- Costume - Fifteenth century
- Middle of fifteenth century to sixteenth century
- Round Table of King Artus of Brittany
The form of table was commonly long and straight, but on occasions of state it was semicircular, or like a horse-shoe in form, recalling the Romanesque round table of King Artus of Brittany. - Fifteenth century
- Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Female - Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Fourteenth century, 1st half
- Footwear, 1510-1540
- Female - End of fifteenth century
- Female Costume - Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Tenth to thirteenth century
- Costumes, 1554-1568
- 'Sans nom ' at the Race of June 8, 1884, near Leiden.
In 1884, the competition again took place in Oudshoorn. The board had now decided to add races for two-belt seniores and for junior four-belt and two-belt races for the sake of the public. The song " Oude vier ", however, remained the main song, the university race . The prize was once again won by Leiden, which reached the winning post 4 seconds before Utrecht and 36 seconds before Delft . - Variety of shapes and slashing. Henry VIII
- Costume - Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Male - Fourteenth century
- Costumes Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Newbridge, County Dublin
- Cap shapes. Period Henry VIII
- Sixteenth century, 2nd quarter
- Twelfth to fourteenth century
- End of fifteenth century
- Middle of fifteenth century
- Female - Period Henry VIII
- Fourteenth century, 2nd half
- Female Costume Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Headware Fourteenth century
- Fourteenth century
- Types of Shoes - British, Roman, Norman to 13th century
- Norman and Saxon Costume - 12th Century
- Twelfth to thirteenth century
- Caps - Saxon and Norman types
- Tribal Gods of the 19th Century
Throughout the nineteenth century, and particularly throughout its latter half, there has been a great working up of this nationalism in the world. All men are by nature partisans and patriots, but the natural tribalism of men in the nineteenth century was unnaturally exaggerated, it was fretted and over-stimulated and inflamed and forced into the nationalist mould. Nationalism was taught in schools, emphasized by newspapers, preached and mocked and sung into men. Men were brought to feel that they were as improper without a nationality as without their clothes in a crowded assembly. - Costumes, 1568-1610
- Female Costume - Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Female Elizabethan modes
- A Group of Lapps
In the northmost part of the Scandinavian Peninsula and Finland live the Lapps. There are probably not more than ten or twelve thousand, all told. They have had much contact with the Finns, and speak a language related to Finnish. In many customs they resemble them. This is not strange, as the land they live in is much the same. - Rowing grip
Top - Wrong grip Bottom - correct grip After the pose, the student should learn to hold his belt. Inadvertently when rowing to apply some force, he will tighten his belt tightly, even pinch it. Now this is nothing but a waste of forces, because it makes the muscles, namely those of the lower arm, tense and tired, without obtaining any greater result. The hands should only serve as a means of connecting the strap to the body; so the looser the belt is held, the better, and to that end only the two extremities of the fingers are bent, as a result of which a hook is formed, as it were, which wraps around the belt; (bottom picture) the thumb is held under the belt and also only with the extreme member pressed against it. The wrist joints should absolutely not be bent downwards, because this is precisely what makes the muscles of the lower arm tense, which is of no use and should therefore be strictly forbidden. After all, the aim must be not to exert a muscle without obtaining any result proportional to the effort. The hand must therefore be held in such a way that it forms a straight line with the arm. - Twelfth and thirteenth centuries
- Costumes, 1554-1580
- Newbridge, County Dublin
- Shapes of Shoes from 1590-1650
- At The Café Aphrodite
At The Café Aphrodite - Byzantine enamels from the Limburg reliquary
- Costumes. Period, James I
- 1585 - 1620
- Female - Period 1625-1660
- Period 1690-1700
- James I Female
- Period 1688-1702
- Shoe shapes. Charles I to 1700
- Ships the British, and the German, navy might have had
Ships the British, and the German, navy might have had! Designs by the Kaiser and other naval theorists. The first illustration on this page is a design for a battle-ship made by the Kaiser in 1893, to replace the old "Preussen," then out of date. The vessel was to carry four large barbettes and a huge umbrella-like fighting-top. Illustration No. 2 is an Immersible Ironclad, designed by a French engineer named Le Grand, in 1862. In action the vessel was to be partly submerged, so that only her three turrets and the top of the armoured glacis would be visible. No. 3 is Admiral Elliott's "Ram," of 1884. The ship was to carry a "crinoline" of stanchions along her water-line, practically a fixed torpedo-net. No. 4 is Thomas Cornish's Invulnerable Ironclad, of 1885. She was to have two separate parallel hulls under water; above she was of turtle-back shape. - Charles I
- Sleeve treatments. Period Charles II
- Period 1650-1685
- Nos. 1, 2, 3, 1540-50, and other shoe forms worn in the reign of Elizabeth
- Costumes. Period James I
- Costumes, 1570-1605
- Gautier Bardins, bailiff and adviser to the king in the 13th century, according to his tombstone