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Digial painting of a rural scene of lambs, and sheep grazing around a lone tree at sunset on The Roaches in the Peak District National Park, Staffordshire, UK
Steel engraving Group of native americans hunting buffalo from 1868
Painting in the church of San Maurizio al Monastero Maggiore, Milan church of early Christian origin, Italy, Europe.
Windmill near Swavesey, Cambridgeshire with snow covered fields.
Digital watercolor painting photo of Kylemore Abbey in Connemara mountains, Ireland Europe
Photo of crumpled paper in the shape of two schoolgirls taking a horseback ride in nature. One girl sits on a horse backwards, and another girl's horse rears up
Vintage photograph, Primrose Time by Henry Peach Robinson, Victorian 19th Century
Picturesque England with scene from Lake District from out-of-copyright 1891 book \
Plaque attached to the base of a bronze statute which was erected in memory of Thomas Sutcliffe Mort in 1883 at Macquarie Place, Sydney.  He was a significant figure in the development of wool industry and exporting agricultural products to the United Kingdom.  This image was taken on a sunny afternoon in summer.
Historical photography: Famine in India, farmers and cows, 1897
London, UK,  30 April 202 : The Temple in Wanstead Park, Wanstead, Redbridge, London
This is the original Joker playing card from the 'Shakespeare' 1895 deck, produced by Bernhard Dondorf in Germany for the London company C. W. Faulkner & Co. This card shows the Joker riding on the back of a donkey. Curiously, the quotation at the bottom 'Laugh and the world laughs with you' is not from Shakespeare, but from (Solitude) by 19th century poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox. After 1902, this deck was published by Dondorf with different Jokers and plain Aces of Spades as 'No 192'. C. W. Faulkner and Co. operated from Golden Lane in London, EC1. From 1882 they worked as lithographers, and also printed in gravure. Their best-quality playing cards were those printed in Germany, some by Dondorf, prior to the First World War. C. W. Faulkner and Co. were best known for their postcards and greetings cards, including Misfitz, which they produced until about 1920. The company closed in 1956.
London, England 1800s: Hatfield House  Grade I listed country house set in the Great Park of the town of Hatfield, Hertfordshire, England. \n\nThe present Jacobean house built in 1611 by Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury
Vintage photograph of Queen Victoria and John Brown, 19th Century
Image from 1894 French book, about the New Adventures of the nephew of Robinson. Black and white illustrations of the era and culture of maritime advenure.\nHer we see an admiral courting and taking his hat of to a beautiful lady, by a stone bench.
Hukou Waterfall of the Yellow River Pattern Design ​on RMB CHINA YUAN
Cast iron signpost on the Trent and Mersey Canal near Stoke-on-Trent in England showing the distance to Shardlow and Preston Brook.
Navajo teenager galloping fast in Monument Valley Arizona at sunset
Painting of Huu Tiep Lake in Hanoi Vietnam
lonely house in nature with thick clouds
Antique photomontage photograph, Young women out in the countryside, Pastoral, Victorian, 19th Century.
The Lycean Tombs date back to BC and have lasted for over 2800 years.\nIt is said the Tombs were made as high as possible for kings and people of importance, who expected to be close to God.\nThey were never finished due to the invasion of Alexander the Great.
A hand drawn illustration of an adult deer by a lake and trees, from an old 1885 book \
London, England 1800s:  Holland House, aka Cope Castle, early Jacobean country house in Kensington, London, Situated in a area now known as Holland Park. Built in 1605 by the diplomat Sir Walter Cope
Original watercolor landscape painted by my great Grandfather in the 1930's in England.
The historical tolls on College Road in South Dulwich. The tollgate still charges for the use of the private road. Dulwich is in south London, UK
The weathered sign for the 'Ye Olde Fighting Cocks' pub, allegedly the oldest pub in England. St Albans, Hertfordshire, England, UK. This  is outside the pub entrance. The pub was originally located close to St Albans Cathedral (when it was St Albans Abbey) and was moved to the present site sometime around 1539. The foundations are claimed to be even older, dating from around 793 but this is unconfirmed.
Free Images: "bestof:John William Inchbold - The white doe of Rylstone - 1855.jpeg The white doe of Rylstone oil canvas cm 68 6 50 8 Leeds Leeds Art Gallery repro from artbook 1855"
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