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Images Dated 4th August 2005 (page 26)

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Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Battle of Rivoli won by the Emperor Napoleon I, 14 January 1797, (c1835-1884)

Battle of Rivoli won by the Emperor Napoleon I, 14 January 1797, (c1835-1884)
Battle of Rivoli won by the Emperor Napoleon I, 14 January, 1797, (1800-1899).The battle of Rivoli in northern Italy occurred as Austrias General Alvintzy made his fourth

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Ears of wheat, c1888. Artist: E Graff

Ears of wheat, c1888. Artist: E Graff
Ears of wheat, c1888. Plate showing a variety of corn, Poulard d Australie in French, which may be Poulard wheat. From Les Meilleurs Bles (The Best Wheat) published by Audrieux-Vilmorin & Cie

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Joseph of Arimathea receiving Christs blood, 15th century

Joseph of Arimathea receiving Christs blood, 15th century. Watched by the Virgin Mary, Joseph kneels at the foot of the cross holding the Holy Grail to catch the drops of blood falling from the spear

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Napoleon and Massena on the Island of Lobau, May 1809, (19th century)

Napoleon and Massena on the Island of Lobau, May 1809, (19th century). Moving across the Danube, Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) ensured his base, Lobau Island

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: The eve of Austerlitz, 1 December 1805, (19th century)

The eve of Austerlitz, 1 December 1805, (19th century). Napoleon rests by a fire with his troops camped near Austerlitz (Slavkov u Brna, Czech Republic)

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Battle of Waterloo, 18 June 1815, (19th century)

Battle of Waterloo, 18 June 1815, (19th century). One of the most decisive battles of the Napoleonic Wars, Waterloo was fought in a small area (some 10km by 4km)

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Battle of Essling - Death of Montebello, 21 May 1809, (c1835). Artist: Francois Georgin

Battle of Essling - Death of Montebello, 21 May 1809, (c1835). Artist: Francois Georgin
Battle of Essling - Death of Montebello, 21 May 1809, (c1835). On 20 May, the IV Corps of Napoleons army under Marshal Massena formed a bridgehead to check for enemy troops

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: The Defence of Paris, 1814, (19th century)

The Defence of Paris, 1814, (19th century). Paris was occupied on 31 March and within a week his marshals had forced Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) to abdicate

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Napoleon injured at Ratisbon, April 1809, (c1835). Artist: Francois Georgin

Napoleon injured at Ratisbon, April 1809, (c1835). Artist: Francois Georgin
Napoleon injured at Ratisbon, April 1809, (c1835). Pursuing the Austrians after the victory at Eckmuhl, Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Long wave transmitter masts at a Marconi radio station at Berne, Switzerland, c1925

Long wave transmitter masts at a Marconi radio station at Berne, Switzerland, c1925

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Spectroscopy

Spectroscopy. A spectrosopist observing (top). At the bottom, from left to right; absorption spectra of indigo, chromic chloride and magenta

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Girolamo Frascatoro, Italian physician, poet and astronomer, late 16th century

Girolamo Frascatoro, Italian physician, poet and astronomer, late 16th century. Artist: Theodor de Bry
Girolamo Frascatoro, Italian physician, poet and astronomer, late 16th century. Frascatoro (c1478-1553) put forward the theory that diseases were caused by seedlike entities (germs in effect)

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Michael Faraday, British physicist and chemist, mid 19th century

Michael Faraday, British physicist and chemist, mid 19th century. Faraday (1791-1867) was one of the greatest scientists of the 19th century

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Michael Faraday, British physicist and chemist, 1881

Michael Faraday, British physicist and chemist, 1881. Top left: reading when apprenticed to Riebau as a bookbinder; top right; experimenting; bottom

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Building trade, c1845

Building trade, c1845. A bricklayer working on a wooden scaffold (centre), a brickyard (top), mixing mortar (right), and a labourer carrying a load up a long ladder (left)

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: William Ramsay, Scottish chemist, 1908. Artist: Spy

William Ramsay, Scottish chemist, 1908. Artist: Spy
William Ramsay, Scottish chemist, 1908. Ramsay (1852-1916) discovered four of the inert gases, Neon, Argon, Krypton and Xenon, for which he won the the Nobel prize for Chemistry in 1904

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Geology and Palaeontology, c1880

Geology and Palaeontology, c1880. Diagram showing geological eras and periods with the rock strata associated with each (right) as well as the types of flora and fauna alive at the time

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Train crossing Chat Moss, Lancashire, 1831. Artist: Henry Pyall

Train crossing Chat Moss, Lancashire, 1831. Artist: Henry Pyall
Train crossing Chat Moss, Lancashire, 1831. A large 12 square mile peat bog five miles west of Manchester, Chat Moss was considered unsuitable for the building of rail tracks

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: The Tunnel, 1831. Artist: Henry Pyall

The Tunnel, 1831. Artist: Henry Pyall
The Tunnel, 1831. The worlds first passenger railway, the Liverpool and Manchester opened on 15 September 1830. Its principal engineer was George Stephenson (1781-1848)

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: St Lukes Hospital, Old Street, London, 1808-1811. Artist: Thomas Rowlandson

St Lukes Hospital, Old Street, London, 1808-1811. Artist: Thomas Rowlandson
St Lukes Hospital, Old Street, London, 1808-1811. Female patients in their day gallery. St Lukes Hospital was a lunatic asylum designed by the architect George Dance jnr (1741-1825)

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Library of the Royal Institution, Albermarle Street, London, 1808-1811. Artist: Thomas Rowlandson

Library of the Royal Institution, Albermarle Street, London, 1808-1811. Artist: Thomas Rowlandson
Library of the Royal Institution, Albermarle Street, London, 1808-1811. Interior view of the library showing gentlemen reading and engaged in discussion

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: The Mint, London, 1808-1811 Artist: Augustus Charles Pugin

The Mint, London, 1808-1811 Artist: Augustus Charles Pugin
The Mint, London, 1808-1811. Coins being produced with coining presses. From The Microcosm of London, published by Ackermann, London 1808-1811

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Draisienne or velocipede shown replacing horses in the French post service, 1818

Draisienne or velocipede shown replacing horses in the French post service, 1818
Draisienne or velocipede, France, 1818. The Draisienne was the forerunner of the bicycle and was invented by Baron von Drais in France in 1817

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Albert, Comte de Dion, French engineer, 1899

Albert, Comte de Dion, French engineer, 1899. Together with George Bouton, de Dion (1855-1946) developed a lightweight engine which could be applied to motorcycles

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Alberto Santos-Dumont, Brazilian aviation pioneer, 1901. Artist: George Hum

Alberto Santos-Dumont, Brazilian aviation pioneer, 1901. Artist: George Hum
Alberto Santos-Dumont, Brazilian aviation pioneer, 1901. Santos-Dumont (1873-1932) made his first flight in the balloon Brasil in 1898, and later that year his second balloon, America

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Charles Darwin, English naturalist

Charles Darwin, English naturalist. Darwin (1809-1882) as a young man. Darwin was employed as naturalist on HMS Beagle from 1831-1836

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: William Archibald Spooner, British clergyman and educationalist, 1898. Artist: Spy

William Archibald Spooner, British clergyman and educationalist, 1898. Artist: Spy
William Archibald Spooner, British clergyman and academic, 1898. Spooner (1844-1930) had a 60 year association with Oxford University lecturing on ancient history and philosophy

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Lyon Playfair, Scottish chemist, politician and administrator, 1875. Artist: Carlo Pellegrini

Lyon Playfair, Scottish chemist, politician and administrator, 1875. Artist: Carlo Pellegrini
Lyon Playfair, Scottish chemist, politician and administrator, 1875. Playfair ( rose from being a chemist in the Geological Survey in 1845)

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Hiram Stevens Maxim, American-born British inventor and engineer, 1904. Artist: Spy

Hiram Stevens Maxim, American-born British inventor and engineer, 1904. Artist: Spy
Hiram Stevens Maxim, American-born British inventor and engineer, 1904. Whilst resident in America, Maxim (1840-1916) took out patents for, among other things, gas apparatus and electric lamps

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Oliver Lodge, British physicist, 1904. Artist: Spy

Oliver Lodge, British physicist, 1904. Artist: Spy
Oliver Lodge, British physicist, 1904. Lodge (1851-1940) is best remembered for his investigations into the propagation of electromagnetic waves

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: John Bennet Lawes, British agriculturalist, 1882

John Bennet Lawes, British agriculturalist, 1882. Lawes (1814-1900) founded Rothamsted Experimental Station at Harpenden, Hertfordshire, in 1843

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: William Huggins, British astronomer and spectroscopist, 1903. Artist: Spy

William Huggins, British astronomer and spectroscopist, 1903. Artist: Spy
William Huggins, British astronomer and spectroscopist, 1903. Huggins (1824-1910) was the inventor of the solar spectroscope

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Lord Kelvin, Scottish physicist and mathematician, 1897. Artist: Spy

Lord Kelvin, Scottish physicist and mathematician, 1897. Artist: Spy
Lord Kelvin, Scottish physicist and mathematician, 1897. Born William Thomson, Lord Kelvin (1824-1907) was educated at Glasgow and Cambridge

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Henry Bessemer, British engineer, inventor and industrialist, 1880. Artist: Spy

Henry Bessemer, British engineer, inventor and industrialist, 1880. Artist: Spy
Henry Bessemer, British engineer, inventor and industrialist, 1880. Bessemer (1813-1898) was a prolific inventor, but is best known for discovering the Bessemer Process for manufacturing steel

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Henry Cole, British designer, civil servant and writer, 1871

Henry Cole, British designer, civil servant and writer, 1871. Cole (1808-1882) assisted Rowland Hill in designing the worlds first adhesive postage stamp, the Penny Black

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: William Crookes, British physicist and chemist, 1903. Artist: Spy

William Crookes, British physicist and chemist, 1903. Artist: Spy
William Crookes, British physicist and chemist, 1903. Crookes (1832-1919) holding the discharge tube which carries his name

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Pierre and Marie Curie, French physicists, 1904

Pierre and Marie Curie, French physicists, 1904. Polish-born Marie Curie and her husband Pierre continued the work on radioactivity started by Henri Becquerel

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Louis Pasteur, French chemist and founder of modern bacteriology, 1887

Louis Pasteur, French chemist and founder of modern bacteriology, 1887. Pasteur (1822-1895) holding rabbits used in his work on hydrophobia (rabies)

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Richard Owen, British zoologist, 1873. Artist: Spy

Richard Owen, British zoologist, 1873. Artist: Spy
Richard Owen, British zoologist, 1873. After qualifying and practising as a surgeon, Owen (1804-1892) made major contributions in the fields of anatomy and paleontology

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: John Tyndall, Irish-born British physicist, 1872

John Tyndall, Irish-born British physicist, 1872. Tyndall (1820-1893) was appointed Professor of Natural Philosophy at the Royal Institution, London in 1854

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh, British scientist, 1899

John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh, British scientist, 1899. Lord Rayleigh (1842-1919) isolated the element Argon, one of the noble (inert) gases

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Rain of frogs recorded in 1355 (1557)

Rain of frogs recorded in 1355 (1557). Accounts of deluges of frogs and fish date back to biblical times. The phenomenon ocurs when a waterspout or tornado passes over a body of water

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: God creating Eve from Adams rib, 1508

God creating Eve from Adams rib, 1508. Scene from the Bible (Genesis). It illustrates Thales concept of the universe based on the four Greek elements with a flat earth floating on water with air

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Howden Minster K940506

Howden Minster K940506
HOWDEN MINSTER, Humberside, East Riding of Yorkshire. Exterior view

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Bosworth Battlefield K940708

Bosworth Battlefield K940708
BOSWORTH BATTLEFIELD, Leicestershire. Site of the battle of 1485

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Manchester United - 1955 / 6

Manchester United - 1955 / 6
Football - 1955 / 1956 season - Manchester United Team Group Back (left to right): Mr Tom Curry (Trainer), William Liam Whelan, Jackie Blanchflower, Ian Greaves, Ray Wood, Freddie Goodwin

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: color image, photography, no people, horizontal, outdoors, sunset, one animal, nature

color image, photography, no people, horizontal, outdoors, sunset, one animal, nature
color image, photography, no people, horizontal, outdoors, sunset, one, Gallo Landscapes, 134363056

Background imageImages Dated 4th August 2005: Gravel Road, Niagara Region, Pelham, Ontario

Gravel Road, Niagara Region, Pelham, Ontario



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