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Images Dated 30th March 2011 (page 11)

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Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: KIRBY HALL

KIRBY HALL
The ruins of Kirby Hall, near Gratton, Northamptonshire, England. The hall was formerly a residence of the Earl of Winchelsea and was built 1570s to 1590s. Date: 16th century

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: East Hagbourne Church

East Hagbourne Church
St. Andrews Church, East Hagbourne, Berkshire, England, a fine mixture of Early English, Decorated and Perpendicular architecture. Date: 12th - 15th century

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Portugal, Lisbon, Belem: Monument to the Discoveries

Portugal, Lisbon, Belem: Monument to the Discoveries (PadrÒ»ádos Descobrimentos) (detail). From left, we see depicted: Gomes Eanes de Zurara (chronicler), Pero da Covilha (traveller)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Portugal, Lisbon, Belem: Monument to the Discoveries

Portugal, Lisbon, Belem: Monument to the Discoveries (PadrÒ»ádos Descobrimentos) (detail). Henry the Navigator (right) and The Saint Prince Ferdinand are depicted here. Date: 2010

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Art deco cover for Theatre World, January 1927

Art deco cover for Theatre World, January 1927. Artwork by Bovey. Date: 1927

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Art deco cover for Theatre World, December 1926

Art deco cover for Theatre World, December 1926. Artwork by Bovey. Date: 1926

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Art deco cover for Theatre World, November 1926

Art deco cover for Theatre World, November 1926. Artwork by Bovey. Date: 1926

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: The Chapel Turret, Charterhouse, London

The Chapel Turret, Charterhouse, London Date: circa 1910s

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: King George Iv / Keapsacke

King George Iv / Keapsacke
KING GEORGE IV OF ENGLAND In a fur-trimmed coat, with top hat and cane Date: 1762 - 1830

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: HOOD SINKS (ART)

HOOD SINKS (ART)
HMS Hood, the worlds largest battleship, is sunk by the Bismarck, from whose decks this eye-witness painting was made Date: 24 May 1941

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: American Bicycle

American Bicycle
American bicycles are fitted with all kinds of gadgetry compared with European machines. Date: 1939

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Livingstone / Reads Bible

Livingstone / Reads Bible
DAVID LIVINGSTONE Livingstone as a missionary reads the Bible to African natives Date: 1813 - 1873

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: England / Avebury

England / Avebury
The remains of the Avebury stone circle, and the village of Avebury Date: 1813

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: The Welsh front-row face Ireland in the 1977 Five Nations

The Welsh front-row face Ireland in the 1977 Five Nations
Rugby Union - 1977 Five Nations Championship - Wales 25 Ireland 9 The Welsh front-row prepare to scrummage at Cardiff Arms Park, with referee Norman Sanson, left

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Anatomical model, 18th century

Anatomical model, 18th century. This artwork is by the French painter Jean-Baptiste Andre Gautier-Dagoty (1740-1786)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Lavoisier respiration experiment, 1770s

Lavoisier respiration experiment, 1770s
Lavoisier respiration experiment, 18th century. French chemist Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794) in his laboratory with his wife and his assistants

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Discovery of anaesthesia, 19th century

Discovery of anaesthesia, 19th century. Artwork showing the discovery of anaesthesia

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Heart anatomy, 16th century

Heart anatomy, 16th century
Heart anatomy. 16th-century artwork showing the anatomy of the heart, from Anatomia Mundini (1541) by the German anatomist Jean Dryander (1500-1560)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Raymond Vieussens, French anatomist

Raymond Vieussens, French anatomist
Raymond Vieussens (c.1635-1715), French anatomist. This artwork is from his book Omnuim corporis humani nervorum (1685). The Latin text at lower right states that it shows him aged 42

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Jean-Baptiste de Senac, French physician

Jean-Baptiste de Senac, French physician
Jean-Baptiste de Senac (1693-1770), French physician. Senac carried out important advances in studies of the heart, including writings on heart disorders

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Heart anatomy, 18th century

Heart anatomy, 18th century
Heart anatomy. 18th-century artwork showing the anatomy of the heart, including its coronary arteries. This artwork is from Traite de la structure du coeur, de son action

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Nerve physiology lesson, 19th century

Nerve physiology lesson, 19th century
Nerve physiology lesson. 19th-century artwork of the French physiologist Claude Bernard (1813-1878) demonstrating the role of vasomotor nerves (nerves affecting blood vessels) in a rabbit

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Artificial heart, 19th century

Artificial heart, 19th century. Artwork showing the artificial heart designed by the French scientist Etienne-Jules Marey (1830-1904) in 1881

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Anatomy and royalty, 17th century

Anatomy and royalty, 17th century. English anatomist William Harvey (1578-1657) dissecting a deers head in front of the English King Charles I (1600-1649)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Heart-lung machine, 20th century

Heart-lung machine, 20th century. This is the first model designed by Lillehei-De Wall

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Heart nerves, 17th century

Heart nerves, 17th century
Heart nerves, 17th-century artwork of the nerves that control the heart muscle and function. This artwork is from Tractatus de corde (1669) by the English physician Richard Lower (1631-1691)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Digitalis plant, 18th century

Digitalis plant, 18th century
Digitalis plant. 18th-century artwork of the Digitalis plant that was used to treat heart problems, and from which digitalin drugs are obtained. This artwork is from a herbarium dating from 1757

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: William Harvey, English physician

William Harvey, English physician
William Harvey (1578-1657), English physician. Harvey is famous for his discovery that the blood and heart form part of a complete systemic circulatory system

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Heart-lung machine, 20th century

Heart-lung machine, 20th century. This is the first model designed by J. Gibbon

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Jean-Nicolas Corvisart, French physician

Jean-Nicolas Corvisart, French physician
Jean-Nicolas Corvisart (1755-1821), French physician. Corvisart was an expert in cardiology, and from 1804 to 1815 was physician to the French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Venous system, 18th century

Venous system, 18th century. Artwork of the layout and appearance of the veins of the human circulatory system. This artwork is from Encyclopedie

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Defeat of the Spanish Armada, 1588

Defeat of the Spanish Armada, 1588. The Latin text labels show Dover (left) and Calais (right). This was said to be the scene seen from the cliffs of Folkestone in August 1588 by 10-year-old William

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Jean Riolan, French anatomist

Jean Riolan, French anatomist
Jean Riolan the Younger (1577-1657), French anatomist. Latin text around the portrait includes his name (upper right), identifies him as a Parisian medical doctor (lower right)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Blood-letting, 18th century

Blood-letting, 18th century. This manuscript is from Persia, with Arabic script at top and bottom. Blood-letting, the withdrawal of often large amounts of blood from a patient

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Heart anatomy, 18th century

Heart anatomy, 18th century
Heart anatomy. 18th-century artwork showing the anatomical structure of the heart from the front and rear. This artwork is from Thesaurus Anatomicus

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Anatomy and royalty, 17th century

Anatomy and royalty, 17th century. French anatomist Jean Riolan the Younger (lower left, 1577-1657) presenting a treatise on anatomy to the French King Louis XIII (right)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Guy Patin, French physician

Guy Patin, French physician
Guy Patin (1601-1672), French physician. Patin was the dean of the Paris Faculty of Medicine (1650-1652), and a professor at the College de France from 1655

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Electrocardiograph, 20th century

Electrocardiograph, 20th century. This model includes an Einthoven cord, and was built in Paris in the period 1918 to 1920 by the engineer G. Boulitte

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: French hospital, 19th century

French hospital, 19th century. Artwork showing the organization of French hospitals in the 19th century, the era of the great clinicians

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Heart and lung anatomy, 17th century

Heart and lung anatomy, 17th century
Heart and lung anatomy. 17th-century artwork showing the anatomical structure of the heart and lungs. This artwork is from the posthumously published anatomical work De homine figuris (1662)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Anatomical model, 18th century

Anatomical model, 18th century. This artwork is by the French painter Jean-Baptiste Andre Gautier-Dagoty (1740-1786)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Mareys heart machines, 19th century

Mareys heart machines, 19th century
Mareys heart machines. 19th-century artworks of the devices developed in 1881 by the French scientist Etienne-Jules Marey (1830-1904) for the study of the circulatory system

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Auguste Comte, French philosopher

Auguste Comte, French philosopher
Auguste Comte (1798-1857), French philosopher. Comte, who is considered the father of modern sociology, coined the term sociology as part of his description of the new science

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Lymphatic system, 17th century

Lymphatic system, 17th century. Artwork showing the lymphatic nodes in the digestive system, as discovered by the Italian physician Gaspare Aselli (c.1581-1626)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Arm veins and valves, 16th century

Arm veins and valves, 16th century. Artwork of the discovery by the Italian anatomist and surgeon Hieronymus Fabricius (1533-1619) of valves within veins

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Tuberculosis diagnosis, 19th century

Tuberculosis diagnosis, 19th century. Artwork showing the French physician Rene Laennec (1781-1826), at the Necker Hospital, Paris, France, examining a patient (left)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Heart anatomy, 17th century

Heart anatomy, 17th century
Heart anatomy. 17th-century artwork showing the heart and the surrounding veins and arteries. This artwork is from Omnuim corporis humani nervorum (1685)

Background imageImages Dated 30th March 2011: Waterfall over Navajo Sandstone, Zion National Park, Utah, United States of America

Waterfall over Navajo Sandstone, Zion National Park, Utah, United States of America, North America



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