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Bat Collection (page 3)

Background imageBat Collection: Cricket, 1923

Cricket, 1923. Professional Coach: You ll be all right, Sir, once you begin to time em. And as for that fast one that whizzes past yer ear ole - why you ll treat it like money from ome

Background imageBat Collection: The sleep of reason produces monsters, 1799. Artist: Francisco Goya

The sleep of reason produces monsters, 1799. Artist: Francisco Goya
The sleep of reason produces monsters, 1799. From Los caprichos. Los Caprichos were published in 1799 at a time of social repression and economic crisis in Spain

Background imageBat Collection: There is plenty to suck, 1799. Artist: Francisco Goya

There is plenty to suck, 1799. Artist: Francisco Goya
There is plenty to suck, 1799. Plate 45 of Los caprichos. Los Caprichos were published in 1799 at a time of social repression

Background imageBat Collection: Natterers bat (Myotis nattereri), 1828

Natterers bat (Myotis nattereri), 1828. From British Quadrupeds by William MacGillivray, one of the volumes in William Jardines Naturalists Library series. (Edinburgh, 1828)

Background imageBat Collection: Long-eared bat (Plectorus auritus), 1828

Long-eared bat (Plectorus auritus), 1828. From British Quadrupeds by William MacGillivray, one of the volumes in William Jardines Naturalists Library series. (Edinburgh, 1828)

Background imageBat Collection: Pipistrelle bat (Pipistrellus pipistrellus), 1828

Pipistrelle bat (Pipistrellus pipistrellus), 1828. From British Quadrupeds by William MacGillivray, one of the volumes in William Jardines Naturalists Library series. (Edinburgh, 1828)

Background imageBat Collection: Mammal embryos, 1905

Mammal embryos, 1905. Dog, bat, hare and human embryos at various stages of development. Illustration from Ernst Haeckels book; one of the first to sketch the genealogical tree of animals

Background imageBat Collection: Pottery. Bat-God: pottery with red paint. Zapotec culture, Mexico, 300-900 AD

Pottery. Bat-God: pottery with red paint. Zapotec culture, Mexico, 300-900 AD. (A branch of Aztec cu)
Camazotz, Bat-God, pottery with red paint, Zapotec culture, Mexico, 300-900. The cult of Camazotz began around 100 BCE among the Zapotec Indians in what is the modern-day Mexican state of Oaxaca

Background imageBat Collection: Roman bronze deity, 2nd century

Roman bronze deity, 2nd century
Roman bronze deity, now in the British Museum, 2nd century

Background imageBat Collection: Zapotec statuette of a bat-god

Zapotec statuette of a bat-god
Zapotec statuette of the bat-god Camazotz

Background imageBat Collection: Pottery Mask of a Bat, grey with red and white paint, Zapotec, Mexico, 300-900

Pottery Mask of a Bat, grey with red and white paint, Zapotec, Mexico, 300-900. The Zapotec civilization was an indigenous pre-Columbian civilization that flourished in the Valley of Oaxaca in

Background imageBat Collection: Hand coloured engraving of a Greater Horseshoe Bat, 1838

Hand coloured engraving of a Greater Horseshoe Bat, 1838. The Greater Horseshoe Bat (Rhinolophus ferrum-equinum) is found in Europe, Africa and Asia. Hand-coloured engraving published Edinburgh 1838

Background imageBat Collection: The Irish Vampire, 1885. Artist: Joseph Swain

The Irish Vampire, 1885. Artist: Joseph Swain
The Irish Vampire, 1885. A vampire bat hovers over a prone Hibernia. From Punch, or the London Charivari, From Punch, or the London Charivari, October 24, 1885

Background imageBat Collection: Drawing The Stumps, 1862. Artist: John Tenniel

Drawing The Stumps, 1862. Artist: John Tenniel
Drawing The Stumps, 1862. Cobden to Dizzy. Carries Out His Bat? Of Course He Does! Your Underhand Bowling ll Never Get Him Out! I ll Show You How to Do It Next Innings



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