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Maison Carree a Nimes, 1853. Creator: Edouard BaldusMaison Carree a Nimes, 1853
The Medici vase, a large vase to right decorated with a representation of the sacrifice of Iphigenia, on a garden terrace
Agony in the Garden, 1680-1719. Creator: Benoit ThiboustAgony in the Garden, 1680-1719. After Carlo Maratti
[Roman Theater at Nimes], 1867. Creator: Unknown[Roman Theater at Nimes], 1867
Nimes, Porte d Auguste, ca. 1864. Creator: Edouard BaldusNimes, Porte d Auguste, ca. 1864
Nimes, Amphitheatre, ca. 1861. Creator: Edouard BaldusNimes, Amphitheatre, ca. 1861
Nimes, Tour Magne, 1853. Creator: Edouard BaldusNimes, Tour Magne, 1853
St. Gilles, 1853. Creator: Edouard BaldusSt. Gilles, 1853
Pont du Gard, ca. 1861. Creator: Edouard BaldusPont du Gard, ca. 1861
Nimes, Temple de Diane, ca. 1862. Creator: Edouard BaldusNimes, Temple de Diane, ca. 1862
Nimes, Fontaine, ca. 1861. Creator: Edouard BaldusNimes, Fontaine, ca. 1861
Aqueducts, 1889. Creator: W & AK JohnstonAqueducts, 1889. Remains of Aqueduct of Metz [France, Roman]; Aqueduct of Pont du Gard near Nismes [over the River Gardon near Nimes, France
Pont du Gard, Nimes, France, 1951. Creator: Shirley MarkhamPont du Gard, Nimes, France, 1951. Pont du Gard, Nimes, France, c AD 150, built to carry water across river to the town of Nimes, which was, in fact, some distance away from the aqueduct
Pont du Gard, 1951. Creator: Shirley MarkhamPont du Gard, Nimes, France, 1951. Pont du Gard, Nimes, France, c AD 150. The Roman aqueduct in the south of France over the River Gardon is the highest of all elevated Roman aqueducts
View of Ales with Irises in Bloom, 1888. Artist: Vincent van GoghView of Ales with Irises in Bloom, 1888. Painting held at the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam. From The Studio Volume 117. [The Offices of the Studio, London, New York, 1939.]
Amphitheatre at Nismes, France, 19th century(?). Artist:s BradshawAmphitheatre at Nismes, France, 19th century(?). Built at the end of the first century AD, the amphitheatre of the city Nimes was among the biggest in Roman Gaul
Roman amphitheatre, Nimes, France, late 19th or early 20th century. Built at the end of the first century AD, the amphitheatre of the city Nimes was among the biggest in Roman Gaul
An Incident in the White Terror, 1815, 1895. General Count Gilly in hiding in a peasants house in the neighbourhood of Anduze in the South of France
Nimes, France, 19th century. Artist: R LuedersNimes, France, 19th century
Ruined interior of the Roman Temple of Diana, Nimes, France, 20th century. Nimes boasts a wealth of Roman buildings. The Temple of Diana dates from the 2nd century. French Postcard
The Roman Arena, Nimes, Provence, France, 1937. Artist: Martin HurlimannThe Roman Arena, Nimes, Provence, France, 1937. Illustration from Frankreich: Baukunst, Landschaft Und Volksleben, a work on French architecture, landscape and people by Martin Hurlimann, (Berlin)
Pont du Gard, Provence, France, 1937. Artist: Martin HurlimannPont du Gard, Provence, France, 1937. The Roman aqueduct near Nimes was built in c18 BC. No cement was used in its construction
Aqueduct of Nimes at the Pont du Gard, France, 1886. Illustration from Cyclopaedia of Useful Arts, Mechanical and Chemical, Manufactures, Mining, and Engineering, by Charles Tomlinson, Volume I
The Temple of Diana, 1890. Artist: Emmanuel LansyerThe Temple of Diana, Nimes, France, 1890. Nimes is famous for its remarkable collection of Roman relics. The magnificent Roman arena (1st century) seating up to 24, 000, is still in use
A Roman arena, 2nd centuryA Roman arena in Nimes, 2nd century
Maison Carree, the only intact Roman temple, 1st century BCMaison Carree, the only intact Roman temple, found in Nimes, France. Its preservation is owed to its rededication as a Christian church in the fourth century, 1st century BC
The ruins of a Roman arena in France, 2nd century BCThe ruins of a Roman arena in Nimes, France, 2nd century BC
Maison Carree Roman Temple, 1st century BCMaison Carree Roman Temple, Nimes, France. This is the only Roman temple still surviving intact, 1st century BC
Pont du Gard, Nimes, southern France, 19th century. This Roman aqueduct was built in c18 BC. No cement was used in its construction
Roman tomb slab of a Roman officer and his wife, 1st centuryRoman tomb slab of a Roman officer and his wife from Nimes, France, at Maison Carree in Nime, 1st century