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A Factoryscape in the Potteries, (1938). Smoke from chimneys in the industrial area known as the Staffordshire Potteries, Stoke-on-Trent
Exterior of Orford Castle, Suffolk (the Battlements restored), (1931). ArtistExterior of Orford Castle, Suffolk (the Battlements restored), (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the first - 1066-1499
A Bird s-Eye View of Caernarvon Castle, North Wales, (1931). Caernarfon (Caernarvon) Castle, one of the iron ring surrounding Snowdonia
The Norman Ship (based on the Bayeux Tapestry), (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellThe Norman Ship (based on the Bayeux Tapestry), (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the first - 1066-1499, by Marjorie and C. D. B
Boys playing at Riding at the Quintain (Romance of Alexander, about 1340. Bodleian), (1931). A quintain was used to practice jousting
Coronation of Harold, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellCoronation of Harold, (1931). Harold Godwinson (c1022-1066) was the last crowned Anglo-Saxon king of England. He died at the Battle of Hastings in 1066
A Mediaeval Windmill, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellA Mediae val Windmill, (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the first - 1066-1499, by Marjorie and C. D. B. Quennell. [B. T
Monmouth Street, Soho, an illustration by G. Cruikshank for Dickens Sketches by Boz. (1938). Scene in Victorian London, with children playing in the gutter
The Tea Clipper Spindrift, (1938)The Tea Clipper Spindrift, built at Glasgow 1867, wrecked on Dungeness 1869. (1938). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in four parts of which this is the third
Agriculture in the time of Edward III (From the Luttrell Psalter), (1931). ArtistAgriculture in the time of Edward III (From the Luttrell Psalter), (1931). Medieval peasants ploughing with oxen, threshing, harvesting with sickles, and broadcasting seed
The Cutty Sark (1869), in Falmouth Harbour, (1938)The Cutty Sark (1869) 921 tons, in Falmouth Harbour, from under Her own Bows, (1938). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in four parts of which this is the third
Contrasted Interiors: Regency - Mecklenburgh Square, Bloomsbury, (1938). Room in a house in Mecklenburgh Square, a Grade II listed square in Kings Cross
A Perpendicular Church Tower, Winterton, Norfolk, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellA Perpendicular Church Tower, Winterton, Norfolk, (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the first - 1066-1499, by Marjorie and C. D
View of Whampoa, Canton River, China, (1938)View of Whampoa, Canton River, China, showing on the right the East Indiaman Waterloo, of 1315 tons, built in 1816 and broken up in 1834, (1938). Whampoa was an anglicised version of Huangpu
Market Day outside the Old Red Lion at Greenwich, (1938). Artist: Thomas RowlandsonMarket Day outside the Old Red Lion at Greenwich, (1938). 18th-century scene outside a public house in the village of Greenwich on the River Thames, now part of London
Back-to-Back Houses in the North of England, (1938). Urban slum housing. Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in four parts of which this is the third
A fine shop in Artillery Row, Houndsditch, London, of the latter half of the eighteenth century, (1938). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in four parts of which this
Contrasted Interiors: Palladian - The Dining-Room, Holkham, Norfolk, by William Kent, with Regency Furniture, (1938). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in four parts of
A Ship of the time of Edward I. (based on the Dover seal, 1284), (1931). ArtistA Ship of the time of Edward I. (based on the Dover seal, 1284), (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the first - 1066-1499
Lively Activity on an Eighteenth-Century Farm, (1938). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in four parts of which this is the third
A Tea Clipper, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellA Tea Clipper, (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the second - 1500-1799, by Marjorie and C. D. B. Quennell. [B. T
A Smock Mill, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellA Smock Mill, (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the second - 1500-1799, by Marjorie and C. D. B. Quennell. [B. T
The Sovereign of the Seas, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellThe Sovereign of the Seas, (1931). Sovereign of the Seas was ordered in August 1634 by Charles I of England (1600-1649). Built at Woolwich
16th-Century Staircase, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne Quennell16th-Century Staircase, (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the second - 1500-1799, by Marjorie and C. D. B. Quennell. [B. T
The Ark Royal, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellThe Ark Royal, (1931). The English galleon Ark Royal (1587) was originally ordered for Sir Walter Raleigh, and was bought by the crown for service in the Tudor navy
An Elizabethan Galleon, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellAn Elizabethan Galleon, (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the second - 1500-1799, by Marjorie and C. D. B. Quennell. [B. T
Orford Castle, Suffolk. (From Mr. Cautleys plan), (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the first - 1066-1499, by Marjorie and C. D
A Portrait of Queen Elizabeth, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellA Portrait of Queen Elizabeth, (1931). The last Tudor monarch, Elizabeth I (1533-1603) ruled from 1558 until 1603. She is referred to as The Virgin Queen, as she never married
Birds Eye View of Castle Hedingham, Essex (Partial Reconstruction. ), (1931)Birds Eye View of Castle Hedingham, Essex (Partial Reconstruction.), (1931). Hedingham Castle in Essex is one of the best preserved Norman keeps in England. The keep was built c1140
Fan Vaulting, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellFan Vaulting, (1931). Perpendicular architectural style, Henry VII Chapel, Westminster Abbey in London. Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is
Bird s-eye view of Carthusian Monastery, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellBird s-eye view of Carthusian Monastery, (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the first - 1066-1499, by Marjorie and C. D. B
The Joseph Cunard, 1839, (1938). Artist: Samuel WaltersThe Joseph Cunard, 1839, (1938). The Joseph Cunard, a barque of 680 tons, built probably about 1830. She traded between Liverpool and New Orleans
One-Roomed House for Five, (1938). Woman in child in slum housing. Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in four parts of which this is the third
Interior of Ayot St. Lawrence Church, Hertfordshire, (1938). New St Lawrence Church, an eighteenth-century neoclassical building
The Debtors Door, Newgate Prison, London, in 1821, (1938). An execution taking place, watched by gentlemen in top hats. Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in four parts
A Banquet at the Royal Pavilion, Brighton, c1827, (1938). Artist: Joseph NashA Banquet at the Royal Pavilion, Brighton, c1827, (1938). Guests at the banqueting table under the dragon chandelier. Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in four parts of
The Royal George, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellThe Royal George, (1931). HMS Royal George, launched in1756, was a 100-gun ship of the line of the Royal Navy. The largest warship in the world at the time
The Assembly before the Hunt, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellThe Assembly before the Hunt, (1931). Queen Elizabeth I and courtiers. Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the second - 1500-1799
A Mediterranean Galley, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellA Mediterranean Galley, (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the second - 1500-1799, by Marjorie and C. D. B. Quennell. [B. T
Song of the Victory of Agincourt, (1931). The Agincourt Carol is an English folk song written in the early 15th century. It celebrates the English victory over the French at the 1415 Battle of
A Ship of the time of Christopher Columbus, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellA Ship of the time of Christopher Columbus, (1931). 15th century ship. Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the first - 1066-1499
Exterior of Caernarvon Castle, North Wales, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellExterior of Caernarvon Castle, North Wales, (1931). Caernarfon (Caernarvon) Castle, one of the iron ring surrounding Snowdonia
Exterior of Benedictine Monastery, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellExterior of Benedictine Monastery, (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the first - 1066-1499, by Marjorie and C. D. B. Quennell. [B
Norman Hunting, (1931). Artist: Charles Henry Bourne QuennellNorman Hunting, (1931). Illustration from A History of Everyday Things in England - Done in two parts of which this is the first - 1066-1499, by Marjorie and C. D. B. Quennell. [B. T
Design for a house at Hampstead By C. H. B. Quennell, c1913. From The Studio Volume 58 [London Offices of the Studio, London, 1913.]