71 results filtered with: Fall of man
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An answer to that part of Dr. Middleton's late treatise, intitled, An examination of the Bishop of London's discourses concerning the use and intent of prophesy, wherein he endeavours to prove, that Moses's account of the fall of man, is an allegory, apologue, or moral fable.
Date: M.DCCL. [1750]- Pictures
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The animals look on as the angel expels Adam and Eve from paradise. Engraving by C.J. Visscher.
Masaccio, 1401-1428.Reference: 20369i- Pictures
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The serpent passes the fruit to Eve while Adam holds onto a branch. Line engraving after A. Durer.
Dürer, Albrecht, 1471-1528.Reference: 15631i- Pictures
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A couple in animal skins (Adam and Eve?) journeying with three children after the expulsion. Coloured stipple engraving.
Reference: 20709i- Pictures
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Eve shows Adam the apple she has bitten. Etching by W. Unger after J. Palma the elder.
Palma, il Vecchio, 1480?-1528.Reference: 15629i- Books
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The state of innocence, and fall of man: an opera. Written in heroick verse, by Mr. Dryden.
Dryden, John, 1631-1700.Date: M.DCC.XXI. [1721]- Books
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The state of innocence, and fall of man: an opera. Written in heroick verse. By Mr. Dryden.
Dryden, John, 1631-1700.Date: printed in the year, 1710- Pictures
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Adam and Eve are condemned to a life of work outside Eden. Etching by J.E. Ridinger.
Ridinger, Johann Elias, 1698-1767.Reference: 20798i- Pictures
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God creates Eve; she tempts Adam. Engraving by Scotin, c. 1765.
Date: 1765Reference: 20704i- Pictures
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A woman looking into a hand-mirror; in the background God shows Adam and Eve the tree of knowledge. Engraving by N. de Bruyn after M. de Vos.
Vos, Maarten de, 1532-1603Reference: 26957iPart of: The five senses (Martin de Vos)- Pictures
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Adam and Eve are driven from Eden by an angel. Etching by J.E. Ridinger after himself, c. 1750.
Ridinger, Johann Elias, 1698-1767.Reference: 20800i- Books
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The use and intent of prophecy, in the several ages of the world. In six discourses, delivered at the Temple-Church, in April and May, 1724. ... To which are added, four dissertations. ... The fourth edition, corrected and enlarged. By Tho. Sherlock, ...
Sherlock, Thomas, 1678-1761.Date: 1744- Pictures
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A serpent with a woman's head lurks in the Tree of Knowledge above Adam and Eve. Chromolithograph after Masolino.
Masolino, da Panicale, 1383-1440?Reference: 15635i- Pictures
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In the Garden of Eden, Eve offers Adam the apple. Line engraving by C. Galle after G.B. Paggi.
Paggi, Giovanni Battista, 1554-1627.Reference: 15625i- Pictures
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The temptation of Adam. Lithograph by N. Consoni after Raphael.
Raphael, 1483-1520.Reference: 20698i- Pictures
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A woman plays music to a stag; God condemns Adam and Eve to exile; representing the sense of hearing. Engraving by N. de Bruyn after M. de Vos.
Vos, Maarten de, 1532-1603Reference: 26959iPart of: The five senses (Martin de Vos)- Pictures
The knowledge of good and evil, and the consequences of that knowledge, with Adam and Eve and the serpent. Engraving by J. Sadeler, 1583, after M. de Vos.
Vos, Maarten de, 1532-1603.Date: 1583Reference: 46961i- Pictures
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A tortoise climbs up a female figure as she reaches out to a bird; in the background Adam and Eve are chased from Eden by the archangel Michael with his sword; representing the sense of touch. Engraving by N. de Bruyn after M. de Vos.
Vos, Maarten de, 1532-1603Reference: 26960iPart of: The five senses (Martin de Vos)- Books
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The original and present state of man, briefly considered: wherein is shewn, the nature of his fall, and the necessity, means and manner of his restoration, through the sacrifice of Christ, and the sensible operation of that divine principle of grace and truth, held fort to the world, by the people called Quakers. To which are added, some remarks on the arguments of Samuel Newton, of Norwich. By Joseph Phipps. [Two lines from I. Timothy]
Phipps, Joseph, 1708-1787.Date: M.DCC.LXXXVIII. [1788]- Pictures
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A serpent/woman coils around the tree of life which stands between Adam and Eve. Engraving by J.T. Richomme, 1814, after Raphaël.
Raphael, 1483-1520.Date: 1814Reference: 20697i- Pictures
Adam and Eve are expelled from Eden by a sword-bearing angel. Lithograph by N. Consoni after Raphael.
Raphael, 1483-1520.Date: 1800-1899Reference: 20700i- Books
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The state of innocence, and fall of man. An opera. Written in heroick verse, by Mr. Dryden.
Dryden, John, 1631-1700.Date: MDCCXXXV. [1735]- Pictures
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Eve receives the forbidden fruit from a serpent in the shape of a woman; the angel expels Adam and Eve from paradise. Engraving by A. Capellan, 1772, after Michelangelo.
Michelangelo Buonarroti, 1475-1564.Date: [1773]Reference: 20426i- Books
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An examination of the Lord Bishop of London's discourses concerning the use and intent of prophecy. With Some cursory Animadversions on his late Appendix, or Additional Dissertation, Containing a farther Inquiry into the Mosaic Account of the Fall. In which These following Points are chiefly explaned and affirmed. I. That the use of Prophecy, as it was taught and practised by Christ, His Apostles, and Evangelists, was drawn intirely from single and separate praedictions, gathered by them from the books of the Law and the Prophets, and applied, independently on each other, to the several acts and circumstances of the Life of Jesus, as so many distinct proofs of his Divine Mission, And consequently, that His Lordship's pretended chain of Antediluvian Prophecies, is nothing else, but a fancifull conceit, which has no connection at all with the evidences of the Gospel. II. That the Bishop's exposition of his text is forced, unnatural, and inconsistent with the sense of St. Peter, from whose Epistle it is taken. III. That the Historical Interpretation, which He gives to the Account of the Fall, is absurd and contradictory to reason: and that the said account cannot be considered, under any other character, than that of Allegory, Apologue, or Moral Fable. IV. That the Oracles of the Heathen World, which His Lordship declares to have been given out by the Devil, in the form of a Serpent, were all impostures, wholly managed by human craft, without any supernatural aid, or interposition whatsoever. By Conyers Middleton, D.D.
Middleton, Conyers, 1683-1750.Date: MDCCL. [1750]- Pictures
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Eve is reproached for eating the forbidden fruit. Etching by J.E. Ridinger after himself, c. 1750.
Ridinger, Johann Elias, 1698-1767.Reference: 20796i