85 results
- Pictures
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The interior of a dingy smoke den where groups of men smoke, drink and play cards. Engraving by P. Moitte, 18th century, after a painting by D. Teniers, the younger.
Teniers, David, 1610-1690.Date: [between 1700 and 1799]Reference: 24728i- Pictures
- Online
Five men drinking and smoking round a table in a large open room. Mezzotint after a painting by A. van Ostade, 1665.
Ostade, Adriaen van, 1610-1685.Date: 1665Reference: 24700i- Pictures
- Online
Members of the Noble Order of Bucks drinking and smoking. Engraving and etching, c. 1756.
Date: 1756Reference: 26274i- Pictures
- Online
Three men carousing beneath a mulberry tree, with verses of a song comparing the life of humans to the life of a tree. Etching after I. Cruikshank, 1808.
Cruikshank, Isaac, 1764-1811Date: 1 March 1808Reference: 26292i- Pictures
- Online
A Dutch tavern interior with three men smoking and drinking in the foreground. Engraving by J. Beauvarlet, 1755, after A. van Ostade.
Ostade, Adriaen van, 1610-1685.Date: [1760?]Reference: 26807i- Pictures
- Online
A witch at her cauldron surrounded by monsters. Etching by Jan van de Velde II, 1626.
Velde, Jan van de, 1593-1641.Date: 1626Reference: 37703i- Pictures
- Online
Two men play cards at a table as others watch, smoke and drink in a dingy smoke den. Mezzotint by W. Baillie, 1771, after D. Teniers the younger.
Teniers, David, 1610-1690.Date: Publish'd 23 Dec.r 1771Reference: 24736i- Pictures
- Online
A drunken party with men smoking, sleeping and falling to the floor. Engraving by W. Hogarth, 1731, after himself.
Hogarth, William, 1697-1764.Date: 1731Reference: 24847i- Pictures
- Online
Policemen apprehend a pickpocket taking a license from a publican; representing the value to the government of publicans' licenses. Chromolithograph by T. Merry, 1890, after himself.
Merry, Tom, 1852-1902.Date: 24 May 1890Reference: 26065i- Books
- Online
An Act to continue several laws relating to the better securing the lawful trade of His Majesty's subjects to and from the East Indies, and for the more effectual preventing all His Majesty's subjects trading thither under foreign commissions; to the importing salt from Europe into the province of Quebec in America; to the permitting the free importation of raw goat skins into this kingdom; to the allowing the exportation of certain quantities of wheat, and other articles, to His Majesty's sugar colonies in America; and to the permitting the exportation of tobacco-pipe clay from this kingdom to the British sugar colonies or plantations in the West Indies.
Great Britain.Date: 1780]