362 results filtered with: Pictures
- Pictures
A chemist portrayed as a devil concocting poisons. Lithograph, 192- (?).
Ponstijn, Jan, 1883-1970.Date: [between 1920 and 1929?]Reference: 995807i- Pictures
Clear labelling of poison bottles to prevent accidental poisoning. Colour lithograph by A. Th. Schwarz, 1926/1939.
Schwarz, A. Th.Date: [between 1926 and 1939]Reference: 667821i- Pictures
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The suicide of Sophonisba: Sophonisba is sitting on a chair taking the poison Masinissa sent her. Etching.
Date: 1700-1799Reference: 42980i- Pictures
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An episode in Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens: a crowd gathers around Mr Mantalini who has attempted to poison himself. Etching after Phiz (Hablot K. Browne).
Browne, Hablot Knight, 1815-1882.Date: [1839]Reference: 43002i- Pictures
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A gigantic human skull, representing death, spewing out poison in the form of warships armed with poison gas. Colour lithograph, 192-.
Date: [between 1920 and 1929]Reference: 640518i- Pictures
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Queen Eleanor sucking the poison from King Edward I's arm. Line engraving by Brown after W.M. Craig.
Craig, William Marshall, 1763 or 1764-1829.Reference: 18576i- Pictures
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Romeo giving money to an apothecary for a poison that will enable him to kill himself. Mezzotint, 17--.
Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616.Date: [between 1700 and 1799]Reference: 15907i- Pictures
Poisonous and suspect mushrooms. Colour lithograph by E. W. Raschke, 1926 (?).
Raschke, Ernst Walter.Date: [1926?]Reference: 2005270iPart of: Graser's naturwissenschaftliche und landwirtliche Tafel- Pictures
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Queen Eleanor sucking the poison from King Edward's arm. Coloured stipple etching by Wynne Ryland, 1780, after A. Kauffman.
Kauffmann, Angelica, 1741-1807.Date: 1 March 1780Reference: 18578i- Pictures
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Queen Eleanor sucking the poison from King Edward's arm. Coloured stipple etching by W. Wynne Ryland, 1780, after A. Kauffman.
Kauffmann, Angelica, 1741-1807.Date: 1 March 1780Reference: 18580i- Pictures
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The death mask of William Palmer, the poisoner. Lithograph after M. Krantz, c. 1860.
Date: [c. 1860]Reference: 28209i- Pictures
Napoleon Bonaparte instructing the doctor to poison the plague victims at Jaffa in 1799. Coloured aquatint by G. Cruikshank, 1814.
Cruikshank, George, 1792-1878.Date: 29 November 1814Reference: 10104i- Pictures
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A young woman rushes to the aid of a woman (Lady Strawberry) fainting into the arms of servants after taking poison, with her distressed husband (Lord Strawberry) standing nearby. Aquatint.
Bishop, Thomas.Date: 1811Reference: 42827i- Pictures
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Poison primula (Primula obconica): flowering plant. Chromolithograph, c. 1897, after H. Moon.
Moon, Henry George, 1857-1905.Date: [1897]Reference: 25887i- Pictures
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Two Shiva devotees known for extracting the poison from a scorpion's bite. Gouache drawing.
Reference: 32948i- Pictures
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The strangling of a poisonous snake, representing the crushing of tuberculosis. Colour lithograph after G. Dorival and G. Capon, ca. 1918.
Commission américaine de préservation contre la tuberculose en France.Date: [1918?]Reference: 47641i- Pictures
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A medicine vendor selling antidotes to snake poison. Etching by G.M. Mitelli.
Mitelli, Giuseppe Maria, 1634-1718.Reference: 20538i- Pictures
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Sarawak: a Kenyah worker collecting the poison from an upas tree trunk. Photograph.
Reference: 30402i- Pictures
A rat, rat poison and a rat about to eat rat poison. Colour lithograph after S. Moisés, 1981.
Date: 1981Reference: 824423i- Pictures
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King Edward I of England, wounded in the arm during a Crusade, has the poison sucked from the wound by Queen Eleanor. Lithograph by J. Linnell, 1845, after J. Severn.
Severn, Joseph, 1793-1879.Date: [1845]Reference: 548177i- Pictures
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King James I of England on his deathbed, attended by courtiers trying to poison him. Etching by or after W. Hollar, ca. 1672.
Hollar, Wenceslaus, 1607-1677.Date: 1672Reference: 36283i- Pictures
X-rays of two hands, before and after inadequate cleaning, showing residual traces of lead dust as a cause of lead poisoning. Colour lithograph by W. Mahler, 1953 (?).
Mahler, W. (Designer)Date: X 53 [October 1953?]Reference: 2000566i- Pictures
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Prevention of food poisoning by cooling hot meat and keeping cold meat covered. Colour lithograph, ca. 1965.
Date: [1965?]Reference: 576179i- Pictures
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A skull and cross bones representing a warning about the dangers of handling toxic substances in Ethiopia. Colour lithograph for the World Health Organisation, 2000.
Date: 2000Reference: 752627i- Pictures
A lamb-shaped vegetable called Tartarian lamb or Scythian lamb, reputed to allow no other plants to grow near it. Aquatint by J. Halfpenny, 1787.
Date: [1787]Reference: 2496789i