1,080 results filtered with: Pictures, Digital Images
- Pictures
- Online
Woman, front view, probably with elephantiasis of the neck (or goitre?), Abyssinia. Photograph, 1904.
Date: 1904Reference: 35004i- Pictures
- Online
Soldiers dismembering, torturing and killing civilians outside town fortifications, probably during a siege. Etching by R. de Hooghe [?].
Reference: 43613i- Pictures
- Online
A young man, probably showing some signs of Down's syndrome. Photograph by Davis & sons.
Shuttleworth, G. E. (George Edward), 1842-1928.Reference: 39114i- Pictures
Page 10: probably a scene from the Ramayana; Rama fighting his twin sons. Watercolour drawing.
Reference: 27009i- Digital Images
- Online
Joseph Wright. Probably made from the small original photographs popular in the 19th century.
Jas. Bacon and Sons- Digital Images
- Online
Cripples bath in Devonshire Hospital, Buxton. From an old slide probably taken from the prospectus.
- Pictures
- Online
Templates of the head of a boy, who probably has Down's syndrome. Two paper cut-outs.
Shuttleworth, G. E. (George Edward), 1842-1928.Reference: 39154i- Digital Images
- Online
Newspaper cutting; portrait of F.D. von Recklinghausen; probably from Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift, 1910, page 1767.
- Pictures
- Online
The German Hospital, Dalston: a room for two patients, probably in the new wing (1936). Photograph.
Date: [between 1900 and 1999]Reference: 42919i- Digital Images
- Online
Neck and thorax of a man with large swelling, probably a lympho-sarcoma, under the right ear
Mark, Leonard Portal- Pictures
- Online
X-ray photograph of a skull, probably from a person with Down's syndrome. Photograph by Finzi, 1913.
Finzi, Neville Samuel, 1881-1968.Date: 1913Reference: 39115i- Pictures
- Online
The German Hospital, Dalston: a room for a single patient, probably in the new wing (1936). Photograph.
Date: [between 1900 and 1999]Reference: 42918i- Pictures
- Online
A young woman with a large forehead, wrapped in a tartan shawl, probably in a hospital. Photograph.
Shuttleworth, G. E. (George Edward), 1842-1928.Reference: 39135i- Pictures
- Online
A curved pathway past a small garden, probably leading to a plague hospital in Bombay. Photograph, 1896/1897.
Date: 1896Reference: 37033i- Pictures
- Online
A goddess probably Parvati as Durga riding on a lion presenting an infant Ganesha to a woman. Chromolithograph.
Reference: 26222i- Pictures
Rash of pustules on the hand of a patient, probably suffering from smallpox. Watercolour by R. Carswell, 1831.
Carswell, Robert, Sir, 1793-1857.Date: 1831Reference: 576544i- Digital Images
- Online
Entrance to baths in Devonshire Hospital, Buxton circa 1910. From an old slide probably taken from a prospectus.
- Pictures
People with mental illness probably in Derby County Lunatic Asylum. Photographs attributed to E.W. Gregor, ca. 1895.
Gregor, Edmund William, active approximately 1894-1946.Date: [1895?]Reference: 816187i- Pictures
- Online
A beggar, probably with two amputated legs, leans on two wooden crutches. Etching by J.T. Smith, 1816.
Smith, John Thomas, 1766-1833.Date: 30 April 1816Reference: 44025i- Digital Images
- Online
Human skull inscribed for phrenological demonstration. One half accords with Gall's theories, the other, Spurzheim's. Probably of French origin.
- Digital Images
- Online
Human skull inscribed for phrenological demonstration. One half accords with Gall's theories, the other, Spurzheim's. Probably of French origin.
- Digital Images
- Online
Human skull inscribed for phrenological demonstration. One half accords with Gall's theories, the other, Spurzheim's. Probably of French origin.
- Digital Images
- Online
Human skull inscribed for phrenological demonstration. One half accords with Gall's theories, the other, Spurzheim's. Probably of French origin.
- Digital Images
- Online
Human skull inscribed for phrenological demonstration. One half accords with Gall's theories, the other, Spurzheim's. Probably of French origin.
- Digital Images
- Online
Human skull inscribed for phrenological demonstration. One half accords with Gall's theories, the other, Spurzheim's. Probably of French origin.