2,198 results filtered with: Pictures, Digital Images
- Digital Images
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Garden with pavilion
Lillias Anna Hamilton- Digital Images
- Online
Garden Flaxe. Woodcut engraving, 1597.
- Digital Images
- Online
Garden Room. Palliative care. NHS Trust, UK
Hedley Finn, The King's Fund, Wellcome Collection- Digital Images
- Online
Garden. Dementia care ward. NHS Trust, UK.
Hedley Finn, The King's Fund, Wellcome Collection- Pictures
- Online
Garden pansies (Viola cultivars): three flowers. Coloured aquatint, c. 1839.
Date: [1839]Reference: 25304i- Pictures
Garden of John Penn, St. James's Park, London: a charity fair for Charing Cross Hospital. Lithograph by G. Scharf, 1830.
Scharf, George, 1788-1860.Date: 1830Reference: 39601i- Pictures
- Online
Garden poppy (Papaver sp.): flowering and fruiting stem. Aquatint by Warner, c.1807, after P. Henderson.
Henderson, Peter, active 1799-1829.Date: 1807Reference: 18322i- Pictures
Garden of John Penn, St James's Park: A charity fair for Charing Cross Hospital. Coloured lithograph by G. Scharf, 1830.
Scharf, George, 1788-1860.Date: 1830Reference: 39600i- Pictures
- Online
Garden Gardinia or Cape jasmine (Gardenia augusta (L.) Merr.): branch with flowers and fruit and separate flowers and fruit. Coloured line engraving.
Date: [1686]Reference: 16263i- Pictures
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Garden rocket (Eruca vesicaria (L.) Cav. subsp. sativa (Miller) Thell.): flowering and fruiting stem with separate fruit and seeds. Coloured etching by M. Bouchard, 177-.
Reference: 17192i- Digital Images
- Online
Gardenia jasminoides J.Ellis Rubiaceae. Cape jasmine - as erroneously believed to have come from South Africa. Distribution: China. Named for Dr Alexander Garden FRS (1730-1791) Scottish-born physician and naturalist who lived in Charles Town, South Carolina, and corresponded with Linnaeus and many of the botanists of his era. The fruits are used in China both as a source of a yellow dye, and for various unsubstantiated medicinal uses. Other species of Gardenia are found in tropical Africa and the roots and leaves have all manner of putative uses. Gardenia tenuifolia is used as an aphrodisiac, for rickets, diarrhoea, leprosy, gall bladder problems, toothache, liver complaints, diabetes, hypertension, malaria and abdominal complaints. It causes violent vomiting and diarrhoea. It, and other species, are used to poison arrows and to poison fish. Some native, muthi medicine, healers regard Gardenia as a ‘last chance’ medicine, given to patients when all else fails – the patient either dies or recovers (Neuwinger, 1996). Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Pictures
- Online
Gardening: a man digging in a walled garden. Wood engraving.
Reference: 496871i- Pictures
Gardening: methods of grafting on tree branches. Engraving by H. Mutlow.
Reference: 496872i- Pictures
Gardens: eight scenes of gardeners working. Etching in sepia by W. H. Pyne, 1807, after himself.
Pyne, W. H. (William Henry), 1769-1843.Date: 1807Reference: 496922i- Pictures
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Gardeners at work in the gardens of Denham Court, Buckinghamshire. Engraving by W. Hollar, 17th century, after F. Cleyn.
Cleyn, Franz, 1590?-1658.Reference: 26672i- Pictures
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Gardens: a gardener tying the trunks of young trees to support posts. Engraving.
Reference: 496889i- Pictures
- Online
Gardens of the Acclimatisation Society in Paris: peacocks and other birds. Coloured wood engraving.
Reference: 42425i- Digital Images
- Online
Garden spider
Kevin Mackenzie, University of Aberdeen- Digital Images
- Online
Herbalist' Garden.
Rowan McOnegal- Digital Images
- Online
Lactuca sativa (Garden lettuce)
Rowan McOnegal- Pictures
- Online
Peter Garden aged 131. Engraving.
Reference: 302i- Digital Images
- Online
Thymus Vulgaris (Garden Thyme)
Rowan McOnegal- Digital Images
- Online
Herbalist's Garden (Rowan McOnegal)
Rowan McOnegal- Digital Images
- Online
Pharmaceutical beds at Chelsea Phy Garden
Sue Snell- Digital Images
- Online
Pharmaceutical beds at Chelsea Phy Garden
Sue Snell