22 results
- Pictures
- Online
Zoological Society of London: three jackals. Coloured etching by W. Panormo.
Panormo, William, 1796-1867.Reference: 42387i- Pictures
- Online
Two jackals standing near their lair outside a village. Coloured etching.
Reference: 42186i- Pictures
A jackal. Wood-engraving by T. Bewick, 178-.
Bewick, Thomas, 1753-1828.Date: [between 1790 and 1799?]Reference: 751206i- Books
- Online
A supplementary letter on the identity of the species of the dog, wolf, and jackal / from John Hunter, addressed to Sir Joseph Banks.
Hunter, John, 1728-1793.Date: 1789]- Books
- Online
Observations tending to shew that the wolf, jackal, and dog, are all of the same species / By John Hunter.
Hunter, John, 1728-1793.Date: 1787]- Pictures
- Online
Above, a pair of bears with two cubs on a crag of a mountain with one bear roaring as one cub is killed by an arrow. Below, a pack of jackals running under the mountain crag leaving bones behind. Coloured chalk lithograph.
Reference: 40225i- Pictures
- Online
Vasudeva carrying a baby Krishna encountering a cobra and jackal. Watercolour drawing.
Reference: 26887i- Pictures
- Online
The court of the jackal raja. Watercolour drawing c. 1870.
Reference: 26724i- Digital Images
- Online
Egyptology, Wooden figure of a jackal.
- Digital Images
- Online
Medicine man's bag, jackal's skin, with head in situ. Uganda
- Books
- Online
The Lion extricated; or, The Jackall's defeat: a fable, in three cantos.
Date: MDCCLXXVII. [1777]- Pictures
- Online
Animals from different parts of the world, including an elephant, a lynx, a camel and a jackall. Etching by T. Morris.
Date: [1785]Reference: 42183i- Pictures
- Online
Animals from different parts of the world, including an elephant, a lynx, a camel and a jackall. Etching by T. Morris.
Date: [1785]Reference: 42166i- Digital Images
- Online
Limestone jackal-headed canopic jar, used to house removed stomach, liver, lungs and intestines, each organ assigned to a different jar, from a mummified Egyptian body. This jar represents Duamutef, one of the four sons of Horus, and is the guardian of the stomach
- Digital Images
- Online
Limestone jackal-headed canopic jar, used to house removed stomach, liver, lungs and intestines, each organ assigned to a different jar, from a mummified Egyptian body. This jar represents Duamutef, one of the four sons of Horus, and is the guardian of the stomach
- Pictures
- Online
Above, a jackall, a fox, a wolf and two dogs; below, a bulldog, a Coach dog, a greyhound, a chamois goat and an ibex. Etching by Heath.
Date: 1 May 1806Reference: 40490i- Videos
The sexual imperative. Part 3, A time and a place.
Date: 1993- Books
- Online
Exeter-Change. The following is a catalogue of part of the capital collection of birds and beasts now exhibiting at the grand menagerie in the Great Room, as above: A Royal Bengal Striped Tyger and Tygress, being the First ever exhibited at the above Place, much superior to any of the Kind in this Kingdom. - The Tygress was landed from the Duckingfield-Hall Indiaman, on the 14th of September, 1796. A ravenous hunting Tyger, from Bengal. An Asiatic Panther, from ditto. A beautiful Spotted Leopard, from Africa. A ravenous Laughing Hyaena. A wonderful Polar or Sea Lion; an amphibious Animal, which cannot live without being washed with Water every Day. A Jackall, or Lion's Provider. A ravenous Wolf, from Siberia, in Russia. A beautiful Antelope, from Asia. A large Tyger Cat; and a Muscovy or Civet Cat. A large Wild Man of the Woods, that walks upright, and is so extremely sagacious as to understand every Word the Keeper says to him. A Long-Armed Baboon; and a curious Ape, from Ape's-Hill, in Barbary. A stupendous Ostrich, Nine Feet high, from the Coast of Barbary. A Pelican of the Wilderness,-a Bird so remarkable as to be mentioned in Sacred History, that feeds it's Young ones with it's own Blood. A Royal Crown Crane, or Bird of Paradise. Two Condor Minor Vultures very rare and scarce. An Imperial Vulture, the largest ever seen in this Kingdom. A Golden Eagle, from Santa Cruz; and a Horned Owl, from Bohemia. And a Variety of other Animals and Birds, too numerous to insert. Admittance 1s. each Person. In an adjoining Apartment, is A wonderful Maif Elephant, which, although the largest Animal in the Creation, is so sagacious and tractable, as to be obedient to every Command of it's Keeper; and is so exceedingly tame, that Children frequently ride on it's Back with the greatest Safety, as the Den is well constructed for that Purpose. - Admittance 1s. each Person. In an Apartment under the Greatroom, is to be Seen from Obscurity, by A curious Appartus, Variety of Pleasing Perspectives and Public Animation, far excelling any thing of the Kind yet invented. Admission One Shilling each Person, or the Three Exhibitions for Half-a-Crown. N. B. Foreign Birds and Beasts bought, sold, or exchanged, by G. Pidcock, as above.
Date: [1800?]- Pictures
Attributes of Pañjaranātha, the tent protector, in a "rgyan tshogs" banner. Distemper painting by a Tibetan painter.
Reference: 47089iPart of: Fifteen banners from a Tibetan Protector chapel.- Pictures
Attributes of Putra-miṅ-sriṅ in a "rgyan tshogs" banner. Distemper painting by a Tibetan painter.
Reference: 47064iPart of: Fifteen banners from a Tibetan Protector chapel.- Pictures
Attributes of rDo-rje Grags-mo brGyal (Dorje Dragmogyel) in a "rgyan tshogs" banner. Distemper painting by a Tibetan painter.
Reference: 47077iPart of: Fifteen banners from a Tibetan Protector chapel.- Archives and manuscripts
Ballingall, Sir George (1780-1855), F.R.S., Regius Professor of Military Surgery at Edinburgh University
Ballingall, George, Sir, 1780-1855Date: 1808-1852Reference: MS.6905