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Roman openwork gold ring with carnelian intaglio of a goddess, c. 1st-2nd centuries CE. From Timelin
Last lion of AlbionThey’ll use you for centuries to comeThey’ll steal your paten
Roman gold and glass earrings, c. 1st-3rd centuries CE. From Timeline Auctions
Silver Roman dress pin with bird figure, c. 2nd-3rd centuries BCE. From Timeline Auctions
cinoh: nybg: Decrypting the Most Mysterious Book in the World In the six or so centuries that it&rsq
“These eyes were closed for centuries, and I saw everything.”
Western Asiatic silver and electrum pendant in the shape of an antelope c. 8th to 6th centuries BCE.
214. Woodward, David. Five Centuries of Map Printing. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1975
kallenart: centuries REALLY makes me think of punk prucan gilbert
Q'eswachaka, the last rope bridge in the world, built 6 centuries ago by the Inca. People from a nea
Dragon, probably produced in Turkey, 17th-18th centuries (Met Museum).
Greek gold and blue glass earrings, c. 3rd-4th centuries CE. From Timeline Auctions
Candy Machine Vending Insert Card - Leaf Centuries bubble gum - 1981 by JasonLiebig on Flickr.
gemma-antiqua: Viking silver gilt filigree brooch, dated to the 9th to 11th centuries. Source: Timel
ronulicny:“The Legend Of The Centuries”, 1948 By: RENE MAGRITTE….
collectorsweekly:Bottled Up: Three Centuries of Whimsey Constructed Within Walls of Glass
Look what I’ve found! I sketched this one centuries ago and was sure it was lost forever but I
naked-atelier:Ralph Fleck, Freiburg, 1992. Foto Dieter BlumFor at least two centuries, people have b
Paris Catacombs By the light of torches, candles or miners lights, haunting scenes centuries old app
New NOVA TV Show Explores Coevolution of Rocks and Life“We’ve thought for centuries [tha
kurhanchyk: Ukrainian women. 19th and early 20th centuries.
Outdated moral values and customs, which have been forcibly imposed for centuries, should not be an
These poleheads were used in Friendly Society parades in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.&nb
An English “pudding” safety hat, worn by children in the 17th and 18th centuries
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