FLO4677195: A little girl holds a score to two musicians of the Middle Ages, one playing the cello, the other playing the tuba (invented in the 19th century) - Lithography based on an illustration by J.E. Rogers, from Passe temps actuels de l'Engleterre heureuse, by Francis Cowley Burnand (1836-1917), 1873 - Young girl holding up a musical score for two medieval musicians playing cello and tuba (invented in the 19th century) - Handcoloured lithograph after an illustration by J. E. Rogers from Francis Cowley Burnand's “” Present Pastimes of Merrie England, Cassell, London, 1873 / Bridgeman Images
MPX5127563: The old sport of tilting at the quintain, one popular throughout medieval England, was revived at Offham, Maidstone, when the only quitain in the country was restored to the village green. It has been kept in safety from air raids all through the war. The Lord Lieutenant of Kent, Lord Corrnwallis, "reinstated" the quintain and took the first tilt at the quintain. Here Lord Lieutenant of Kent, Lord Cornwellis, takes the first try. It isn's so easy as it looks; the sand bag has a tricky habit of swinging back and hitting the tilter on the head. 11th August 1945 (b/w photo) / Bridgeman Images
FLO4677236: A Middle Ages man plays billiards with a woman who lays chalk on the tail she uses (billiards was only popular in the 19th century) - Lithograph based on an illustration by J.E. Rogers, from Passe temps actuels de l'Engleterre happy, by Francis Cowley Burnand (1836-1917), 1873 - Medieval man playing a game of snooker (pool) while a woman chalks her cue and watches (Snooker was not popular until the 19th century) - Handcoloured lithograph after an illustration by J. E. Rogers from Francis Cowley Burnand's “” Present Pastimes of Merrie England, Cassell, London, 1873 / Bridgeman Images
TEC4710216: Musee national du Moyen-Age (Middle Ages) et des thermal baths de Cluny, 6 place Paul Painleve, Paris 5. Built by Jacques d'Amboise (1440 or 1450-1516), 1498. Completion 1560. One of the most beautiful monuments of medieval civil architecture in Paris elevated at the iniative of the Abbes of Cluny by Jacques d'Amboise, brother of the Cardinal Minister.Restores after the ransacking of the Revolution, it now houses collections of sculptures and art objects of the Middle Ages. Repabtise since 1991, Musee national du Moyen-Age-Thermes de Cluny. Photography 1993. / Bridgeman Images