VEN5029600: Geographic Atlas: representation of the Caribbean Sea and the Greater Antilles (Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico and Jamaica), the Bahamas Islands, the South of the United States, the North of South America (Venezuela) and the Lesser Antilles. Map from an Atlas of American Odds by J. Rufsell, 1794s. Biblioteca Jose Marti, Havana, Cuba. / Bridgeman Images
ELD4886448: The Escape of Gustave I Vasa (or Gustav Vasa) (1496-1560) (future king of Sweden) disguise as a peasant to escape from Denmark, 1519 (Gustav Eriksson (Vasa) disguised as a bullocky escapes himself from Kalo, Denmark, 1519) Drawing a pen drawn from “” Historische Memorabilian des In-und Auslandes” (Historical Memories) by Anton Ziegler, 1840 Private Collection, Geiger, Peter Johann Nepomuk (1805-80) / Bridgeman Images
ICA4886637: Illustration of Francisco Sancha Lengo (1874-1936) - Flying leaf, circa 1915 - A carne de lobo diente de perro - War of 14 -18, Germany Prussia, England Great Britain, Belligerants and symbols, France, Spanish Language, Foreign Press - William II, Dog, Hidenburg - Animation, Sancha y Lengo, Francisco (1874-1936) / Bridgeman Images
ELD4889307: Dr Lanyon opens his door and discovers Mr Hyde vetus of clothes far too big, Illustration by Edmund Joseph Sullivan (1869-1933) for the novel L'Etrange Cas du dr Jekyll et de Mr Hyde” by Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) 1927 (Dr Lanyon opens his door at midnight to a small man in clothes too big for him: Mr Hyde, Jekyll had succeeded in separating out the duality in his nature, Hyde representing pure evil and Jekyll good, but eventually the antidote to the Hyde persona ceases to be effective - Illustration by Edmund Joseph Sullivan (1869-1933) from “” The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde””” by Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894), 1927 Private collection, Sullivan, Edmund Joseph (1869-1933) / Bridgeman Images
JEB4883630: Agar and Ismael: Ismael is Abraham's first son with Hagar (Agar), the Egyptian maid of his wife Sarah. After Isaac's birth, Ismael and Agar are hunted. They are saved while wandering through the desert by an angel who told them a well full of water. Painting attributed to Francesco Guardi (1712-1793). Oil on canvas, 18th century. 132 x 94 cm. Musee Grobet Labadie, Marseille. / Bridgeman Images