- GB 2014 WS-03-PIC-003/79
- Item
- 19th century
Landscape of a rural scene, with the Thames and St. Paul's in the distance. There are two figures in the left foreground and three horses to the right. there is light from the setting sun in the west.
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Landscape of a rural scene, with the Thames and St. Paul's in the distance. There are two figures in the left foreground and three horses to the right. there is light from the setting sun in the west.
View of Great College Street by William Capon
Capon, William, 1757-1827
View from Liddell's Arch by Augustus Pugin
Pugin, Augustus, 1812-1852
View from Grant's Housemaster's Study by Chris Clarke
Clarke, Chris
Victorian three-lights Corinthian Column Candelabras (pair)
Silver-plated. Inscription: 'These Candelabra were given to the Queen's Scholars of Westminster in memory of Charles Fell Watherson C.B., QS 1888-1893 sometime Governor of the School'. One base repaired.
William Hutton & Sons Ltd
Radiating scallop rim dish base with flat-chased foliate rim, glass well cut with similar cartouches, the neck matching the base with domed cover. Makers Mark reads S.C.
Via Devia: The By-Way: Misleading the weak and unstable into dangerous paths of error.
Lynde, Sir Humphrey, 1579-1636
Lynde, Sir Humphrey, 1579-1636
Vetus Testamentum graecum ex versione septuaginta interpretum
Title in red and black with engraved vignette, title in Latin and Greek, preface in Latin, text in double-column in Greek. First printing in England of the Septuagint, the earliest translation of the Hebrew Old Testament into Greek. Edited by the Unitarian controversialist John Biddle (1615-1662), who was imprisoned by the Parliamentary Commissioners for his religious opinions. "Roger Daniel's version of the text of the Sixtine edition [was] prepared for the use of the scholars at Westminster School. This appeared in 1653 and was edited by the Socinian, John Biddle. Its publication may have owed something to the interest in the Septuagint generated by Codex Alexandrinus and the frustration produced by the failure of Young's attempts to edit it" (S. Mandelbrote, "English Scholarship and the Greek Text of the Old Testament", p. 87).