XEE4136851: A young woman wearing white, holding an open book, accompanied by her mother, wearing black with a sad face, sitting on a bench in front of a landscape on the Mediterranean coast. Behind them, a man leans over the young woman's shoulder. Illustration for White Wedding, by Jules Lemaitre (1853-1914). Engraving by Fortune Meaulle (1844-1901), 1890 in “” La vie populaire””. Private Collection, Meaulle, Fortune Louis (1844-1901) / Bridgeman Images
XEE4136891: A couple of peasants, the man in a blouse and hoof, jumped the young woman who pushed him back with a smile and light. Illustration by E. Bertin for Les twenty five francs de la superieure by Guy de Maupassant (1850-1893). Engraving by Fortune Meaulle (1844-1901), 1890 in “” La vie populaire””. Private Collection, Meaulle, Fortune Louis (1844-1901) / Bridgeman Images
XEE4158868: rebellion of the Alsatian and lorraine conscripts is an engraving by F. Meaulle representing the conscripts go with reluctantly to Germany, extracted from the illustrated supplement of the Petity Journal, on november 1st, 1896 - Rebellion des conscrits Alsatiens-Lorrains - les reticences des appeles Alsatiens et Lorrains to military service in Germany (the Alsace and Lorraine formed a province ruled by the Emperor of Prussia), from the illustrious supplement of the Peer Journal, November 1, 1896, Meaulle, Fortune Louis (1844-1901) / Bridgeman Images
LSE4326753: Spanish sentinel watching the coastlines, from an observation post installed in the canopy of a coconut tree, to prevent any attempt to bark American troops during the American Hispano War in 1898 for the independence of Cuba. Engraving in "Le petit journal" 12/6/1898. Selva Collection., Meaulle, Fortune Louis (1844-1901) / Bridgeman Images
PCT4270576: Andromaque: engraving (1883) by Meaulle after a painting by Georges Rochegrosse (1859-1938). In the hands of the Greek soldiers, Andromaque tries to hold his son Astyanax, taken away by a Thracian hoplite who will hand him over to Odysseus (Ulysses). The latter waits for Hector's son at the top of the stairs, to precipitate him from the top of the ramparts. At the beginning of the staircase, the Svastika (gammee cross), a symbol discovered shortly before by the archeologist Heinrich Schliemann (1822-1890) on the walls of the ancient city of Troy., Meaulle, Fortune Louis (1844-1901) / Bridgeman Images