FLO4658167: Woman of Majorca, Spain, 19th century. She wears a white veil over a fichu-wimple combination, blue bodice, white petticoat trimmed with floral design. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Georges Jacques Gatine after an illustration by Louis Marie Lante from Costumes of Various Countries, Costumes de Divers Pays, Paris, 1827., Gatine, Georges Jacques (1773-1831) / Bridgeman Images
FLO4658222: Married woman of Coburg, Franconia, Germany, 19th century. She wears an embroidered cap of pleated chiffon, and a full cape of rich cloth, decorated with gold braid. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Georges Jacques Gatine after an illustration by Louis Marie Lante from Costumes of Various Countries, Costumes de Divers Pays, Paris, 1827., Gatine, Georges Jacques (1773-1831) / Bridgeman Images
FLO4658228: Servant girl of Coburg, Franconia, Germany, 19th century. She wears her hair is tied up in a bun, laced bodice with ribbons, short sleeves, and full pleated petticoats. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Georges Jacques Gatine after an illustration by Louis Marie Lante from Costumes of Various Countries, Costumes de Divers Pays, Paris, 1827., Gatine, Georges Jacques (1773-1831) / Bridgeman Images
FLO4658293: Young woman of the vallee d'Aure, France, 19th century. She wears the Pyrenean capulet or hood over her head and shoulders, fichu, apron and petticoats. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Georges Jacques Gatine after an illustration by Louis Marie Lante from Costumes of Various Countries, Costumes de Divers Pays, Paris, 1827., Gatine, Georges Jacques (1773-1831) / Bridgeman Images
FLO4658394: Straw hat merchant - Straw hat seller, Paris, early 19th century, in white dress with frilled cuffs and hem, lace collar and bonnet - Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Gatine after an illustration by Louis-Marie Lante from “” Ouvrieres de Paris” (Tradeswomen of Paris), Paris, 1823 / Bridgeman Images
FLO4658402: Bouquetiere - Flower seller, Paris, early 19th century, in red dress, white apron and bonnet, carrying a basket of flowers - Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Gatine after an illustration by Louis-Marie Lante from “” Ouvrieres de Paris” (Tradeswomen of Paris), Paris, 1823 / Bridgeman Images
FLO4658409: Merchant de toile - Fabric seller, early 19th century, in black apron over white dress, bonnet and gloves, carrying a bolt of cloth and measure - Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Gatine after an illustration by Louis-Marie Lante from “” Ouvrieres de Paris” (Tradeswomen of Paris), Paris, 1823 / Bridgeman Images
FLO4658434: Demoiselle de boutique - Shop girl of Paris, wearing a bonnet, lace collar and long coat and carrying a bolt of fabric - Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Gatine after an illustration by Louis-Marie Lante from “” Ouvrieres de Paris”” (Tradeswomen of Paris), Paris, 1823 / Bridgeman Images
FLO4661611: White monseron agaric (Calocybe gambosa, Agaricus albellus) and strong odour agaric (Agaricus graveolens). Chromolithography of C.Krause, based on an illustration by Fritz Leuba (1848-1910), in Les champignons edibles et les especes veneneuses with which they could be confused, published by Delachaux and Niestle, in Neuchatel, Switzerland, in 1890. / Bridgeman Images
FLO4661628: Sulphur-coloured agaric (Agaricus sulphureus) and odorant agaric (Agaricus odorus). Chromolithography of C.Krause, based on an illustration by Fritz Leuba (1848-1910), in Les champignons edibles et les especes veneneuses with which they could be confused, published by Delachaux and Niestle, in Neuchatel, Switzerland, in 1890. / Bridgeman Images
FLO4661639: Edible agaric ecarlate (Agaricus coccineus) and Conical Agaric (Agaricus conicus). Chromolithography of C.Krause, based on an illustration by Fritz Leuba (1848-1910), in Les champignons edibles et les especes veneneuses with which they could be confused, published by Delachaux and Niestle, in Neuchatel, Switzerland, in 1890. / Bridgeman Images
FLO4661671: Viscous agaric (Agaricus viscidus) and glutinous agaric (Agaricus glutinosus), edible. Chromolithography of C.Krause, based on an illustration by Fritz Leuba (1848-1910), in Les champignons edibles et les especes veneneuses with which they could be confused, published by Delachaux and Niestle, in Neuchatel, Switzerland, in 1890. / Bridgeman Images
PIX4661707: Cotylorhynchus - Cotylorhynchus was a large mammalian reptile (Synapside, Pelycosaur) living herbivorous from early Permian to mid-Permian (299 to 265 million years). They were the largest terrestrial animals of their time, measuring 6 metres long and weighing two tons. Giant, 20-foot-long and one-ton synapsids of the genus Cotylorhynchus forage in an Early Permian swamp 275 million years ago in what is today North America. Also in this image on the lower left is a 3-foot long lepospondyl amphibian of the genus Diplocaulus. Vegetation includes ferns and horsetails in the foreground and on the horizon is a forest of ginkgos. Cotylorhynchus is the largest known non-mammalian synapsid and was the largest land animal of its time. An herbivore, Cotylorhynchus had a massive barrel-shaped body and limbs with a relatively small head, making it perhaps one of the most unattractive land animals to have ever walked the Earth. Standing about 6 feet tall at the shoulder Cotylorhynchus probably had no predators; even the fierce Dimetrodon (also a synapsid) weighed little more than 300 pounds compared to Cotylorhynchus' 2,000 / Bridgeman Images
PIX4661798: Postosuchus - Postosuchus was a 5-metre-long, 4-ton Triassic predator living in North America. He is a close relative of the crocodiles we know today. A 12-foot-long, 1,000 pound rauisuchian archosaur of the genus Postosuchus wanders a hilltop 220 million years ago in what is today Texas. Surrounding the Postosuchus are various cycads, ferns, and tree-like Glossopteridales. With a crocodile-like body and tyrannosaurlike head, Postosuchus was likely a fierce apex predator that preyed upon Dicynodonts and other animals smaller than itself, including some of the first dinosaurs / Bridgeman Images
FLO4661806: Hydne sinuous (Hydnum repandum) and edible hydna (Hydnum imbricatum). Chromolithography of C.Krause, based on an illustration by Fritz Leuba (1848-1910), in Les champignons edibles et les especes veneneuses with which they could be confused, published by Delachaux and Niestle, in Neuchatel, Switzerland, in 1890. / Bridgeman Images
FLO4661810: Cluster clavary (Clavaria botrytis), edible. Chromolithography of C.Krause, based on an illustration by Fritz Leuba (1848-1910), in Les champignons edibles et les especes veneneuses with which they could be confused, published by Delachaux and Niestle, in Neuchatel, Switzerland, in 1890. / Bridgeman Images
FLO4661826: Shade clavary, (Clavaria umbraticola), suspect. Chromolithography of C.Krause, based on an illustration by Fritz Leuba (1848-1910), in Les champignons edibles et les especes veneneuses with which they could be confused, published by Delachaux and Niestle, in Neuchatel, Switzerland, in 1890. / Bridgeman Images
FLO4661852: Conical morel (Morchella conica), edible. Chromolithography of C.Krause, based on an illustration by Fritz Leuba (1848-1910), in Les champignons edibles et les especes veneneuses with which they could be confused, published by Delachaux and Niestle, in Neuchatel, Switzerland, in 1890. / Bridgeman Images
FLO4661882: Hygrometric (Geastrum hygrometricum) and blackish bovist (Bovista nigrescens), edible. Chromolithography of C.Krause, based on an illustration by Fritz Leuba (1848-1910), in Les champignons edibles et les especes veneneuses with which they could be confused, published by Delachaux and Niestle, in Neuchatel, Switzerland, in 1890. / Bridgeman Images
PIX4661948: Nothosaurus - A nothosaurus mirabilis tries to catch a fish (saurichthys). The genus Nothosaurus, meaning mixed lezard, belongs to the family Nothosaurides (Sauropterygia), who lived in the Triassic from -240 to -210 million years. The amphibious Triassic reptile Nothosaurus mirabilis gathers itself to launch after the fish Saurichthys on a shore of what is now Germany. Nothosaurus mirabilis is an extinct genus of sauropterygian reptile from the Triassic period, approximately 240-210 million years ago, with fossils being distributed from North Africa and Europe to China. It is the best known member of the nothosaur order. Its name means False lizard / Bridgeman Images
FLO4662018: English dandies in side-buttoned fencing jackets, gloves and masks at a fencing school, 1820. Jerry's admiration of Tom in an Assault with Mr. O'Shaunessy at the Rooms in St. James's Street. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Isaac Robert Cruikshank and George Cruikshank from Pierce EGAN's Life in London, Sherwood, Jones, London, 1823. / Bridgeman Images
FLO4659760: Cresson Alenois (Lepidium sativum) Coloured copper prints from a drawing by B. Thanner by Johannes Zorn “Afbeeldingen der Artseny-Gewassen”” (Icons de plantes medicinales) published by Jan Christiaan Sepp in 1796. Zorn (1739-1799) was a German pharmacist and botanist who travelled all over Europe looking for medicinal plants. / Bridgeman Images