BL3297515: КоммуниÑтичеÑкий рай. The Communist Paradise. (Two pictures. [Colour]. The top one depicts Lenin, Trotsky and others, feasting at a table laden with fine food and drink. Lenin is proposing a toast. The text reads: "I drink to those who we have liberated from violence and hunger, to those whom we have given the opportunity to see the Communist paradise." The bottom picture depicts a Red Army soldier guarding a locked and bolted bakery, plastered in signs reading 'No bread'. Ragged and starving people are begging outside the shop. In the street lie dead people and animals, while in the background Red Army soldiers drive by drinking. The text reads: "The Communist Paradise"]) / Bridgeman Images
BL3297603: Sanctorale, Anniversary of the Dedication of Sherborne Abbey church, 18th July. Text page with initial 'O', St. Kenelm, as king, with halbert. Initial 'T', St. Kenelm as bishop blessing the church, and devil fleeing. Abbot Bruyning with hounds, and Christ with the publican Zacchaeus. Marginal decoration / Bridgeman Images
BL3297605: Verkhovnyĭ praviteslʹ Rossii Admiral Aleksandr Vasilʹevich Kolchak / Pomoshʹ anglichan Armiiam iuga Rossii (Series of photographs) Alexander Vasilyevich Kolchak (1874 – 1920) was a polar explorer and commander in the Imperial Russian Navy, who fought in the Russo-Japanese War and the First World War. During the Russian Civil War, he established an anti-communist government in Siberia and was recognised as the "Supreme Ruler and Commander-in-Chief of All Russian Land and Sea Forces" by the other leaders of the White movement from 1918 to 1920. / Bridgeman Images
BL3297615: Na frontie / Glavnokomanduiushchii Vooruzhennymi Silami na lugie Rossii General Leitenant Anton Ivanovich Denikin Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Southern Russia, General Lieutenant Anton Ivanovich Denikin Anton Ivanovich Denikin (1872 - 1947) was a Lieutenant General of the Imperial Russian Army (1916) and afterwards a leading general of the White movement in the Russian Civil War. / Bridgeman Images