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18th-century artist Elizabeth Blackwell produced a beautiful herbal to pay off her husband's debts.
Read a #blogpost about her here https://t.co/AxbqTwLmYG.
She also features in our online exhibition https://t.co/nax2W25f8e
#WomensHistoryMonth #Herstory #WomenInHistory
Francis Kilvert writing in 1870 makes our #diary of the day
'This evening being May Eve I ought to have put some birch and wittan over the door to keep out the "old witch". But I was too lazy ... Let us hope the old witch will not come in the night. The young witches are welcome
Just received this image of two @tcdlibrary staff members taking a well deserved break from 'working from home' to celebrate #NationalTeaDay! Carlisle Buildings were located close to @tcddublin on D'Olier St. #Isolation #twometres
#WildlifeWednesday has hopped around again, so here are some more of the strays. These pictures of dendrolagus inustus and dendrolagus ursinus were supposed to be cancelled once Gould received updated versions with text.
Join us for our Heritage Week event next Tuesday: a talk about the military illustrations bequeathed to the Library by William Smith in 1832. Register here https://t.co/m9BxLV1hBv #heritageweek
This gorgeous 17thC tulip catalogue from the #FagelCollection was on view today for King Willem-Alexander and Queen Máxima of the Netherlands visit to @tcdlibrary as part of their State visit to Ireland. Read more about it in our blog https://t.co/ZZaucHo25F
From the @TrinityMed1 archives. When medical illustration were easier to reproduce in publications than photographs. Seward is the name of the artist. #explorearchives #archivescience
Two images from John Gould's gorgeous 3-vol Mammals of Australia, published 1845-1863, shelfmark Fag. HH.3.6-8, for #AustraliaDay