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French troops crossing the Yser in 1917.
Troupes françaises traversant l’Yser en 1917.
#Passchendaele #WW1 #GWG @Stbslam @C_VargasHarle
Pescadores en la laguna
Guglielmo Ciardi , nació el 13 de septiembre de 1842, falleció el 5 de octubre de 1917.
Chic Summer blouse and skirt combos from the Delineator for June 1917. Perfect pink for tennis, chequers for strolling. Parasol or umbrella for you today madam?
Children's book in the park: Russian wonder tales, by P Wheeler and Ivan Bilibin........1917......https://t.co/nDb4ROhPzW #KidsLit #ChildrensBooks
31 July 1917. The 3rd Battle of Ypres (Passchendaele) in WW1 began in Belgium as British forces attacked the German Army.
Men of the 13th Bn. Royal Scots make their way up a communication trench on the outskirts of Ypres in the late summer of 1917. #ww1 #illustration
Consider what happened in Russia during the six months following February 27, 1917. (https://t.co/4Kw84yaBRg)
A2 sketch of 'Moonlit Waders' Winter 1917. Another #WW1 sketch from my #IsolationLife #drawingismylife #isolationcreation @SommeAssoc @sommecourt @Barney065 @TheWFA @artistsrifles @FlandersWW1 @RibbonofPoppies @poppypride1 @PoppyLegion @WW1_Education @CWGC #wewillrememberthem
Hunting Party - Bristol F2B, Lieutenant Keith Park leading, 1917. Art by Lee Lacey.
This graphic history tells the story of Canada’s first national internment operations through the eyes of John Boychuk, an internee held in Kapuskasing from 1914 to 1917. https://t.co/4ACFRTc7is @readBTLbooks #spons
A little late I know, but here's the third of the #SixFanartsChallenge
Schofield from 1917. Totally loved that movie and that character💜
#illustration #digitalpainting
Charles Burchfield (American, 1893-1967), Untitled (Landscape with Trees and Houses), 1917.
9 May 1917. At 16.50hrs, German ace Werner Voss of Jasta 2, flying an Albatros D-III, destroyed a Sopwith Pup over Lesdain. Art by Iain Wyllie.
@philistella @LockdownBestia1 Great that you are working on Amabel. She had so many different names during her life that references to her are sometimes confused. Many of the prints she collected found their way to @britishmuseum in 1917. We included some related to Napoleon in 2015 exhibition.
The Cottingley #Fairies appear in a series of five photographs taken by Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths in 1917. In the early 1980s, Elsie and Frances admitted that the photographs were faked, using cardboard cutouts of fairies copied from a popular children's book of the time