Landscape Near
November 30th, 2010
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A.J.CASSON (1898-1992)-Ltd Edition – “Farm near Baptiste”-GROUP 7 $295.00 |
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1892 PRINT BY J.HOVER PHILI CALLED SCENE NEAR FREDERICK BY MEIVILLE ARGES ? $34.99 |
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1937 Print Aaron Bohrod Landscape Near Chicago Protests Chicagoans Automobile $38.95 |
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IRAK – GRAVE NEAR KAROUN RIVER – engraving from 1885 $4.90 |
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VIETNAM – THE SHIP “ANTILOPE” NEAR HUE CITY – engraving from 1878 $4.90 |
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Hector Falls near Watkins Glen, NY ORIGINAL Art Photo $10.00 |
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Montmartre near the Upper Mill Stretched Canvas van Gogh Giclee Repro 3 Foot $99.99 |
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Repro Sunset near Landss End Cornwall England oil painting on canvas V72 $0.99 |
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Thunderstorm Near Houston, TX Limited Edition Original Art Photo $13.00 |
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The Fairway Near Pebble Beach Charles Alfred Weigel Oil Painting Of Landscape $199.99 |
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Beautiful Near Laguna Beach Charles Alfred Weigel Oil Painting Of Landscape $199.99 |
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Beautiful Near La Quinta Charles Alfred Weigel Oil Painting Of Landscape $199.99 |
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Circa 1940′s The Old Man of the Sea Near Tillamook Oregon Real Photo Postcard $2.49 |
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“Near Murfreesboro, TN” Original Watercolor Sketch by Darryl Glenn Steele $25.00 |
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Quartz Mountains near almost nothing, Oklahoma, oil on canvas, Margaret Aycock $275.00 |
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VINTAGE LITHOGRAPH IN ORIGINAL FRAME JAMES LEE CO1906 NEAR THE MOUNTAINS $29.99 |
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53 LITHOGRAPH DAVID GILBOA NEAR MOUNT ZION IN JERUSALEM $9.99 |
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CLIFF SEGERBLOM ORIGINAL WATERCOLOR, “TROPICANA WASH” near Las Vegas Nevada $79.00 |
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Original Woodcut Southwest Mojave Desert Lake Mead Landscape Near Hoover Dam LE $39.00 |
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ARKANSAS RIVER NEAR PUEBLO, CO by Richard R. Nervig $200.00 |
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JAMES EVERETT STUART ORIGINAL OIL PAINTING 1921 NEAR CAMP TAYLOR CALIFORNIA $499.99 |
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USA – THE MARBLE CANYONS NEAR PAGUMP VALLEY – engraving from 1886 $7.90 |
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CANADA – GIANTS STAIRS NEAR MONTMORENCY WATERFALL – engraving from 1861 $4.90 |
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Cabin Near Forest Mountains Trail Road Autumn Landscape Art FRAMED OIL PAINTING $174.00 |
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1868 PRINT WATERFALL ON THE MAI MUNA,NEAR SENAFE $12.99 |
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circa 1927 Frasher RPPC view of Desert Flowers Near Palm Springs CA $6.60 |
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Archaeological Landscapes of the Near East, T. J. Wilki $60.00 |
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TANZANIA – ROCKS FORMATIONS NEAR OUSEKHE engraving 1877 $4.90 |
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KENYA – VIEW OF KILIMANDJARO, NEAR TCHALA LAKE – engraving from 1885 $4.90 |
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KENYA – MILITARY CAMP NEAR MANDARA – engraving from 1885 $4.90 |
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Castlerigg Stone Circle near Keswick in the Lake District, England Photo Mugs Castlerigg Stone Circle near Keswick in the Lake District, England…. |
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China Scenery/kwangfoong Photo Mugs Chinese scenery landscape near Kwangfoong …. |
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Glen Nevis, Scottish Highlands Photo Mugs Glen Nevis, near Fort William. A camping and caravan site can be seen on the valley floor….. |
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Canadian Art Songs $10.32 … |
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Spectrum & Spectrum #2: 50 Contemp Wrks Solo Pno $13.62 … |
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More Than Men $15.50 … |
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Sun Joe TJ600E Tiller Joe Garden 14-Inch 6.5 amp Electric Tiller/Cultivator $144.99 Sun Joe Tiller Joe TJ600E-RM 6.5 AMP Electric Garden Tiller/Cultivator Quality Craftsmanship Backed by a Two Year Warranty The Sun Joe Electric Tiller and Cultivator holds the power found in a gas tiller with the convenience of electric power. Weighing in at 17 lbs the Tiller Joe is easy to use in any situation; such as starting a new garden or recovering an old lawn. Its four steel angled tines e… |
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Nikon EH-6 AC Adapter $106.12 EH-6 AC Adapter Power Supply for the D2 Digital Series SLR Cameras… |
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Wallmonkeys Peel and Stick Wall Decals – Aurora Borealis near Drayton Valley, Alberta, Canada. – Removable Graphic WallMonkeys wall graphics are printed on the highest quality re-positionable, self-adhesive fabric paper. Each order is printed in-house and on-demand. WallMonkeys uses premium materials & state-of-the-art production technologies. Our white fabric material is superior to vinyl decals. You can literally see and feel the difference. Our wall graphics apply in minutes and won’t damage your paint or l… |
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David Hockney: A Bigger Picture $13.13 Synopsis: Item Type: DVD MovieItem Rating: NRStreet Date: 06/15/10Wide Screen: noDirector Cut: noSpecial Edition: noLanguageENGLISHForeign Film: noSubtitlesnoDubbed: noFull Frame: noRe-Release: noPackaging: Sleeve Please note: This supplier will be closed on 11/24, 11/25, 12/26, 1/2 for the holidays. The shipping cut off is 12/10 to try and have the products delivered by Christmas…. |
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Landscape $5.59 Landscape |
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As Landscape $11.95 As Landscape |
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Landscape No. 2 $16.96 Two crooks stumble upon information that could ruin the lives of some powerful men in this allegorical political thriller from Slovenian filmmaker Vinko Möderndorfer. Sergej (Marko Mandic) and Polde (Janez Hocevar) are a pair of hoodlums who break into a museum and steal a well-known painting entitled “Landscape No. 2.” While making off with the painting, the pair also happen upon some rare documents and grab them as well. As it turns out, the papers are the item that have suddenly made their caper dangerous; the documents connect certain military figures to a war crime committed near the end of World War II. The surviving officers behind the ugly incident are determined to keep the story from becoming public, and they’re willing to use any means at their disposal to silence Sergej and Polde once and for all. Pokrajina St. 2 (aka Landscape No. 2 received its American premiere at the 2009 Miami International Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi |
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1000x Landscape Architecture $99 Landscape architecture covers the entire range of outdoor design: the fascinating scope of this field ranges from open space planning near, on or even inside buildings to self-sufficient creations … |
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Landscape With Reptile $16.46 In this marvelously original and authoritative book, Thomas Palmer introduces us to a community of rattlesnakes nestled in the heart of the urban Northeast, one of several such enclaves found near … |
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Landscape With Chainsaw Poems $16 James Lasdun lives near Woodstock, New York. |
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‘Labours in the cause of humanity in every part of the globe’: Transatlantic philanthropic collaboration and the cosmopolitan ideal, 1760–1815. $49.99 Working together, citizens of the Atlantic world expanded the scale and scope of philanthropic activity. This dissertation moves beyond questions about the economic motives behind the rise of humanitarianism. Instead, through a transatlantic and transassociational study, with particular focus on medical philanthropy, it focuses on how philanthropists built a complex charitable infrastructure and found ways to help suffering strangers near and far. This study reveals that activists recast organized beneficence through targeted changes that they collected and crafted as a result of a cosmopolitan approach to the world common in their era. Eighteenth-century philanthropists bequeathed to their successors an accelerating pace of growth, a vastly elaborated charitable landscape, and the expectation of a worldwide reach. The developments that made possible those legacies unfolded as the Consumer Revolution burgeoned, the globe became more integrated (giving rise to a pragmatic cosmopolitanism among many people), and Americans and Britons made and unmade the empire. Rather than a major transformation, expansion of humanitarian activity rested on measured change. Through focused and incremental innovations trafficked among people around the Anglophone Atlantic, philanthropists identified more and more discrete groups as objects worthy of charitable assistance, enlarged the universe of eleemosynary institutions, and found routine ways to extend charity beyond local or particularistic boundaries. This dissertation studies that evolution through analyses of philanthropists’ activities at both the transnational and local levels. It first examines the role of geographically mobile individuals in the collection, transmission, and introduction to urban Atlantic communities of new programs. This study then probes the pervasive impact of the Consumer Revolution on philanthropy through the international celebrity of English prison reformer John Howard. Attention then turns to |
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‘Labours in the cause of humanity in every part of the globe’: Transatlantic philanthropic collaboration and the cosmopolitan ideal, 1760–1815. $49.99 Working together, citizens of the Atlantic world expanded the scale and scope of philanthropic activity. This dissertation moves beyond questions about the economic motives behind the rise of humanitarianism. Instead, through a transatlantic and transassociational study, with particular focus on medical philanthropy, it focuses on how philanthropists built a complex charitable infrastructure and found ways to help suffering strangers near and far. This study reveals that activists recast organized beneficence through targeted changes that they collected and crafted as a result of a cosmopolitan approach to the world common in their era. Eighteenth-century philanthropists bequeathed to their successors an accelerating pace of growth, a vastly elaborated charitable landscape, and the expectation of a worldwide reach. The developments that made possible those legacies unfolded as the Consumer Revolution burgeoned, the globe became more integrated (giving rise to a pragmatic cosmopolitanism among many people), and Americans and Britons made and unmade the empire. Rather than a major transformation, expansion of humanitarian activity rested on measured change. Through focused and incremental innovations trafficked among people around the Anglophone Atlantic, philanthropists identified more and more discrete groups as objects worthy of charitable assistance, enlarged the universe of eleemosynary institutions, and found routine ways to extend charity beyond local or particularistic boundaries. This dissertation studies that evolution through analyses of philanthropists’ activities at both the transnational and local levels. It first examines the role of geographically mobile individuals in the collection, transmission, and introduction to urban Atlantic communities of new programs. This study then probes the pervasive impact of the Consumer Revolution on philanthropy through the international celebrity of English prison reformer John Howard. Attention then turns to |
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1231 Establishments $14.13 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: Tomb of Prince Nasiru’d-Din Mahmud Sultan Ghari was the first Islamic Mausoleum (tomb) built in 1231 AD for Prince Nasiru’d-Din Mahmud, eldest son of Iltumish, in the funerary landscape of Delhi in the Malakapur village (near Vasant Kunj). Iltumish was the first Sultan of the Slave Dynasty who ruled in Delhi from 1210 to 1236 A.D. The area where the Ghari (meaning: cave) tomb is situated, was part of the first city of medieval Delhi known as the Slave Dynasty that ruled during the period 1206 to 1290.This area is now part of the Qutb complex. The Slave Dynasty was the forerunner under the early Delhi Sultanate ( ) that ruled from 1216 to 1516. This dynastic city was followed by creation of other five cities of Delhi ruled by different dynastic rulers of the Delhi Sultanate, namely, the Khilji dynasty (1290-1320), the Tughlaq dynasty (1320-1413), the Sayyid dynasty (1414-51), and the Lodi dynasty (1451-1526). The rule of the Mughal Empire then followed and lasted from 1526 to 1857. The crypt or the tomb is implanted in a Ghari (cave), approached by winding steep stairs made of stone, and supported by pillars and flooring. The cave is covered by an unusual octagonal roof slab. The exterior of the tomb structure built in Delhi sandstone with marble adornment exhibits a walled area with bastions (towers) on corners, which impart it the look of a fortress in aesthetic Persian and Oriental architecture. The other tombs inside the Ghari have not been identified. Front entrance of the Sultan GhariIltumish, ruling from Delhi since 1210 A.D., invaded eastern India in 1225 A.D. to capture Laknauti (now a ruined city in West Bengal called Gaur). The resultant battle ended in signing of a Treaty between Izaz, the then ruler of Eastern India (Bihar and B… More: |
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1436 Establishments: Chi in u, League of the Ten Jurisdictions, Wernesgr ner, Coat of Arms of Bratislava $14.13 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: Chiinu – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia According to one version, the name comes from the archaic Romanian word chila (meaning “spring”, “source of water”) and nou (“new”), because it was built around a small spring. Nowadays, the spring is located at the corner of Pushkin and Albioara streets. An alternative version, by Stefan Ciobanu, Romanian historian and academician, holds it, that the name was formed the same way as the name of Chiineu (alternative spelling: Chiinu) in Western Romania, near the border with Hungary. Its Hungarian name is Kisjen , from which the Romanian name originates. Kisjen in turn comes from kis “small” + the “Jen” tribe, one of the seven Hungarian tribes that entered the Carpathian Basin in 896 and gave the name of 21 settlements. Chiinu is also known in Russian as (Kishinyov). It is written Kiinöv in the Latin Gagauz alphabet. It was also written as " in the Moldovan Cyrillic alphabet in Soviet times. Historically, the English language name for the city, “Kishinev”, was based on the modified Russian one because it entered the English language via Russian at the time Chiinu was part of the Russian Empire (e.g. Kishinev pogrom). Therefore, it remains a common English name in some historical contexts. Otherwise, however, the Romanian-based “Chiinu” has been steadily gaining wider currency, especially in the written language. Rose Valley, Sectorul Botanica Chiinu gardensChiinu is located on the river Bîc, a tributary of the Dniester, at , with an area of 120 km². The whole municipality claims 635 km². The city lies in the middle of the central area of Moldova. Geographically convenient in the largely flat Eastern European country, the city is surrounded by a relatively level landscape with very fertile ground, offeri… |
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1815 Books (Study Guide): 1815 Novels, Striking and Picturesque Delineations of the Grand, Beautiful, Wonderful $14.14 Purchase includes a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 1815 Novels, Striking and Picturesque Delineations of the Grand, Beautiful, Wonderful, and Interesting Scenery Around Loch-Earn, Guy Mannering, the Manuscript Found in Saragossa, the Devil’s Elixir, 1815 in Literature, Gesenius’ Lexicon, Les Jeux Des Jeunes Garçons, the Life and Death of Cardinal Wolsey. Source: Wikipedia. Free updates online. Not illustrated. Excerpt: Striking and Picturesque Delineations of the Grand, Beautiful, Wonderful, and Interesting Scenery Around Loch-Earn, also published as A Description of the Beauties of Edinample and Lochearnhead, is a short book by the Scotsman Angus McDiarmid (1770?1820?) that led the local-history populariser Archie McKerracher to call him “the world’s worst author”. The book begins with a dedication to the Earl of Breadalbane (presumably John Campbell, the fourth Earl). Its “grovelling and abject” tone was unusual by that time. An anonymous preface recounts how an unnamed “Gentleman”, on a grouse-shooting visit to the earl’s estate in the Lochearnhead region, met Angus McDiarmid, a ground-officer (or ghillie, a gamekeeper and hunting-guide) of the earl’s. Struck by McDiarmid’s eloquent descriptions of the scenery and associated legends, the gentleman learned that McDiarmid had written a manuscript, which McDiarmid entrusted to him to be published. The preface assures the reader that visitors to Lochearnhead could confirm McDiarmid’s existence and his sole authorship of the book. It then praises the “unparalleled sublimity” of the book’s style, which it connects with the rugged Highland landscape and offers as the reason McDiarmid’s sentences “overleap the mounds and impediments of grammar”. Lochearnhead and Glen Ogle (the valley at left) in May, 2007.The main text is 28 pages about the region near Lochearnhead. There are three |
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A Canadian Heroine, Volume 1 $27.31 Used – It was near sunset, and the season was early summer. Every tree was in full leaf, but the foliage had still the exquisite freshness of its first tints, undimmed by dust or scorching heat. The grass was, for the present, as green as English grass, but the sky overhead was more glorious than any that ever bent above an English landscape. So far away it rose overhead, where colour faded into infinite space, that the eye seemed to look up and up, towards the Gate of Heaven, and only through m |
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A Canadian Heroine, Volume 1 $14.03 New – It was near sunset, and the season was early summer. Every tree was in full leaf, but the foliage had still the exquisite freshness of its first tints, undimmed by dust or scorching heat. The grass was, for the present, as green as English grass, but the sky overhead was more glorious than any that ever bent above an English landscape. So far away it rose overhead, where colour faded into infinite space, that the eye seemed to look up and up, towards the Gate of Heaven, and only through mo |
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A Canadian Heroine, Volume 1 $27.31 New – It was near sunset, and the season was early summer. Every tree was in full leaf, but the foliage had still the exquisite freshness of its first tints, undimmed by dust or scorching heat. The grass was, for the present, as green as English grass, but the sky overhead was more glorious than any that ever bent above an English landscape. So far away it rose overhead, where colour faded into infinite space, that the eye seemed to look up and up, towards the Gate of Heaven, and only through mo |
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A Canadian Heroine, Volume 1 $21.49 Used – It was near sunset, and the season was early summer. Every tree was in full leaf, but the foliage had still the exquisite freshness of its first tints, undimmed by dust or scorching heat. The grass was, for the present, as green as English grass, but the sky overhead was more glorious than any that ever bent above an English landscape. So far away it rose overhead, where colour faded into infinite space, that the eye seemed to look up and up, towards the Gate of Heaven, and only through m |
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A Canadian Heroine, Volume 1 $14.03 Used – It was near sunset, and the season was early summer. Every tree was in full leaf, but the foliage had still the exquisite freshness of its first tints, undimmed by dust or scorching heat. The grass was, for the present, as green as English grass, but the sky overhead was more glorious than any that ever bent above an English landscape. So far away it rose overhead, where colour faded into infinite space, that the eye seemed to look up and up, towards the Gate of Heaven, and only through m |