photo: Creative Commons / Przemysław Sakrajda
The castle in Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford
photo: Creative Commons / Vdegroot
Market Natuurstenen Pomp op de Markt, uit 1798, in Lodewijk XVI-stijl. Hierbij drie zogenaamde visstenen,
photo: Creative Commons
Weggis
photo: Creative Commons / sidonius
1706 depiction of the council chamber. It was built in 1694-1698. It served as the seat of government of the Republic of Zürich until 1798.
photo: Creative Commons
Lucerne in 1758
photo: Creative Commons / Portrætsamlingen på Frederiksborg Slot
Ditlev Conrad Blunck: Danske kunstnere på et romersk osteri, 1837. Ditlev Conrad Blunck (June 22, 1798 – January 7, 1853) was a Danish painter.
photo: Creative Commons / Sidonius
Portal Zürich, Erster Teil. Birkhäuser: Basel 1939, S. 319–360. It was built in 1694-1698. It served as the seat of government of the Republic of Zürich until 1798.
photo: Creative Commons / Daderot
Massachusetts State House, completed 1798. Bulfinch's first building was the Hollis Street Church (1788). Among his other early works are a memorial column on Beacon Hill (1789), the first monument to the American Revolution
photo: Creative Commons / Sidonius
Lindenhof (1798) Among the prominent historical visitors are Casanova, Goethe, Johannes von Müller, Herzog Charles Augustus, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach,
photo: Creative Commons / Rama
The Act of Mediation was Napoleon's attempt at a compromise between the Ancient Régime and a Republic.
photo: Creative Commons / Adrian Pingstone
Pero’s Bridge, Bristol, England.Close up of the horn-shaped counterweights.The bridge is named after "Pero" who lived from around 1753 to 1798, arriving in Bristol probably from the Caribbean Island
photo: Creative Commons / MaxPride
The main street going through Burtonport.
photo: Creative Commons / File Upload Bot (Eloquence)
Battle of the Pyramids, July 21, 1798, by François-Louis-Joseph Watteau.
photo: Creative Commons
Salt House und Hofstatt Fountain
photo: Creative Commons / BetacommandBot
Hamlet
photo: Creative Commons / Eloquence
Massimo d'Azeglio
photo: Creative Commons / Charles Thévenin
The Festival of the Fédération, 14 July 1790, on the Champ-de-Mars (1792). After giving up history painting for decorative subjects for a time, in 1798 he produced Augereau on the bridge at Arcole, the first in a series of paintings glorifying the Empire.
photo: Creative Commons / Bms4880
Cragfont
photo: Creative Commons / Kunsthalle
Der gesprengte Turm des Heidelberger Schlosses (The Ruined Tower of Heidelberg Castle), 1830 Carl Blechen (July 29, 1798 – July 23, 1840), sometimes given as Karl Blechen, was a German painter, specializing in fantastic landscapes, sometimes with demons and grotesque figures.
photo: Public Domain / JoJan
Charles Wilkes
photo: Creative Commons / Brian67
Gebenstorf is a municipality in the district of Baden in the canton of Aargau in Switzerland.
photo: Creative Commons / Clio
Musée national Eugène Delacroix.
photo: Creative Commons / James Gillray
Doublûres of Characters;—or—striking Resemblances in Phisiognomy.—"If you would know Mens Hearts, look in their Faces." (1798) In recent years James Gillray's work has become very collectible
photo: Creative Commons / Roland zh
S-Bahn Zürich train station on line S6. Affoltern was first mentioned in 870 as Affaltrahe, and in the 9th century it was reigned by the St. Gallen Abbey, in the 12th/13th century by the Dukes of Regensberg, followed in 1468 by the city of Zürich as part of the Obervogtei Regensberg ending in 1798
photo: Creative Commons / Roland zh
Zürich-Affoltern as seen from Katzensee (oberer Katzensee). Affoltern was first mentioned in 870 as Affaltrahe, and in the 9th century it was reigned by the St. Gallen Abbey, in the 12th/13th century by the Dukes of Regensberg, followed in 1468 by the city of Zürich as part of the Obervogtei Regensberg ending in 1798.
photo: Creative Commons / Roland zh
A1 between Zürich-Affoltern and Rümlang, Affoltern to the left. Affoltern was first mentioned in 870 as Affaltrahe, and in the 9th century it was reigned by the St. Gallen Abbey, in the 12th/13th century by the Dukes of Regensberg, followed in 1468 by the city of Zürich as part of the Obervogtei Regensberg ending in 1798.
photo: Creative Commons / Guindulman
Roman Catholic Church, Guindulman, Bohol
photo: Public Domain / BerndH
Anguloa
photo: Creative Commons / Tangopaso
Foire du Caire, Paris (1798), with Hathor heads and Egyptianizing frieze. The 18th century witnessed the rise of a first authentically historicist imagination, one that attempted to picture the cultures of the distant past as truly different in kind,
photo: Creative Commons / Smallbones
Old Town Hall