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Château de Chaumont-sur-Loire
Image by Christophe Finot

Château de Chaumont-sur-Loire

Château de Chaumont-sur-Loire, Loir-et-Cher, France. First built in the 10th century CE, it was destroyed by Louis XI in 1465. The reconstruction started in 1469 and continued into the 16th century CE.
Marble Head of Emperor Constantine I
Image by Ramon van Opdorp

Marble Head of Emperor Constantine I

Marble head of Emperor Constantine I (r. 306-337 CE) by an unknown artist, c. 325-370 CE. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Statue of Emperor Augustus
Image by Ramon van Opdorp

Statue of Emperor Augustus

Statue of Emperor Augustus (r. 27 BCE to 14 CE). Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen.
Roman Baths, Heerlen
Image by Ramon van Opdorp

Roman Baths, Heerlen

Interior of a Roman bathhouse in the Thermenmuseum, Heerlen.
Troop Movements at the First Battle of Saratoga, 19 September 1777
Image by United States Military Academy

Troop Movements at the First Battle of Saratoga, 19 September 1777

Troop movements before the First Battle of Saratoga (or the Battle of Freeman's Farm) on 19 September 1777. Map by the History Department of the United States Military Academy.
Troop Movements at the Second Battle of Saratoga, 7 October 1777
Image by United States Military Academy

Troop Movements at the Second Battle of Saratoga, 7 October 1777

Troop movements at the Second Battle of Saratoga (or Battle of Bemis Heights), 7 October 1777. Map by the History Department of the United States Military Academy.
Will West Long
Image by Unknown Photographer

Will West Long

Will West Long (also known as Will Westi, l. c. 1869-1947), Cherokee mask-maker, historian, and translator. He became famous for his work with Euro-American anthropologists and ethnographers translating Cherokee legends, lore, prayers, and...
James Mooney, American Ethnographer
Image by Smithsonian Institution

James Mooney, American Ethnographer

James Mooney (l. 1861-1921), American ethnographer who helped preserve the literature, language, and culture of the Cherokee nation. Plate 1 in The Swimmer Manuscript by James Mooney and Frans M. Olbrechts, Smithsonian Institution. Bureau...
Indian Corn
Image by Sam Fentress

Indian Corn

Indian Corn – also known as Flint Corn and Calico Corn – one of the three types of maize cultivated by the Native Peoples of North America.
The Roman Empire and the Tetrarchy of Diocletian, 293 - 305 CE
Image by Simeon Netchev

The Roman Empire and the Tetrarchy of Diocletian, 293 - 305 CE

A map illustrating the Tetrarchy (from the Greek tetrarchia, "leadership of four"), established by the Roman Emperor Diocletian in 293 CE. It was a radical restructuring of the Roman Empire's governance system aimed at addressing its political...
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