Search Images
Browse Content (p. 362)

Image
François de Langlade, Abbot of Chaila
François de Langlade, abbot of Chaila (1647-1702), painting by an unknown artist, 17th century.
Musée Ignon-Fabre, Mende.

Image
Jean Cavalier
Jean Cavalier, Camisard leader, painting by Pierre-Antoine Labouchère, 1864.
Musée du Désert, France.

Image
Château de Saumur
The château of Saumur, Maine-et-Loire, France. Built in the 14th century for the Dukes of Anjou, it is the only Gothic castle in the Loire Valley.

Image
Bernal Díaz del Castillo
A modern bust of the Spanish conquistador and chronicler Bernal Díaz del Castillo (1492 - c. 1580). Díaz wrote a famous account, The Conquest of New Spain. The bust is in the town of Medina del Campo in Spain, the birthplace of Díaz.

Image
British Red Coat, 1767
An 1894 illustration showing the uniform of a Grenadier, 40th Foot regiment, 1767. The soldier is wearing his famous "red coat" made with cochineal dye. From R. H. Raymond Smythies (1894). Historical Records of the 40th (2nd Somersetshire...

Image
Cardinal Agostino Pallavicini
A c. 1621 portrait of Cardinal Agostino Pallavicini by Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641). The cardinal is wearing robes dyed with cochineal. (Getty Center, Los Angeles)

Image
Portrait of Baronne de Crussol
A 1785 oil-on-panel portrait by Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun of French nobelwoman Baronne de Crussol Florensac. The striking red dress and hat are rendered using cochineal pigment which would have made them very expensive indeed. Musée...

Image
Joan of Arc Well, Chinon
Reconstruction of the well that Joan of Arc is believed to have used to get off her horse in Chinon on March 6th 1429 as she was heading to meet King Charles VII of France.

Image
Prickly Pear Cactus with Cochineal Insects
A prickly pear cactus (nopal) with the parasite insect Dactylopius coccus which is used to make cochineal dye.

Image
Mesoamerican Collecting Cochineal
An 18th-century illustration showing a Mesoamerican using the traditional method of collecting insects to make the prized cochineal dye. (The Newberry Library)