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  1. Title: Monument of Mary, Queen of Scots (from "The History of England") Artist: John George Landseer (British, 1763/69–1852 London) Artist: After Robert Smirke (British, Wigton, Cumberland 1752/53–1845 London) Printer: Anker Smith (British, London 1759–1819 London) Publisher: Robert Bowyer (British, Portsmouth 1758–1834 Byfleet, Surrey)

  2. A History of England. Part One: From Prehistory to the Close of the Middle Ages. [By John Thorn]. Part Two: The the Accession of the Hanoverians. [By Roger Lockyer]. Part Three: To the Close of the Second World War. [By David Smith]. Thorn, John, Roger Lockyer and David Smith: Published by London: Ernest Benn Limited, 1964

  3. Liked by David Smith. ॿ. Artist at Queenship Game Studio, Artist at Triplecast Games, Printmaker, Illustrator · I'm an illustrator and printmaker who has worked on both digital and print game projects. I work best with traditional mediums such as dip nib ink pens, markers, and sketching, and I also have experience coloring and editing work ...

    • Triplecast Games
  4. 1965,0409.1. The Hinton St Mary Mosaic is a large, almost complete Roman mosaic discovered at Hinton St Mary, Dorset, England in 1963. It appears to feature a portrait bust of Jesus Christ as its central motif, which could be the oldest depiction of Jesus Christ anywhere in the Roman Empire. [1] A second mosaic was found during 2022 excavations ...

  5. Cubi VII. 1963. David Smith was among the first American artists to master the use of steel and other industrial materials. After many years of working metal into evocative linear compositions, he forged a new, formal language for sculpture through increased focus on shape, volume, surface, and structure. Cubi VII is part of a series executed ...

  6. david england artist/sculptor. Facebook; Twitter; Google; RSS

  7. John married about 1624 Elizabeth Tilley [1620 Mayflower ], daughter of John Tilley [1620 Mayflower ]. He was the brother of both Arthur and Henry Howland who came to Plymouth later. John Howland died at Plymouth in Feb 1673 “above eighty years”. Elizabeth (Tilley) Howland died at Swansea Dec 1687, aged eighty.