Welcome to corvusfugit.com!
Corvus fugit means "the crow flies."-
Join 424 other subscribers
Recent Top Posts
- 2nd Century: Dodecahedron
- 1649: Descartes's Wooden Daughter
- 1883: Educate! Agitate! Organize!
- 1st Century AD: You Aren't Even Sure What This Is at First
- 1936: Gold Were His Limbs where He Was Bird
- 100 AD: Leucippus
- 1913: Afterglow
- 1740: Thangka Depicting Vajrabhairava
- 1920: Drag
- 5th Century BC: Hermes Kriophoros
Blogroll
Tags
- 1860's
- 1870's
- 1880's
- 1890's
- 1900's
- 1910's
- 1920's
- 1930's
- 1940's
- 1950's
- 1960's
- 1970's
- 2000's
- 2010's
- Africa
- African-Americans
- Animals
- Art
- Belgium
- Birds
- Books
- Children
- Christianity
- Drawing
- France
- Germany
- Great Britain
- Italy
- Labor
- Landscapes
- LGBTQ
- Mammals
- Miniatures
- Netherlands
- New York City
- Painting
- Photography
- Poetry
- Portraits
- Printmaking
- Religion
- Science Fiction
- Sculpture
- Seascapes
- Ships & Sailing
- The Sky
- Trees
- Unions
- USA
- Women
Tag Archives: King Henry VII
1509: The Most Curious Book in the World
The following entry appears in Charles Carroll Bombaugh’s Gleanings from the Harvest Fields of Literature: A Melange of Excerpta, Curious, Humorous, and Instructive (1867): THE MOST CURIOUS BOOK IN THE WORLD The most singular bibliographic curiosity is that which belonged … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged 15th Century, 16th Century, 17th Century, 1860's, Belgium, Books, Charles Carroll Bombaugh, Christianity, France, Germany, Hans Memling, King Henry VII, Painting, Pierre Lambinet, Printing, Religion, USA
Leave a comment
