[Group of Mongolians attending the Great Mongolian Festival of the Princes]
- 4552955/229
- Eitem
- 1935.
A man and three women looking at the camera.
392 canlyniad gyda gwrthrychau digidol Dangos canlyniadau gyda gwrthrychau digidol
[Group of Mongolians attending the Great Mongolian Festival of the Princes]
A man and three women looking at the camera.
[Horsemen at the Great Mongolian Festival of the Princes]
Fifty or so horsemen galloping from left to right across the photo, away from the camera.
[Row of one storey buildings and yurts]
Animated scene with a row of one storey buildings on the right of the photograph and two yurts on the right.
Single storey buildings, the roofs of which can be seen behind a low wall.
Two young monks wearing distinctive headgear.
Anatoli Petrewschtchew standing on a track, looking at the camera. He has a cigarette in his left hand.
Untitled and unused RP card of the exterior of a circular temple, identified by the cataloguer as the Temple of Heaven, Beijing.
Harting's Postcard Publishers
The Ploughing ceremony in progress as photographed from behind the Royal Throne.
A sampan photographed from the stern, sailing under a large square sail. Location unknown.
Stern of a houseboat, used as a living space.
[Gareth Vaughan Jones & Chinese friends]
Gareth Vaughan Jones seated at a table with the daughter of General Tsai and two other men possibly including Tsai Daocheng.
Angkor Wat viewed from a distance.
A narrow street. In the photo, with their backs to the camera, are the two girls thought to be the daughters of Mr R T Barrett, a Hong Kong journalist who GVJ befriended.
[Two girls on the deck of a ship]
Two girls, one sitting in a deck chair, the other younger girl leaning over her.
A man and a boy standing either side of an unidentified artefact partly sheltered by a screen.
An unidentified port photographed from the sea, slightly overexposed.
Letters from Strasbourg, Hamburg, Wilna, Charente,
Letters from Genève, Strasbourg,
Letters from Danzig, New York, Washington DC, Connecticut,
Letters from G.V.J. at Dublin to his family,