- 4552955/185
- Eitem
- circa 1920
Engraving of a Roman Centurion with text in French.
392 canlyniad gyda gwrthrychau digidol Dangos canlyniadau gyda gwrthrychau digidol
Engraving of a Roman Centurion with text in French.
Reproduction of portrait of Colonel T. E . Lawrence painted in 1919 by Augustus John.
Photographic reproduction of Japanese artwork depicting children looking at their reflections in a large bowl of water. Possibly collected by Gareth Vaughan Jones on his visit to Japan in 1935.
Photographic reproduction of Japanese artwork depicting children looking at their reflections in a large bowl of water. Possibly collected by Gareth Vaughan Jones on his visit to Japan in 1935.
Photographic reproduction of Japanese artwork depicting Lotus flowers and a dragonfly. Possibly collected by Gareth Vaughan Jones on his visit to Japan in 1935.
Most of the cuttings are of articles by Gareth Jones describing conditions in Russia following his visits to the country, many of them on the Five Year Plan of economic recovery introduced by Stalin and the terrible famine in the country the holodomor). There are also a few cuttings on the United States and Hitler's Germany.
Group photo of boys at Welsh Schoolboys Camp at Aberedw, 1922, Gareth Jones, aged around 16yrs can be seen to the right in the third row.
Six soldiers smiling and laughing at the camera. One is holding a bugle aloft.
Mongolians examining the car before Gareth departed on the final journey from Pai Ling-Miao
A group of Mongolian Princes examining a Sedan. The detail of the spare wheel cover and the side of the bonnet is suggestive of an early 1930s Cadillac.
[A group of Mongolians in traditional dress alongside two men in Western dress]
Five Mongolians in traditional dress in conversation with two men in western dress. The man on the extreme left appears to be Mongolian, perhaps a translator, whilst the man in the light suit and hat may well be Gareth Vaughan Jones.
[A group of Mongolians in traditional dress alongside two men in Western dress]
Five Mongolians in traditional dress in conversation with two men in western dress. The man on the extreme left appears to be Mongolian, perhaps a translator, whilst the man in the light suit and hat may well be Gareth Vaughan Jones.
Llama or Lhama Service, Mongolia [sic]
A service in progress, but appearing more shamanic than Buddhist.
A group of Mongolian Princes engaged in conversation.
A boy with a scarf around his head sitting astride a horse whose ribs are clearly visible.
Novice monks, presumably in the grounds of a temple or monastery.
A Yurt in the left foreground. Beyond is a small Buddhist Temple.
A boy aged about five wearing a tunic and skull cap. On page 16 of 'Gareth Jones - A Manchukuo Incident' by Margaret S Colley (Newark, 2001) Jones recalls 'He had a little red hat on...and a brown silk coat"
Prince Teh Wang astride a white horse.
Prince Teh Wang walking past a wrestling match at the Great Mongolian Festival of the Princes.
A man in a white shirt and shorts with his back to the camera watching a group of men with a horse.The pencil note on reverse of photo identifies him as Baron Von Plessen.