Search Constraints
Filtering by:
Contributing Institution
Pitts Theology Library
Remove constraint Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library
Format (Digital)
JPEG
Remove constraint Format (Digital): JPEG
Type
Image
Remove constraint Type: Image
Search Results
-
Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library Description: The printer's device of Christoph Froschauer (d. 1564) includes a wordplay on his surname (Frosch = Frog). portal dated 1521 -
Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library Description: The printer's device of Andreas Wechel (d. 1581) features Pegasus, the winged horse of Greek mythology that rose into the heavens to become a constellation of stars -
Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library Description: Printer's device of Juan de Cánova (fl. 1555-1568) -
Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library Description: Portrait of Philipp Melanchthon (1497-1560) -
Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library Description: The initial letter V shows Moses with the tablets of the law. He looks up at a serpent lifted on a wooden cross in the wilderness. Some Israelites are lying on the ground striken with snake bites, as others look up prayerfully at the serpent. -
Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library Description: Printer's device of Oudin Petit (d. 1572) -
Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library Description: Printer's Device of Jean Crespin (d. 1572) -
Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library Description: The printer’s device of Mathias Apiarius (ca. 1500-1554) features a swarm of bees as a wordplay on his name (apiary = a home for a colony of bees). At the base of the tree is a Bible -
Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library Description: The initial letter V shows the high priest followed by other priests, with a curtain in the background, as he comes before a table with the showbread/bread of the presence and the tablets of the law. -
Contributing Institution: Pitts Theology Library Description: In a workshop with large table and furnace two craftsmen, Bezalel and Oholiab, fashion the bowls and other utensils to be used in the Israelite Temple/tabernacle cult with hammer and anvil.