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This shows the stylish Valet, Knave or Jack of Hearts from a pack of Belgian playing cards printed in 1910. The card case has the words (Fine glazed playing cards no. 1322, Lion-Brand, Made in Belgium). The name Lion-Brand thinly disguises the name of the maker of these playing cards, Leonard Biermans. This company operated between 1875 and 1973, when it was taken over by Cartamundi. This image is offered for sale with the permission of Cartamundi. The Joker and reverse / back pattern from the same Biermans no. 1322 pack of playing cards: .
Old Indonesian currency with a picture of farmers in rice fields.
Indian on horseback hunting buffalo with a bow and arrow.
Close up of Old Postal Stamp Album
Super Macro Shot of 100 Euro  detail
A ten Pfennig East German postage stamp issued in 1973 featuring Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
Plaing card Jack of cross isolated on white background
Stamps on a postcard from Italy
A stamp printed in the United States in 1869 shows a steam locomotive moving.
Jack of diamonds. Over 100 years old, this antique card (shown both front and back design) has a design similar to Bernhard Dondorf's well-known \
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Turkish postage stamps on black background
Vintage Jack Of Diamond Isolated (clipping path included)
Postage stamps of the Soviet Union on the theme of antiquities and ancient architecture. THE USSR.
Sepia toned photo of gun, map and apple, lying on the straw.
ROMANIA - CIRCA 1976: A stamp printed in Romania from the \
This is the Ace of Clubs playing card from a pack manufactured by Charles Goodall (1785-1851) of Camden, London. Charles Goodall was in business for over 100 years, from 1820 to 1929. This original deck  was produced in about 1895, and is one of a small and haphazard series of 'Historic Playing Cards'. The court cards feature four different historic British royal dynasties, as follows: Spades: Hanoverian (1714–1901), last representative Queen Victoria. Hearts: Stuart (1371–1714), last representative Queen Anne. (Originated in Scotland.) Diamonds: Tudor (1485–1603), last representative Queen Elizabeth I. Clubs: Plantagenet (1126–1485), last representative Richard III. All aces and court cards from this deck are available here. Below are some more antique playing cards, including some from Bernhard Dondorf's rare 1895 'Shakespeare' deck: .
Interior of the Great Mock of the Rock - Palestine
Lopburi,Thailand – November  28,2014: A stamp printed in Colombia, shows Msgr. R. M. Carrasquilla (1857-1930), rector of Our Lady of the Rosary Seminary, Bogota and Church, circa 1959
man and woman athletes on old East German stamp.
Sandwich, Massachusetts, USA-February 6, 2011:A 20-cent commemorative stamp honoring Dr. Mary Edwards Walker, Civil War surgeon and advocate of women\\'s rights, was issued June 10, 1982, at her birthplace, Oswego, New York. .Dr. Mary Walker (1832-1919) was the first woman awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. The medal was awarded in 1865. After becoming the second woman in the U.S. to earn a medical degree   she volunteered for the Union Army, serving near the front lines as a field surgeon for several years. In addition to treating wounded soldiers, she often crossed the lines to treated civilians affected by the war.
Belarus Postage Stamp Illustrating a Crusades Horseman in Blue-tones, 1992 (the year following independance of Belarus).
Helston, UK - February 23, 2011: An old worn cigar box which contained Hoyo de Monterray Cuban cigars. The Cuban Hoyo de Monterray cigars are produced for Habanos SA the state owned tobacco company.
Knave of Acorns playing card from the William Tell 'Hungarian deck' of 1890 by Austrian manufacturer Piatnik, manufactured in Pest, Hungary. As well as 'Hungarian pack' and 'William Tell', this pack also has the name Four Seasons, because the Aces (they are two's, but act as Aces) represent each of the four seasons. The Knave is styled after Resz÷ Harras, a character in Schiller's retelling of the William Tell legend.. The card symbols follow the German tradition of bells, hearts, acorns and leaves. Here is a comparison between terminology in Hungarian and in German. German 'bells' become Hungarian 'pumpkins'. Hungarian: T÷k (pumpkin); German: Schellen (bells) Hungarian: Piros (red); German: Herz (heart Rot (red) Hungarian: Makk (acorn); German: Eichel (acorn)  Hungarian: Z÷ld (green); German: Laub (leaves), Gr³n (green).
The Sultana by ManetFeatured on a Stamp from South Arabia
Mail postage stamp
generation of learning on a Swiss stamp
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