75 resultados para Arches
em University of Michigan
Resumo:
Publication date from ESTC.
Resumo:
All of the numbered plates in the atlas are double plates, and thus are counted twice in the adjusted plate count.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Title on spine: Lee Arches & Prerogative Courts.
Resumo:
Vita.
Resumo:
Includes index.
Resumo:
"15 January 1960.
Resumo:
Mason & Kahn, architects. 1910 addition Kahn & Wilby. Building completed September 1904. Addition 1909-1910. From diagonal side (northeast). Photographer's stamp on verso.
Resumo:
Cornerstone laid May 26, 1888; dedicated June 1891. Gift of Helen H. Newberry of Detroit as headquarters of Students' Christian Association. Leased by U-M as classroom in 1921; gift to U-M from SCA in 1937. Adapted as museum in 1928, named the Francis W. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology in 1953.
Resumo:
Cornerstone laid May 26, 1888; dedicated June 1891. Gift of Helen H. Newberry of Detroit as headquarters of Students' Christian Association. Leased by U-M as classroom in 1921; gift to U-M from SCA in 1937. Adapted as museum in 1928, named the Francis W. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology in 1953. Person in image.
Resumo:
York and Sawyer, architects. Given to the university by William W. Cook, the four buildings comprising the Law Quadrangle with their construction dates are: the Lawyers Club, 1924; the John P. Cook Dormitory, 1930; the Legal Research Building, 1931, and Hutchins Hall, 1933. The Legal Research Building includes the original library.
Resumo:
Ware and Van Brunt, architect. An addition was built to the south in 1898. The 1883 portion was torn down in 1918.
Resumo:
The lotus column.-- Græco-Roman architecture.-- The age of Constantine.-- Early Christian architecture.-- Santa Maria Maggiore.-- Romanesque architecture.-- The renaissance.-- Saint Peter's.
Resumo:
pt. 1. American stone arches.--pt. 2. Roman stone arches.--pt. 3. English stone arches.--pt. 4. French stone arches.--pt. 5. German and Austrian stone arches.