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Tartar Collection (page 4)

Tartar, a word that carries the echoes of history and diverse cultures

Background imageTartar Collection: A Tartar on horseback halts in the snow at sunset for a warming drink Date

A Tartar on horseback halts in the snow at sunset for a warming drink Date: late 19th century

Background imageTartar Collection: Two Dromedaries (Aubry de La Mottrayes 'Travels throughout Europe

Two Dromedaries (Aubry de La Mottrayes "Travels throughout Europe
Two Dromedaries (Aubry de La Mottrayes " Travels throughout Europe, Asia and into Part of Africa... " London, 1724, plate 314), 1723-24

Background imageTartar Collection: Five Standing Muscovites (Aubry de La Mottrayes 'Travels throughout Europe

Five Standing Muscovites (Aubry de La Mottrayes "Travels throughout Europe
Five Standing Muscovites (Aubry de La Mottrayes " Travels throughout Europe, Asia and into Part of Africa... " London, 1724, pl. 313), 1723-24

Background imageTartar Collection: The 'Tartar Soldier', in Hyde Park, 1844. Creator: Unknown

The "Tartar Soldier", in Hyde Park, 1844. Creator: Unknown
The " Tartar Soldier", in Hyde Park, 1844. Display of horsemanship and military exercises by...a very curious individual, a Tartar soldier

Background imageTartar Collection: Amida, Japan

Amida, Japan
Amida (also known as Amitabha and Amitayus) is a celestial buddha according to the scriptures of Mahayana Buddhism. Amida is the principal buddha in Pure Land Buddhism (Mahayana Buddhism)

Background imageTartar Collection: MACKERELS IN SAUCE

MACKERELS IN SAUCE
Mackerels in sauce served with fresh bread. Date: 1960s

Background imageTartar Collection: FALL / JAPANESE CHIN / 1933

FALL / JAPANESE CHIN / 1933
LITTLE TARTAR OF ST OMER Challenge certificate winner (1933) Owned by Mrs DAutour. Date: 1933

Background imageTartar Collection: TARTAR WARRIOR CHIEF

TARTAR WARRIOR CHIEF
A Tartar warrior chief of medieval Hungary, equipped for battle in helmet and armour, and carrying a heavy sword Date: medieval

Background imageTartar Collection: DIANTHUS CARYOPHYLLUS

DIANTHUS CARYOPHYLLUS
FRANKLINS TARTAR, or WILD CARNATION one of several species Date: 1796

Background imageTartar Collection: RUSSIA / TARTAR

RUSSIA / TARTAR
Tartar Horsewoman

Background imageTartar Collection: Tartar Officer Carrying Blond Lady, 19th century. Creator: Unknown

Tartar Officer Carrying Blond Lady, 19th century. Creator: Unknown
Tartar Officer Carrying Blond Lady, 19th century. Qing dynasty (1644-1911)

Background imageTartar Collection: Tartar Officer with Blond Lady Playing Musical Instruments, 19th century. Creator: Unknown

Tartar Officer with Blond Lady Playing Musical Instruments, 19th century. Creator: Unknown
Tartar Officer with Blond Lady Playing Musical Instruments, 19th century

Background imageTartar Collection: Tartar Horse Soldier, 1890. Creator: Unknown

Tartar Horse Soldier, 1890. Creator: Unknown
Tartar Horse Soldier, 1890. The Mongol Empire, established under Genghis Khan in 1206, allied with the Tatars, a group native to present-day Russia and Ukraine

Background imageTartar Collection: The Return of Ivan the Terrible to Moscow after the Conquest of Kazan. Creator: Sir John Gilbert

The Return of Ivan the Terrible to Moscow after the Conquest of Kazan. Creator: Sir John Gilbert
The Return of Ivan the Terrible to Moscow after the Conquest of Kazan. Ivan the Terrible of Russia (1530-1584) successfully besieged the city of Kazan which was held by the Tartars

Background imageTartar Collection: Kertch from the North, 1855. Creator: Edmund Walker

Kertch from the North, 1855. Creator: Edmund Walker
Kertch from the North, 1855. The seat of war in the East. Scene from the Crimean War: view of Kertch from the road to Yenikale, with British soldiers in the foreground

Background imageTartar Collection: Georgian Donkey Water Carrier - Caucasus

Georgian Donkey Water Carrier - Caucasus. Date: circa 1908

Background imageTartar Collection: A Bosnian and a Tartar

A Bosnian and a Tartar. Date: 1821

Background imageTartar Collection: Habits of Dagestan Tartars of Tarcu, on the borders of Persia, 1780. Artist: NC Goodnight

Habits of Dagestan Tartars of Tarcu, on the borders of Persia, 1780. Artist: NC Goodnight
Habits of Dagestan Tartars of Tarcu, on the borders of Persia, 1780. From Millars New Complete Universal System of Geography

Background imageTartar Collection: Portrait of a Tartar woman, 19th century

Portrait of a Tartar woman, 19th century. Chinese School

Background imageTartar Collection: Lama of the Mongolian Tartars, 19th century. Artist: Jegor Scotnikoff

Lama of the Mongolian Tartars, 19th century. Artist: Jegor Scotnikoff
Lama of the Mongolian Tartars, 19th century

Background imageTartar Collection: A View of the celebrated Great Wall of China, 1782

A View of the celebrated Great Wall of China, 1782
A View of the celebrated Great Wall of China, which divides that Empire from Tartary, & was originally built to prevent the Invasions of the Tartars, 1782

Background imageTartar Collection: A Chinese prince of the Manchoo Tartar race, 1801. Artist: J Chapman

A Chinese prince of the Manchoo Tartar race, 1801. Artist: J Chapman
A Chinese prince of the Manchoo Tartar race, 1801

Background imageTartar Collection: Tartar girl of the Green Peninsula, Crimea, 1936

Tartar girl of the Green Peninsula, Crimea, 1936. From Peoples of the World in Pictures, edited by Harold Wheeler, published by Odhams Press Ltd (London, 1936)

Background imageTartar Collection: The Emperor Weit-Soong and his court, taken prisoners by the Tartars, 1847. Artist: JW Giles

The Emperor Weit-Soong and his court, taken prisoners by the Tartars, 1847. Artist: JW Giles
The Emperor Weit-Soong and his court, taken prisoners by the Tartars, (1847). Episode from Chinese history. Drawn by B Clayton, from a painting by Fo Shang

Background imageTartar Collection: Wogulski Tartars on the Frontiers of Siberia, c1740

Wogulski Tartars on the Frontiers of Siberia, c1740. A tartar family

Background imageTartar Collection: The Fountain of Bahcesaray, 1849. Artist: Karl Briullov

The Fountain of Bahcesaray, 1849. Artist: Karl Briullov
The Fountain of Bahcesaray, 1849. The Fountain of Bakhchisaray is a poem by Alexander Pushkin published in 1822. Found in the collection of the A Pushkin Memorial Museum, St Petersburg

Background imageTartar Collection: Chief of the Tatar city of Kazan, and Kachin

Chief of the Tatar city of Kazan, and Kachin man in long coat.. Handcolored lithograph from Friedrich Wilhelm Goedsches Complete Gallery of Peoples in True Pictures, Meissen, circa 1835-1840

Background imageTartar Collection: Dental plaque and tartar

Dental plaque and tartar. Clinical view of a the teeth in a patients lower jaw, with the incisors coated in bacterial plaque and tartar (brown)

Background imageTartar Collection: Tartars of Russia

Tartars of Russia
Russian Tartars in their native attire Antique hand-colored print

Background imageTartar Collection: Kirghiz people of central Asia

Kirghiz people of central Asia
Kirghiz people of the Asian steppes in their traditional attire. Antique hand-colored print

Background imageTartar Collection: Tartars of Kohonor, China

Tartars of Kohonor, China -- Lama or Priest (left), man and woman (centre), taken from Johann Grueber, an Austrian Jesuit missionary and astronomer who visited China and Tibet in the 1650s

Background imageTartar Collection: Tartars of Naun Koton or Tsitsikar, China

Tartars of Naun Koton or Tsitsikar, China
Tartars of Naun Koton or Tsitsikar (Xixigar), China, taken from Eberhard Isbrand Ides, a Danish traveller and diplomat who travelled in China in the early 1690s. circa 1760

Background imageTartar Collection: Baobab-Alley, Grandidiers Baobab (Adansonia grandidieri) in the morning light, Morondava

Baobab-Alley, Grandidiers Baobab (Adansonia grandidieri) in the morning light, Morondava, Madagascar, Africa

Background imageTartar Collection: Tartar Priests from the Sergach District - Russia

Tartar Priests from the Sergach District - Russia
Two Priests from the Volga Tartars from the Sergach District - Russia. Date: circa 1910s

Background imageTartar Collection: Orteliuss map of Europe, 1603

Orteliuss map of Europe, 1603
Orteliuss map of Europe. This map of Europe is from the 1603 edition of Theatrum orbis terrarum (Theatre of the World). First published in 1570 by Flemish mapmaker Abraham Ortelius (1527-1598)

Background imageTartar Collection: Tatar Sabantuy celebration at Belebey, Russia

Tatar Sabantuy celebration at Belebey, Russia
Tatar Sabantuy celebration at Belebey - a town in the Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia. Sabantuy is a Tatar and Idel-Uralian summer festival, dating back to the Volga Bulgarian epoch

Background imageTartar Collection: PASI2A-00004

PASI2A-00004
Marco Polo transported in Kublai Khans elephant car during visit to China, 1200s. Hand-colored 19th-century woodcut reproduction of an earlier engraving

Background imageTartar Collection: GASI2A-00007

GASI2A-00007
Mongol camp on the move in the Gobi Desert. Hand-colored woodcut of a 19th-century illustration

Background imageTartar Collection: North-central Asian people in traditional attire

North-central Asian people in traditional attire
Persons from Tsinghai, from Buryat-Mongolia playing music, and from Obdorsk (Salekhard) in Siberia. Antique hand-colored print

Background imageTartar Collection: GASI2A-00040

GASI2A-00040
Horse caravan crossing the Gobi Desert, Mongolia. Hand-colored woodcut of a 19th-century illustration

Background imageTartar Collection: Crimean Tartars

Crimean Tartars
Russian Tartars from the Crimea in their native clothing. Antique hand-colored print

Background imageTartar Collection: Emperor Cham (Tatar)

Emperor Cham (Tatar)
GRAND TATAR CHAM Emperor of China

Background imageTartar Collection: Wheeled tents of the Tartars or Tatars, Russia

Wheeled tents of the Tartars or Tatars, Russia
Wheeled tents of the Tartars or Tatars, a Turkic ethnic group in Russia

Background imageTartar Collection: Old Man from the Crimea, smoking a cigarette

Old Man from the Crimea, smoking a cigarette in a holder. Date: circa 1910

Background imageTartar Collection: Tartar Fortress 1380

Tartar Fortress 1380
A tartar fortress in medieval Russia, built with defence in mind. Date: circa 1380

Background imageTartar Collection: Illustration by Cecil Aldin, The Mongolian Tarpan

Illustration by Cecil Aldin, The Mongolian Tarpan, a horse native to Russia. Date: 1933

Background imageTartar Collection: Tatar family from Kazan, the man firing a musket

Tatar family from Kazan, the man firing a musket.. Handcolored woodcut from Auguste Wahlens Manners, Customs and Costumes of all the People of the World, Brussels, 1845

Background imageTartar Collection: Tatar woman from Tomsk, Siberia, in headress and cape

Tatar woman from Tomsk, Siberia, in headress and cape.. Handcolored woodcut from Auguste Wahlens Manners, Customs and Costumes of all the People of the World, Brussels, 1845



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Tartar, a word that carries the echoes of history and diverse cultures. From the fierce Mongol horsemen galloping across vast plains to the brave soldiers demonstrating their unmatched horsemanship, it has left an indelible mark on our world. The name also resonates with naval power, as seen in the HMS Tartar - Tribal Class Destroyer of the Royal Navy. This mighty vessel symbolizes strength and resilience, sailing through treacherous waters with unwavering determination. But Tartar is not just about warriors and battles; it encompasses human connections too. A Siberian Tartar woman embraces her Russian Mongol partner, bridging cultural divides and celebrating love's triumph over differences. In harmony with their nomadic lifestyle, Mongol tribes move camp effortlessly across landscapes untouched by time. Their existence reflects a deep connection to nature and an understanding of life's transient nature. Symbols such as PASI2A-00001 or EXPL2A-00146 may seem cryptic at first glance but hold stories waiting to be unraveled. They represent moments frozen in time – perhaps captured by Saint Hyacinth carrying an image of the Virgin or reminiscent of Sisyphus' eternal struggle against fate. Even within military settings like HMS Tartar splicing rope in service to the Royal Navy, there is evidence of camaraderie and teamwork that transcends borders and ranks. Pah tah lom boo stands tall as a Tartar Brigadier-General 2nd Class Mandarin – a testament to leadership forged through experience and wisdom gained on countless battlefields. Lastly, we cannot forget those who have been laid to rest alongside their loyal companions. The phrase "TARTAR BURIED W. HORSE" evokes images of honor bestowed upon fallen warriors who were inseparable from their trusted steeds even in death.