Search Results:

564 records were found. Viewing Records 211 to 231
View : Light Box | List View | Image List | Detailed

[AC] Mead Art Museum at Amherst College; [HC] Hampshire College Art Gallery;
[HD] Historic Deerfield; [MH] Mount Holyoke College Art Museum; [MH SK] The Joseph Allen Skinner Museum at Mount Holyoke College; [SC] Smith College Museum of Art; [UM] University Museum of Contemporary Art at UMASS Amherst

ID Number Maker Name/Title Date Made  
AC 2001.627.1-.3 Yōshū Chikanobu; Sakai Tōbei, publisher (active ca. 1900) A Picture of the Occupation of Dingzhou ('Teishūjō senryō no zu') 1904 View
AC 2001.628.1-.3 Kobayashi Kiyochika; Sawamuraya Seikichi, publisher (active ca. 1855–1904) The Great Naval Battle at Port Arthur ('Ryojun daikaisen') 1904 View
AC 2001.629.1-.3 Gakyōjin May 4, 1904: The spectacle of our forces attacking the Russian forces, charging ahead, and occupying Jiuliancheng ('Meiji sanjū nen gogatsu tsuitachi waga gun Kurenjō no rogun o kōgeki shi tokkan senryō no kōkei'), from "Scenes of Russo-Japanese Battles" ('Nichiro kōsen') View
AC 2001.630.1-.3 Hirose Bihō; Hirose Yoshikuni Our 2nd Army once again braves the thunderous gunfire and occupies the castle at Gaizhou ('Waga dainigun sai hōraidan o okashite Gaihyō no shiro o senryō su') ca. 1904 View
AC 2001.631.1-.3 Kobayashi Toshimitsu; Matsuno Yonejirō, publisher (active ca. 1884–1904) The Last Stand of Vice-Admiral Makarov ('Makarofu chūjyō funshin no zu') 1904 View
AC 2001.632.1-.3 Migita Toshihide; Akiyama Buemon, publisher For the Fourth Time, Our Destroyers Bravely Attack Enemy Ships Outside the Harbor of Port Arthur ('Dai yonkai ryojunkō gaiiki kuchikukan yū tekikan o shūgeki su'), from the series "News of the Russo-Japanese War" ('Nichiro kōsen kibun') 1904 View
AC 2001.635.1-.3 Getsuzō General Nogi Meets the General Forced to Surrender Port Arthur ('Ryojun kaijō subeshi shōgun kaiken Nogi shōgun') 1905 View
AC 2001.637.1-.3 Utagawa Kokunimasa; Fukuda Hatsujirō, publisher (ca. 1894–1939) Telegraphic Record of the Russo-Japanese War: On the Ice of Lake Baikal in Russia, a Steam Locomotive and Its Cars Sank, Killing Tens of Officers and Soldiers. Russia's Transport Capacity Was Greatly Damaged. (Nichiro sensō denpō jikki no uchi: Rokoku no Baikaru-ko hyōjō tetsudō kikansha oyobi ressha kosui ni chinbotsu shite shōkō heishi sūjūnin sokushi su Rokoku yusōryoku wa dai shōgai o uketaru mono nari 1904 View
AC 2001.639.1-.3 Hirose Bihō; Hirose Yoshikuni; Daikokuya Heikichi, publisher Scouts Clash outside the Seven-Star Gate ('Shichiseimon gai sekkō shōtotsu') 1904 View
AC 2001.640.1-.6 Koto Big sea battle off Port Arthur with victory in the early morning of February 14, 1904. 1904 View
AC 2001.641.1-.3 Utagawa Kokunimasa From the Battery at Mount Ogon, Port Arthur, the Russian forces bombard our warship ('Rohei ryojin ōgonzan hōdai yori waga kanchiku o hōgeki su'), the fifth in a series entitled "Illustrated News from the Japanese Russian War" ('Nichiro sensō gahō: shigo') ca. 1904 View
AC 2001.642.1-.3 Kobayashi Kiyochika; Fukuda Hatsujirō, publisher (ca. 1894–1939) The Russo-Japanese Naval Battle at Chemulpo Bay: The Great Victory of the Japanese Navy — Banzai ('Nichiro jinsekō kaisen dai nihon kaigundaishōri banzai') 1904 View
AC 2001.643.1-.3 Getsuzō In the vicinity of the South Gate of Dingzhou, commissioned officer scouts of our cavalry faced heavy enemy fire and engaged in a valiant struggle and savage fighting. Finally overcoming resistance, they occupied Dingzhou. ('Waga kiheitai no shōkō sekkō Teishū nanmon fukin ni oite, gankyō naru teki no hoka ni ōji, yuto mosen, tsui ni kore o gekitai shi, Teishū o senryō su.' 1904 View
AC 2001.644.1-.3 Ikeda Terukata; Fukuda Hatsujirō, publisher (active ca. 1894–1939); Watanabe Takisaburō, blockcutter (1876–1947) Our Troops Occupy Fenghuangcheng, a Great Victory for the Japanese Army, Hurrah! ('Waga gun hōōjō senryō su dai nihon rikugun daishōri banzai') 1904 View
AC 2001.645.1-.3 Hirose Bihō; Hirose Yoshikuni; Daikokuya Heikichi, publisher Our Forces Advance Fiercely to Attack Port Arthur from the Rear ('Waga gun mōshin shite haimen o kōgeki su') 1904 View
AC 2001.646.1-.3 Hirose Bihō; Hirose Yoshikuni; Daikokuya Heikichi, publisher After Heavy Shelling, Our Forces Occupy the Fort of Dashiqiao ('Waga gun kyōshūshite tekigun o hōgekishi daisekkyō no kenrui o senryō su') 1904 View
AC 2001.647.1-.3 Unknown The Great Japanese Victory Near the Yalu River ('Ōryokkō fukin nihon daishōri') ca. 1904 View
AC 2001.648.1-.3 Kyōkatsu; Katsuki Yoshikatsu, publisher (active ca. 1888–1904) Our Troops Occupy Dingzhou, a Great Japanese Victory ('Teishū o senryō su nihon dai shōri'), from the series "Illustrations of Fierce Russo-Japanese Battles" 1904 View
AC 2001.649.1-.3 Yonehide; Matsuno Yonejirō, publisher (active ca. 1887–1905) The Japanese Forces Occupy Yizhou and the Russian Soldiers Flee to the Northern Bank of the Yalu River ('Nihon gun gishū senryō rohei ōryokkō hokugan e tōsō su') 1904 View
AC 2001.650.1-.3 Kobayashi Kiyochika; Inoue Kichijirō, publisher (1869–1905) The Righteous War to Chastise Russia: Scouts Advancing (Chō-rō gisen teisatsu no shinshin') 1904 View
AC 2001.651.1-.3 Migita Toshihide; Akiyama Buemon, publisher (ca. 1882–1920s) On March 10 at Port Arthur, as destroyers from both sides engaged in close combat... ('San gatsu tōka ryojunkō higa kuchikukan no sessen ni...'), from the series "News of the Russo-Japanese War" ('Nichiro kōsen kibun') 1904 View

Result Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27