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Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, French politician and economist, early 19th century. Artist: William Thomas Fry
AR917866 
Railway steam locomotive designed in 1849 by English engineer Thomas Russell Crampton.
AR918043 
Title page of Adam Bede by George Eliot, c1885. Artist: William Small
AR926909 
Robert Peel, British industrialist.
AR918916 
Title page of The Mill on the Floss by George Eliot, c1880. Artist: Walter-James Allen
AR926917 
Title page of Isagoge in Typum Cosmographicum seu Mappam Mundi by Peter Apian, 1523.
AR916844 
Thomas Paine, English-born American revolutionary, writer and philosopher, c1790.
AR926269 
Title page of Quadrans Apiani by German mathematician and astronomer Peter Apian, 1532.
AR916841 
Robert Thomas Wilson, English soldier and military writer, 1817. Artist: Anon
AR913785 
Sectional view of a Newcomen steam engine, 1737.
AR917917 
James Watt, Scottish engineer, 19th century. Artist: Robert G Bell
AR917896 
Robert Thomas Wilson, English soldier and military writer, 1821. Artist: Anon
AR913782 
Model of a Newcomen steam engine, 1856.
AR917899 
James Watt, Scottish engineer.
AR917893 
Thomas Bambridge (fl1729), Warden of the Fleet Prison, London.
AR918376 
Giant tortoises of the Galapagos Islands which were observed by Darwin, 1894.
AR915373 
William Thomas Stead, English author and journalist, c1890. Artist: W&D Downey
AR913848 
Die-stamping the channel and eye position on needle wires, Redditch, England, c1835.
AR917881 
Execution of Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury, Oxford, 1556 (mid 19th century).
AR926607 
Dr Johnson and James Boswell recovering from a hangover after a night on the town. Artist: Thomas Rowlandson
AR927073 
Title page of Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Malthus, 1806. Artist: Thomas Malthus 
Title page of Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Malthus, 1806. Thomas Robert Malthus (1766-1834), English cleric and economist, believed that population growth would outstrip food supplies, with disastrous results. He published his theory in his famous essay which first appeared in 1798, advocating population control as the solution to the impending crisis. Malthus had not anticipated the influence of the scientific and technological advances of the Industrial Revolution, however, and his predictions of doom proved false. 
Unique Identifier AR917980 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 2602px × 4026px 
Photo Credit HIP / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
19th century
Ann Ronan Pictures
ARTS
B&W
B/W
Black & White
Black and white
Britain
British
concept
ECONOMICS
ESSAY
event
Industrial Revolution
Literature
Malthus
Monochrome
NINETEENTH CENTURY
overpopulation
POPULATION
PREDICTION
Print Collector1
THOMAS
Thomas Malthus
Thomas Robert Malthus
Title page