Close
Cart (0)
Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Conceptually similar
AR6172951
AR6172981
AR6172988
AR6172993
AR6177110
AR6172957
AR6172958
AR6172950
AR6172960
AR6172980
AR6172982
AR6172995
AR6172959
AR6172956
AR6172952
AR6172961
AR6172978
AR6172976
AR6177111
AR6172977
Mask representing Bacchus, Roman god of wine, on the facade of the Hotel des Freres Raimbaud, an 18th century mansion on the Quai Turenne on Ile Feydeau, in Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. The building is listed as a historic monument. Nantes was an important trading port, profiting greatly from the slave trade from 17th - 19th century, although the Rimbaud brothers were wood merchants. The Ile Feydeau area, a former island in the Loire, was developed from the 1720s with large mansions built by wealthy shipowners and slave traders. Picture by Manuel Cohen
Unique Identifier
AR6177562
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
7087px × 4725px
Photo Credit
Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Tags
18th century
ARCHITECTURAL DETAIL
Architecture
Bacchus
BRETAGNE
BRITTANY
building
Cityscape
classical
COLOR IMAGE
colour image
DAY
EUROPE
EUROPEAN
Exterior
Facade
Face
French
god
Grapes
HERITAGE
HISTORIC MONUMENT
History
HOME
HORIZONTAL
hotel particulier
House
LOIRE
LOIRE VALLEY
Loire-Atlantique
MANSION
Mask
Merchant
Monument Historique
MYTHOLOGICAL
MYTHOLOGY
NANTES
Neoclassical
Neo-Classicism
Outdoors
OUTSIDE
Pays de la Loire
Roman
SCULPTURAL DETAIL
Sculpture
SLAVE TRADE
Slavery
Stone
Town
Western Europe
Western European
Wine