Close
Logo
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
play button
Conceptually similar
Guglielmo Marconi, Italian physicist and inventor and pioneer of wireless telegraphy, 1906.
AR924662 
Guglielmo Marconi, Italian physicist and inventor, c1909.
AR984923 
Mr Punch thanking Marconi for wireless telegraphy which was saving lives at sea, 1913. Artist: Leonard Raven-Hill
AR924666 
Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937), Italian physicist and inventor, 1926.
AR959928 
AR9419797 
Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937), Italian physicist and radio pioneer.
AR914060 
AR9436125 
Mobile radio station used by Marconi, 1900.
AR924648 
Guglielmo Marconi, Italian pioneer of wireless telegraphy, Signal Hall, Newfoundland, 1901 (1951).
AR980103 
Guglielmo Marchese Marconi, Italian electrical engineer, (c1924).
AR937234 
Replica of Marconi's first transmitter used in his early experiments in Italy, 1894.
AR924636 
ART208080 
GUGLIELMO MARCONI (1874-1937). Físico italiano. Logró la primera transmisión de radio entre Francia y Gran Bretaña. Premio Nobel de Física en el año 1909. S. XIX-XX (S. XIX-S. XX). Grabado de 'L'Illus
alb1471548 
Wireless officer sending a message by Morse Code from on board a ship, 1916.
AR916071 
Sir Joseph John Thomson, physicist and inventor, 1900.
AR926786 
Karl Guthe Jansky, American physicist and radio engineer, c1940.
AR923916 
Louis de Broglie, French physicist, 1933.
AR977702 
Pierre Curie, French physicist, (c1924).
AR937249 
Svante Arrhenius (1859-1927), Swedish physicist and chemist.
AR918832 
Dmitri Skobeltsyn and Niels Bohr, Russian and Danish physicists, 1961.  Artist: Anon
AR911868 
'Guglielmo Marconi', (1874-1937), Italian physicist and inventor, 1894-1907. Marconi discovered a way in which waves could be used to send messages from one place to another without wires or cables. Having read about Heinrich Hertz's work with electromagnetic waves, he began experiments of his own, and in 1894 successfully sounded a buzzer 9 metres away from where he stood. In 1902 Marconi sent a radio signal across the Atlantic in Morse code. Five years later, a Canadian scientist, Reginald Fessenden, transmitted a human voice by radio for the first time. Marconi's inventiveness and business skills made radio communication a practical proposition. From Ogden's Guinea Gold Cigarettes. 
Unique Identifier AR9418510 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 2687px × 3732px 
Photo Credit HIP / Art Resource, NY 
 Add to lightbox
 Add to cart
Tags
1900s
19th century
20th century
ACCESSORY
B&W
B/W
Black & White
Black and white
clothes
company
country
Dress
Guglielmo
GUGLIELMO MARCONI
Guinea Gold
Industry
Inventor
Italian
Italy
JOB
LOCATION
looking away
Male
Man
Marchese Guglielmo Marconi
MARCONI
MARCONI, GUGLIELMO
Men
Monochrome
NINETEENTH CENTURY
NOBEL PRIZE
Nobel Prize winner
Noise
OCCUPATION
Ogden's
one person
People
Photograph
PHYSICIST
Portrait
Print Collector29
PROFESSION
Radio
Science
Scientist
soundwave
suit
The Print Collector
tie