Cultural Japan
SearchCategoryEraNewsUsageSettings
  1. Top
  2. Search
  3. THE JAPANESE BATTLESHIP MIKASA, WHICH TOOK FIRE AND SANK IN SASEBO HARBOUR, SEPTEMBER 10, 1905
THE JAPANESE BATTLESHIP MIKASA, WHICH TOOK FIRE AND SANK IN SASEBO HARBOUR, SEPTEMBER 10, 1905
RDF DataOriginal SiteIIIF Viewer

THE JAPANESE BATTLESHIP MIKASA, WHICH TOOK FIRE AND SANK IN SASEBO HARBOUR, SEPTEMBER 10, 1905

License: Auckland Libraries Terms (InC-Edu eq.)
IIIF
People
Auckland Weekly News
Time
1900-1909
Owner Organization
Auckland Libraries

More Like This

Pictures shewing two of the Japanese submarines which took part in the attack on Sydney Harbour, and which w...

Pictures shewing two of the Japanese submarines which took part in the attack on Sydney Harbour, and which w...

Destroyed by an internal explosion last week: the Japanese battleship Kawachi, which sank in four minutes, o...

Destroyed by an internal explosion last week: the Japanese battleship Kawachi, which sank in four minutes, o...

Japanese battleship “Hatsuse” which accidentally struck a mine off Port Arthur, and sank with great loss of ...

Japanese battleship “Hatsuse” which accidentally struck a mine off Port Arthur, and sank with great loss of ...

BARON KOMURA,  The Japanese Peace Plenipotentiary, (Otago Witness, 06 September 1905)

BARON KOMURA, The Japanese Peace Plenipotentiary, (Otago Witness, 06 September 1905)

THE JAPANESE BATTLESHIP. MIKASA, 15 200 TONS, NEWS OF WHOSE DESTRUCTION BY FIRE, WITH  THE LOSS OF 200 LIVES...

THE JAPANESE BATTLESHIP. MIKASA, 15 200 TONS, NEWS OF WHOSE DESTRUCTION BY FIRE, WITH THE LOSS OF 200 LIVES...

Last Updated:

Uploaded: 2020-12-17

Cultural Japan

  • About this site
  • Team
  • News
  • Policy
  • Contact
  • For Developers

Tools

  • Search
  • Browse by Category
  • Browse by Place
  • Browse by Era
  • RDF Store

Usage

  • Self Museum
  • Cultural Japan Exhibitions Archive
  • Comparison of Kuni-ezu (Map)
  • NPL Visualization
  • IIIF Collection
  • Other Examples

Links

  • Japan Search
  • Japan Search unofficial support page
  • Europeana
  • DPLA
  • Trove
  • Twitter
Cultural Japan