Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: IX. Another interior view of the remains of the so-called Collège des Anfictions
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Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: VII. Interior view of the so-called Collège des Anfictions

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: VIII. Another view of the pronaos described and drawn in the preceding plate

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: V. A. View of the remains of the pronaos of the building known as the Collège des Anfictions..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: VI. Another view of the pronaos façade drawn and described in Plate V..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: II. View showing the remains of a large enclosure of columns..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: XIII. A., B. Interior view of the remains of one of the pronaoi of the Temple of Neptune..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: III. View of some columns of the façade opposite the one shown in the preceding plate..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: XIV. Rear view of the ramains of the pronaos of the Temple of Neptune, drawn in the two preceding plates

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: I. View showing the remains of the ancient city walls A. of Pesto..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: XV. View of the remains of the cella of the Temple of Neptune

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: XVII. View of the remains of the cella of the Temple of Neptune

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: XIX. Side view of the Temple of Juno..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: X. View of the Temple of Neptune, tutelary god of the ancient city of Pesto..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: Frontispiece: View showing the remains of the interior of the Temple of Neptune..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: IV. A. View of the eighteen side columns, drawn from the side opposite those shown in the first plate..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: XVIII. View of another temple in the city of Pesto, which if commonlt believed to have been dedicated to Juno..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: XVI. A., B. View of the remains of the two rows of columns in the Temple of Neptune..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: XII. Interior view of the Temple of Neptune, described in Plate X (second version)

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: XX. Interior view of the temple which is believed to have been dedicated to Juno..

Different Views of some of the remains of three great edifices..of the ancient city of Pesto: XI. Temple of Neptune at Pesto, seen from the side and drawn on a larger scale than in the first plate

The Views of Rome: Hadrian's Villa: Remains of the So-Called Pretorio

The Views of Rome: Hadrian's Villa. Remains of the Smaller Palace (Formerly Called the Temple of Apollo)

Parisian Freebooters 12: The Crocodile: This has to do with a variety of species of Crocodile, which was known to the ancients under the name of Tantalus and which a Gymnasium naturalist of our time has called the Gastronome without money. This voracious whale-like creature is most commonly found in the localities of Merchants of Eatables. His teeth are pointed and very long from lack of exercise, since he uses only his eyes to devour. When he has had the perseverance to remain for a whole day static in front of his prey he sometimes ends up by having the luck to catch... a crick in the neck. He feeds himself only on desires and vain hopes, he is also remarkably thin. Very different from other fish of his species that swim in open water, this type of Crocodile is always in the dry
Uploaded: 2023-01-17
