EditorialTree with love apples, mandrake, 'mandragora', Reuben brings mandrakes to his mother Leah, anonymous, 1683 - 1762, paper, etching, h 132 mm ? w 81 mm.
EditorialCharles Nicolas, le pere Cochin, French, 1688-1764, after Jean Restout, French, 1692-1768, Laban Defending Himself from Jacob for Having Imposed Leah upon Him in Place o, c. 1737, Etching and engraving printed in black on laid paper, sheet (trimmed wit...
EditorialPurgatorio: Leah speaks to Dante in his dream. Dante Alighieri, Divina Commedia ( The Divine Comedy ), with a commentary in Latin. 1st half of the 14th century. Source: Egerton 943, f.113. Language: Italian, Latin.
EditorialOld Testament. Book of Genesis. Jacob in his uncle Laban's house and the father of his two wives Leah and Rachel. Engraving by Gustave Dore. 19th century.
EditorialOld Testament. Book of Genesis. Jacob in his uncle Laban's house and the father of his two wives Leah and Rachel. Engraving by Gustave Dore. 19th century. Colored.
EditorialOld Testament. Book of Genesis. Jacob in his uncle Laban's house and the father of his two wives Leah and Rachel. Engraving by Gustave Dore. 19th century.
EditorialJacob Returning to Canaan with Rachael and Leah Pursued by Laban, c. 1525. North Netherlands, 16th century. Pot-metal and white glass, and silver stain; overall: 71.1 x 50.3 cm (28 x 19 13/16 in.).
EditorialJacob and Laban with Rachel and Leah (recto) Sketch of Two Men and Other Various Figures (verso), 1600s. Italy, Bologna, 17th century. Red chalk; sheet: 21.3 x 29.2 cm (8 3/8 x 11 1/2 in.).
EditorialOld Testament. Book of Genesis. Jacob in his uncle Laban's house and the father of his two wives Leah and Rachel. Engraving by Gustave Dore. 19th century. Colored.
EditorialOld Testament. Book of Genesis. Jacob in his uncle Laban's house and the father of his two wives Leah and Rachel. Engraving by Gustave Dore. 19th century.
EditorialMassacre of the Shechemites. History of the Bible. France; 15th century. [Miniature only] Dinah and Shechem, and the Massacre of the Shechemites. Dinah, daughter of Jacob and Leah, was defiled by Shechem, which led to the massacre, led by her brothers,...
EditorialPurgatorio: Leah speaks to Dante in his dream. Dante Alighieri, Divina Commedia ( The Divine Comedy ), with a commentary in Latin. 1st half of the 14th century. Source: Egerton 943, f.113. Language: Italian, Latin.
EditorialLeah, wife of Jacob and here the symbol of a contemplative life, from the tomb of Pope Julius II Rovere, San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome. Michelangelo worked on the papal tomb off and on from 1505-1545. Marble.
EditorialTorah ark curtain. Date/Period: 1698/9 (date of inscription). Ceremonial Art-Textile. Linen: embroidered with silk and metallic thread Linen: embroidered with silk and metallic thread. Height: 1,840 mm (72.44 in); Width: 1,255 mm (49.40 in).
EditorialDANTE'S VISION OF LEAH, BY GUSTAVE DOR?. Dore, 1832 - 1883, French. Engraving for the Purgatorio by Dante. 1870, Art, Artist, romanticism, colour, color engraving.
EditorialOld Testament. Book of Genesis. Jacob in his uncle Laban's house and the father of his two wives Leah and Rachel. Engraving by Gustave Dore. 19th century. Colored.
EditorialOld Testament. Book of Genesis. Jacob in his uncle Laban's house and the father of his two wives Leah and Rachel. Engraving by Gustave Dore. 19th century.
EditorialLeah, wife of Jacob and here the symbol of a contemplative life, from the tomb of Pope Julius II Rovere, San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome. Michelangelo worked on the papal tomb off and on from 1505-1545. Marble.
EditorialKetubah, a Jewish marriage contract from Persia. This contract of marriage between Leah bat Eliahu and Yehezkiel ben Yosef, is decorated with a traditional Persian symbol, the half-moon face rising over lions. From Isfahan, 1860. Watercolour on paper, ...