Ethnic groups (1947 Subjects)
Ottoman archer in the service of the Sultan.
Azamoğlan: young boy of christian origin yet converted into Islam, in the service of the Sultan.
Pilgrim to Mecca, who upon his return from the Hedjaz sells holy water of the region.
Wealthy and poor Turkish woman in house costumes.
Turkish women on their way to the bath (hamam).
Turkish wrestlers.
Greek sailors resting in their boats.
Albanian soldier from the Peloponnese.
Albanian woman from Athens.
Greek woman from Myconos.
Catholic women of Chios.
Catholic woman of Chios.
Young Albanina woman from Lichada, Euboea.
The bazaar of Larissa.
Janissary and cannonier of the Ottoman army.
Costumes of Jewish people from Rhodes island, worn by Jacob Breuning and his companion Carlier de Pinon. On the left, their Jewish guide, Abraham.
The Janissary and the interpreter that accompanied Jacob Breuning and his companion Carlier de Pinon in their trip from Istanbul to Egypt. Jacob Breuning and his companion Carlier de Pinon in costumes typical to Istanbul and Egypt.
Jacob Breuning and his companion Carlier de Pinon in Ottoman costumes on their way to the Pyramids, and accompanied by Janissaries and their Jewish interpreter. In the background Sycamores and Cassias
Jacob Breuning, his companion Carlierde Pinon, and their escorts setting off to Mount Sinai (from Cairo).
Jacob Breuning, his companion Carlier de Pinon, and their escorts on their way to Mount Sinai.
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. In the foreground, a Turk charges the pilgrims their entrance to the church.
Jacob Breuning and his companion Carlier de Pinon in Ottoman costumes at Tripoli, Lebanon. Also depicted their escorts, a local interpreter and a Janissary.
Jacob Breuning his companion Carlier de Pinon, and their escort, a local interpreter and a Janissary, on their way to Tripoli, Lebanon.
Scene from the author's journey from Saint Petersburg to Odessa.
Tatars of Crimea.
Inhabitants of Crimea.
Nomad merchants of Crimea.
The author meets inhabitants of Taganrog in Russia.
Frontispiece.
The siege of the Palatinate in modern-day Germany by Louis IV's army in the late 17th century.