Collingwood | Collingwood Football Club | Alexander Frey | Freyr | Collingwood, Victoria | Collingwood, Ontario | Glenn Frey | Paul Collingwood | James Frey | HMS Collingwood | W. G. Collingwood | Leonard Frey | HMS Collingwood (establishment) | Gerhard Frey | Collingwood, New Zealand | Chocolat Frey | Widdowson (hand on hip) depicted in an engraving titled "Famous Football Players" issued by the ''Boy's Own Paper | Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick depicted in 1347 as one of the 8 mourners attached to the monumental brass of Sir Hugh Hastings (d.1347) at St Mary's Church, Elsing | The town of Sofala, as depicted in the 1974 film ''The Cars That Ate Paris | The simultaneous destruction of the ''Cordelière'' and the ''Regent'' depicted by Pierre-Julien Gilbert | "The painstaking Irishman"
As depicted by "Ape" (Carlo Pellegrini | ''The Annunciation'' as depicted in an oil on canvas by Edward Burne-Jones | Some strike leaders like "the Gaucho" Cuello, Facón Grande and Schultz, "the German", depicted in the 1974 film ''Rebellion in Patagonia | Sami Frey | Rúnar Freyr Gíslason | Right elevation and deck plan as depicted in Brassey's Naval Annual | Richard Frey | R. G. Collingwood | Raymond Frey | Rama and Lakshmana seated on Kabandha's arms, about to sever them. Kabandha is depicted with a big mouth on his stomach and no head or neck; though depicted with two eyes, the ''Ramayana'' describes him as one-eyed. (Painting on ceiling of temple in Ayodhyapattinam near Salem, Tamil Nadu |
Lakeland author W. G. Collingwood 1917 book The Likeness of King Elfwald: A Study of Iona and Northumbria imagined the life of Ælfwald.
Coauthoring with W. G. Collingwood A pilgrimage to the saga-steads of Iceland. (1899, W. Holmes: Ulverston (publisher))
Veneration of Njörðr survived into 18th or 19th century Norwegian folk practice, as recorded in a tale collected by Halldar O. Opedal from an informant in Odda, Hordaland, Norway.
William M. Johnston, The Formative Years of R. G. Collingwood (Harvard University Archives, 1965)
In the prose, Loki has been bound by the gods with the guts of his son Nari, his son Váli is described as having been turned into a wolf, and the goddess Skaði fastens a venomous snake over Loki's face, from which venom drips.
He used the names of some of Collingwood's grandchildren for his characters, the Swallows (see Roger Altounyan).
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In 1896, Arthur Ransome met the Collingwoods and their children, Dora (later Mrs Ernest Altounyan), Barbara (later Mrs Oscar Gnosspelius), Ursula, and Robin (the later historian and philosopher).