X-Nico

unusual facts about validly published name



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List of works published posthumously | Will Irwin, photo published in ''San Francisco Call | Vovin (published musical recording) | Title page of ''Mariken van Nieumeghen'', published ca. 1518 in Antwerp | This advertisement for ''Fast Hack'em'', published in the September 1985 issue of COMPUTE!'s Gazette | ''The Secret Miracles of Nature'', title page from 1658 of the edition published by John Streater | "The “Rhinoceros" woodcut (34 × 20.5 cm or 11.8×8.0 inches) by David Kandel, published in Sebastian Münster's “Cosmographia” of 1598. The obvious resemblance with Dürer's Rhinoceros | The Bachs at leisure? The title page to ''Singende Müse an der Pleisse'', a collection of strophic songs published in Leipzig in 1736, by Johann Sigismund Scholze | ''Spiral Expansion of Muscles in Action'', plaster, photograph published in 1914 and 1919, in ''Cubists and Post-Impressionism'', by Arthur Jerome Eddy | Richard F Outcault's last ''Hogan's Alley'' cartoon for ''Truth'' magazine, ''Fourth Ward Brownies'', was published on 9 February 1895 and reprinted in the ''New York World'' newspaper on 17 February 1895, beginning one of the first comic strips in an American newspaper. The character later known as the Yellow Kid had minor supporting roles in the strip's early panels. This one refers to ''The Brownies | One of the illustrations of ''Gamiani, or Two Nights of Excess'' published in Brussels in 1833. Illustration by Achille Devéria | ''Notes'' was the only full-length book published by Thomas Jefferson | ''Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars'' #1 (May 1984), published by Marvel Comics. Cover art by Mike Zeck | Lord Shaftesbury's "Memorandum to Protestant Monarchs of Europe for the restoration of the Jews to Palestine", published in the Colonial Times | Illustration of Darwin's Rhea, published in 1841 in John Gould | Goldberg's image as published in the ''Berliner Tageblatt | ''Fate of the Norns'' was initially published in 1993 with this 1912 illustration by Arthur Rackham | Doña Mariana and Don Antonio Coronel, from a photo published in the ''Overland Monthly | Australia's Sustainable Seafood Guide, and Pocket Guide, published by Australian Marine Conservation Society | A frame from a German relativity film produced in 1922, published in ''Scientific American |


see also

Nomen illegitimum

A nomen illegitimum is a validly published name, but one that contravenes some of the articles laid down by the International Botanical Congress.