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#tankard
wearemercs · 5 months
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All girls dungeon squad! by HanPixe
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artifacts-archive · 27 days
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Tankard (Hanap) with Ships
Turkey, Late 16th century
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ltwilliammowett · 4 months
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Copper tankard marked "God Bless Lord Nelson", early 19th century
Possibly a Sailor's drinking vessel or water pitcher for swabbing out fired Cannon barrels. 
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thesilicontribesman · 8 months
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Prehistoric Feasting Utensils, 1150BCE to 150CE, Fagans National Museum of History, Cardiff, Wales
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shewhoworshipscarlin · 2 months
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Tankard, 1685-87, Leipzig, Germany.
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dozydawn · 4 months
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yourcoffeeguru · 12 days
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Vintage Sadler England Earl JOHN-WARENNE 1286-1347 Beer Stein Tankard Barware || SWtradepost - ebay
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▪︎ Tankard.
Place of origin: Koenigsberg, Germany
Date: ca. 1625
Medium: Amber; Frame: gold, enamel
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zoethehead · 6 months
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aaand, here's the main teutonic thrash 4 fandomstuck group, the knight of rage(Sodom), Page of blood(Kreator), Prince of Doom(Destruction), and Bard of mind(Tankard)
now when i fell like it, i'll work on coroner and accept's fandmstuck designs, to finish off the big 6 of teutonic thrash(I only really know of 6 bands in the teutonic thrash subgenre, hence why i call them the big 6)
all bases used made by @chubby-aphrodite and Doodlegamergirl.
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batatasthings · 27 days
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Tankard foi de f
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Attributed to Jacob Heise (1621 - circa 1675), German, Königsberg, circa 1650-60, Tankard; amber, silver-gilt.
Courtesy Alain Truong
via pwlanier
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artifacts-archive · 1 month
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Tankard (Hanap) with Tulips, Hyacinths, Roses, and Carnations
Turkey, Ottoman dynasty (1299–1923), Late 16th century
Though the Iznik tradition seems to have been intially inspired by imported Chinese blue-and-white porcelain, by the 1550s, Iznik pottery had been transformed. Working in collaboration with the imperial Ottoman atelier in Istanbul (nakkash-hane), Iznik potters helped to create a style that epitomized an empire and was eventually sought after far from Istanbul. The tulip and carnation motif was particularly popular and appears on book bindings, paper borders, and textiles made for the Ottoman court. The craze for tulips was not limited to ornament, however. The real flowers were cultivated in Istanbul’s gardens, and the bulbs were exported to Europe. The size of this tankard even suggests that it may have once been used as a flower vase, perhaps to hold the very blossoms it depicts.
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world-of-advice · 1 month
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corvianbard · 2 months
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#6049
Come gather around the tankard of ale, And drink until all your senses fail. If your heart is so heavy with grief, Let this alcoholic company be your relief.
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Tankard, 1736, New York City.
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