No. 8. - Examination of a man who has recovered from Plague previous to his discharge from the Port Trust Hospital

Classe

Image fixe

Type

fre Photographie

Titre

eng No. 8. - Examination of a man who has recovered from Plague previous to his discharge from the Port Trust Hospital

Créateur

fre Shivshanker Narayen (18..-1...)

Éditeur

fre Inconnu

Numérotation de l'éditeur

8

Date

Couverture temporelle

Couverture spatiale

Format

fre 3 fichiers JPEG (planche recto : 3,41 Mo ; planche verso : 3,87 Mo ; photographie : 5,57 Mo)
fre 3 vues

Technique et dimensions

fre Épreuve à l'albumine sur papier montage sur carton
fre 21,5*26,5 cm

Autre numérotation

fre 14 (numérotation manuscrite de Louis Dumoulin au verso du cliché)

Provenance

fre Bibliothèque de l'ancien Musée des colonies (Paris)

Marque(s) d'appartenance

fre Tampon bleu au nom de Louis Dumoulin

Source

fre Université Côte d'Azur. BU Lettres Arts Sciences Humaines. Fonds ASEMI

Cote

PH104-12

Droits

fre Domaine public

Identifiant pérenne

Description

Vue du Bombay Port Trust Hospital, pendant l'épidémie de peste de 1896-1897. Comme l'indique la légende au verso, l'homme couché sur le brancard a survécu à la maladie et subit un dernier examen avant de quitter l'hôpital. Comme l'indique son tampon, ce cliché a été acheté par le peintre Louis Dumoulin lors de l'un de ses voyages en Extrême-Orient. Le MET, qui possède un tirage de ce cliché, identifie le photographe comme étant un certain "Shivshanker Narayen".

Annotations

Les Indes Bombay (annotation manuscrite de Louis Dumoulin au verso)

Relation(s)

Ressources liées

Filtrer par propriété

Relation
Titre Libellé alternatif Classe
No. 7. - Wari Bunder Hospital, Bombay, arrival of a Plague patient in an ambulance carriage Relations Image fixe
No. 10. - The start for work in the morning - Doctors of both sexes, Health Officials, Justices, Police, Conservancy men, with steam pump and white-washers, ambulance, shigrams and attendants setting out from morning duty Relations Image fixe
No. 15. - A well-to-do Hindu family who had to leave their own house and live in huts at Malad (Salsette) during the prevalence of the Plague in their neighbourhood Relations Image fixe
No. 4. - A Plague house in Kalbadevi Road, Bombay. The plain circles represent death from Plague. The circles with a cross within denote death reported as from others maladies. It is probable that many of the latter were Plague cases falsely reported Relations Image fixe
No. 3. - Washing buildings and dwellings and flushing house gullies with Municipal steam pump in foreground and fire engine in background. A fire of wood and sulphur burns in front of the building - October 1896 Relations Image fixe
No. 12. - Arrival of a Plague patient in an ambulance entrance of the Wari Bunder Hospital. The pulse of the patient is being examined by the Doctor. The ambulance is entirely of iron mounted on easy springs and carried on cycle wheels with rubber tyres - February 1897 Relations Image fixe
No. 2. - Cremation ceremony in the Hindu burning ground during the time of Plague. The pile of wood is supported latterally by two iron stakes driven into the ground at each side, 5 cwts. of wood are used for burning of an adult body. At the left hand side a body just brought in and still enveloped in cloth, awaits cremation. The ashes of the body are collected and thrown into the sea Relations Image fixe
[No. 11. - House to house visitation by Justices of Peace with a military escort and ambulance, in the native part of Bombay, much opposition was at first shown to this work but eventually the alarm of the people subsided. Plague cases continued however to be concealed till the end of the epidemic - April 1897] Relations Image fixe
[No. 16. - The house and shop on the left hand side of the street have been declared by the Plague Committee unfit for human habitation and marked U. H. H. : accumulation of filth and insufficient light and ventilation are the causes noted by the Committee] Relations Image fixe
[No. 1. - House in Mandvie Bunder Road where Plague was first recognised in September 1896. The seventeen circles marked against the doorway are registers of deaths from Plague officially recognised. It is currently reported that fifty deaths occurred from the epidemic in this house before the Municipality began to take official note of it] Relations Image fixe