RM2JXKKGP–Engraving titled 'The Rake's Progress' by William Hogarth (1697-1764) depicting the Rake in the Debtor's Prison. Dated 18th Century
RMRJGB0M–DEBTOR'S PRISON, London,1846.
RMAY4GCB–A Debtors Prison
RMCPJ7DY–Debtors' prison in London
RMG38AMF–Scene in a debtor's prison : the debtor's family join him inside Date: first published 1766
RMD2AC0H–Virginia, Prince Edwards County. Debtor'S Prison
RM2ARBCE6–Exodus from Whitecross Street debtors prison 1870
RM2A2PTA5–Paul Gavarni, French, 1804-1866, Debtor's Prison, 1840, lithograph printed in black ink on wove paper, Image: 8 1/2 × 7 7/8 inches (21.6 × 20 cm
RMFY3D61–A lawyer being tossed in a blanket by his colleagues in the yard at King's Bench Prison. Debtors and creditors inside a debtor's prison. Surry Collegians giving a lift to a Limb of the Law. Handcoloured copperplate drawn and engraved by Robert Cruikshank from The English Spy, London, 1825. Written by Bernard Blackmantle, a pseudonym for Charles Molloy Westmacott.
RMDDJ9A8–Poor-house inmates waiting for dinner, Randall's Island, New York City, 1870s. Hand-colored woodcut
RMKJBD6G–Fleet Prison at the time of Charles I
RMWHB8N9–Daily Life - Kings Bench Prison - London.. Pubished 1st December 1808 at R. Ackerman's Repository of Arts, 101 Strand, London.. The King's Bench Prison was a prison situated in the Southwark area of London from medieval times, until its final closure in 1880. It took its name from the King's Bench court of law , where cases of defamation, bankruptcy and other misdemeanours were heard. The prison was often used as a debtor's prison until the practice was abolished in the 1860s. In 1842, it was renamed the Queen's Prison, and later became the Southwark Convict Prison..
RMEG75AP–English dandies visiting a friend in a Whistling Shop (gin palace) in Fleet Prison (debtor's gaol). Tom and Jerry visiting Logic 'on board the Fleet.' Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Isaac Robert Cruikshank and George Cruikshank from Pierce Egan's Life in London, Sherwood, Jones, London, 1823.
RMG3BMP0–Located in St George's Fields, south of the Thames : a debtors' prison notorious for the laxness of its rules - it housed 30 gin shops, as well as facilities for dining. Date: 1808
RM2A1J37D–FL;EET PRISON, London, about 1780 showing debtors begging for alms at the Debtor's Gate
RMB7RT9E–The only surviving remnants of the Marshalsea, a notorious prison in Southwalk, are a brick wall and two original gate arches.
RMDDP0YY–View of Whitecross Street Prison for debtors, London, c1840. Artist: Frederick Napoleon Shepherd
RM2B03XPJ–An engraving of Giltspur Street Compter, London UK scanned at high resolution from a book printed in 1851. Believed copyright free.
RMD89EX1–Whitecross Prison - Egan
RMB4REWR–Site of Marshalsea Prison Southwark London
RMG39Y9A–The Marshalsea Prison, mainly a debtors' prison, was in the Borough High Street, Southwark, as shown on the map Date: 1773
RM2A5YW29–Door from the Debtor's Prison. Dated 18th Century
RMB8P3D5–mr alexander lever in King's Bench Prison Southwark London
RMF7NN9N–Door from the Debtor's Prison. Dated 18th Century
RM2A40X8P–Irish gentleman in Crofton’s whisky and beer bar in Dublin prison, 1821. Bankrupt Brian Boru with his friends in the taproom drinking with criminals and debtors. The Tap in Sheriff’s Prison. Handcoloured engraving from Pierce Egan’s Real Life in Ireland, or the Day and Night Scenes, Rovings, Rambles, and Sprees, Bulls, Blunders, Bodderation and Blarney, of Brian Boru Esq., and his Elegant Friend Sir Shawn O’Dogherty, published by William Evans, London, 1829.
RMD9DN8A–A Fleet Marriage: Churchmen confined in the Fleet Prison for debtors would marry any couple without asking questions. Illustration by 'Phiz' (1815-1882).
RFF28888–Heubrücke bridge over the Pegnitz, debtors' prison on Schütt island, Nuremberg, Middle Franconia, Franconia, Bavaria, Germany
RMR8XR8P–Debtor's prison, Hospice of the Holy Spirit and Hay bridge at the Pegnitz river, old town, Nuremberg, Franconia, Bavaria, Germany, Europe
RF2ABACMY–Cityscape, Schutt Island, debtor's prison, Nuremberg, Middle Franconia, Franconia, Bavaria, Germany
RMBHR419–View of Borough Compter, a debtors' prison in Mill Lane, Bermondsey, London, 1826. Artist: G Yates
RMR350WN–The Westgate Museum in Winchester - Medieval gates front this ancient Tudor & Stuart building with exhibits in a former debtor's prison. Autumn, UK
RMP74R0P–interior of lancaster castle with male prison to the left keep and debtors prison to the right lancaster england uk
RMKYT1H6–The King's Bench Debtors Prison, London in the 18th Century
RMBH05ER–The Hole in the Wall pub Bodmin, which was the Debtors Prison 1749 - 1779
RF2D5YHRJ–Germany, Bavaria, Nuremberg, Old town, cityscape with Nuremberg Castle and Debtor's prison right
RM2WKF5FT–Sign indicating that Little Dorrit's heroine (Amy Dorrit) was not a prisoner although a resident at Marshalsea Debtors' Prison, Southwark, London, UK
RMBJ07H5–An execution before the debtor's door at Newgate Prison, London, c1809. Artist: Unknown
RFEXEH80–Debtors' prison, built in 1323, Nuremberg, Middle Franconia, Bavaria, Germany
RMAHCYTA–An Insolvent Debtor
RMDGT4P9–Schuldturm tower, a former debtors' prison, built in 1323 on the bank of the Pegnitz river, beer garden, Insel Schuett 2
RMAB08MP–Clock turret and cupola on the Debtors Prison at the Castle Museum in York Yorkshire England
RMDGT4PC–Schuldturm tower, a former debtors' prison, built in 1323 on the bank of the Pegnitz river, beer garden, Insel Schuett 2
RMK370XC–LITTLE DORRIT (UK 1988) [SANDS FILMS] SARAH PICKERING as Little Dorrit DEBTORS' PRISON
RMDE0EDB–Schuldturm or Maennereisen, the debtors' prison, built in 1323 by the town architect Conrad Stromer, Nuremberg, Middle Franconia
RMBTKHD5–Forced emigration to the colony of Georgia in North America of debt ridden English lords, esquires, and attorneys, who were sentenced to transportation to Georgia. The deportation of debtors reduced the English prison population during the early reign of George III.
RMB1REJR–Schuldturm Maennereisen, debtors prison tower, built 1323 under the supervision of master builder Conrad Stromer, Nuremberg, Mi
RMR8XR8G–Debtor's prison, Hospice of the Holy Spirit and Hay bridge at the Pegnitz river, old town, Nuremberg, Franconia, Bavaria, Germany, Europe
RMDBBXDK–Schuldturm Tower (Debtor’s prison), built in 1323, Nuremberg, Bavaria, Germany, Western Europe.
RM2BT4AMA–Regency gentleman in a debtors prison, Islington, London. The inmates eat and drink in a large room with a fireplace. SMTWTFS. Proteus taking a benefit according to Law. Scene: Whitecross Street Prison. Handcoloured engraving etched by Theodore Lane from Pierce Egans The Life of an Actor, Pickering and Chatto, London, 1892.
RMKYT1K0–Boy prisoners and youth offenders exercising at Tothill Fields Prison,(aka Bridewell) and Westminster Bridewell) jail or gaol, London
RMP74R0X–interior of lancaster castle with old debtors prison building and keep lancaster england uk
RM2A5R0GB–Regency gentleman in a debtors’ prison, Islington, London. The inmates eat and drink in a large room with a fireplace. SMTWTFS. Proteus taking a benefit according to Law. Scene: Whitecross Street Prison. Handcoloured engraving etched by Theodore Lane from Pierce Egan’s The Life of an Actor, Pickering and Chatto, London, 1892.
RMEHBN0M–For The Benefit of Spiller, an engraving by William Hogarth in 1728, depicting the actor James Spiller trying to raise money outside debtors prison.
RM2A4W72R–Regency dandies visit King’s Bench debtors prison, Southwark. Inmates exercise in a yard surrounded by 30ft walls. A trader rents rackets and balls, others bring beer and gin. Kings Bench. Tom and Bob taking a peep at Real Characters in the Abbots Priory. Handcoloured copperplate engraving from Real Life in London, or, the Further Rambles and Adventures of Bob Tallyho, Esq. and His Cousin The Hon. Tom Dashall, through the Metropolis, Jones, London 1821. Anonymous imitation of Pierce Egan’s Life in London.
RMRF5CJM–Little Dorrit and Maggie, c1890s. By Frances Brundage (1854-1937). Little Dorrit is a novel by Charles Dickens, originally published in serial form between 1855 and 1857.
RM2ANBM51–South London . n in 1758,and the Debtors were removed to a larger and much morecommodious place on the other side of the street south ofLant Street—the site is now marked by a number of newand very ugly houses and mean streets. When it was builtit looked out at the back of St. Georges Fields and acrossLambeth Marsh, then an open space, and by this timedrained. But the good air without was fully balanced by thebad air within. THE DEBTORS PRISON 2/5 The place was surrounded by a very high wall, the areacovered was extensive, and the buildings were more com-modious than had ever before been attem
RMCF0XTD–The Heubrucke (Heu bridge) and the Male Debotrs tower (debtors prison) over the river Pegnitz in Nuremberg, Germany
RM2RGDHAY–The remains of the old palace called the Marshalsea, Southwark, showing the chapel and the palace court : after rebuilding it became a debtors' prison.
RMB7RWP1–A Sign marking the only surviving remnants of the Marshalsea prison in Southwalk
RMG3B3PK–An insolvent debtor makes a court appearance : soon, no doubt, he will find himself in a debtors' prison Date: 1842
RMJ4GHR0–St Briavels Castle Debtors Prison
RMK370XD–LITTLE DORRIT (UK 1988) [SANDS FILMS] SARAH PICKERING as Little Dorrit DEBTORS' PRISON
RMDP9XF7–Fleet Prison - Debtor's grate
RF2JN6WG7–Jedburgh, United Kingdom - 18 June, 2022: interior view of the debtor's prison and jail cells in Jedburgh
RMB1REJW–Schuldturm Maennereisen, debtors prison tower, built in 1323 under the supervision of master builder Conrad Stromer, Nuremberg,
RMR8XR8J–Debtor's prison, Hospice of the Holy Spirit and Hay bridge at the Pegnitz river, old town, Nuremberg, Franconia, Bavaria, Germany, Europe
RMD86F5G–King's Bench Prison London Mainly for Debtors
RMP9HK2J–A lawyer being tossed in a blanket by his colleagues in the yard at King's Bench Prison. Debtors and creditors inside a debtor's prison. Surry Collegians giving a lift to a Limb of the Law. Handcoloured copperplate drawn and engraved by Robert Cruikshank from The English Spy, London, 1825. Written by Bernard Blackmantle, a pseudonym for Charles Molloy Westmacott.
RMG38B1P–The exterior of Fleet prison with debtor's grate Date: Early 18th century
RM2DF4HC2–Chevalier Desseasau, remarkable for his vanity, died 1775. Vain Prussian dwarf who was a celebrity London’s coffee houses such as Old Anderton’s and the Barn, and later Fleet Debtor’s Prison. Dressed in black as an 18th century buck, with tricorn, buckle shoes, two swords, cane and roll of poetry. Lithograph after a stipple engraving by Robert Cooper from Henry Wilson and James Caulfield’s Book of Wonderful Characters, Memoirs and Anecdotes, of Remarkable and Eccentric Persons in all ages and countries, John Camden Hotten, Piccadilly, London, 1869.
RM2M3NH8A–Tailors at work in the debtor's prison of Clichy in Paris, working away while one inmate reads aloud from the newspapers of the day. On a pillar is a poster reading 'Celui qui ne travaille pas est un voleur' (He who does not work is a rogue). Date: 1848
RF2A85B9C–From 'The Descriptive Album of London' by George H Birch 1896 - Extract text : ' FLEET STREET, noted for its literary associations, is one of the busiest streets in London. It runs from Ludgate Circus to the Strand. The Fleet, once a brook, now a sewer, from which it takes its name, flows through Holborn Valley and empties into the Thames at Blackfriars Bridge. The debtors' prison, where ' Fleet Marriages were performed (described so well by Besant, in ' 'The Chaplain of the Fleet '), once stood in this neighbourhood. The names of Shakespeare, Ben Johnson, Dryden, Goldsmith, &c., come to the r
RMFBBY57–The Raquet Ground of the Fleet Prison circa 1808, London, UK
RMHFRE44–The Viaduct Tavern, the only remaining Victorian Gin Palace, stands on the site of the “Giltspur Compter” (a debtors’ prison).
RMDDP105–'Proteus taking a benefit according to law', 1825. Artist: Theodore Lane
RM2B02NW6–Charles John Huffam Dickens (7 February 1812 – 9 June 1870) was an English writer and social critic. He created some of the world's most well-known fictional characters and is generally regarded as the greatest novelist of the Victorian period. During his life, his works enjoyed unprecedented popularity, and by the twentieth century he was widely seen as a literary genius by critics and scholars. His novels and short stories continue to be widely popular. Born in Portsmouth, England, Dickens was forced to leave school to work in a factory when his father was thrown into debtors' prison. Altho
RMERGYG8–The Pickwick papers' by Charles Dickens. Illustrated by Hablot Knight Browne (Phiz). Caption reads: 'Mr. Pickwick sits for his portrait '. (before he goes to the debtor's prison). CD: English novelist: 7 February 1812 - 9 June 1870.
RMB7T0W7–The only surviving remnants of the Marshalsea, a notorious prison in Southwalk, are a brick wall and two original gate arches.
RMA28CB7–Marshalsea Prison
RMW89J42–Debtors Prison Accomac.
RMEABXPB–HMP Lancaster Castle, Lancashire, UK. Exercise room in B wing (the former male debtors prison)
RMF34332–A debtor being received in the Fleet Prison. During the reign of George II, the prison was mainly used for debtors and bankrupts.
RF2HW53J7–Art inspired by Study for a Title-Page: Allegory of Commerce and a Debtor's Prison (?), n.d., Pen and brown ink, brush and brown wash, over black chalk, white gouache., 14 1/5 x 8 9/10 in. (36.1 x 22.6 cm); cardboard mount: 15 1/4 x 10 1/10 (38.75 x 25.7 cm), Drawings, Attributed to, Classic works modernized by Artotop with a splash of modernity. Shapes, color and value, eye-catching visual impact on art. Emotions through freedom of artworks in a contemporary way. A timeless message pursuing a wildly creative new direction. Artists turning to the digital medium and creating the Artotop NFT
RMKJFJNN–Etching and engraving on paper, titled, 'A Rake's Progress, Plate 7, The Rake, Tom Rakewell sits dumbfounded in a debtor's prison', depicting a group of people in a room, some children, a woman being awakened with salts after having fainted, by William Hogarth, 1735. From the New York Public Library.
RMR8XR8H–Debtor's prison, Hospice of the Holy Spirit and Hay bridge at the Pegnitz river, old town, Nuremberg, Franconia, Bavaria, Germany, Europe
RMR3516D–The Westgate Museum in Winchester - Medieval gates front this ancient Tudor & Stuart building with exhibits in a former debtor's prison. England, UK
RM2BT5EFG–Regency dandies visit Kings Bench debtors prison, Southwark. Inmates exercise in a yard surrounded by 30ft walls. A trader rents rackets and balls, others bring beer and gin. Kings Bench. Tom and Bob taking a peep at Real Characters in the Abbots Priory. Handcoloured copperplate engraving from Real Life in London, or, the Further Rambles and Adventures of Bob Tallyho, Esq. and His Cousin The Hon. Tom Dashall, through the Metropolis, Jones, London 1821. Anonymous imitation of Pierce Egans Life in London.
RM2AKKACY–WHITECROSS STEET PRISON, Islington,London. A mixture of debtor prisoners about 1830
RFB98XMG–debtor's prison
RM2WKF5EM–Sign indicating the position of Marshalsea Prison, Southwark, London, UK
RM2TC7RPR–Study for a Title-Page: Allegory of Commerce and a Debtor's Prison (?) 1956 by Romeyn de Hooghe
RM2RAA8MN–The remains of the old palace called the Marshalsea, Southwark, showing the chapel and the palace court : after rebuilding it became a debtors' prison. Date: 1803
RFJAWNDY–Vordere Insel Schütt, Schuldturm Tower or Debtors Prison and Heubrücke Bridge over the River Pegnitz in Nuremberg, Middle Franconia, Bavaria, Germany, Central Europe.
RM2WR93MR–Tom Rakewell with rejection letter and Sarah Young fainted, Progress of a libertine (series title), The Rake's Progress (series title), Text in English in the bottom margin. Here Tom receives a rejection letter written by John Rich, the manager of Covent Garden Theatre, about a submitted play. Two people confront Tom; the man with the key as a representative of the debtors' prison (Fleet Prison) and the other man to collect money for the mug of beer. Tom's wife stands next to him with a clenched fist because he gambled away all her money. Two people try to revive a fainted Sarah
RM2B02NWA–Charles John Huffam Dickens (7 February 1812 – 9 June 1870) was an English writer and social critic. He created some of the world's most well-known fictional characters and is generally regarded as the greatest novelist of the Victorian period. During his life, his works enjoyed unprecedented popularity, and by the twentieth century he was widely seen as a literary genius by critics and scholars. His novels and short stories continue to be widely popular. Born in Portsmouth, England, Dickens was forced to leave school to work in a factory when his father was thrown into debtors' prison. Altho
RMKC84H2–Study for a Title-Page: Allegory of Commerce and a Debtor's Prison (?), Attributed to Romeyn de Hooghe, n.d
RMB7RTJ4–The only surviving remnants of the Marshalsea, a notorious prison in Southwalk, are a brick wall and two original gate arches.
RMA67BWC–Fleet Prison Cruikshank
RMT96HHY–Tom Rakewell in a cell in the Fleet Prison. The inscription across bottom refers to his wife's reproaches, a swooning woman and child, and the chemist (alchemist) by the furnace (background). A Rake's Progress is a series of 8 paintings by William Hogarth. The canvases were produced in 1732-34, then engraved in 1734 and published in print form in 1735.
RM2M3K5N8–Last remains of Old Fleet Prison, comprising a facade of three archways, London. In the background a train runs along a railway viaduct and the dome of St. Paul's Cathedral is visible. In the foreground a horse-drawn cart passes a low wall covered with contemporary advertising posters.
Download Confirmation
Please complete the form below. The information provided will be included in your download confirmation