Showing 3270 results

Subjects
Subjects term Scope note Results
Basho 1
Basilica of Saint Mary Major (Rome, Italy) 1
Basilica of Santa Croce (Florence, Italy) 1
Basilica of Santa Maria del Fiore (Florence, Italy) 1
Basilicas (Roman architecture) 1
Basketball

Use for: Basket-ball

10
Baskets 4
Bathing Cabinets 1
Bathrooms 3
Batteries 1
Battles--Aliwal (1846) 1
Battleships--HMS Victoria (1887) 1
Bavaria--Pictorial works 1
Bayer 0
Beaches

Use for: Beach

  • Shores comprised of an accumulation of sediment, such as sand or pebbles, along the edge of a sea or lake, and formed by coastal processes such as waves and tides.
75
Beards 10
Bears 2
Beaumont Castle--Pictorial works 1
Beloil 0
Beluga whale 0
Ben Nevis 1
Bentley 1
Berlin 0
Berlin, Germany--Pictorial works 1
Bible colleges 1
Bicycles 16
Biddeford 1
Bigamy 1
Bikes 1
Biographical Records 2
Biographical films 2
Biology 2
Biomedical Engineering 1
Birdhouses 4
Birds 6
Birds in art 3
Bison 2
Black Creek Pioneer Village 1
Black Forest (Germany) 1
Black History 0
Black Sea 0
Black-and-white photography

Use for: Black and white photography , Photography, black-and-white

  • The art or practice of taking and/or processing photographs whose images are composed of gray tones, black, and white, and sometimes one hue, which may result from toning or aging.
4
Blackface entertainers

Use for: Black-face entertainers, Entertainers, Blackface, Minstrels (Blackface entertainers)

  • Blackface is a form of theatrical make-up used predominantly by non-Black performers to represent a caricature of a Black person. It refers to the racist act of artificially darkening the skin in an attempt to impersonate Black people.
9
Blanc, Mont (France and Italy) 1
Bleachers 2
Blinds 1
Blood banks 1
Blueprints

Use for: Blue-prints, Cyanotypes

7
Blues musicians 6
Boards of trade 1
Boardwalks 3
Boats and boating

Use for: Boat handling, Boats, Boating, Boats, Primitive, Boats and boating--Recreational use, Pleasure boating, Recreation boating, Recreational boating, Recreational boats, Watercraft

93
Boer War 1
Bonnets 4
Book Chapters 3
Books 3
Books - Manuscripts 1
Books - Published 13
Bookstores 0
Boston--Pictorial works 2
Bottles 2
Bourbon Street 0
Bowler hats 1
Bowling 7
Box cameras

Use for: box camera, Camera, box, Cameras, box

  • Early type of camera consisting of a lightproof box, with lens, shutter, and viewfinder, and employing film rather than a plate.
25
Boxers (Sports) 5
Boys 15
Boys--Societies and clubs 3
Branch banks 15
Branch libraries--Ontario-Burlington 1
Branscombe, Maude 1
Breadalbane (Ship) 0
Brides 4
Bridges (built works) (1) 37
Briefs 19
Brigham Young 1
British Columbia--Politics and government 1
British Marines 1
Brodie Loch 1
Bronco 1
Brownie camera 120
Bruges, Belgium--Pictorial works 1
Brush 1
Brussels, Belgium--Pictorial works 1
Brutalism (Architecture) 3
Buddhist architecture 1
Buffalo 0
Bufford 0
Building materials 2
Building sites--Ontario 2
Building, Wooden 5
Buildings

Use for: Edifices, Halls, Structures

  • Here are entered general works on structures or edifices. Works on the design and style of structures are entered under [Architecture.] Works on the process of construction are entered under [Building.]
85
Buildings, Temporary 2
Buildings--Maintenance 2
Buildings--New York (State) 1
Buildings--Repair and reconstruction 4
Buildings--War damage 1
Built Complexes and Districts (hierarchy name) (4)
  • The Built Complexes and Districts hierarchy contains terms for coherent groupings of built works and for parts of settlements. Complexes are defined as aggregations of buildings, other structures, and open spaces, often multifunctional and more extensive, and usually shaped over a longer period of time by more participants than single built works. Districts are defined as delineated or perceived components of settlements that are more extensive and less architectonic than built complexes. These areas are likely to be defined by socio-economic characteristics or topographic features, by a sameness of the built works they encompass, or by administratively created boundaries. Relation to other hierarchies: Terms for public transit systems (e.g.,
0
Built Environment (hierarchy name) (43)
  • The Built Environment hierarchy includes terms for the built and natural environment, covering constructed works and natural landscapes, forming a continuum from the largest natural landscapes and settled areas to the smallest of individual built works. Relation to other hierarchies: The constituent parts of constructed works, such as doors and walls, that extend the continuum at even smaller scale, are found in the Components hierarchy. Concepts may have multiple parents; therefore, in those instances where a concept may logically appear at more than one level of the continuum (e.g.,
0
Built environment 0
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