Hi! This is not an 'old' painting. I believe it's no earlier than a 19th century (most likely later) illustration. It depicts the heraldry of Richard I, the Lionhearted (1189-1199), with the golden lions rampant. It almost looks like the work of the German illustrator, Gustav Adolf Closs (1864 -1938) who did historical illustration.. (see link)... but I cannot find your image. As there have been countless illustrations done of this era.. my suggestion would be to contact the website: (Review: September, 2005, ESSAY: 'Fighting Faiths: Rethinking the Crusades' by Daniel Johnson) which is illustrated by your picture (below)...... and simply ask them! I think they'll be thrilled that someone read their article:) I searched for an attribution but could find none. I wish I could have found it for you... but I hope that this helped!
http://www.art.com/asp/sp-asp/_/PD--12743373/SP--A/IGID--1931292/First_Crusade_a_Cavalry_Charge_by_the_Knights_of_Saint_John_Against_the_Saracens.htm?sOrig=CRT&sOrigId=62077&ui=712FF7662C2E49F7A49419AD31F42BE7
http://www.aijac.org.au/review/2005/30-9/essay30-9.htmlhttp://aolsearch.aol.com/aol/imageDetails?invocationType=imageDetails&query=richard+lionhearted+illustration&img=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.marbleslawn.com%2FSH200-Richard.jpg&site=&host=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.marbleslawn.com%2Fmedievalhome.html&width=91&height=113&thumbUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fimages-partners-tbn.google.com%2Fimages%3Fq%3Dtbn%3AffoGF_tjx-9EYM%3Awww.marbleslawn.com%2FSH200-Richard.jpg&b=image%3Fquery%3Drichard%2Blionhearted%2Billustration%26page%3D5%26invocationType%3Dbottomsearchbox.image%26clickstreamid%3D-5768712703781997260
http://www.aijac.org.au/main-pages/contact.html
2007-09-25 16:52:00
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answer #1
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answered by guess who at large 7
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paint does get previous. the various contents in paint improve and start to how could i clarify rot the paint. my father is a painter. he has been interior the corporation on the grounds that he replaced into 14 years previous (born and raised in russia until he replaced into like 20 and then moved to huge apple). whilst it replaced into time to color my room to boot the paint he had in his closet for virtually 13 years replaced into all cracked and it appeared oily. sometimes an excellent mixing with some primer in that is going to help restoration the paint. additionally transfering it right into a sparkling bucket so the previous one does not burst whilst in use. some indicators that the soreness has expired is its scent and ordinary texture. if the paint smells (paint smells even though it doesnt scent like moldy or nasty) like its rotting, aka, moldy or rancid like undesirable cheese then its long previous. if it has cracks (interior the paint not the can) like there are streams of oil during the paint, then you may probable attempt to repair it via mixing in some primer yet in easy terms a splash at a time so which you will see if there's a distinction. if there is none then toss the bucket out! no if ands or buts approximately it. the attempt to apply stale paint on partitions might desire to harm the wall and correctly...if the paint is spoiled then you wont have the skill to even attempt to color with it to start with.
2016-11-06 09:03:13
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answer #2
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answered by purifory 4
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I have no idea but I xcan tell you its from the High Renaissance period and it is of great detail compared to the Early Renaissance so this is one way to tell/ I think you might be able to google it or ask an art professor or an artist who enjoys this era, but if it were me I'd ask an art appraiser. That is what they specialize in. Hope this helps some.
2007-09-25 13:18:10
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answer #3
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answered by Natalie F 2
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are you sure it's a painting? It almost looks like a tapestry or a wood block carving.
2007-09-25 12:26:27
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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ME! No, i honestly have no clue.
2007-09-25 11:14:40
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answer #5
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answered by Kammie54 3
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king aurther obviously, god how dumb are u?
2007-09-25 11:21:05
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answer #6
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answered by Marnie L 1
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