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[Sarajcvo (i.e., Sarajevo), looking toward Alifakovak, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

[Sarajcvo (i.e., Sarajevo), looking toward Alifakovak, Bosnia, Austro-...

Title from the Detroit Publishing Co., Catalogue J foreign section, Detroit, Mich. : Detroit Publishing Company, 1905. Print no. "17375". Forms part of: Views of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the Photochrom pr... More

Interior of Mosque at Sarajevo, Bosnia where Arch Duke Francis Ferdinand & his wife were assassinated

Interior of Mosque at Sarajevo, Bosnia where Arch Duke Francis Ferdina...

Public domain historical photo, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description

Natives in market place, Sarajevo, Bosnia, Austria-Hungary

Natives in market place, Sarajevo, Bosnia, Austria-Hungary

J142558 U.S. Copyright Office. No. 15611. Public domain photograph of stereoscopic card, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description

The Inertia of the East. Is aptly illustrated in this Turkish quarter of Sarajevo, where Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated. The buildings, streets and methods of business have not changed in centuries, while in the European quarter there are fine buildings and finer shops. It was in this Oriental quarter that the American Red Cross found most of their patrons at its free feeding stations for children

The Inertia of the East. Is aptly illustrated in this Turkish quarter ...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Herzegovina. On caption card: 12827. Used in: T.T.... More

[Sarajcvo (i.e., Sarajevo), Bendbasi, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

[Sarajcvo (i.e., Sarajevo), Bendbasi, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

Title from the Detroit Publishing Co., Catalogue J foreign section, Detroit, Mich. : Detroit Publishing Company, 1905. Print no. "17376". Forms part of: Views of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the Photochrom pr... More

Where the late unpleasantness started. The market place in Sarajevo, where the Archduke Ferdinand was murdered giving an excuse for starting the war. This picture shows the town as it appeared this fall. At the end of this street the American Red Cross had a feeding station where 5,000 undernourished children were cared for

Where the late unpleasantness started. The market place in Sarajevo, w...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: Paris Office. Group title: Herzegovina. On caption card: (11742) Used in: T.T. & ... More

Cheerful Balkan Burden-Bearer. The women of the Balkans, unlike their more progressive sisters in America, are satisfied to be the burden bearers of the city and town and countryside, preferring to let their men follow their immemorial vocation of going to battle and guarding home and country. The aged but sturdy housewife in the picture was snapped at the American Red Cross dispensary in Sarajevo, Bosnia, where she had come to apply for milk for her little grandchild

Cheerful Balkan Burden-Bearer. The women of the Balkans, unlike their ...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Dispensary, Bosnia. On caption card: 1/1496. Used ... More

[Sarajcvo (i.e., Sarajevo), Turkenviertal, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

[Sarajcvo (i.e., Sarajevo), Turkenviertal, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

Title from the Detroit Publishing Co., Catalogue J foreign section, Detroit, Mich. : Detroit Publishing Company, 1905. Print no. "17378". Forms part of: Views of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the Photochrom pr... More

What was your first reaction? Vukovar 91, Mogadishu 93, Sarajevo 92 ... / / Maria Dujmović Kondres.

What was your first reaction? Vukovar 91, Mogadishu 93, Sarajevo 92 .....

Picture shows vignettes of ballet dancers performing, with text superimposed.

[Sarajcvo (i.e., Sarajevo), from the north, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

[Sarajcvo (i.e., Sarajevo), from the north, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

Title from the Detroit Publishing Co., Catalogue J foreign section, Detroit, Mich. : Detroit Publishing Company, 1905. Print no. "16788". Forms part of: Views of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the Photochrom pr... More

[Studio portrait of models wearing traditional clothing from the province of Bosna (Bosnia), Ottoman Empire]

[Studio portrait of models wearing traditional clothing from the provi...

(1) Resident of Mostar; (2) bourgeois of Bosna-Seraı̈ (Sarajevo) ; and (3) married woman of Bosna-Seraı̈ (Sarajevo). French caption: Bosnie: Figure 1: Habitant de Mostar; Figure 2: Bougeois de Bosna-Seraı̈; Fi... More

[Sarajcvo (i.e., Sarajevo), from the west, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

[Sarajcvo (i.e., Sarajevo), from the west, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

Title from the Detroit Publishing Co., Catalogue J foreign section, Detroit, Mich. : Detroit Publishing Company, 1905. Print no. "16789". Forms part of: Views of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the Photochrom pr... More

The Draying Business in Bosnia. The pack mules have plenty of competition among the Turkish women when it comes to carrying heavy loads. The Mohammedan woman on the left is carrying more than the burro. Upon this group the American Red Cross was dependent for much of its firewood to keep its soup kettles boiling in Sarajevo, where it fed 5,000 undernourished mothers and children a day. This particular group gives a typical idea of the customs that prevail among Turkish women and men. The women always carry the heaviest burdens while the male member of the family staggers along under a small package weighing a few ounces

The Draying Business in Bosnia. The pack mules have plenty of competit...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Bosnia. On caption card: 11745. Used in: Ex. Inter... More

Kept Open by American Generosity. The largest hospital in Sarajevo was about to close for lack of medical supplies and equipment when the American Red Cross unit arrived in the city where the excuse for the world was given by the assassination of the Austrian Archduke. The Americans came to feed the under nourished mothers and children. But they also assumed the burden of keeping the hospitals open. The Red Cross sent supplies immediately from its warehouses in France and this hospital with many others admitted more patients instead of turning out those that were already in it

Kept Open by American Generosity. The largest hospital in Sarajevo was...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Hospital, Herzegovina. On caption card: (1/1757) U... More

[Girl of Sarajevo, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

[Girl of Sarajevo, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

Title from the Detroit Publishing Co., Catalogue J foreign section, Detroit, Mich. : Detroit Publishing Company, 1905. Print no. "17381". Forms part of: Views of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the Photochrom pr... More

The evening scene at the biggest mosque in Sarajevo. Those who can't get inside can be seen kneeling on the wide portico while a beggan man and woman hover about the entrance. Note the bare feet of the worshippers and the rack of shoes and sandals in the entrance. A Mohammadan always takes off his shoes while at prayer. For the first time in the history of this Bosnian town a religious custom was broken shortly after the American Red Cross arrived. The priests issued a proclamation permitting children and mothers to break a religious fast and partake of food distributed by the Red Cross

The evening scene at the biggest mosque in Sarajevo. Those who can't g...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: A.R.C. Paris Office. Group title: Bosnia, General. On caption card: (11634) Used ... More

Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. Scene of murder of crown prince which started flame that engulfed all Europe

Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. Scene of murder of crown prince which started fl...

Stereograph title from item. Series title and number from accompanying guide book (call number: D521.H32). Keystone catalog no. 15625. Copyright by The Keystone View Company. Purchase; Jeffrey Kraus; 2009; (DLC... More

Bread Boys of Sarajevo. Typical illustration of the way boys of Bosnia carry burdens on their head. This is a baker's boy who peddles bread in the streets. He balances a long plank loaded with thirty pounds of bread on his head and walks without a misstep through crowded traffic. All this bread is made from white flour sent from America to relieve the food shortage. These boys and thousands of others like them are being aided by the Junior Red Cross of America, which looked after the distribution of cocoa and milk to the under nourished children of Bosnia

Bread Boys of Sarajevo. Typical illustration of the way boys of Bosnia...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Children-Bosnia. On caption card: (1/1938) Used in... More

Getting it While It's Hot. A scene in one of the Bosnian school yards during the noonday meal which is composed of American soup and chocolate. These are some of the children that the boys and girls of America are helping back to health through the Junior Red Cross organization. Five thousand children were fed daily in the city of Sarajevo alone through the Red Cross

Getting it While It's Hot. A scene in one of the Bosnian school yards ...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Children Bosnia. On caption card: 1/1852. Used in:... More

Plenty of free water and air. But that is about all there is left in Sarajvo, the Bosnia town in which the Great War started. This is a scene in the poorest quarter, a Mohammedan mother and her little daughter filling their Turkish jugs with drinking water to sell on the streets, the American Red Cross directed the feeding of 5,000 under nourished children daily in Sarajevo. Types of those that received A.R.C. aid are shown in the background

Plenty of free water and air. But that is about all there is left in S...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Bosnia. On caption card: (11580) Used in: Ex. T.T.... More

Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. Scene of murder of crown prince which started flame that engulfed all Europe

Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. Scene of murder of crown prince which started fl...

Stereograph title from item. Series title and number from accompanying guide book (call number: D521.H32). Keystone catalog no. 15625. Copyright by The Keystone View Company. Purchase; Jeffrey Kraus; 2009; (DLC... More

[Sarajevo, Turkish shop, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

[Sarajevo, Turkish shop, Bosnia, Austro-Hungary]

Print shows the town of Stolac, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Title from the Detroit Publishing Co., Catalogue J foreign section, Detroit, Mich. : Detroit Publishing Company, 1905. On print: Herzegowina. Stolac. Prin... More

Interior of Mosque at Sarajevo, Bosnia where Arch Duke Francis Ferdinand & his wife were assassinated

Interior of Mosque at Sarajevo, Bosnia where Arch Duke Francis Ferdina...

Title from unverified data provided by the National Photo Company on the negative or negative sleeve. Date from negatives in same range. Gift; Herbert A. French; 1947. General information about the National Pho... More

The Luncheon Recess in Sarajevo. A group of Bosnian war orphans being fed in the yeard of their school by the American Red Cross during the noon recess. The Red Cross served 5,000 of these youngsters daily in Sarajevo. Establishing the stations in the schools doubled the attendance, as the children were so hungry that they didn't mind taking a little education along with the food

The Luncheon Recess in Sarajevo. A group of Bosnian war orphans being ...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Bosnia. On caption card: (11759) Gift; American Na... More

The Draying Business in Bosnia. The pack mules have plenty of competition among the Turkish women when it comes to carrying heavy loads. The Mohammedan woman on the left is carrying more than the burro. Upon this group the American Red Cross was dependent for much of its firewood to keep its soup kettles boiling in Sarajevo, where it fed 5,000 undernourished mothers and children a day. This particular group gives a typical idea of the customs that prevail among Turkish women and men. The women always carry the heaviest burdens while the male member of the family staggers along under a small package weighing a few ounces

The Draying Business in Bosnia. The pack mules have plenty of competit...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Bosnia. On caption card: 11745. Used in: Ex. Inter... More

American Red Cross old clothes being prepared for distribution in warehouse at Sarajevo

American Red Cross old clothes being prepared for distribution in ware...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Roumania Supplies. Used in: R.C. Bul. Dec. 22/1919... More

Sarajevo. Inneres der Begova Moschee view, photochrome print postcard.

Sarajevo. Inneres der Begova Moschee view, photochrome print postcard.

Title in Detroit Publishing Co., Catalogue J foreign section, Detroit, Mich. : Detroit Publishing Company, 1905: "Austro-Hungary. Bosnia. Interior of Mosque." Print no. "17379. P.Z." Purchase; Detroit Publishi... More

Belles of Sarajevo. Coin ornaments twisted in their hair, wide band bracelets, immense earrings, embroidered jackets and full skirts are the mark of a belle in Sarajevo, the Bosnian town where the Austrian Archduke was murdered in 1914. This shows two of them on the street surrounded by a group of admiring swain, also in native costume. Amidst such scenes as this Americans are working to relieve the distress caused at the "cradle of the war". Five thousands undernourished children were fed daily by the American Red Cross in Sarajevo

Belles of Sarajevo. Coin ornaments twisted in their hair, wide band br...

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card. Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: ARC Paris Office. Group title: Gen. Bosnia. On caption card: (1/2077) Gift; Ameri... More