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  • Infirm and elderly transit passengers transported through tunnel by buggy through Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport1022-11-08-2009.jpg
  • Infirm and elderly transit passengers await transport by buggy through Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport1011-11-08-2009.jpg
  • Infirm and elderly transit passengers transported by buggy through Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport1010-11-08-2009.jpg
  • Seen from an aerial walkway, we look down on a lady airline passenger being helped to pull her heavy suitacse from the carousel in the baggage reclaim hall in the arrivals of Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. 50-70,000 pieces of British Airways baggage a day travel through 11 miles of conveyor belts which were installed in a 5-storey underground hall beneath the 400m (a quarter of a mile) length of Terminal 5. T5 alone has the capacity to serve around 30 million passengers a year and was completed in 2008 at a cost of £4.3bn. The system was designed by an integrated team from the airport operator BAA, BA and Vanderlande Industries of the Netherlands, and handles both intra-terminal and inter-terminal luggage. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport459-14-07-2009.jpg
  • Before they were all replaced as working modes of public transport, a conductor sells a ticket wgile travelling along a London road, as part of a two-man crew of a number 88 red London Rotemaster bus, England UK. A parked car is seen through the open ledge of the bes' rear, blurred in the back ground and a lady passengers sits patiently as the bus speeds on its journey along its route through the capital. The man holds two fingers up to a foreign tourist to make sure they want two tickets for their destination. The conductor is the last human link with friendly public travel in London. He is usually a friendly face to accompany unsure travellers, often helping them reach their stop and answering questions about the journey with good humour and kindness. Their removal in favour of single driver crews meant that bus travel became more intimidating...
    RB_120-22-11-1997.jpg
  • NHS Paramedic Janet Greenhead cycles through the departures concourse on her Specialized Rockhopper mountain bike in Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. Janet is a Responder with the cycle response unit (CRU), a part of the London Ambulance Service whose job it is to attend injuries within Heathrow's terminals. Pedalling the heavy bike laden with 55kg of medical emergency equipment she answers the calls from those with a cut finger, a baggage handler who's injured an arm, a child who's fallen over with cuts and bruises or a much more serious incident like a cardiac arrest which are common in an airport where passengers feel under stress or who forget to take their medicines while jet lagged. During a busy shift, she could end up cycling more than eight miles. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). .
    heathrow_airport1134-12-08-2009.jpg
  • Airline passengers recently arrived from India wait in line at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5 transit concourse. The middle-aged travellers queue patiently after their long-haul flight and two believe that masks will protect themselves from airborne diseases and infections, not wishing to be exposed to Swine Flu or perhaps SARS, in a hectic public place where such bacteria can be transmitted from one human being to another. But a lady at the front of the queue has lowered her mask while the man at the back keeps his covering the mouth and nose. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport1015-11-08-2009.jpg
  • NHS Paramedic cyclist Responders holds a young passenger in a lift (elevator) within Heathrow Airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport1151-12-08-2009.jpg
  • Airline passengers from India await transit instructions in line at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5 arrivals concourse.
    heathrow_airport1012-11-08-2009.jpg
  • A Games Maker volunteer offers a high-five to a young spectator arriving with her family for the London 2012 Olympics. Situated on the fringe of the Olympic park, Westfield is Europe's largest urban shopping centre. This land was transformed to become a 2.5 Sq Km sporting complex, once industrial businesses and now the venue of eight venues including the main arena, Aquatics Centre and Velodrome plus the athletes' Olympic Village. After the Olympics, the park is to be known as Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.
    olympic_park03-02-08-2012.jpg
  • Pasted to the wall in Gerrard Street, Soho, in London's Chinatown, the Metropolitan Police are appealing for witnesses to help with their investigation of a murder of Vien Xuan Cao, a Chinese immigrant who was murdered in this street after being attacked with a meat cleaver. The implication is that this was a Triad turf war, a territorial dispute between gang members of this secret society. We see the young man's face photocopied to the paperwork, laid over more traditional images of ethnic Chinese and a boxing contest promotional poster. "Can you Help?" reads the Police's appeal and alongside, the same text has been translated into Chinese for locals to read.
    RB_118-08-10-1992.jpg
  • Lying on her back with eyes closed, a young girl stretches her arms out allowing her father to support her weight in an empty swimming pool in Miami Florida. With complete trust, she lets herself go and yields to her own natural  buoyancy as she floats amid this seemingly wide ocean of chlorinated water belonging to a hotel on Ocean Drive. We see her bright red costume clearly against the  complimentary prime colour green in a vibrant display from the spectrum. It is a scene of love and confidence, of youth and health.
    miami_pool02-18-05-1996.jpg
  • A young girl stretches out her arms and her father supports her weight in an empty swimming pool in Miami Florida.
    miami_pool01-18-05-1996.jpg
  • Attempting to Cold-start a car with jump leads in a residential Norwood street, South London during a severe winter.
    misc-london07-30-08-2007.jpg
  • NHS Paramedic Janet Greenhead attends to a lady passenger in Heathrow airport's terminal 3 who has tripped on escalators and badly gashed her leg. Janet applies a dressing and cleans the deep wound before advising the lady to visit a local hospital. Paramedics 'Responders' are with the cycle response unit (CRU), part of the London Ambulance Service whose job is to attend injuries within Heathrow, cycling through the terminals on mountain bikes. She answers radio calls from those with a cut finger, a baggage handler who's injured an arm, a child who's fallen over with cuts and bruises or a much more serious incident like a cardiac arrest which are common in an airport where passengers feel under stress or who forget to take their medicines while jet lagged. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). .
    heathrow_airport1207-13-08-2009.jpg
  • International baggage reclaim hall seating and Skycap luggage barrow at Heathrow's Terminal 5. .
    heathrow_airport518-14-07-2009.jpg
  • An NHS Paramedic Responder rides his 55kg Specialized Rockhopper mountain bike through in Heathrow's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport1482-19-08-2009.jpg
  • NHS Paramedic Responders attends a lady passenger in Heathrow's terminal 3 who has tripped and badly gashed her leg.
    heathrow_airport1215-13-08-2009.jpg
  • A detail close-up of a pair of feet and floor bloodied tissue paper stained by blood from a minor accident.
    heathrow_airport1213-13-08-2009.jpg
  • A detail close-up of a floor bloodied tissue paper stained by blood from a minor accident.
    heathrow_airport1211-13-08-2009.jpg
  • An NHS Paramedic Responder attends a lady passenger in Heathrow's terminal 3 who has tripped and badly gashed her leg.
    heathrow_airport1209-13-08-2009.jpg
  • An NHS Paramedic Responder attends a lady passenger in Heathrow's terminal 3 who has tripped and badly gashed her leg.
    heathrow_airport1205-13-08-2009.jpg
  • NHS Paramedic Responders' Specialized Rockhopper mountain bikes are propped up in Arrivals concourse at Heathrow's T5.
    heathrow_airport1133-12-08-2009.jpg
  • Infirm and elderly transit passengers await transport by buggy through Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport1020-11-08-2009.jpg
  • Paramedics assist a bloodied man under the influence of alcohol, picked up by Atlanta police after a street altercation.
    paramedic_help01-10-11-1995.jpg
  • Sheryl is an Airport Ambassador Volunteer at Dallas Fort Worth, Texas and stands for a portrait at the foot of some escalators in the main terminal. She sports a straw hat saying 'Ask Me' in red and a name badge with her job title although she comes to the airport to assist strangers at her city's airport, hoping her good nature and charitable efforts will help uncertain travellers find their way. Also on her jacket is a the phrase 'Proud to be Drug Free .. Airport Narcotics Task Force.' 'Fort Worth is the sixth busiest airport in the world transporting 59,064,360 passengers in 2005. Picture from the 'Plane Pictures' project, a celebration of aviation aesthetics and flying culture, 100 years after the Wright brothers first 12 seconds/120 feet powered flight at Kitty Hawk,1903..
    aviation_corbis56-10-11-2000.jpg
  • A shop assistant adjusts the clothing on a mannequin in the northern Italian south Tyrolean city of Bozen-Bolzano.
    bolzano_italy02-11-07-2015.jpg
  • Shop assistants during a mid-day break sit together outside a Starbucks cafe in central London.
    street_cafe01-25-04-2013.jpg
  • A shop assistant arranges male mink coats on sale from a rack on the shop floor of the Knightsbridge Harrods department store, on 17th March 1991, in London, England.
    mink_furs-22-03-1991.jpg
  • A shop assistant arranges clothing on the rail in the Chinese fashion brand Shanghai Tang who make a presence in their store in Central, on the eve of the handover of sovereignty from Britain to China, on 30th June 1997, in Hong Kong, China.
    hong_kong07-30-06-1997.jpg
  • The office of Major General Hans Carlsohn, an exhibit in 'Haus 1' the ministerial headquarters of the Stasi secret police in Communist East Germany, the GDR. Built in 1960, the complex now known as the Stasi Museum. Before the fall of the Wall, it was a 22-hectare complex of espionage whose centrepiece is the office and working quarters of the former Minister of State Security, Erich Mielke who considered their role as the 'shield and sword of the party', conducting one of the world's most efficient spying operations against its political dissenters during its 40-year old socialist history. Carlsohn was personal assistant to Mielke then director of the Minister's secretariat. Between 1950 and 1989, the Stasi employed a total of 274,000 people in an effort to root out the class enemy. During Hitler's Third Reich, the Gestapo had one agent for every 2,000 citizens whereas the Stasi had approximately an spy for every 6.5. Here at the Stasi HQ alone 15,000 were employed plus the many regional stations. German media called East Germany 'the most perfected surveillance state of all time' - administered from this complex of offices.
    berlin_stasi_museum45-07-04-2013.jpg
  • A young magician performs a levitation trick using a lady assistant, in front of a crowd in Covent Garden's Piazza, London. Saying abracadabra or a similar explanation to wow his surrounding audience, the man stands beneath the raised woman, lying horizontally in mid-air. Levitation (from Latin levitas "lightness") is the process by which an object is suspended by a physical force against gravity, in a stable position without solid physical contact.
    street_magician-08-10-1998.jpg
  • Tired assistant with Doctor on TV screen at a traditional Chinese herbalist's shop window in London's West End.
    chinese_herbalist02-18-01-2011.jpg
  • Tired assistant with Doctor on TV screen at a traditional Chinese herbalist's shop window in London's West End.
    chinese_herbalist01-18-01-2011.jpg
  • Having just unearthed more bodies from layers of volcanic ash and pumice, an archaeologist's assistant pauses for a cigarette, kneeling beside a victim of the AD79 eruption of Mount Versuvius over the ancient Roman town of Pompeii. Buried beneath huge amounts of toxic material this person was suffocated and crushed from falling debris. Preserved in a shell of volcanic material it is to be removed from this site on top of a villa roof where, it is calculated, this citizen was one of the last to die, having climbed 4 metres above ground level to await its fate. The Italian man ears a red t-shirt and holds a pick that has scraped and brushed away the soil to reveal the human form which also shows another body beneath. Others litter the rooftop too proving that many survivors of the first eruption perished after the second many hours later.
    pompeii03-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • A hot air balloon is partially inflated before flight at Longleat Estate, Warminster, England. Using firstly cold air from a gas-powered fan, before its propane burners are used for final inflation, one of the ground crew assists in the process by pulling at the fragile synthetic material so that the volume within the whole 'envelope' can fill without damage and it's spectrum arc of colours are becoming rainbow-like. The hot air balloon is the oldest successful human-carrying flight technology. The first manned flight was made by Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier and François Laurent d'Arlandes in a balloon created by the Montgolfier brothers in 1783. In today's sport balloons the envelope is generally made from nylon fabric and the mouth of the balloon (closest to the burner flame) is made from fire resistant material such as Nomex.
    balloonist08-18-2004.jpg
  • An elderly lady receives a consultation from a professional beautician in the Clinique Bar at World Duty Free in Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. In a quiet corner of peace and tranquility, the woman's face is examined in detail using a magnifying lens that allows the assistant to see every hair follicle and pore. Amid the busy departures terminal of this international aviation hub, this is a corner of quiet and tranquillity before the woman traveller boards her flight after this few minutes of pampering. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport160-13-07-2009.jpg
  • Travelex bureau de change assistant serves currency to passenger at Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport972-10-08-2009.jpg
  • Travelex bureau de change assistant serves currency to passenger at Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport970-10-08-2009.jpg
  • A bored-looking shop assistant in the window of a City gents outfitters, on 9th February 2017, in the City of London, England.
    city_menswear-03-09-02-2017.jpg
  • A sales assistant with Dixons Digital replenishes shelves with travel adapters and plugs at Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport977-10-08-2009.jpg
  • A female member of the Thomas Cook staff issues foreign currency to an unseen airline passenger in the departures concourse at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. This Bureau de Change is one of two companies trading in foreign exchange, travel insurance and travellers cheques for passengers passing through this aviation hub is west London. We see on the wall behind the assistant, a beach paradise scene of palm trees, calm seas and beach chalets, the idea of tranquillity and prosperity. On the left are the exchange rates for the world's currencies for purchase at this kiosk. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). .
    heathrow_airport1135-12-08-2009.jpg
  • A gentleman Sky Cap stands in front of the terminal building at Santa Barbara Municipal Airport, California, USA. Wearing his red waste-coat, ID badge and cap he holds the handle of the baggage trolley with which he assists passengers to offload their belongings and guides them to the check-in counters inside. The man has a greying beard and sunglasses against the glare and is an eager helper to those struggling with heavy travel possessions. On the ground are stencilled the words 'Passenger Loading Only' referring to where departing travellers might seek help with baggage. There are armies of workers across the world keeping airlines and airports running 24/7. Picture from the 'Plane Pictures' project, a celebration of aviation aesthetics and flying culture, 100 years after the Wright brothers first 12 seconds/120 feet powered flight at Kitty Hawk,1903..
    aviation_corbis47-10-11-2000.jpg
  • A shop employee applies make-up from a brush in the window of a House of Fraser store in the Square Mile, on 31st March 2017, in the City of London, England. House of Fraser is a British department store group with over 60 stores across the United Kingdom and Ireland. It was established in Glasgow, Scotland in 1849 as Arthur and Fraser. By 1891, it was known as Fraser & Sons.
    house_of_fraser-08-31-03-2017.jpg
  • A Valentines Day poster in the window of TM Lewin, a City menswear retailer, on 9th February 2017, in the City of London, England.
    city_menswear-02-09-02-2017.jpg
  • A woman hairdresser seemingly works on the graphics of glamourous models' hair in salon shop window.
    hairdresser02-18-01-2011.jpg
  • Wearing darkened glasses, unsighted Tim Gutteridge walks along a suburban pavement near to The Guide Dogs for the Blind Association's offices in Reading, England with Lewis, a one year-old Labrador Retriever who has been groomed to become a guide dog. Tim is hoping to forge a strong relationship with his new-found companion who confidently leads the way along the path anticipating and avoiding obstacles and dangers. Animals like Lewis don't start learning with a guide dog trainer until they are 12-15 months old. There are around 5,000 working guide dogs in the UK today, though the Guide Dogs charity care for around 8,000 dogs, including breeding stock, puppies, dogs in training and retired dogs.
    guide_dog02-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • Wearing darkened glasses, unsighted Tim Gutteridge stands outside The Guide Dogs for the Blind Association's offices in Reading, England with Lewis, a one year-old Labrador Retriever who has been groomed to become a guide dog. Tim is hoping to forge a strong relationship with his new-found companion whose job is to confidently leads the way anticipating and avoiding obstacles and dangers. Animals like Lewis don't start learning with a guide dog trainer until they are 12-15 months old. There are around 5,000 working guide dogs in the UK today, though the Guide Dogs charity care for around 8,000 dogs, including breeding stock, puppies, dogs in training and retired dogs. A sign in bright yellow says 'Please don't distract me I'm working.'
    guide_dog01-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • Lying horizontal in a busy salon, a lady passenger receives eyebrow threading treatment during a beauty session at the Blink Eyebrow Bar in World Duty Free, Heathrow Airport's terminal 5. The beautician holds the thread that squeezes the woman's eyebrow follicles, removing the tiniest and finest hair right from the root. Threading is a technique that China has been using for centuries but has recently become popular in western countries. Amid the busy departures terminal of this international aviation hub, this is a corner of quiet and tranquillity before the woman traveller boards her business flight after this few minutes of pampering. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport194-13-07-2009.jpg
  • An elderly lady receives a consultation from professional beautician in Clinique Bar at World Duty Free in Heathrow Airport's T5
    heathrow_airport152-13-07-2009.jpg
  • Two elderly passengers taste Scottish Malt Whiskey in a retail space called World of Duty Free in Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport130-13-07-2009.jpg
  • A lady passenger has eyebrow threading treatment during beauty session at the Blink Eyebrow Bar in World Duty Free Heathrow's T5
    heathrow_airport185-13-07-2009.jpg
  • The rear of a cab, its chassis and hydraulic control hoses of an HGV lorry parked at a supermarket distribution depot
    sainsburys_depot191-09-05-2007.jpg
  • A make-up artist smiles while applying a makeover to a customer in the window of a Covent Garden hairdressers, on 4th May 2017, in London, England.
    window_makeover-01-04-05-2017.jpg
  • A shop employee applies make-up from a brush in the window of a House of Fraser store in the Square Mile, on 31st March 2017, in the City of London, England. House of Fraser is a British department store group with over 60 stores across the United Kingdom and Ireland. It was established in Glasgow, Scotland in 1849 as Arthur and Fraser. By 1891, it was known as Fraser & Sons.
    house_of_fraser-06-31-03-2017.jpg
  • Smiley face cushions in a shop window are arranged by a shop employee in central London.
    smiley_shop-01-29-09-2016.jpg
  • Two assistands await customers, seen through the window of cigar retailer Davidoff of London in stylish St. James's, London.
    shop_window01-28-01-2016.jpg
  • Television documentary film maker Desmond Wilcox (1931 – 2000) and production crew during the filming of a programme. The portrait is with members of his colleagues during a break in filming for a programme about Hampstead Heath in London. Desmond John Wilcox (21 May 1931 – 6 September 2000) was a British documentary maker at the BBC and ITV. He was producer of This Week, Man Alive, and That's Life! and married to television presenter Esther Rantzen in 1977. He died of a heart attack in Paddington, London, in 2000, aged 69 after converting to Judaism in 1992.
    desmond_wilcox-18-08-1994.jpg
  • With a blindfolded trainer, a young Labrador dog learns how to negotiate obstructions and hazards as part of its training as a guide dog. There are around 5,000 working guide dogs in the UK today, though the Guide Dogs charity care for around 8,000 dogs, including breeding stock, puppies, dogs in training and retired dogs.
    guide_dog01-09-06-1997.jpg
  • A lady passenger has eyebrow threading treatment during beauty session at the Blink Eyebrow Bar in World Duty Free Heathrow's T5
    heathrow_airport200-13-07-2009.jpg
  • A lady passenger has eyebrow threading treatment during beauty session at the Blink Eyebrow Bar in World Duty Free Heathrow's T5
    heathrow_airport189-13-07-2009.jpg
  • An elderly lady receives a consultation from professional beautician in Clinique Bar at World Duty Free in Heathrow Airport's T5
    heathrow_airport149-13-07-2009.jpg
  • Two elderly passengers have stopped by in a retail space called World of Duty Free to taste Scottish Malt Whiskey in Terminal 5 at heathrow Airport. The two South-Africans travel widely across the world to visit their extended family and like to stop by this shop to try the various blends of Scotch with the help of a sales person who helps them decide which bottles to buy. Together they swallow the fine alcohol and taste its delicate and subtle differences. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport132-13-07-2009.jpg
  • Squadron Leader Duncan Mason of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, strides out across a gloomy, rainswept 'apron' at RAF Scampton, Lincolnshire. Squadron Leader Mason will fly up to 6 times daily during winter training ,when weather permits, learning new manoeuvres. Wearing winter green flying suits, their day is spent flying and de-briefing. Mason  wears a green flying suit with anti-g pants and helmet on with its pilot number. He is being greeted by a member of the team's support ground crew who outnumber the pilots 8:1.  The engineer wears a fluorescent yellow tabard and stands politely by the waiting aircraft on the 'line'. He has already prepared it for flight and helps with any technical issues that may arise.
    Red_Arrows015_RBA.jpg
  • A Post Office employee hauls a cart full of post onto the station platform on the Mail Rail system. The Post Office Railway, also known as Mail Rail, was a narrow-gauge driverless underground railway in London, built by the Post Office with assistance from the Underground Electric Railways Company of London, to move mail between sorting offices. Inspired by the Chicago Tunnel Company it operated from 3 December 1927 until 31 May 2003. It ran east-west from Paddington Head District Sorting Office in the west to the Eastern Office at Whitechapel in the east, a distance of 6.5 miles (10.5 km). It had eight stations, the largest of which was underneath Mount Pleasant, but by 2003 only three stations remained in use because the sorting offices above the other stations had been relocated.
    mail_rail-16-03-1993.jpg
  • A Beadle mace-bearer from the City of London holds a ceremonial mace in the crook of his left arm during the annual Lord"s Mayor's Show. We see only the arm and the golden mace as a close-up detail. The Beadle's role is now only symbolic, accompanying the City Adlermen as the lead the processions through the capital's ancient financial heart. A Beadle or bedel was a lay official of a church or synagogue who would usher, keep order, make reports, and assist in religious functions; or a minor official who carries out various civil, educational, or ceremonial duties. The term has Franco-English pre-renaissance origins, derived from the Vulgar Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus", rooted in words for "herald". It moved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to council.
    lord_mayors_show04-10-11-2012.jpg
  • A Beadle mace-bearer from the City of London holds a ceremonial mace in the crook of his left arm during the annual Lord"s Mayor's Show. We see only the arm and the golden mace as a close-up detail. The Beadle's role is now only symbolic, accompanying the City Adlermen as the lead the processions through the capital's ancient financial heart. A Beadle or bedel was a lay official of a church or synagogue who would usher, keep order, make reports, and assist in religious functions; or a minor official who carries out various civil, educational, or ceremonial duties. The term has Franco-English pre-renaissance origins, derived from the Vulgar Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus", rooted in words for "herald". It moved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to council.
    lord_mayors_show08-10-11-2012.jpg
  • A person lies on a bench reading an Evening Standard newspaper carrying a headline about the Guinness trial, on 27th May 1991, in the City of London, England. The Guinness share-trading fraud was a major business scandal of the 1980s. It involved the manipulation of the London stock market to inflate the price of Guinness shares to thereby assist Guinness's £4 billion takeover bid for the Scottish drinks company Distillers. In May 1991, Saunders and his co-accused appealed against their convictions.
    guinness_trial-27-05-1991.jpg
  • A Beadle mace-bearer from the City of London holds a ceremonial mace in the crook of his left arm during the annual Lord"s Mayor's Show. We see only the arm and the golden mace as a close-up detail. The Beadle's role is now only symbolic, accompanying the City Adlermen as the lead the processions through the capital's ancient financial heart. A Beadle or bedel was a lay official of a church or synagogue who would usher, keep order, make reports, and assist in religious functions; or a minor official who carries out various civil, educational, or ceremonial duties. The term has Franco-English pre-renaissance origins, derived from the Vulgar Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus", rooted in words for "herald". It moved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to council.
    lord_mayors_show02-10-11-2012.jpg
  • A Beadle mace-bearer from the City of London holds a ceremonial mace in the crook of his left arm during the annual Lord"s Mayor's Show. We see only the arm and the golden mace as a close-up detail. The Beadle's role is now only symbolic, accompanying the City Adlermen as the lead the processions through the capital's ancient financial heart. A Beadle or bedel was a lay official of a church or synagogue who would usher, keep order, make reports, and assist in religious functions; or a minor official who carries out various civil, educational, or ceremonial duties. The term has Franco-English pre-renaissance origins, derived from the Vulgar Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus", rooted in words for "herald". It moved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to council.
    lord_mayors_show05-10-11-2012.jpg
  • A Beadle mace-bearer from the City of London holds a ceremonial mace in the crook of his left arm during the annual Lord"s Mayor's Show. We see only the arm and the golden mace as a close-up detail. The Beadle's role is now only symbolic, accompanying the City Adlermen as the lead the processions through the capital's ancient financial heart. A Beadle or bedel was a lay official of a church or synagogue who would usher, keep order, make reports, and assist in religious functions; or a minor official who carries out various civil, educational, or ceremonial duties. The term has Franco-English pre-renaissance origins, derived from the Vulgar Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus", rooted in words for "herald". It moved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to council.
    lord_mayors_show07-10-11-2012.jpg
  • A Beadle mace-bearer from the City of London holds a ceremonial mace in the crook of his left arm during the annual Lord"s Mayor's Show. We see only the arm and the golden mace as a close-up detail. The Beadle's role is now only symbolic, accompanying the City Adlermen as the lead the processions through the capital's ancient financial heart. A Beadle or bedel was a lay official of a church or synagogue who would usher, keep order, make reports, and assist in religious functions; or a minor official who carries out various civil, educational, or ceremonial duties. The term has Franco-English pre-renaissance origins, derived from the Vulgar Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus", rooted in words for "herald". It moved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to council.
    lord_mayors_show06-10-11-2012.jpg
  • A Beadle mace-bearer from the City of London holds a ceremonial mace in the crook of his left arm during the annual Lord"s Mayor's Show. Wearing white gloves and a decorative overcoat worn on special occasions, we see only the arm and the golden mace as a close-up detail. The Beadle's role is now only symbolic, accompanying the City Adlermen as the lead the processions through the capital's ancient financial heart. A Beadle or bedel was a lay official of a church or synagogue who would usher, keep order, make reports, and assist in religious functions; or a minor official who carries out various civil, educational, or ceremonial duties. The term has Franco-English pre-renaissance origins, derived from the Vulgar Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus", rooted in words for "herald". It moved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to council.
    aldeman_sceptre01-15-11-1983.jpg
  • Important City of London figures, one time Lord Mayor of London Dick Whittington and Thomas Gresham. Richard Whittington (c. 1354-1423) was a medieval merchant and politician, and the real-life inspiration for the pantomime character Dick Whittington. He was four times Lord Mayor of London, a Member of Parliament and a sheriff of London. In his lifetime he financed a number of public projects, such as drainage systems in poor areas of medieval London, and a hospital ward for unmarried mothers. He bequeathed his fortune to form the Charity of Sir Richard Whittington which, nearly 600 years later, continues to assist people in need. He knew three of the five kings who reigned during his lifetime. Sir Thomas Gresham (c. 1519 - 21 November 1579) was an English merchant and financier who worked for King Edward VI of England and for Edward's half-sisters, Queens Mary I and Elizabeth I.
    guildhall_glass01-23-09-2012.jpg
  • A Beadle mace-bearer from the City of London holds a ceremonial mace in the crook of his left arm during the annual Lord"s Mayor's Show. We see only the arm and the golden mace as a close-up detail. The Beadle's role is now only symbolic, accompanying the City Adlermen as the lead the processions through the capital's ancient financial heart. A Beadle or bedel was a lay official of a church or synagogue who would usher, keep order, make reports, and assist in religious functions; or a minor official who carries out various civil, educational, or ceremonial duties. The term has Franco-English pre-renaissance origins, derived from the Vulgar Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus", rooted in words for "herald". It moved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to council.
    lord_mayors_show10-10-11-2012.jpg
  • A Beadle mace-bearer from the City of London holds a ceremonial mace in the crook of his left arm during the annual Lord"s Mayor's Show. We see only the arm and the golden mace as a close-up detail. The Beadle's role is now only symbolic, accompanying the City Adlermen as the lead the processions through the capital's ancient financial heart. A Beadle or bedel was a lay official of a church or synagogue who would usher, keep order, make reports, and assist in religious functions; or a minor official who carries out various civil, educational, or ceremonial duties. The term has Franco-English pre-renaissance origins, derived from the Vulgar Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus", rooted in words for "herald". It moved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to council.
    lord_mayors_show09-10-11-2012.jpg
  • In the 24hrs that a further 38 died from Coronavirus, bringing the total to 41,736, a further easing of the UK’s Covid pandemic lockdown restrictions took place with many high street shops today being allowed to re-open after three months of forced closure. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, wanting to stimulate the economy, has urged people to "shop with confidence" and long queues formed outside the main brands. But unlike on public transport, face coverings are not compulsory so shop floors and shopping practices have had to be adapted to ensure customers’ social distances, amid fears of a second infection wave. A shop assistant cleans a shop window on Regent Street, on 15th June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_shops-06-15-06-2020.jpg
  • A shop assistant carries three boxes of Toshiba T1000 Portable Personal Computer laptops in an electronics and tech shop on the Tottenham Court Road, on 3rd March 1990, in London, England. The T1000 was a portable computer manufactured by the Toshiba Corporation from 1987. It had a similar specification to the IBM PC Convertible, with a 4.77 MHz 80C88 processor, 512 kB of RAM, and a monochrome CGA-compatible LCD. Unlike the Convertible, it includes a standard serial port and parallel port, connectors for an external monitor, and a real-time clock.
    toshiba_shop-03-03-1990.jpg
  • A portrait of botanist, Sir Ghillean Tolmie Prance while head of the Botanical Gardens at Kew in the summer of 1988, in Kew's Palm House, London England. Prance worked from 1963 at The New York Botanical Garden, initially as a research assistant and, on his departure in 1988, as Director of the Institute of Economic Botany and Senior Vice-President for Science. Much of his career at the New York Botanical Garden was spent conducting extensive fieldwork in the Amazon region of Brazil. He was Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew from 1988 to 1999.
    ghillean_prance-01-06-1988.jpg
  • Former Lebanon hostage Terry Waite speaks outside the Church of England's Synod on 1st February 1992 in London, England. Terry Waite CBE is an English humanitarian and author. He was the Assistant for Anglican Communion Affairs for the then Archbishop of Canterbury, Robert Runcie, in the 1980s and held captive in Lebanon from 1987 to 1991.
    terry_waite02-01-02-1992.jpg
  • Former Lebanon hostage Terry Waite speaks outside the Church of England's Synod on 1st February 1992 in London, England. Terry Waite CBE is an English humanitarian and author. He was the Assistant for Anglican Communion Affairs for the then Archbishop of Canterbury, Robert Runcie, in the 1980s and held captive in Lebanon from 1987 to 1991.
    terry_waite05-01-02-1992.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspecting a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch137-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspecting a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch129-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspects wiring on a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch123-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspects wiring on a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch120-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspects wiring on a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch119-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspects wiring on a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch89-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Official NYC shield belonging to Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspecting a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch84-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspecting a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.<br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'The Skyline' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    tim_lynch15-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspecting a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch318-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspecting a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch233-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch inspecting a new construction site in Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch190-23-05-2014.jpg
  • Records archive held in the City of New York Buildings Department, Manhattan, by Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch, Manhattan.
    tim_lynch572-24-05-2014.jpg
  • Writer Polly Morland and Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch, researching the chapter entitled 'The Skyline' for her book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2014), on the roof of the federal NYC Department of Buildings on Broadway.
    tim_lynch537-24-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch on the roof of the federal NYC Department of Buildings on Broadway.
    tim_lynch523-24-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch on the roof of the federal NYC Department of Buildings on Broadway.
    tim_lynch515-24-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch in the federal City of New York Buildings Department, Manhattan.
    tim_lynch488-24-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch on the roof of the federal NYC Department of Buildings on Broadway.
    tim_lynch511-24-05-2014.jpg
  • Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch in the federal City of New York Buildings Department, Manhattan.<br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'The Skyline' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2014).
    tim_lynch492-24-05-2014.jpg
  • 19th century derelict building ordered for demolition by Investigative Engineering Services, Assistant Commissioner Tim Lynch, Manhattan, New York City.
    tim_lynch640-24-05-2014.jpg
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