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  1. Hablot Knight Browne (July 12, 1815 - July 8, 1882) was an English artist, nearly unknown as Hablot Knight Browne, wellknown as H. K. Browne and famous as Phiz. He was the illustrator of the best-known books by Charles Dickens , Charles Lever and William Harrison Ainsworth in their original editions.

  2. Hablot Knight Browne, the ninth son of William Loder Browne (1771–1855), a merchant, and his wife, Katherine Hunter Browne (1774–1856), was born in Lower Kennington Lane, London, in June 1815 and baptized on 21st December 1815 at St Mary's Church in Lambeth. In 1822, when Browne was seven years old, his father fleed to the United States ...

  3. Hablot Knight Browne was a British artist and illustrator. Well known by his pen name, Phiz, he illustrated books by Charles Dickens, Charles Lever, and Harrison Ainsworth. More at Wikipedia.

  4. 15 czerwca 1815. Lambeth. Data i miejsce śmierci. 8 lipca 1882. Brighton. Zawód, zajęcie. ilustrator. Multimedia w Wikimedia Commons. Hablot Knight Browne pseud. N.E.M.O. i Phiz [1] (ur. 15 czerwca 1815 w Lambeth, zm. 8 lipca 1882 w Brighton) – brytyjski rytownik i ilustrator.

  5. BROWNE, Hablot Knight (1815-1882) a.k.a. PHIZ. Plaque erected in 2001 by English Heritage at 239 Ladbroke Grove, Ladbroke Grove, London, W10 6HG, Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. HABLOT KNIGHT BROWNE alias "PHIZ" 1815-1882 Illustrator of Dickens's novels lived here 1874-1880. Ceramic.

  6. 13 de mar. de 2023 · Hablot Knight Browne - Fox-Hunting Sketches, No 9 The fences are very blind just now - and the riders too, occasionally - B1985.36.286 - Yale Center for British Art.jpg 1,920 × 1,230; 471 KB Hablot Knight Browne - I am not learned in Vaccine Matters - but I think those look like Charley's Calves - B1993.30.47 - Yale Center for British Art.jpg 1,920 × 1,425; 260 KB

  7. This critical analysis and historical contextualisation of the etching "Australian Aborigines Slaughtered by Convicts" (depicting Myall Creek Massacre 1838) -- created by illustrator Hablot Knight Browne and first published in the Chronicles of Crime 1841 -- is the second article published under the new column: Representation and Power - A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words