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Joss Bay CliffsThe white chalk cliffs and foreshore at Joss Bay, Isle of Thanet, Kent, England. Date: 1950s
Canton. Chinese JossPierre Joseph Rossier. Views in China issued by Negretti and Zambra in 1859 and 1861. First Series and second series. These important images were the first commercial views of China to be sold in
Canton. Joss HousePierre Joseph Rossier. Views in China issued by Negretti and Zambra in 1859 and 1861. First Series and second series. These important images were the first commercial views of China to be sold in
Canton. Joss House, Perspective ViewPierre Joseph Rossier. Views in China issued by Negretti and Zambra in 1859 and 1861. First Series and second series. These important images were the first commercial views of China to be sold in
Canton. Joss in the Temple of LongevityPierre Joseph Rossier. Views in China issued by Negretti and Zambra in 1859 and 1861. First Series and second series. These important images were the first commercial views of China to be sold in
Monk and incense, Temple of the Six Banyan TreesA monk puts incense sticks on a shrine at the Temple of the Six Banyan Trees, or Liurong Temple, Guangzhou, China Date: 1982
Joshua PooleJOSHUA POOLE known as Fiddler Joss Yorkshire drunkard and wife- beater, who was converted and became a much-respected evangelist. Date: 1826 - 1908
Tin How Temple, Chinatown, San Francisco, California, USAInterior, Tin How Temple (Joss House), Chinatown, San Francisco, California, USA. Date: 1936
China - Interior of a Joss HouseLantern slide of Interior of a Joss House. A Shenist temple or Chinese folk temple is a place for worshiping the variety of indigenous Chinese shen (deities, saints)
Near Joss Stairs KingsgateNear Joss Stairs, Kingsgate. Date: 1867
America. The Chinese in San Francisco. A Joss-house, or ChinInterior hung with silks and decorated with chinese vases and table carved with animal and fish figures for Chinese traditional worship
Joss-House at Ning-BoChinese joss-house, a place of worship where joss-sticks (incense) are burnt, at Ning- bo (previously Ning-po, aka Ning-hsien), Treaty Port opened to European trade 1842