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Forgery Collection

"Unraveling the Threads of Deception: The Enigmatic World of Forgery" In 1689, a young Sir Isaac Newton sat for a portrait

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Forgery Collection: 1689 Sir Isaac Newton portrait young
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Forgery Collection: Lochness Monster
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Forgery Collection: A discussion on the Piltdown skull by John Cooke
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Forgery Collection: Piltdown Man memorial, 1938
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Forgery Collection: Largest ear of corn grown in Canada
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Forgery Collection: Piltdown Man article- The most ancient inhabitant of England
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Forgery Collection: Piltdown forgery meeting
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Forgery Collection: Piltdown man reconstructed
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Forgery Collection: Geologists at Piltdown
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Forgery Collection: The Falsifier Fool, 1660-86 (brush and Indian ink on paper)
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Forgery Collection: Wine counterfeiter disguised as excursionist caught at the Bavarian border near Kufstein, Germany
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Forgery Collection: Forgery of coin adulteration at the time of the Thirty Years'War
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Forgery Collection: David Colbreth Broderick of California, between 1855 and 1865. Creator: Unknown
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Forgery Collection: Landscape (album leaf), 18th century or later (ink on paper)
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Forgery Collection: Landscape (album leaf), 18th century or later (ink on paper)
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Forgery Collection: Landscape (album leaf), 18th century or later (ink on paper)
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Forgery Collection: Discovery of the Piltdown Man in 1911
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Forgery Collection: The Great City Forgeries, Examination of Bidwell and Noyes at the Mansion House (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: Landscape (album leaf), 18th century or later (ink on paper)
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Forgery Collection: Henry Fauntleroy, banker hanged for forgery in 1824 (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: Man examining a coin (colour litho)
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Forgery Collection: Spoof of Rudyard Kiplings poem, The Vampire (litho)
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Forgery Collection: Small soapstone tablet, with pierced relief of Manjusri on lion, Period of Division
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Forgery Collection: Buddhist tablet in the form of a miniature shrine, Period of Division, ca. 520
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Forgery Collection: Imitation banknote etched by George Cruikshank in 1818, satirising the inflication of capital
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Forgery Collection: The Great City Forgeries, Trial of the Accused at the Central Criminal Court (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: Arrest of a counterfeiter in Puteaux, France (colour litho)
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Forgery Collection: Little Women - Mrs March and Jo read a letter
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Forgery Collection: Yugao vines and a poem, Hanging scroll (mounted on panel)
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Forgery Collection: The Forgers Arrest (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: The Arrest Of Famous French Fraudster Teresa Humbert And Her Family In A Modest Apartment In
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Forgery Collection: Discovery Of A Counterfeit Coin Factory In Rome, Police Officers, Transvestites
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Forgery Collection: The Will Forgeries, Re-Examination of the Prisoners at the Mansion-House (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: Specimen of the siderographic plan for preventing the forgery of banknotes submitted to
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Forgery Collection: The Norton Forgeries (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: Charles Price in Disguise (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: Mrs Margaret Caroline Rudd on her trial at the new Sessions House in the Old Bailey (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: View of Lochness Monster, taken near Dores (b / w photo)
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Forgery Collection: Oh! The Tiara! (b / w photo)
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Forgery Collection: The Wills Forgery Trials (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: Charles Price in his Usual Dress (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: Female Saint in a boat with a courtly couple and two boatmen
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Forgery Collection: Les Faux-Monnayeurs Americains (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: Trial of the Bank Forgers at the Old Bailey (engraving)
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Forgery Collection: Napoleons birth certificate, 19 July 1782, (1921). Creator: Unknown
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Forgery Collection: Panel with Falconers, 1516-1955. Creator: Unknown
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Forgery Collection: Ogives with Winged Quadrupeds and Peacocks, 1526-1955. Creator: Unknown
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Forgery Collection: Lampas with confronting peacocks, 1660-1955. Creator: Unknown


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"Unraveling the Threads of Deception: The Enigmatic World of Forgery" In 1689, a young Sir Isaac Newton sat for a portrait, unaware that his image would later become entangled in a web of deceit. Little did he know that centuries later, this innocent painting would pale in comparison to the infamous Loch Ness Monster sightings. But it was not mythical creatures alone that captured public imagination; rather, it was the Piltdown Man memorial erected in 1938. A discussion on the Piltdown skull by John Cooke shed light on its dubious origins and sparked controversy among scholars. As headlines blared "Piltdown Man: The Most Ancient Inhabitant of England, " doubts began to creep into scientific circles. A clandestine forgery meeting ensued, where experts dissected every detail surrounding this supposed ancient ancestor. The Piltdown man reconstructed with meticulous precision fooled even seasoned geologists at Piltdown. They were unwittingly drawn into an elaborate hoax that shook the foundations of evolutionary theory. Yet forgery is not confined to historical artifacts alone. From art to agriculture, deception knows no bounds. Just as Canada celebrated its largest ear of corn grown within its borders, a wine counterfeiter disguised as an excursionist met his downfall near Kufstein's Bavarian border in Germany. Throughout history, individuals like "The Falsifier Fool" have sought personal gain through their crafty manipulations – brush and Indian ink on paper serving as their tools of choice during times when authenticity mattered most. Forgery serves as a stark reminder that truth can be elusive and appearances deceiving. It challenges our notions of trust and forces us to question what we hold dear – whether it be portraits or prehistoric remains. So let us delve into these tales woven by masterful impostors and learn from them. For only through understanding past deceptions can we hope to safeguard against future forgeries lurking beneath seemingly genuine facades.