Elegant dining rooms in the nineteenth century served an important role in the social discourse of the Victorian household. They tended to be "masculine" spaces and typically were filled with solid, heavily carved sideboards and tables, and draped with rich, velvet curtains. Sideboards "groaned" with the weight of opulent silver serving pieces, set off by the jewel-like tones of colored art glass vases and bowls. There could never be too many objects; after all, these were rooms that were meant to impress. So it was perfectly fine to have silver asparagus tongs or orange slicers, sitting beside the silver spoon warmer in the shape of a shell. This richly colorful book is a visual journey through the nineteenth century dining room. From the sideboard to the tea table, the serving pieces, silver, glass, and unusual Victorian oddities are presented. Through over 200 photographs, it becomes clear why the whimsical, beautiful, and sometimes bizarre products of that inventive and colorful time continue to astound and fascinate us. Also included is a facsimile of "How to Set the Table," a rare booklet from 1901, which will help the reader understand the variety and uses of the Victorian table setting. A Value Guide completes the work.
Victorian sideboards "groaned" with the weight of opulent silver serving pieces, set off by the jewel-like tones of colored art glass vases and bowls. This richly colorful book is a visual journey through the nineteenth century dining room, through over 200 photographs. It becomes clear why the whimsical, beautiful, and sometimes bizarre products of that inventive and colorful time continue to astound and fascinate us. Also included is a facsimile of "How to Set the Table," a rare booklet from 1901. A Value Guide completes the work.
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Bureau of Intelligence and Research
(INR), National Security Agency (NSA), Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) ...Sie alle haben im Kern dieselbe
Aufgabe und dasselbe Ziel: den Einfluß der USA in aller Welt zu sichern.
Die Liste der unerklärten Kriege, Umstürze und Sabotageaktionen gegen fremde
Staaten ist lang und hinterläßt eine blutige Spur rund um den Globus. Der
Band berichtet über Dilettanten und Verbrecher im Sold der US-Regierung,
über das Scheitern der nachrichtendienstlichen Arbeit gegen die Sowjetunion
und die Wildwestmanier, mit der die CIA Nicaraguas Häfen verminte, über
die Mordpläne gegen Fidel Castro und über die wieder aktuelle Frage, ob
das FBI in die Mordfälle Martin Luther King und John Lennon verstrickt
war.