3.1 Émile Cammaerts (left) by Lafayette (14 May 1928), © National Portrait Gallery, London, and Pieter Geyl (right) in London (1922), Utrecht University Library, Special Collections
3.2 Émile Cammaerts’ poem ‘Carillon’ (‘Chantons, Belges, chantons!’) set to music by Edward Elgar, 1914, © The British Library Board, Digital Store h.3930.l.-7; Anglo-Belgian Notes from July 1928 with prose by Émile Cammaerts, © The British Library Board
3.3 Émile Cammaerts’ publications with Louis Raemaekers, © Louis Raemaekers Foundation and the British Library Board. Reproduced with kind permission
3.4a/b Club House of the Nederlandsche Vereeniging te Londen on Sackville Street and its president F. C. Stoop, from Eigen haard: Geïllustreerd Volkstijdschrift, no. 10 (5 March 1898), pp. 157 and 159, © The British Library Board
3.5a/b Pieter Geyl, Holland and Belgium: Their Common History and Their Relations: Three Lectures Given at University College London, on February 10, 17 and 24, 1920 (Leiden, 1920) and first page from his inaugural lecture, 16 October 1919 (UCL Special Collections, College Collection DG 39 and STORE 06-1123)
3.6 Émile Cammaerts, Jean Lerot (lawyer), C. H. Williams (head of history department, King’s College London) teaching about Belgium at the University of London in November 1943, SHL, MS 800/I/162
4.1 Provisional plan of the IHR from November 1920 (IHR Archive, IHR/11/1/1)
4.2 Geyl on the Anglo-American Conference of Historians, London, July 1926 (middle of back row in front of the UCL Portico), in The History Laboratory: the Institute of Historical Research, 1921–96, compiled by Debra J. Birch and Joyce M. Horn (London, 1996), after p. 144 (detail)
4.3 Growth of the Low Countries book collection at the IHR per decade
4.4 Floor plan of the IHR. Back cover of the annual report (1927)
4.5 Floor plan of the temporary housing of the IHR on the third floor of Senate House, 1937 (IHR archive, IHR/11/1/10)
5.1 Medieval Dutch plays Lancelot of Denmark (1924) and The Tale of Beatrice (1927), translated by Geyl. Both were staged in London’s West End
5.2 Written during Geyl’s captivity (1940–44): the sonnet collection O vrijheid (‘Oh, Freedom’, 1945), and the detective novel Moor dop de plas (‘Murder on the Lake’, 1946)
5.3 Geyl receiving the P. C. Hooft Prize, 21 May 1958. Nationaal Archief Den Haag, Fotocollectie Anefo (photo: Joop van Bilsen), inv. no. 909-5807