Proper noun
Courtauld (plural Courtaulds)
A surname.
Image credits: A MOLA archaeologist recording a 15th century cesspit uncovered in the basement of the Courtauld. Source: Internet
"Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 22.1/2 (1959): pp. 90 Satan repeatedly demonstrates a lack of virtue throughout the story as he intends to tempt God’s creations with evil in order to destroy the good God is trying to create. Source: Internet
"Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 22.1/2 (1959): pp. 89 A hero would have to either be a human with God-like powers or the offspring of God. Source: Internet
He grew up in Paris and then studied Art History at Brown University before going on to do further research at the Courtauld Institute in London. Source: Internet
In July 2011, the BBC TV programme Fake or Fortune investigated a copy of Dirck van Baburen 's The Procuress owned by the Courtauld Institute. citation Opinion had been divided as to whether it was a 17th-century studio work or a van Meegeren fake. Source: Internet
His bride was Alima Boranbayeva, then 20, a student at the Courtauld Institute of Art in London, daughter of an oil mogul involved in Kazakh-Russian trade. Source: Internet