View allAll Photos Tagged 2h
Lockheed SP-2H Neptune , 135582 / LE USA - Navy (VP 11)
Lockheed SP-2H Neptune , 135614, USA - Navy
Tucson - Davis-Monthan AFB (DMA / KDMA)
USA - Arizona, July 29 1984
2nd Half photos of Barton Community College Men’s Basketball vs Bethel College JV on 11-06-19 held at the Barton Gym on the campus of Barton Community College in Great Bend, KS.
Photos by Migle Mazurkeviciute, student photographer for Barton Sports Information Department.
2nd half photos of Barton Community College Men’s Basketball vs Dodge City CC on 1-15-20 held at the Barton Gym on the campus of Barton Community College in Great Bend, KS.
Photos by Migle Mazurkeviciute, student photographers for Barton Sports Information Department.
The slippery lines of the Chaparral 2H showing the clear side panel so the reclined driver could see out. Not one of Jim Hall's more successful variations on the theme, but a stunning shape! Seen at the amazing Chaparral Gallery in Midland, Texas.
La première des préoccupations était, sans aucun doute, de se nourrir durant l’Occupation. Dans ce domaine aussi, les Allemands prélevaient beaucoup sous forme de réquisitions. On voit ici l’état hebdomadaire des fournitures de bétail du 10 au 16 avril 1944. On y apprend qu’en moyenne, la ville de Marcq-en-Barœul devait livrer 510 kilos de viande par semaine.
There are homeless people, construction workers and all kinds of interesting people that I have run into in my explorations of the city.
If you have an event to record or need other photography services or would like to purchase a print of one of my works please contact me. Prints are available in 11" x 14" or 13" x 19" sizes.
ronzig@rogers.com
View my Portfolio, References and Upcoming Shows
ronzigsportfolio.synthasite.com/
View my blog about homelessness
Down, But Not Out
<a downbutnotout.synthasite.com/
View the ongoing saga of Ronzig The Wizard
rronzigthewizard.blogspot.com/
All rights reserved.
In the mid first century CE, Palmyra, a wealthy and elegant city located along the caravan routes linking Persia with the Mediterranean ports of Roman Syria and Phoenicia, came under Roman control. (See below.) During the following period of great prosperity, the Aramaean and Arab inhabitants of Palmyra adopted customs and modes of dress from both the Parthian world to the east and the Graeco-Roman west.
Tadmor is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible (Second Book of Chronicles 8:4) as a desert city built (or fortified) by the King Solomon of Judea, the son of David.
In the First Book of Kings (9:18) is mentioned the city of תמר Tamor or Tamar, also built by Solomon. But it is traditionally read (see Qere) as Tadmor, and several citations in the tractates of the Talmud and of the Midrash refer to that city in the Syrian desert (sometimes interchanging the letters "d" and "t" - "Tatmor" instead of "Tadmor"). Some modern scholars wrote that it could refer to a place near the Dead Sea.[citation needed]
Tadmor is also mentioned as built by Solomon in Flavius Josephus Antiquities of the Jews - Book VIII, along with the Greek name of Palmyra.
Tadmor is the name of Palmyra in modern Hebrew. The exact etymology of the name "Palmyra" in this case is unknown, although some scholars believe it was related to the palm trees in the area. Others, however, believe it may have come out of an incorrect translation of the name "Tadmor" (cf. Colledge, Seyrig, Starcky, and others).
The city was first mentioned in the archives of Mari in the 2nd millennium BC. It was another trading city in the extensive trade network that linked Mesopotamia and northern Syria. Palmyra is also mentioned in 2 Chronicles (8:4):