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When a piece of Syvon's soul containing his acperience powers returned, Viara and her father, the soul watcher were both surprised.

 

Though the fate of Monarth and the rest of Syvon was unknown, the soul watcher forged the returned soul into a new acperience warden. Alai, as the warden was named, was modelled after Viara, but took on a more brash personality.

 

As opposed to Syvon, Alai's method of 'beating sense' into the dead proved effective and the soul cycle could slowly start to continue once more.

 

-----------------------------------

 

It didn't take too long to build Alai, since a large portion was copied from Viara. The lower torso is largely original though, as is the back. I aimed for a slightly stockier build with her, though some of the design choices resulted in longer arms and the sides being a bit flimsy. I like the final look though.

 

Trivia:

-Alai's stomach is still orange as opposed to her translucent tail, because she hasn't fully matured yet. Once she's lived a few years, her belly will become translucent and glowy like here sister's.

-Like Viara, the shaping is inspired by Pokémon's Mewtwo.

A night shot of one of the most famous museums in Florence (and Italy), containing many renaissance paintings.

Containing her favorite work for her offspring... :)

Warning: The following contains a long story of me explaining art related stuff, prepared to get bored at your own discretion.

  

It’s been quite a while since I did blogs. They’re really fun. Nevertheless I dug up the old art I promised to show everyone—-here it is.

  

I started this around 3. I was the special kid, quite popular all around. I fondly remember the time my mom read that oddly satisfying children’s book of owls to the whole class. While much memory has been gone, the art never left.

 

It was the time when I started to think of superheroes, of plots, lots of insane sci fi stuff. I was obsessed with comics, Star Wars, anything you could ever imagine. I found lots of solitude in there despite having a great life as a kid, and considered myself to be one of the crazy people who drew lots of stuff from what I saw from every form of entertainment possible, from Three Kingdoms to horribly drawn Batman comics, to cliched rip-offs.

 

Soon I watched even more cartoons and anime (around 7 or 8), and that got me. I pretended I had such a fans (probably talking to my stuffed animals and some of my friends XD). My understanding of English was pretty good at that time so I was able know what was going on. Maybe it was my naive, young mind, but I didn’t know that I created a mess that I realised today. I did make a lot of sci fi and related superhero stuff, and I didn’t know my drawings were basically all the same, generic recycled stuff. Take for example, I used a military sci fi action title, named “G.H.O.S.T” (which sounds a lot like Ghost Recon), and I even gave the characters profiles based on myself and my friends. I even wrote them episodes like how I would write it on Wikipedia, or a FANDOM article. I had lots of awesome dreams and the next day or a random day I would wake up or daydreaming (yes, I daydreamed a lot as a kid) and quickly turn them into ideas.

 

What’s even interesting is that I “used” and “borrowed” ideas to draw, from movies like 9 (2009), Bionicle, and used me, my cousins and my friends as the protagonists and some as the antagonists. I even used video games and novels as a launching point (e.g. Gears of War, Tom Clancy, Harry Potter etc). Lots of themes even expanded into thriller, fantasy, psychological dramas and etc.

 

By then in secondary school I exploded into much more ideas. Secondary school was a period that made me lost, I doodled stuff in class because I didn’t like anything. I didn’t even have a lot friends, except for one who believed and trusted me. We soon got into doodling, and we based it on the teachers who I talked to and liked as superheroes, and I made a knockoff, ripoff named the Fanstatic Four (an obvious spoof of Marvel’s Fantastic Four). He who agreed with me and liked those teachers as well, and we joked a lot about it, he was good at maps and making fake bills and etc. The amount we made on Fanstatic Four was on the level of merchandise selling numbers.

 

I worked on it a bit more, for at least a year until my friend got bored and wanted out. Then I kept drawing on my own, then I got bored. By the time passed away, I got tired of drawing (also the same year I started a Flickr account, October 2014). I drew less and less and was more into Lego, video games and other stuff.

 

2 years and nothing happened. I didn’t draw anymore because I couldn’t feel like drawing, the mood was gone, the trashy and recycled, very unoriginal, had lots of boring stuff, and really terrible (probably the main reasons I quit drawing). But then in 2017, my hope reinvigorated and it came back....

 

When I revisited everything back before (saw the other half of my stuff I drew previously in 1 hour) is awesome yet a little cringy at the same time. Soon I’ll be getting ideas using the old ones, for my future projects. Despite being bad, I didn’t realise it would actually help me today—-things I thought up of in the past, like G.H.O.S.T., would come to my mind and is actually the basis for my current and upcoming sci fi series in development.

 

Stay tuned folks.

Claydon contains some of the most lavish and ambitious interiors ever created in an eighteenth century house. Such was the grandeur that owner Richard Verney went to, to impress his neighbours, that thirty years after its creation, he was facing financial ruin.

Los Alamos, California.

Dilapidated ruins contain history unseen by the public. As urban explorers, the forgotten draws us to rediscover what otherwise would just vanish. For almost 150 years, tunnels were dug here, and coal was produced. Parts of this massive mine could be preserved - but not all of it. In this video, we are exploring the neglected remains that are falling apart day by day. We time-traveled to a past when this place was defining the future of all of France. Join us to see what we have found in this video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=BqhCoCURD3g

LOGIE-BUCHAN, a parish, in the district of Ellon, county of Aberdeen, 2 miles (E. by S.) from Ellon; containing 713 inhabitants.

 

The word Logie, expressive of a low-lying spot, was given to this place on account of its applicability to the tract in which the church is situated; while the affix is descriptive of the position of the parish in that part of the county called Buchan.

 

Logie-Buchan Parish Church is located on the southern slope of the River Ythan valley, in gently rolling countryside with small fields, rough grazing and enclosures of trees. There is a narrow trackway and footbridge across the river a short distance to the north. The church stands in a sloping graveyard, bounded by a rubble wall. The large former manse is positioned to the south and the church itself closed recently and a new use had not been found when it was visited (2012).

 

A church here was granted to Aberdeen Cathedral by David II in 1361, while the current church was built in the late 18th century with later additions and alterations.

 

Description (exterior)

The church is a small, simple building with little architectural detailing. It is aligned roughly east-west and has harled, rubble walls and a slate roof. There are narrow strips of granite stone around the windows and doors. The church is rectangular on plan, with a small, gabled porch and a lean-to vestry at the west end.

   

The east elevation has a hipped or piended roof rather than a gable. There are two rectangular windows with simple timber tracery and small panes of leaded glass. There has clearly been alterations carried out at this end of the church, shown by two blocked openings, a doorway and window, in the centre of the east elevation.

   

The north elevation of the church has four equally-spaced rectangular windows, each with simple tracery and latticed glazing. The opposite south elevation has two larger rectangular windows, towards the centre, again with tracery and latticed glazing.

   

The west end of the church has a small, gabled porch with a rectangular doorway on the south side, which is the main entrance into the church. There is a rectangular window in the west gable of this porch and a tall chimney rises from the apex, serving a fireplace in the small lean-to vestry extension to the north of the porch. The church has a tall gable at the west end, topped by an ashlar-built bellcote, which has a stone ball finial.

 

Description (interior)

Some of the fittings remain in the church but are likely to be removed if and when a new use is found for the church, which is no longer in use.

 

People / Organisations:

Name RoleDates Notes

William RuxtonRecast the interior 1912

Robert MaxwellMade the church bell1728

  

Events:

Church built on site of older church (1787)

Porch and vestry added to west (1891)

Interior recast (1912)

 

Logie-Buchan is separated on the east from the German Ocean by the parish of Slains, and is intersected by the river Ythan.

 

The river abounds with various kinds of trout, also with salmon, eels, lounders, and mussels; and pearls are still occasionally found.

 

It has a ferry opposite the parish church, where its breadth at low water is about sixty yards; and two boats are kept, one for general passengers, and the other, a larger boat, for the conveyance of the parishioners to church from the northern side.

 

A tradition has long prevailed that the largest pearl in the crown of Scotland was obtained in the Ythan; and it appears that, about the middle of the last century, £100 were paid by a London jeweller to gentleman in Aberdeen, for pearls found in the river.

 

Most of the inhabitants of the district are employed in agricultural pursuits, a small brick-work recently established being the only exception.

 

The great north road from Aberdeen passes through the parish, and the mail and other public coaches travel to and fro daily. On another road, leading to the shipping-port of Newburgh, the tenantry have a considerable traffic in grain, lime, and coal, the last procured from England, and being the chief fuel.

 

The river Ythan is navigable for lighters often or twelve tons' burthen at high water. The marketable produce of the parish is sent to Aberdeen. Logie- Buchan is ecclesiastically in the presbytery of Ellon, synod of Aberdeen, and in the patronage of Mr. Buchan.

 

The church was built in 1787, and contains 400 sittings.

 

Cemeteries - Presbyterian / Unitarian

Logie Buchan Parish Church, Logie-Buchan, Church of Scotland

 

The church of Logie-Buchan was dedicated to St Andrew.

 

St Andrew's Church was built in 1787 and has been much altered. It contains a 1728 bell.

 

Logie-Buchan (Aberdeen, Buchan). Also known as Logie Talargy, the church was granted by David II in 1361 to the common fund of the canons of Aberdeen cathedral, and this was confirmed to the uses of the canons by Alexander, bishop of Aberdeen in 1362, both parsonage and vicarage fruits being annexed while the cure was to become a vicarage pensionary.

 

Although possession was obtained by the dean and chapter, this was subsequently lost, and the church had to be re-annexed in 1437, the previous arrangement being adhered to, with both parsonage and vicarage remaining annexed.

 

St Andrew's Kirk, 1787. Undistinguished externally, porch 1891, inside original ceiling with Adam-like centrepiece and two-light Gothic windows, part of 1912 recasting, William Buxton. Pulpit was originally in the centre of the N wall with a horseshoe gallery bearing the Buchan coat of arms (George Reid, Peterhead, carver). Monuments to Thomas (d. 1819) and Robert (d. 1825) Buchan.

 

Bell, 1728, Robert Maxwell. Church bought by Captain David Buchan to ensure access and survival.

 

Kirkyard: plain ashlar gatepiers and rubble walls; some table tombs.

Container Schubverband bei Mannheim (GKM) auf dem Rhein

An interesting Work of Art depicting the removal of the 5th Head of Brahma.Here we find the Lord holding the 5th Head of Brahma in one hand and having the Tharjani mudra in another reprimanding Brahma .

 

The kanchi Kailasanathar temple is the oldest structure in Kanchipuram. Located in Tamil Nadu, India, it is a Hindu temple in the Dravidian architectural style. It is dedicated to the Lord Shiva, and is known for its historical importance. The temple was built from 685-705AD by a Rajasimha ruler of the Pallava Dynasty. The low-slung sandstone compound contains a large number of carvings, including many half-animal deities which were popular during the early Dravidian architectural period. The structure contains 58 small shrines which are dedicated to various forms of Shiva. These are built into niches on the inner face of the high compound wall of the circumambulatory passage.

The temple is located on the banks of the Vedavathi River at the western limits of the Kanchipuram. It faces east. Its location, demarcated according to the religious faiths, is in one of three "Kanchis", the Shiva Kanchi; the other two Kanchis are, Vishnu Kanchi and Jain Kanchi. It is 75 kilometres (47 mi) from the Chennai, the capital city of Tamil Nadu.Kailasanathar is one of several notable temples in Kanchipuram, the others being Ekambaranatha, Kachapeshwarar, Kamakshi Amman, Kumarakottam Temple, and Varadaraja Perumal

Temple construction is credited to the Pallava dynasty, who had established their kingdom with Kanchipuram (also known as "Kanchi" or "Shiva Vishnu Kanchi") as the capital city, considered one of the seven sacred cities under Hinduism.

The only temple of this period which is extant is the Kailsahanathar Temple.

The temple was built during 685-705AD. It is the first structural temple built in South India by Narasimhavarman II (Rajasimha), and who is also known as Rajasimha Pallaveswaram.

The temple has retained the Pallava architecture in its original stylized form with influence of the later styles developed by the Chola Dynasty and Vijayanagara Emperors. It is of stone built architecture unlike the rock cut architecture built into hallowed caves or carved into rock outcrops as in Mahabalipuram.

 

Sealed since its manufacture, containing the remains of balsam and the liquid in which it was once suspended. The vessel would be blown and filled through either the open tail or beak, which would then be reheated to seal it. Accessing the contents would require snapping off the beak or tail, which in this case was never done.

Dated to the 2nd half of the 1st c. CE.

Found at Rovasenda (Vc).

Museo di Antichità di Torino (alias Museo Archeologico Nazionale del Piemonte), Italy

**contains spoilers"

I have complicated feelings about this book - while I'm really glad Kiko found a warm, accepting chosen family, and a completely unrealistic romantic partner in the end, this to my knowledge rarely, if ever happens.

 

Damaged people will generally end up with other damaged people. Those warm, loving, well-adjusted families will avoid you like the plague. They will be friendly but they will not welcome you into their fold, nor will they ever really understand you.

 

****and why is there a jellyfish and not a starfish on the cover?

DDC-Contains a Z

 

We brought her out for her exercise. She was running back and forth like a puppy!

The bag May contain books but The band plays on in York. (999)

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Rarely does one image contain so many things that make me smile! First of all I am an avid college basketball fan so this is our super bowl season right now. Staying in Boca Raton, FL and passing by Florida Atlantic University on numerous occasions and never stopping to visit...until this year. The gym was open and this is D1 so of course I had to go in and walk on the court. To my delight there was a basketball in the corner so I even bounced the ball a few times and made a few layups.

 

Their motto is "Winning in Paradise" which is stamped right on the court...brilliant. Also, 3.8 miles to the beach is on the other side of the court....stop right there and where can I sign up again for college...lol! The palm trees on the court and their mascot name of "Owls" (hint, hint for birders seeking those that burrow) puts me over the moon!

 

To our surprise the Louisian Tech softball and baseball teams were staying at our hotel as they each had a weekend series at FAU. Fun to see student athletes competing.

  

Florida Atlantic University (est. 1961)

Boca Raton, FL

  

In Retzbach-Zellingen wurde dann noch eine SBB 482 mit Containern im regen Schneetreiben abgepasst.

Containing two trainsets dead in tow, Metrolink 320 heads into Los Angeles as Mission Tower looms in the background. Both train sets are powered by F59PHs. Winter rains make the Los Angeles River a little angrier than normal, although it's still well below the man-made confines of the concrete flood wall.

Aus dem fernen Osten hat der Containerzug das Ziel seiner Reise bald erreicht. Zur BMW Niederlassung in Wackersdorf/Altenschwand ist er unterwegs.

Wimpole Estate is a large estate containing Wimpole Hall, a country house located within the civil parish of Wimpole, Cambridgeshire, England, about 8+1⁄2 miles (13.7 kilometres) southwest of Cambridge. The house, begun in 1640, and its 3,000 acres (12 km2) of parkland and farmland are owned by the National Trust. The estate is regularly open to the public and received over 335,000 visitors in 2019.[1] Wimpole is the largest house in Cambridgeshire.

 

History

Sited close to the great Roman road, Ermine Street, Wimpole was listed in the Domesday Book of 1086. At that time there was a moated manor house set in a small 81 hectares (200 acres) deer-park.[2] Situated to the north and south of this were three medieval villages: Bennall End, Thresham End and Green End.

 

The estate was held by the Chicheley family for over 250 years,[3] beginning in 1428 with Henry Chichele who was Archbishop of Canterbury.[4] The last of this family to hold the house was the politician Thomas Chicheley, who was responsible for the "new" house that was completed in 1650.[5] Chicheley established the "formal gardens and architectural landscape".[2] He enjoyed the house for 36 years until, weighed down by financial problems, he was forced to sell to Sir John Cutler.[6] In 1689, Sir John gave it as a marriage settlement to his daughter Elizabeth and her husband Charles Robartes, 2nd Earl of Radnor.[6] Lord Radnor extended the formal gardens and dug out fishponds.[2] On the death of Elizabeth in 1697, without an heir, the estate passed to Edmund Boulter, nephew of Sir John Cutler. In 1710 it was in the possession of John Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, who left it to his daughter Lady Henrietta Cavendish Holles upon his death the following year.[7] Upon Henrietta's marriage, in 1713, it became the possession of her husband Edward Harley, 2nd Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer.[8] In 1740, Edward sold Wimpole to Philip Yorke, Earl of Hardwicke, in order to pay off his debts.[9] The Earls of Hardwicke held it until it passed into the hands of Thomas Agar-Robartes, 6th Viscount Clifden,[10] and then his son, Francis Agar-Robartes, 7th Viscount Clifden[11] who, in 1930, departed to Lanhydrock upon the death of his father.[2]

 

On 27 October 1843, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert visited the hall. They listened to speeches by local politicians including the Earl of Hardwicke, and dinner was served for 26 people. A ball was held in the evening. On 28 October 1843, Her Majesty visited the farm in the morning before departing for London.[12]

 

In 1938, Capt. George Bambridge and his wife, Elsie, daughter of Rudyard Kipling, purchased it after having been tenants since 1932.[11][13] They used the inheritance left to them by her father, and the royalties from his books, for the long-needed refurbishment of the house and grounds. During the War, for instance, the house had no running water nor electricity.[13] During her time at Wimpole Hall, Elsie was known to become irritated by members of the public gathering too close to the house for picnics, so much so, she once returned to the offending couple's property and had her own picnic on their lawn.[13]

 

Over the centuries many notable architects have worked on it, including James Gibbs (between 1713 and 1730), Henry Flitcroft (around 1749), John Soane (1790s), and H. E. Kendall (1840s).[14] There are decorative schemes by the painter James Thornhill (1721).

 

Carved marble busts of the Roman emperors Trajan and Galba were returned to Wimpole in 2014 and placed on the original wooden plinths which had been carved for them by Rattee and Kett in around 1860. Wikipedia

Container Schubverband bei Mannheim auf dem Rhein

  

The Milky Way is the galaxy that contains our Solar System This name derives from its appearance as a dim "milky" glowing band arching across the night sky, in which the naked eye cannot distinguish individual stars. The term "Milky Way" is a translation of the Classical Latin via lactea, from the Hellenistic Greek γαλαξίας κύκλος (pr. galaxías kýklos, "milky circle"). The Milky Way appears like a band because it is a disk-shaped structure being viewed from inside. The fact that this faint band of light is made up of stars was proven in 1610 when Galileo Galilei used his telescope to resolve it into individual stars. In the 1920s, observations by astronomer Edwin Hubble showed that the Milky Way is just one of many galaxies.

 

Your next breath will contain more than 400,000 argon atoms breathed by Gandhi.

....

 

Argon makes up about 1% of the Earth’s atmosphere.

1% of the Earth's atmosphere means 60 trillion tons of argon.

There are about 3x1019 argon atoms in each breath we take. (That's 30,000,000,000,000,000,000)

From your next breath exhaled - the argon quickly spreads:

By nightfall it is all over the neighborhood,

In a week it is all over the country,

In a year it is spread evenly all over the earth, and

Inhalation one year from now gets at least 15 of them back.

We are rebreathing argon atoms of our and other's breaths.

These argon atoms associate us with the past and future.

The first gasp of every baby born one year ago had argon since breathed by you.

Likewise, the last gasp of all the dying.

Your next breath will contain more than 400,000 argon atoms breathed by Gandhi.

Your next breath will contain argon atoms from:

Conversations at The Last Supper,

Arguments of diplomats at Yalta,

Recitations of Homer and Shakespeare, and

Battle cries at Waterloo.

Likewise, the future generations will share yours.

We are intimately associated with the past and the future.

...

Flypaper textures

Italien / Trentino - Tenno (Calvola)

 

Tenno (Tén in local dialect) is a comune (municipality) in Trentino in the northern Italian region Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol, located about 30 kilometres (19 mi) southwest of Trento.

 

Tenno borders the following municipalities: Comano Terme, Fiavè, Arco, Ledro and Riva del Garda.

 

Tenno contains the waterfalls of Cascate del Varone.

 

Tenno hosts an yearly summer festival called Quarta d'Agosto (Fourth of August) which is celebrated the fourth Sunday of August, in Cologna.

 

(Wikipedia)

 

Tenno (auf deutsch früher Thenn) ist eine italienische Gemeinde in der Provinz Trient (Region Trentino-Südtirol) mit 2012 Einwohnern (Stand 31. Dezember 2019). Sie liegt 43 km südwestlich von Trient und 79 km nordwestlich von Verona.

 

Verwaltungsgliederung

 

Die Gemeinde Tenno setzt sich aus vier Fraktionen zusammen, zu denen wiederum mehrere Weiler (italienisch Località) gehören. Die Fraktionen, bis 1929 alle selbstständige Gemeinden, sind Cologna-Gavazzo, Tenno (Gemeindesitz), Ville del Monte und Pranzo. Die 3 Weiler Volta di No, Piazze und Teggiole sind Teil der Fraktion Cologna-Gavazzo. Die Weiler San Antonio, Calvola, Pastoedo, Canale, Lago di Tenno und Mattoni gehören zur Fraktion Ville del Monte.

 

Die Nachbargemeinden sind: Arco, Comano Terme, Fiavè, Ledro und Riva del Garda.

 

Geografie

 

Tenno liegt im Hinterland des Gardasees, einige Kilometer nördlich von Riva del Garda. Das Gemeindegebiet von Tenno auch als Tennese bezeichnet, erstreckt sich vom Ort Gavazzo Nuova (201 m s.l.m.) bis zum Rio Secco oberhalb des Tennosees und umfasst den ganzen dazwischen liegenden Bereich.

 

Eingegrenzt im Osten vom Monte Misone (1803 m s.l.m.) und seinen Ausläufern, liegen westlich die Berge der Ledrogruppe, denen der Monte Tombio (841 m s.l.m.) und der Monte S. Martino (1075 m s.l.m.) vorgelagert sind. Unterhalb des Monte Misone liegt der durch einen Hangrutsch im 12. Jahrhundert aufgestaute Tennosee. Das vom See in nordnordwestlicher Richtung weiterverlaufende und vom Rio Secco durchzogene Tal verengt sich zusehends und endet am Passo di Ballino (755 m s.l.m.), der bereits im Gemeindegebiet von Fiavè liegt und die geographische Grenze zu den Äußeren Judikarien darstellt. Dieser obere nördliche Bereich unterscheidet sich wesentlich vom südlichen vom Rio Magnone durchflossenen breiteren Abschnitt, der klimatisch vom nahe liegenden Gardasee beeinflusst wird.

 

Dieses nach dem Rio Magnone benannte Tal, Valle di Magnone, ist durch einen Gletscher entstanden, dessen Moräne am südöstlichen Ende des Tales eine terrassenartige Stufe aufgeworfen hat, auf der die Burg von Tenno liegt. Der Magnone, der an den Osthängen des Corno di Pichea (2138 m s.l.m.) entspringt hat das Tal tief eingeschnitten und überwindet die Moränenstufe in einem fast 100 m hohen klammartigen Wasserfall oberhalb von Varone, einer Fraktion von Riva del Garda, nach der der Wasserfall, Cascate del Varone, auch benannt ist. Der zweite erwähnenswerte Wasserlauf, der Rio Secco, im nördlichen Bereich, entspringt am Dosso della Torta (2156 m s.l.m.) und ist der einzige bedeutende Zufluss des Tennosees.

 

Alle Orte der Gemeinde liegen mit Ausnahme von Pranzo (463 m s.l.m.) auf der orographisch linken Talseite.

 

Das Gemeindegebiet von Tenno ist auch in der jüngeren Vergangenheit immer wieder von Erdrutschen heimgesucht worden. So löste sich westlich des Tennosees nach mehrtägigen schweren Regenfällen im November 2000 ein über 4 Millionen Kubikmeter großer Hangrutsch, der nicht nur den Lauf des Rio Magnone, sondern auch das Aussehen des Tales veränderte.

 

Geschichte

 

Tenno wurde 1194 als Theni erstmals urkundlich erwähnt. Wie Funde bezeugen, war die Gegend um Tenno aber bereits zur Bronzezeit besiedelt. Der Ortsname geht vermutlich auf eine langobardische Siedlung zurück, von der bei Ausgrabungen Reste gefunden wurden.

 

Die Lage an einer wichtigen Straße, die das Nordufer des Gardasees mit den Judikarien über den Passo Balino verband sowie der nahegelegene Pass Bocca di Trat, der eine wichtige Verbindung in das Ledrotal darstellte, waren ausschlaggebend für die Entwicklung des Ortes und seiner Burg. Tenno bestand historisch aus drei auch sonst klar von einander abgegrenzten Ortsteilen, den sogenannte Ville del Piano, die sich damit von den darüber gelegenen Ville del Monte auch namentlich unterschieden. Zu den Ville del Piano zählt Frapporta, der unter der Burg gelegene und mit einer eigenen Ringmauer und Türmen versehene, erstmals 1211 als infra pòrtam (deutsch zwischen den Toren) das heißt zwischen Stadt- und Burgtor erwähnte Ortsteil, der einen einzigen Wehrkomplex mit der angrenzenden Burg bildete und im Trentino eines der seltenen Beispiele darstellt, in der ein Wohnbereich in eine Wehrstruktur eingegliedert wurde.

 

Nördlich von Frapporta, heute rechts der zum Passo Balino führenden Staatsstraße, liegen die beiden Ortsteile Gardule und Veduto (auch als Revedù bezeichnet) mit der erstmals 1204 erwähnten Pfarrkirche Santa Maria Immacolata, die in der Vergangenheit mehrmals um- und ausgebaut wurde und deren heutiges Aussehen auf das Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts zurückgeht, während der Campanile noch aus dem 16. Jahrhundert stammt.

 

Nachdem Tenno seine Bedeutung als Straßenknotenpunkt mit dem Bau der Ponalestraße in das Ledrotal und der Straße durch die Limaro-Schlucht zwischen Sarche und Comano Terme in der Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts verloren hat, stellt heute der Fremdenverkehr eine bedeutende Einkommensquelle dar.

 

Kulinarische Spezialitäten

 

Tenno gilt mit Arco und Varone als Ursprungsgebiet des traditionellen Trentiner Fleischgerichts Carne Salada.

 

(Wikipedia)

A colorful, festive image shows different types of light containing the remains of not one, but at least two, exploded stars. This supernova remnant is known as 30 Doradus B (30 Dor B for short) and is part of a larger region of space where stars have been continuously forming for the past 8 to 10 million years. It is a complex landscape of dark clouds of gas, young stars, high-energy shocks, and superheated gas, located 160,000 light-years away from Earth in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a small satellite galaxy of the Milky Way.

 

The new image of 30 Dor B was made by combining X-ray data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory (purple), optical data from the Blanco 4-meter telescope in Chile (orange and cyan), and infrared data from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope (red). Optical data from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope was also added in black and white to highlight sharp features in the image.

 

Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/Penn State Univ./L. Townsley et al.; Optical: NASA/STScI/HST; Infrared: NASA/JPL/CalTech/SST; Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/J. Schmidt, N. Wolk, K. Arcand

 

#NASAMarshall #NASA #astrophysics #NASAChandra #NASA #NASAHubble #NASASpitzer #supernova #pulsar

 

Read more

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

"Ogni Tempo ha il suo Luogo".

 

Lilienthal Berlin | The L1 model.

Made in Germany

Silver/White version.

 

Lilienthal Berlin | Demo.

 

Canon Powershot G5x

 

"Orologi e collaborazioni" è un album che contiene fotografie demo realizzate a tema still-life commerciale orientato al mondo dell'orologeria. Marchi, grandi aziende del settore, ed i loro prodotti che amo fotografare nel dettaglio e nel contesto di utilizzo avvalendomi anche di modelli e modelle attraverso cui mostrare le caratteristiche fashion del prodotto stesso al fine di creare una sorta di personale campagna pubblicitaria da proporre per le aziende che vorranno collaborare con il mio marchio "MR PhotoArt ©".

 

Watches and collaboration is an album containing photographs taken demo themed commercial still-life oriented to the world of watchmaking. Brands, large companies in the industry, and their products that I love to photograph in detail and in the context of use, making use also of models through which fashion show features of the product itself in order to create a kind of personal publicity campaign to be proposed for Companies that want to collaborate with my "MR PhotoArt ©" brand.

 

© All rights reserved. Using this photo without my permission is illegal.

© Le immagini contengono filigrana digitale per il copyright e l’autenticazione

© E’ vietata ogni riproduzione e/o utilizzo della/e stessa/e previo specifico accordo con l’autore che ne detiene tutti i diritti e si riserva di poter concederne uso in licenza secondo norme vigenti.

© MR PhotoArt - www.mikerphotoart.wix.com/book

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© YouPic www.youpic.com/photographer/michelemikerallo

© VivereD’Arte Store - www.viveredarte.it/profile/mrphotoart

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© Behance.net - www.behance.net/MRPhotoArt

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This image contains two separate galaxy clusters and a myriad of smaller ones scattered throughout the field. The upper right cluster is dominated by NGC 7331, a galaxy very similar to our own lying about 40 million light years away. The other smaller galaxies that make up this illusory cluster are actually almost 10 times further away, and therefore not gravitationally bound.

 

At the bottom right is Stephan's Quintet, a grouping of 5 galaxies, 4 of which are thought to be gravitationally bound to each other; all but NGC 7320 are thought to lie about 300 million light years away.

 

Taken with a Stellarvur SVS130 and an SBIG STL4020M. The image was processed in Maxim DL, PixInsight, and Photoshop, and upsampled 2x.

"May Contain Fish" by Maya Paris at „Moving Islands"

 

This picture is based on a part of the collaboration project „Moving Islands“ orchestrated by Eupalinos Ugain on LEA20

 

The Sim shows a "Cosmogony of Rafts and other improbable floating beings". All is spectacular, all is moving. Absolutely worth a visit

link to the destination

  

See more at the LEA-Blog

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Moving Islands

 

Participating Artists:

 

● Alpha Auer - www.flickr.com/photos/alpha_auer/

● Artistide Despres - artist-id.blogspot.com/

● Aston Leisen - www.flickr.com/photos/aston_leisen/

● CapCat Ragu - www.flickr.com/photos/capcatragu/

● Cica Ghost - www.flickr.com/photos/64860898@N05/

● Cutea Benelli - www.flickr.com/photos/grimbros/

● Derek Michelson

● Eupalinos Ugajin - eupalinosugajin.wordpress.com/

● Haveit Neox - accalpha.blogspot.com/

● Kake Broek - www.flickr.com/photos/13539895@N06/

● Kikas Babenco - www.flickr.com/photos/kikas_babenco/

● Livio Korobase - www.flickr.com/photos/liviokorobase/

● Maclane Mills - www.flickr.com/photos/absence/

● Marmaduke Arado - www.flickr.com/photos/28090997@N03/

● Maya Paris

● Meilo Minotaur - www.flickr.com/photos/meilominotaur/

● Merlino Mayo - www.flickr.com/photos/merlinomayo/

● Oberon Onmura - www.flickr.com/photos/oberon_onmura/

● Ole Etzel - www.flickr.com/photos/boned/

● Pallina60 Loon - www.flickr.com/photos/pallina60loon/

● Scottius Polke - srolfe.com/

● Simotron Aquila - www.flickr.com/photos/simotron/

● Takio Ra

●Uan Ceriaptrix - www.flickr.com/photos/uanguz/

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More pictures from the LEA-ART-project, see my set "LEA - Linden Endowment for the Arts" - Follow this link

 

(More information about the LEA project on the LEA-Website - follow this link)

 

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The "Somewhere in sl" picture series (or "The Adventures of WuWai in Second Life") is my guide and bookmark folder to wonderful, artful, curious or in other way remarkably sims of second life with travel guide WuWai Chun.

 

(More pictures of WuWai's adventures: Follow this link)

 

You can find some of the pictures in world at my homeland

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POIMANDRES, THE VISION OF HERMES

The Divine Pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus is one of the earliest of the Hermetic writings now extant. While probably not in its original form, having been remodeled during the first centuries of the Christian Era and incorrectly translated since, this work undoubtedly contains many of the original concepts of the Hermetic cultus. The Divine Pymander consists of seventeen fragmentary writings gathered together and put forth as one work. The second book of The Divine Pymander, called Poimandres, or The Vision, is believed to describe the method by which the divine wisdom was first revealed to Hermes. It was after Hermes had received this revelation that he began his ministry, teaching to all who would listen the secrets of the invisible universe as they had been unfolded to him.

The Vision is the most: famous of all the Hermetic fragments, and contains an exposition of Hermetic cosmogony and the secret sciences of the Egyptians regarding the culture and unfoldment of the human soul. For some time it was erroneously called "The Genesis of Enoch," but that mistake has now been rectified. At hand while preparing the following interpretation of the symbolic philosophy concealed within The Vision of Hermes the present author has had these reference works: The Divine Pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus (London, 1650), translated out of the Arabic and Greek by Dr. Everard; Hermetica (Oxford, 1924), edited by Walter Scott; Hermes, The Mysteries of Egypt (Philadelphia, 1925), by Edouard Schure; and the Thrice-Greatest Hermes (London, 1906), by G. R. S. Mead. To the material contained in the above volumes he has added commentaries based upon the esoteric philosophy of the ancient Egyptians, together with amplifications derived partly from other Hermetic fragments and partly from the secret arcanum of the Hermetic sciences. For the sake of clarity, the narrative form has been chosen in preference to the original dialogic style, and obsolete words have given place to those in current use.Hermes, while wandering in a rocky and desolate place, gave himself over to meditation and prayer. Following the secret instructions of the Temple, he gradually freed his higher consciousness from the bondage of his bodily senses; and, thus released, his divine nature revealed to him the mysteries of the transcendental spheres. He beheld a figure, terrible and awe-inspiring. It was the Great Dragon, with wings stretching across the sky and light streaming in all directions from its body. (The Mysteries taught that the Universal Life was personified as a dragon.) The Great Dragon called Hermes by name, and asked him why he thus meditated upon the World Mystery. Terrified by the spectacle, Hermes prostrated himself before the Dragon, beseeching it to reveal its identity. The great creature answered that it was Poimandres, the Mind of the Universe, the Creative Intelligence, and the Absolute Emperor of all. (Schure identifies Poimandres as the god Osiris.) Hermes then besought Poimandres to disclose the nature of the universe and the constitution of the gods. The Dragon acquiesced, bidding Trismegistus hold its image in his mind.Immediately the form of Poimandres changed. Where it had stood there was a glorious and pulsating Radiance. This Light was the spiritual nature of the Great Dragon itself. Hermes was "raised" into the midst of this Divine Effulgence and the universe of material things faded from his consciousness. Presently a great darkness descended and, expanding, swallowed up the Light. Everything was troubled. About Hermes swirled a mysterious watery substance which gave forth a smokelike vapor. The air was filled with inarticulate moanings and sighings which seemed to come from the Light swallowed up in the darkness. His mind told Hermes thatthe Light was the form of the spiritual universe and that the swirling darkness which had engulfed it represented material substance.Then out of the imprisoned Light a mysterious and Holy Word came forth and took its stand upon the smoking waters. This Word--the Voice of the Light--rose out of the darkness as a great pillar, and the fire and the air followed after it, but the earth and the water remained unmoved below. Thus the waters of Light were divided from the waters of darkness, and from the waters of Light were formed the worlds above and from the waters of darkness were formed the worlds below. The earth and the water next mingled, becoming inseparable, and the Spiritual Word which is called Reason moved upon their surface, causing endless turmoil.Then again was heard the voice of Poimandres, but His form was not revealed: "I Thy God am the Light and the Mind which were before substance was divided from spirit and darkness from Light. And the Word which appeared as a pillar of flame out of the darkness is the Son of God, born of the mystery of the Mind. The name of that Word is Reason. Reason is the offspring of Thought and Reason shall divide the Light from the darkness and establish Truth in the midst of the waters. Understand, O Hermes, and meditate deeply upon the mystery. That which in you sees and hears is not of the earth, but is the Word of God incarnate. So it is said that Divine Light dwells in the midst of mortal darkness, and ignorance cannot divide them. The union of the Word and the Mind produces that mystery which is called Life. As the darkness without you is divided against itself, so the darkness within you is likewise divided. The Light and the fire which rise are the divine man, ascending in the path of the Word, and that which fails to ascend is the mortal man, which may not partake of immortality. Learn deeply of the Mind and its mystery, for therein lies the secret of immortality."The Dragon again revealed its form to Hermes, and for a long time the two looked steadfastly one upon the other, eye to eye, so that Hermes trembled before the gaze of Poimandres. At the Word of the Dragon the heavens opened and the innumerable Light Powers were revealed, soaring through Cosmos on pinions of streaming fire. Hermes beheld the spirits of the stars, the celestials controlling the universe, and all those Powers which shine with the radiance of the One Fire--the glory of the Sovereign Mind. Hermes realized that the sight which he beheld was revealed to him only because Poimandres had spoken a Word. The Word was Reason, and by the Reason of the Word invisible things were made manifest. Divine Mind--the Dragon--continued its discourse:"Before the visible universe was formed its mold was cast. This mold was called the Archetype, and this Archetype was in the Supreme Mind long before the process of creation began. Beholding the Archetypes, the Supreme Mind became enamored with Its own thought; so, taking the Word as a mighty hammer, It gouged out caverns in primordial space and cast the form of the spheres in the Archetypal mold, at the same time sowing in the newly fashioned bodies the seeds of living things. The darkness below, receiving the hammer of the Word, was fashioned into an orderly universe. The elements separated into strata and each brought forth living creatures. The Supreme Being--the Mind--male and female, brought forth the Word; and the Word, suspended between Light and darkness, was delivered of another Mind called the Workman, the Master-Builder, or the Maker of Things.

"In this manner it was accomplished, O Hermes: The Word moving like a breath through space called forth the Fire by the friction of its motion. Therefore, the Fire is called the Son of Striving. The Workman passed as a whirlwind through the universe, causing the substances to vibrate and glow with its friction, The Son of Striving thus formed Seven Governors, the Spirits of the Planets, whose orbits bounded the world; and the Seven Governors controlled the world by the mysterious power called Destiny given them by the Fiery Workman. When the Second Mind (The Workman) had organized Chaos, the Word of God rose straightway our of its prison of substance, leaving the elements without Reason, and joined Itself to the nature of the Fiery Workman. Then the Second Mind, together with the risen Word, established Itself in the midst of the universe and whirled the wheels of the Celestial Powers. This shall continue from an infinite beginning to an infinite end, for the beginning and the ending are in the same place and state."Then the downward-turned and unreasoning elements brought forth creatures without Reason. Substance could not bestow Reason, for Reason had ascended out of it. The air produced flying things and the waters such as swim. The earth conceived strange four-footed and creeping beasts, dragons, composite demons, and grotesque monsters. Then the Father--the Supreme Mind--being Light and Life, fashioned a glorious Universal Man in Its own image, not an earthy man but a heavenly Man dwelling in the Light of God. The Supreme Mind loved the Man It had fashioned and delivered to Him the control of the creations and workmanships."The Man, desiring to labor, took up His abode in the sphere of generation and observed the works of His brother--the Second Mind--which sat upon the Ring of the Fire. And having beheld the achievements of the Fiery Workman, He willed also to make things, and His Father gave permission. The Seven Governors, of whose powers He partook, rejoiced and each gave the Man a share of Its own nature."The Man longed to pierce the circumference of the circles and understand the mystery of Him who sat upon the Eternal Fire. Having already all power, He stooped down and peeped through the seven Harmonies and, breaking through the strength of the circles, made Himself manifest to Nature stretched out below. The Man, looking into the depths, smiled, for He beheld a shadow upon the earth and a likeness mirrored in the waters, which shadow and likeness were a reflection of Himself. The Man fell in love with His own shadow and desired to descend into it. Coincident with the desire, the Intelligent Thing united Itself with the unreasoning image or shape."Nature, beholding the descent, wrapped herself about the Man whom she loved, and the two were mingled. For this reason, earthy man is composite. Within him is the Sky Man, immortal and beautiful; without is Nature, mortal and destructible. Thus, suffering is the result of the Immortal Man's falling in love with His shadow and giving up Reality to dwell in the darkness of illusion; for, being immortal, man has the power of the Seven Governors--also the Life, the Light, and the Word-but being mortal, he is controlled by the Rings of the Governors--Fate or Destiny."Of the Immortal Man it should be said that He is hermaphrodite, or male and female, and eternally watchful. He neither slumbers nor sleeps, and is governed by a Father also both male and female, and ever watchful. Such is the mystery kept hidden to this day, for Nature, being mingled in marriage with the Sky Man, brought forth a wonder most wonderful--seven men, all bisexual, male and female, and upright of stature, each one exemplifying the natures of the Seven Governors. These O Hermes, are the seven races, species, and wheels."After this manner were the seven men generated. Earth was the female element and water the male element, and from the fire and the æther they received their spirits, and Nature produced bodies after the species and shapes of men. And man received the Life and Light of the Great Dragon, and of the Life was made his Soul and of the Light his Mind. And so, all these composite creatures containing immortality, but partaking of mortality, continued in this state for the duration of a period. They reproduced themselves out of themselves, for each was male and female. But at the end of the period the knot of Destiny was untied by the will of God and the bond of all things was loosened."Then all living creatures, including man, which had been hermaphroditical, were separated, the males being set apart by themselves and the females likewise, according to the dictates of Reason."Then God spoke to the Holy Word within the soul of all things, saying: 'Increase in increasing and multiply in multitudes, all you, my creatures and workmanships. Let him that is endued with Mind know himself to be immortal and that the cause of death is the love of the body; and let him learn all things that are, for he who has recognized himself enters into the state of Good.'"And when God had said this, Providence, with the aid of the Seven Governors and Harmony, brought the sexes together, making the mixtures and establishing the generations, and all things were multiplied according to their kind. He who through the error of attachment loves his body, abides wandering in darkness, sensible and suffering the things of death, but he who realizes that the body is but the tomb of his soul, rises to immortality."Then Hermes desired to know why men should be deprived of immortality for the sin of ignorance alone. The Great Dragon answered:, To the ignorant the body is supreme and they are incapable of realizing the immortality that is within them. Knowing only the body which is subject to death, they believe in death because they worship that substance which is the cause and reality of death."Then Hermes asked how the righteous and wise pass to God, to which Poimandres replied: "That which the Word of God said, say I: 'Because the Father of all things consists of Life and Light, whereof man is made.' If, therefore, a man shall learn and understand the nature of Life and Light, then he shall pass into the eternity of Life and Light."Hermes next inquired about the road by which the wise attained to Life eternal, and Poimandres continued: "Let the man endued with a Mind mark, consider, and learn of himself, and with the power of his Mind divide himself from his not-self and become a servant of Reality."Hermes asked if all men did not have Minds, and the Great Dragon replied: "Take heed what you say, for I am the Mind--the Eternal Teacher. I am the Father of the Word--the Redeemer of all men--and in the nature of the wise the Word takes flesh. By means of the Word, the world is saved. I, Thought (Thoth)--the Father of the Word, the Mind--come only unto men that are holy and good, pure and merciful, and that live piously and religiously, and my presence is an inspiration and a help to them, for when I come they immediately know all things and adore the Universal Father. Before such wise and philosophic ones die, they learn to renounce their senses, knowing that these are the enemies of their immortal souls."I will not permit the evil senses to control the bodies of those who love me, nor will I allow evil emotions and evil thoughts to enter them. I become as a porter or doorkeeper, and shut out evil, protecting the wise from their own lower nature. But to the wicked, the envious and the covetous, I come not, for such cannot understand the mysteries of Mind; therefore, I am unwelcome. I leave them to the avenging demon that they are making in their own souls, for evil each day increases itself and torments man more sharply, and each evil deed adds to the evil deeds that are gone before until finally evil destroys itself. The punishment of desire is the agony of unfulfillment."Hermes bowed his head in thankfulness to the Great Dragon who had taught him so much, and begged to hear more concerning the ultimate of the human soul. So Poimandres resumed: "At death the material body of man is returned to the elements from which it came, and the invisible divine man ascends to the source from whence he came, namely the Eighth Sphere. The evil passes to the dwelling place of the demon, and the senses, feelings, desires, and body passions return to their source, namely the Seven Governors, whose natures in the lower man destroy but in the invisible spiritual man give life."After the lower nature has returned to the brutishness, the higher struggles again to regain its spiritual estate. It ascends the seven Rings upon which sit the Seven Governors and returns to each their lower powers in this manner: Upon the first ring sits the Moon, and to it is returned the ability to increase and diminish. Upon the second ring sits Mercury, and to it are returned machinations, deceit, and craftiness. Upon the third ring sits Venus, and to it are returned the lusts and passions. Upon the fourth ring sits the Sun, and to this Lord are returned ambitions. Upon the fifth ring sits Mars, and to it are returned rashness and profane boldness. Upon the sixth ring sits Jupiter, and to it are returned the sense of accumulation and riches. And upon the seventh ring sits Saturn, at the Gate of Chaos, and to it are returned falsehood and evil plotting."Then, being naked of all the accumulations of the seven Rings, the soul comes to the Eighth Sphere, namely, the ring of the fixed stars. Here, freed of all illusion, it dwells in the Light and sings praises to the Father in a voice which only the pure of spirit may understand. Behold, O Hermes, there is a great mystery in the Eighth Sphere, for the Milky Way is the seed-ground of souls, and from it they drop into the Rings, and to the Milky Way they return again from the wheels of Saturn. But some cannot climb the seven-runged ladder of the Rings. So they wander in darkness below and are swept into eternity with the illusion of sense and earthiness."The path to immortality is hard, and only a few find it. The rest await the Great Day when the wheels of the universe shall be stopped and the immortal sparks shall escape from the sheaths of substance. Woe unto those who wait, for they must return again, unconscious and unknowing, to the seed-ground of stars, and await a new beginning. Those who are saved by the light of the mystery which I have revealed unto you, O Hermes, and which I now bid you to establish among men, shall return again to the Father who dwelleth in the White Light, and shall deliver themselves up to the Light and shall be absorbed into the Light, and in the Light they shall become Powers in God. This is the Way of Good and is revealed only to them that have wisdom."Blessed art thou, O Son of Light, to whom of all men, I, Poimandres, the Light of the World, have revealed myself. I order you to go forth, to become as a guide to those who wander in darkness, that all men within whom dwells the spirit of My Mind (The Universal Mind) may be saved by My Mind in you, which shall call forth My Mind in them. Establish My Mysteries and they shall not fail from the earth, for I am the Mind of the Mysteries and until Mind fails (which is never) my Mysteries cannot fail." With these parting words, Poimandres, radiant with celestial light, vanished, mingling with the powers of the heavens. Raising his eyes unto the heavens, Hermes blessed the Father of All Things and consecrated his life to the service of the Great Light.Thus preached Hermes: "O people of the earth, men born and made of the elements, but with the spirit of the Divine Man within you, rise from your sleep of ignorance! Be sober and thoughtful. Realize that your home is not in the earth but in the Light. Why have you delivered yourselves over unto death, having power to partake of immortality? Repent, and change your minds. Depart from the dark light and forsake corruption forever. Prepare yourselves to climb through the Seven Rings and to blend your souls with the eternal Light."Some who heard mocked and scoffed and went their way, delivering themselves to the Second Death from which there is no salvation. But others, casting themselves before the feet of Hermes, besought him to teach them the Way of Life. He lifted them gently, receiving no approbation for himself, and staff in hand, went forth teaching and guiding mankind, and showing them how they might be saved. In the worlds of men, Hermes sowed the seeds of wisdom and nourished the seeds with the Immortal Waters. And at last came the evening of his life, and as the brightness of the light of earth was beginning to go down, Hermes commanded his disciples to preserve his doctrines inviolate throughout all ages. The Vision of Poimandres he committed to writing that all men desiring immortality might therein find the way.In concluding his exposition of the Vision, Hermes wrote: "The sleep of the body is the sober watchfulness of the Mind and the shutting of my eyes reveals the true Light. My silence is filled with budding life and hope, and is full of good. My words are the blossoms of fruit of the tree of my soul. For this is the faithful account of what I received from my true Mind, that is Poimandres, the Great Dragon, the Lord of the Word, through whom I became inspired by God with the Truth. Since that day my Mind has been ever with me and in my own soul it hath given birth to the Word: the Word is Reason, and Reason hath redeemed me. For which cause, with all my soul and all my strength, I give praise and blessing unto God the Father, the Life and the Light, and the Eternal Good.

   

IC 410 is an emission nebula about 10000 ly away. It contains "The Tadpoles" which are aggregations of more dense gas. IC 410 partly covers the star cluster NGC 1893

20 x 300 s with Omegon 12 nm H-alpha filter @ ISO 1600

30 x 180 s in full color RGB @ ISO 800

Pentax K3ii (unmodified) and TS apo 130/7

 

Contains candy

Second choice for Macro Mondays Theme Contained.

 

Welcome to my Flickr space & thank you for visiting,

hope you enjoy my images.

 

Many thanks to everyone who takes the time to look,

like and comment on my pictures.

 

Don't use this image on any media without my permission.

 

You can contact me on my website at:

www.digifred.nl

  

Thanks for > 11 000 000 views.

 

This image of NGC 6240 contains new X-ray data from Chandra (shown in red, orange, and yellow) that has been combined with an optical image from the Hubble Space Telescope originally released in 2008. In 2002, the discovery of two merging black holes was announced based on Chandra data in this galaxy. The two black holes are a mere 3,000 light years apart and are seen as the bright point-like sources in the middle of the image.

 

Scientists think these black holes are in such close proximity because they are in the midst of spiraling toward each other -- a process that began about 30 million years ago. It is estimated that the two black holes will eventually drift together and merge into a larger black hole some tens or hundreds of millions of years from now.

 

Finding and studying merging black holes has become a very active field of research in astrophysics. Since 2002, there has been intense interest in follow-up observations of NGC 6240 by Chandra and other telescopes, as well as a search for similar systems. Understanding what happens when these exotic objects interact with one another remains an intriguing question for scientists.

 

The formation of multiple systems of supermassive black holes should be common in the Universe, since many galaxies undergo collisions and mergers with other galaxies, most of which contain supermassive black holes. It is thought that pairs of massive black holes can explain some of the unusual behavior seen by rapidly growing supermassive black holes, such as the distortion and bending seen in the powerful jets they produce. Also, pairs of massive black holes in the process of merging are expected to be the most powerful sources of gravitational waves in the Universe.

 

Read entire caption/view more images: chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2009/ngc6240/

 

Image credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/MIT/ C.Canizares, M.Nowak; Optical: NASA/STScI

 

Caption credit: Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

 

Read more about Chandra:

www.nasa.gov/chandra

 

p.s. You can see all of our Chandra photos in the Chandra Group in Flickr at: www.flickr.com/groups/chandranasa/ We'd love to have you as a member!

 

You can also get Twitter updates whenever there's a new image:

www.twitter.com/nasa1fan

Okay, so this is how I'm gonna do it: first I'm gonna make a spoiler free review (which will be very short :p), and then a review which will contain ALOT of Spoilers! (That one will be longer ;p)

Oh and sorry this is so late, but I watched this movie while I was on vacation and I didn't have time to upload it. :(

Anyway here we go:

 

Spoiler free review:

Well here we go. I'm just gonna start off with one thing: I loved this movie. It had a great plot (plus a couple o' twists ;D), great characters and great humor! Especially alot of great humor, mostly between Cap and Falcon, but Black Widow drops a few good lines aswell. My favourite scene is the first scene, where (don't worry, no spoilers :p) Falcon is like running around Washington, well *jogging* and then you see Steve just running past him and saying "On your left." and this happens like 5 times. :P Anyway, that's how the movie starts and that is basically how the rest of the movie is as well. Here and there some serious moments, but there's always just a tick of humor in it. I think that's as far as I can go without ruining anything, so yeah. Oh one last thing: sit through all of the credits. There are two scenes. :)

 

Well, that was my attempt at a Spoiler free review, here is the review with a TON of spoilers!

 

SPOILER Warning! I will be disscussing A TON of spoilers here, so if you havn't watched the movie yet, stop reading, leave this page emediatly and don't come back till you watched. Okay ?! Right then, let's get to it!

 

Okay, here come the spoilers!

Bad-ass movie!!! Definitley the best MARVEL movie to date!! I mean everything that should be in a MARVEL movie, WAS in this movie: Action, Humor, Plot Twists! And of course I'm gonna have to start with the biggets Plot twist from all of the MARVEL movies: Hydra was in S.H.I.E.L.D. this whole time!!!!! I mean I so did not see that coming!! When that Secret came out, I was like WHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAT????????????????????????!!!!!!!!!!???????????????????!!!!! So yeah, that was a huge twist! And I gotta say, no movie changed the MARVEL Cinematic Universe - with the exception of Avengers Assemble of course! - like this one. I mean S.H.I.E.L.D. is gone. I mean S.H.I.E.L.D. was in every single MARVEL movie - MARVEL Disney movie, I am not including FOX or SONY - and now they're gone! This changes everything! Especially what is happening in Marvel's Agents of SHIELD! Which I must say, has really taken a turn for the awesome now! The first few episodes were so boring I thought this could not be true, but now! I mean these last few episodes were so good, I was sure I was in a different Universe where AoS (it's not MAoS, it's AoS!) is awesome as shit! But enough about AoS, I'm here to talk about The Winter Soldier. Which brings me to two things I didn't like about the movie. 1. Winter Soldier `?? More like Hydra Soldier! Yea, I hated what they did with his backstory. I mean it was alright, but compared to the Comic origin ? CRAP! I mean I get that they had to change it a bit, but still! Which also brings to another thing that slightly bugged me about Bucky is that he played such a small role in it. I mean it wasn't that small, but seing as the movie is called The Winter Soldier I was dissapointed by that. What also bugged me was that Natasha had nothing to do with Buck - apart from he almost killing her on one mission -. That is actually how I first got into The Winter Soldier, I read that he and Natasha had an Affair while she was working for the KGB or whatever, and they fell in love. So that I really didn't like. Well that is one of the things I didn't like (though 3 things would be more acourate), the second (*4th) I didn't like was: Alexander Pierce > Red Skull, nuh-uh. Yeah, I was so sure Pierce was gonna be the Red Skull, just like Lukin was in the comics, but no luck!

Oh and Extremis Genious AKA New Marks on the Block AKA Stark's Marks AKA Iron Legion AKA Iron Legion Returns AKA Iron Legion Resurrected not "everyone was thinking that Pierce and Lukin/Red Skull were the same person, oh and you only knew that after I told you. -_- Just wanted to put say that there, beccause it really ticked me off when you said that in your review.

Anyhoo! Antoher thing that could have been better was the fact that Steve wore his Stealth suit so few times.

well those are the things that could have been better, but here are the things that just made this movie so freaking bad-ass!:

Running scene, Ship scene, Batroc v Cap fight scene (probally one of my favourite scenes of the entire movie), Fury Car chase, WS just being bad-ass in just every scene, the Helicarier scene(s), Fight on the bridge, and basically every other scene in the movie. XD So here are the ratings:

 

Favourite Fight Scene: Tie between Batroc V Cap & Cap v Bucky (the reveal).

Action: 10/10-

 

Favourite "Funny scene:" The Running Man (first scene of the movie)

Humor: 9/10.

 

Favourite Plot Twist: HYDRA was in S.H.I.E.L.D. this whole time!

Plot: 10/10

 

Overall: 12/10.

 

So those were/are my thoughts on Captain America: The Winter Soldier, I hope you liked it. :)

Also I watched The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (Rise of Electro) last wendsday, so expect the review to be either up tomorrow or Monday. :)

 

Comments & Faves are both appreciated, but please comment when you favourite. Thank you. :)

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PACK CONTAINS 6 GLITTER EYESHADOWS AND 6 LIPSTICKS

 

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HUD HAS 14 FUR AND 14 RIBBON COLOURS

 

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All linked decor included

 

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Lots more pictures and info in my blog

stormysstorey.blogspot.com/2024/12/last-weekend-for-gothm...

  

SICHUAN DANCER

The Sichuan Dance Troupe from Sichuan China is in Las Vegas for the 2017 Chinese Lunar New Year celebration. I found them at Container Park in downtown Vegas.

 

- Humility contains in itself the answer to all the great problems of the life of the soul. It is the only key to faith, with which the spiritual life begins: for faith and humility are inseparable.

-Thomas Merton

/*************************************************************************/

In-between or a Gentle Parting

 

More beautiful than a face are you

Bargaining with time to seek a liturgy

Owned is your journey without invitation

 

Retreating, this monk slowly disappears

Following his heart an ancient song is heard

A journey such as this can take no friend

 

-Robert Cowlishaw

 

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THANK YOU ALL FOR THE GREAT COMMENTS

 

THE GREAT GREENHOUSE

 

Rising from the earth

Space like vision of beauty

Treasure of plantlife

 

By Henrhyde

   

The Great Glasshouse

This spectacular dome is the largest single span glasshouse in the world, designed by Norman Foster Poised on the Welsh landscape like a giant raindrop, it protects and conserves some of the most endangered plants on the planet.

These plants come from six areas of the world: California, Australia, the Canary Islands, Chile, South Africa, the Mediterranean Basin, and the Great Glasshouse is zoned to reflect this. Each of these geographical areas has regions that enjoy a Mediterranean climate. Hot dry summers, cool moist winters, dazzling sunlight, strong breezes and the occasional ground-clearing fire create perfect conditions for many plants to thrive on the scrubby, rock-strewn landscapes. In fact, it’s so perfect that most of these plants grow nowhere else on Earth. Although these regions cover less than 2% of the Earth’s surface, they contain more than 20% of all known flowering plant species, and the plant diversity are considered second only in importance to tropical habitats. Due to human activity, these habitats are now threatened as the rainforests, and our Great Glasshouse is dedicated to conserving their endangered plants.

At first glance, it is not obvious that the plants come from six different places in the world. This is because they share many qualities, such as small leathery evergreen leaves and dense shrubby forms . As you explore, you will find yourself travelling across continents and countries within a few steps. The imaginative flowing landscape on which these plants thrive, covers 3,500 square metres. Its rocky terraces, sandstone cliffs and gravelled scree slopes, are contoured to reflect the natural environment and to create a wide range of habitats. Balancing light and shade and varying moisture levels to suit the needs of different plants.

 

A magical visit—not to be missed.

Part of the glorious BOTANIC GARDEN OF WALES

 

Love Hibiscus? Me too! Enjoy more in my newly created set of my Hibiscus flowers:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/motorpsiclist/sets/72157634426592235/

 

You might enjoy viewing it as a slideshow:

 

www.flickr.com//photos/motorpsiclist/sets/721576344265922...

 

.

  

Copyright © notice: My photographs and videos and any of my derivative works are my private property and are copyright © by me, John Russell (aka "Zoom Lens") and ALL my rights, including my exclusive rights, are reserved and protected by United States Copyright Laws and by the Berne Convention and the Universal Copyright Convention.

 

Do not rip these photos off; they do not belong to you!

 

ANY use without my permission in writing is forbidden by law, including use on blogs; pin boards such as Pinterest; Tumblr; Facebook; or any other use without my specific written permission.

 

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.

 

~

 

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Fujairah City is the capital of the emirate of Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates, located on the Gulf of Oman (part of the Indian Ocean). It is the only emirate on the east coast.

 

Contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data [2023], processed by Sentinel Hub/Pierre Markuse

 

Parts of the Irrawaddy River Delta, Myanmar - 25 April 2023

 

Iimage is about 126 kilometres wide.

 

Follow us on Twitter!

 

Try out the EO Browser!

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palace_of_Westminster

The Palace of Westminster, also known as the Houses of Parliament, is the seat of the two houses of the Parliament of the United Kingdom—the House of Lords and the House of Commons. The Palace lies on the north bank of the River Thames[note 1] in the London borough of the City of Westminster, close to the government buildings of Whitehall.

The palace contains around 1,100 rooms, 100 staircases and 5 kilometres (3 mi) of corridors. Although the building mainly dates from the 19th century, remaining elements of the original historic buildings include Westminster Hall, used today for major public ceremonial events such as lyings in state, and the Jewel Tower.

Control of the Palace of Westminster and its precincts was for centuries exercised by the Queen's representative, the Lord Great Chamberlain. By agreement with the Crown, control passed to the two Houses in 1965. Certain ceremonial rooms continue to be controlled by the Lord Great Chamberlain.

After a fire in 1834, the present Houses of Parliament were built over the next 30 years. They were the work of the architect Sir Charles Barry (1795–1860) and his assistant Augustus Welby Pugin (1812–52). The design incorporated Westminster Hall and the remains of St Stephen's Chapel.

The Old Palace

The Palace of Westminster site was strategically important during the Middle Ages, as it was located on the banks of the River Thames. Buildings have occupied the site since at least Saxon times.[citation needed] Known in medieval times as Thorney Island, the site may have been first-used for a royal residence by Canute the Great (reigned 1016–35). St Edward the Confessor, the penultimate Saxon monarch of England, built a royal palace on Thorney Island just west of the City of London at about the same time as he built Westminster Abbey (1045–50). Thorney Island and the surrounding area soon became known as Westminster (a contraction of the words West Minster). After the Norman Conquest in 1066, King William I established himself at the Tower of London, but later moved to Westminster.[citation needed] Neither the buildings used by the Saxons nor those used by William I survive. The oldest existing part of the Palace (Westminster Hall) dates from the reign of William I's successor, King William II.

The Palace of Westminster was the monarch's principal residence in the late Medieval period. The predecessor of Parliament, the Curia Regis (Royal Council), met in Westminster Hall (although it followed the King when he moved to other palaces). The Model Parliament, the first official Parliament of England, met in the Palace in 1295;[1] almost all subsequent Parliaments have met there.

The Jewel Tower was built approximately in 1365 to house the treasures of King Edward III.[2]

Westminster remained the monarch's chief London residence until a fire destroyed part of the complex in 1512.[citation needed] In 1530, King Henry VIII acquired York Palace from Thomas Cardinal Wolsey,[3] a powerful minister who had lost the King's favour. Renaming it the Palace of Whitehall, Henry used it as his principal residence. Although Westminster officially remained a royal palace, it was used by the two Houses of Parliament and as a law court.

Because it was originally a royal residence, the Palace included no purpose-built chambers for the two Houses. Important state ceremonies were held in the Painted Chamber. The House of Lords originally met in the Queen's Chamber, a modest Medieval hall at the south end of the complex. In later years the Upper House met in the larger White Chamber, which had formerly housed the Court of Requests; the expansion of the Peerage by King George III during the 18th century necessitated the move as the original chamber could not accommodate the increased number of peers.

The House of Commons, which did not have a chamber of its own, sometimes held its debates in the Chapter House of Westminster Abbey. The Commons acquired a permanent home at the Palace in the form of St Stephen's Chapel during the reign of Edward VI. The Chantries Act 1547 (passed as a part of the Protestant Reformation) dissolved the religious order of the Canons of St Stephen's,[citation needed] among other institutions; thus, the building became available for the Commons' use. Alterations were made to St Stephen's Chapel for the convenience of the Lower House. Sir Christopher Wren was commissioned to carry out major work on the chapel in the late 17th century. During these works the chapel's clerestory was removed and its Gothic interiors concealed behind oak panelling. More seating was added over the years to accommodate the new MPs created by the Acts of Union with Scotland (1707) and Ireland (1800), including an upper-level gallery.

The palace complex was substantially remodelled by Sir John Soane during the early 19th century. The medieval House of Lords chamber, which had been the target of the failed Gunpowder Plot of 1605, was demolished as part of this work in order to create a new ceremonial entrance at the southern end of the palace. The original undercroft where Guy Fawkes was discovered guarding the barrels of gunpowder was also lost during the reconstruction. Soane's work at the palace included new law courts adjoining Westminster Hall and a new Members' entrance to St. Stephen's Chapel.

Fire and reconstruction

J. M. W. Turner watched the fire of 1834 and painted several canvases depicting it, including The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons (1835).

On 16 October 1834, a fire broke out in the Palace[1] after a stove used to destroy the Exchequer's stockpile of tally sticks ignited panelling in the Lords Chamber. In the resulting conflagration both houses of Parliament were destroyed along with most of the other buildings in the palace complex. Westminster Hall was saved largely due to heroic firefighting efforts. The Jewel Tower, the crypt of St Stephen's Chapel and the cloisters were the only other parts of the palace to survive.

At one stage, King William IV considered converting Buckingham Palace, which was being renovated at the time, into the new Houses of Parliament.[4]

A Royal Commission was appointed to study the rebuilding of the Palace and a heated public debate over the proposed styles ensued. The neo-Classical design, similar to that of the White House and the federal Capitol in the United States, was popular at the time, but had connotations of revolution and republicanism, whereas Gothic design embodied conservative values. The Commission announced in June 1835 that "the style of the buildings would be either Gothic or Elizabethan".[5]

In 1836, after studying 97 rival proposals, the Royal Commission chose Charles Barry's plan for a Gothic-style palace. The foundation stone was laid in 1840;[6] the Lords Chamber was completed in 1847, and the Commons Chamber in 1852 (at which point Barry received a knighthood). Although most of the work had been carried out by 1860, construction was not finished until a decade afterwards. Barry (whose own architectural style was more classical than Gothic) relied heavily on Augustus Pugin for the sumptuous and distinctive Gothic interiors, including wallpapers, carvings, stained glass and furnishings, like the royal thrones and canopies.

During the Second World War, the Palace of Westminster was hit fourteen times by bombs (see The Blitz). The worst of these was on 10 May 1941, when the Commons Chamber was destroyed and three people were killed.[7] The chamber was re-built under the architect Giles Gilbert Scott in a similar but more austere style; the work was completed in 1950.[1]

As the need for office space in the Palace increased, Parliament acquired office space in the nearby Norman Shaw Building in 1975,[8] and more recently in the custom-built Portcullis House, completed in 2000. This increase has now allowed all MPs to have their own office facilities.[1]

Exterior

Sir Charles Barry's collaborative design for the Palace of Westminster uses the Perpendicular Gothic style, which was popular during the 15th century and returned during the Gothic revival of the 19th century. Barry was a classical architect, but he was aided by the Gothic architect Augustus Pugin. Westminster Hall, which was built in the 11th century and survived the fire of 1834, was incorporated in Barry's design. Pugin was displeased with the result of the work, especially with the symmetrical layout designed by Barry; he famously remarked, "All Grecian, sir; Tudor details on a classic body".[9]

Stonework

The stonework of the building was originally Anston, a sand-coloured magnesian limestone quarried in the village of Anston in South Yorkshire.[10] The stone, however, soon began to decay due to pollution and the poor quality of some of the stone used. Although such defects were clear as early as 1849, nothing was done for the remainder of the 19th century. During the 1910s, however, it became clear that some of the stonework had to be replaced.

In 1928 it was deemed necessary to use Clipsham Stone, a honey-coloured limestone from Rutland, to replace the decayed Anston. The project began in the 1930s but was halted due to the Second World War, and completed only during the 1950s. By the 1960s pollution had once again begun to take its toll. A stone conservation and restoration programme to the external elevations and towers began in 1981, and ended in 1994.[11] The House Authorities have since been undertaking the external restoration of the many inner courtyards, a task due to continue until approximately 2010.

Towers

Sir Charles Barry's Palace of Westminster includes several towers. The tallest is the 98.5-metre (323 ft)[10] Victoria Tower, a square tower at the south-western end of the Palace. It was named after the reigning monarch at the time of the reconstruction of the Palace, Queen Victoria; today, it is home to the Parliamentary Archives. Atop the Victoria Tower is an iron flagstaff, from which either the Royal Standard (if the Sovereign is present in the Palace) or the Union Flag is flown. At the base of the tower is the Sovereign's Entrance to the Palace, used by the monarch whenever entering the Palace of Westminster for the State Opening of Parliament or for any other official ceremony.

Over the middle of the Palace, immediately above the Central Lobby, stands the octagonal Central Tower. At 91.4 metres (300 ft),[10] it is the shortest of the Palace's three principal towers. Unlike the other towers, the Central Tower culminates in a spire, and was designed as a high-level air intake.

At the north end of the Palace is the most famous of the towers, the Clock Tower, commonly known as Big Ben after its main bell. The Clock Tower is 96.3 metres (316 ft)[10] tall. Pugin's drawings for the tower were the last work he did for Barry. The Clock Tower houses a large, four-faced clock—the Great Clock of Westminster—also designed by Pugin. The tower also houses five bells, which strike the Westminster Chimes every quarter hour. The largest and most famous of the bells is Big Ben (officially The Great Bell of Westminster), which strikes the hour. This is the third-heaviest bell in England, weighing 13.8 tonnes (13.6 long tons).[10] Although Big Ben properly refers only to the bell, it is colloquially applied to the whole tower. A light, called the Ayrton Light, is located at the top of the Clock Tower. The Ayrton Light is lit when either the House of Commons or the House of Lords is sitting after dark. The light takes its name from Thomas Ayrton, the first Commissioner of Works who installed a gas lamp in the tower soon after it was built in 1885. It was installed at the request of Queen Victoria, so she could see from Buckingham Palace whether the members were "at work".

A small tower, St. Stephen's Tower, is positioned at the front of the Palace, between Westminster Hall and Old Palace Yard, and contains the main entrance to the House of Commons at its base, known as St. Stephen's Entrance.[12] Other towers include Speaker's and Chancellor's Towers, at the north and south ends of the building's river front respectively.[13] They are named after the presiding officers of the two Houses of Parliament at the time of the Palace's reconstruction, the Speaker of the House of Commons and the Lord High Chancellor.

Grounds

There are a number of small gardens surrounding the Palace of Westminster. Victoria Tower Gardens is open as a public park along the side of the river south of the palace. Black Rod's Garden (named after the office of Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod) is closed to the public and is used as a private entrance. Old Palace Yard, in front of the Palace, is paved over and covered in concrete security blocks (see security below). Cromwell Green (also on the frontage, and in 2006 enclosed by hoardings for the construction of a new visitor centre), New Palace Yard (on the north side) and Speaker's Green (directly north of the Palace) are all private and closed to the public. College Green, opposite the House of Lords, is a small triangular green commonly used for television interviews with politicians.

Interior

The Palace of Westminster includes over 1,100 rooms, 100 staircases and 4.8 kilometres (3 mi) of passageways.[10] The building includes four floors; the ground floor includes offices, dining rooms and bars. The "first floor" (known as the principal floor) houses the main rooms of the Palace, including the Chambers, the lobbies and the libraries. The Robing Room, the Royal Gallery, the Prince's Chamber, the Lords Chamber, the Peers' Lobby, the Central Lobby, the Members' Lobby and the Commons Chamber all lie in a straight line on this floor, from south to north, in the order noted. (Westminster Hall lies to a side at the Commons end of the Palace.) The top-two floors are used for committee rooms and offices.

Formerly, the Palace was controlled by the Lord Great Chamberlain,[citation needed] as it was (and formally remains) a royal residence. In 1965, however, it was decided that each House should control its own rooms;[citation needed] the Speakers now exercise control on behalf of their respective Houses. The Lord Great Chamberlain retains custody of certain ceremonial rooms.

Lords Chamber

The Chamber of the House of Lords is located in the southern part of the Palace of Westminster. The lavishly decorated room measures 13.7 by 24.4 metres (45 by 80 ft).[10] The benches in the Chamber, as well as other furnishings in the Lords' side of the Palace, are coloured red. The upper part of the Chamber is decorated by stained glass windows and by six allegorical frescoes representing religion, chivalry and law.

At the south end of the Chamber are the ornate gold Canopy and Throne; although the Sovereign may theoretically occupy the Throne during any sitting, he or she attends only the State Opening of Parliament. Other members of the Royal Family who attend the State Opening use Chairs of State next to the Throne. In front of the Throne is the Woolsack, a backless and armless red cushion stuffed with wool, representing the historical importance of the wool trade. The Woolsack is used by the officer presiding over the House (the Lord Speaker since 2006, but historically the Lord Chancellor or a deputy). The House's mace, which represents royal authority, is placed on the back of the Woolsack. In front of the Woolsack are the Judges' Woolsack, a larger red cushion occupied by the Law Lords during the State Opening, and the Table of the House, at which the clerks sit.

Members of the House occupy red benches on three sides of the Chamber. The benches on the Lord Speaker's right form the Spiritual Side and those to his left form the Temporal Side. The Lords Spiritual (archbishops and bishops of the established Church of England) all occupy the Spiritual Side. The Lords Temporal (nobles) sit according to party affiliation: members of the Government party sit on the Spiritual Side, while those of the Opposition sit on the Temporal Side. Some peers, who have no party affiliation, sit on the benches in the middle of the House opposite the Woolsack; they are accordingly known as cross-benchers.

The Lords Chamber is the site of important ceremonies, the most important of which is the State Opening of Parliament, which occurs at the beginning of each annual parliamentary session. The Sovereign, seated on the Throne, delivers the Speech from the Throne, outlining the Government's legislative agenda for the forthcoming parliamentary session. The Commons do not enter the Lords' debating floor; instead, they watch the proceedings from beyond the Bar of the House, just inside the door. A similar ceremony is held at the end of a parliamentary session; the Sovereign, however, does not normally attend, and is instead represented by a group of Lords Commissioners.

Commons Chamber

The Chamber of the House of Commons is at the northern end of the Palace of Westminster; it was opened in 1950 after the Victorian chamber had been destroyed in 1941 and re-built under the architect Giles Gilbert Scott. The Chamber measures 14 by 20.7 metres (46 by 68 ft)[10] and is far more austere than the Lords Chamber; the benches, as well as other furnishings in the Commons side of the Palace, are coloured green. Members of the public are forbidden to sit on the red benches, which are reserved for members of the House of Lords. Other parliaments in Commonwealth nations, including those of India, Canada and Australia, have copied the colour scheme under which the Lower House is associated with green, and the Upper House with red.

At the north end of the Chamber is the Speaker's Chair, a present to Parliament from the Commonwealth of Australia. The current British Speaker's Chair is an exact copy of the Speaker's Chair given to Australia, by the House of Commons, on the celebration of Australia's Parliamentary opening. In front of the Speaker's Chair is the Table of the House, at which the clerks sit, and on which is placed the Commons' ceremonial mace. The dispatch boxes, which front-bench Members of Parliament (MPs) often lean on or rest notes on during Questions and speeches, are a gift from New Zealand. There are green benches on either side of the House; members of the Government party occupy benches on the Speaker's right, while those of the Opposition occupy benches on the Speaker's left. There are no cross-benches as in the House of Lords. The Chamber is relatively small, and can accommodate only 427 of the 646 Members of Parliament[14]—during Prime Minister's Questions and in major debates MPs stand at either end of the House.

By tradition, the British Sovereign does not enter the Chamber of the House of Commons. The last monarch to do so was King Charles I, in 1642. The King sought to arrest five Members of Parliament on charges of high treason, but when he asked the Speaker, William Lenthall, if he had any knowledge of the whereabouts of these individuals, Lenthall famously replied: "May it please your Majesty, I have neither eyes to see nor tongue to speak in this place but as the House is pleased to direct me, whose servant I am here."[15]

The two red lines on the floor of the House of Commons are 2.5 metres (8 ft 2 in)[10] apart, which, by (probably apocryphal) tradition, is intended to be just over two sword-lengths. Protocol dictates that MPs may not cross these lines when speaking. Historically, this was to prevent disputes in the House from devolving into duels. If a Member of Parliament steps over this line while giving a speech he or she will be lambasted by opposition Members. This is a possible origin for the expression "to toe the line".

Westminster Hall

Westminster Hall, the oldest existing part of the Palace of Westminster, was erected in 1097,[16] at which point it was the largest hall in Europe, though it was subsequently overtaken by the Palais de la Cité in Paris (1301-6) and a hall in Padua of similar date.[17] The roof was probably originally supported by pillars, giving three aisles, but during the reign of King Richard II, this was replaced by a hammerbeam roof by the royal carpenter Hugh Herland, "the greatest creation of medieval timber architecture", which allowed the original three aisles to be replaced with a single huge open space, with a dais at the end. Richard's architect Henry Yevele left the original dimensions, refacing the walls, with fifteen life-size statues of kings placed in niches.[18] The rebuilding had been begun by Henry III in 1245, but had by Richard's time been dormant for over a century.

Westminster Hall has the largest clearspan medieval roof in England, measuring 20.7 by 73.2 metres (68 by 240 ft).[10] Despite an Essex legend that the oak timber came from woods in Thundersley, Essex, it is known that the original roof was constructed with Irish black oak from County Galway and the chestnut roof timberwork was framed in 1395 at Farnham in Surrey, 56 kilometres (35 mi) south-west of London.[19] Accounts record the large number of wagons and barges which delivered the jointed timbers to Westminster for assembly.[20]

Westminster Hall has served numerous functions. It was primarily used for judicial purposes, housing three of the most important courts in the land: the Court of King's Bench, the Court of Common Pleas and the Court of Chancery. In 1875, these courts were amalgamated into the High Court of Justice,[21] which continued to meet in Westminster Hall until it moved to the Royal Courts of Justice in 1882.[22] In addition to regular courts, Westminster Hall also housed important trials, including impeachment trials and the state trials of King Charles I at the end of the English Civil War, Sir William Wallace, Sir Thomas More, John Cardinal Fisher, Guy Fawkes, the Earl of Strafford, the rebel Scottish Lords of the 1715 and 1745 uprisings, and Warren Hastings.

Westminster Hall has also served ceremonial functions. From the twelfth century to the nineteenth, coronation banquets honouring new monarchs were held here. The last coronation banquet was that of King George IV, held in 1821;[23] his successor, William IV, abandoned the idea because he deemed it too expensive. The Hall has been used for lyings-in-state during state and ceremonial funerals. Such an honour is usually reserved for the Sovereign and for their consorts; the only non-royals to receive it in the twentieth century were Frederick Sleigh Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts (1914) and Sir Winston Churchill (1965). The most recent lying-in-state was that of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother in 2002.

The two Houses have presented ceremonial Addresses to the Crown in Westminster Hall on important public occasions. For example, Addresses were presented at Elizabeth II's Silver Jubilee (1977) and Golden Jubilee (2002), the 300th anniversary of the Glorious Revolution (1988), and the fiftieth anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1995).

Under reforms made in 1999, the House of Commons uses the Grand Committee Room next to Westminster Hall as an additional debating chamber. (Although it is not part of the main hall, the room is usually spoken of as such.) The room is shaped like an elongated horseshoe; it stands in contrast with the main Chamber, in which the benches are placed opposite each other. This pattern is meant to reflect the non-partisan nature of the debates held in Westminster Hall. Westminster Hall sittings occur thrice each week; controversial matters are not usually discussed.

Other Rooms

There are several other important rooms that lie on the first floor of the Palace. At the extreme southern end of the Palace is the Robing Room, the room in which the Sovereign prepares for the State Opening of Parliament by donning official robes and wearing the Imperial State Crown. Paintings by William Dyce in the Robing Room depict scenes from the legend of King Arthur. Immediately next to the Robing Room is the Royal Gallery, which is sometimes used by foreign dignitaries who wish to address both Houses. The walls are decorated by two enormous paintings by Daniel Maclise: "The Death of Nelson" (depicting Lord Nelson's demise at the Battle of Trafalgar) and "The Meeting of Wellington and Blücher" (showing the Duke of Wellington meeting Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher at the Battle of Waterloo).

To the immediate south of the Lords Chamber is the Prince's Chamber, a small anteroom used by members of the Lords. The Prince's Chamber is decorated with paintings of members of the Tudor dynasty by Richard Burchett and his pupils, and features a marble statue of Queen Victoria. To the immediate north of the Lords Chamber is the Peers' Lobby, where Lords informally discuss or negotiate matters during sittings of the House.

The centrepiece of the Palace of Westminster is the octagonal Central Lobby, which lies immediately beyond the Peers' Lobby. The lobby, which lies directly below the Central Tower, is adorned with statues of statesmen and with mosaics representing the United Kingdom's constituent nations' patron saints: St George for England, St Andrew for Scotland, St David for Wales and St Patrick for Ireland.[note 2] Constituents may meet their Members of Parliament in the Central Lobby. Beyond the Central Lobby, next to the Commons Chamber, lies the Members' Lobby, in which Members of Parliament hold discussions or negotiations. The Members' Lobby contains statues of several former Prime Ministers, including David Lloyd George, Winston Churchill, Clement Attlee and Margaret Thatcher.

There are two suites of libraries on the Principal Floor, overlooking the river, for the House of Lords Library and House of Commons Library.

The Palace of Westminster also includes state apartments for the presiding officers of the two Houses. The official residence of the Speaker stands at the northern end of the Palace; the Lord Chancellor's apartments are at the southern end. Each day, the Speaker and Lord Speaker take part in formal processions from their apartments to their respective Chambers.[24][25]

There are 19 bars and restaurants in the Palace of Westminster,[26] many of which never close while the House is sitting. There is also a gymnasium, and even a hair salon; the rifle range closed in the 1990s.[27] Parliament also has a souvenirs shop, where items on sale range from House of Commons key-rings and china to House of Commons Champagne.

Security

The Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod oversees security for the House of Lords, and the Serjeant at Arms does the same for the House of Commons. These officers, however, have primarily ceremonial roles outside the actual chambers of their respective Houses. Security is the responsibility of the Palace of Westminster Division of the Metropolitan Police, the police force for the Greater London area. Tradition still dictates that only the Serjeant at Arms may enter the Commons chamber armed.

With rising concern about the possibility of a lorry full of explosives being driven into the building, a series of concrete blocks was placed in the roadway in 2003.[28] On the river, an exclusion zone extending 70 metres (77 yd) from the bank exists, which no vessels are allowed to enter.[29]

Despite recent security breaches, members of the public continue to have access to the Strangers' Gallery (public gallery) in the House of Commons. Visitors pass through metal detectors and their possessions are scanned. Police from the Palace of Westminster Division of the Metropolitan Police, supported by some armed police from the Diplomatic Protection Group, are always on duty in and around the Palace.

Under a provision of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005, it has been illegal since 1 August 2005 to hold a protest, without the prior permission of the Metropolitan Police, within a designated area extending approximately one kilometre (0.6 mi) around the Palace.[30]

Eating, drinking and smoking

The Palace has accumulated many rules and traditions over the centuries. Smoking has not been allowed in the chambers of the House of Lords and the Commons since the 17th century.[38] As a result, Members may take snuff instead and the doorkeepers still keep a snuff-box for this purpose. Despite persistent media rumours, it has not been possible to smoke anywhere inside the Palace since 2005.[39] Members may not eat or drink in the chamber; the exception to this rule is the Chancellor of the Exchequer, who may have an alcoholic drink while delivering the Budget statement.[40]

Dress code

Hats must not be worn (although they formerly were when a point of order was being raised),[41] and Members may not wear military decorations or insignia. Members are not allowed to have their hands in their pockets—Andrew Robathan was heckled by opposing MPs for doing this on 19 December 1994.[42] Swords may not be worn in the Palace, and each MP has a loop of ribbon in the cloakroom for storing weapons.

Forms of address

Members may not refer to each other by name and use either "my honourable friend" (if a member of the same party) or "the honourable lady/gentleman" (for members from other parties); alternatively, "the honourable member for [the constituency]" is used. Members of the Privy Council are referred to as "the right honourable". Barrister MPs are entitled to be styled "my learned friend" or "the learned lady/gentleman".

In the House of Lords, members are referred to as "the noble lord/lady", or "my noble friend".

Other traditions

No animals may enter the Palace of Westminster, with the exception of guide dogs for the blind;[38] sniffer dogs and police horses are also allowed on the grounds.[43]

Speeches may not be read out during debate, although notes may be referred to. Similarly, the reading of newspapers is not allowed. Visual aids are discouraged in the chamber.[44]

Applause is not normally allowed in the Lords and Commons. Some notable exceptions to this were when Robin Cook gave his resignation speech in 2003,[45], when Prime Minister Tony Blair appeared for the last time at Prime Minister's Questions and when Speaker Michael Martin gave his leaving speech on 17 June 2009.[46]

It is a convention that MPs do not discuss the Sovereign nor use the name of the monarch as a point of debate without prior permission from the Speaker. This comes from 19th-century constitutionalist Erskine May, who said, "the irregular use of the Queen's name to influence a decision of the House is unconstitutional in principle and inconsistent with the independence of Parliament ... Any attempt to use her name in debate to influence the judgement of Parliament is immediately checked and censured." Vincent Cable was reprimanded for breaking this convention during a session of Prime Minister's Questions in 2008.[47]

The nearest London Underground station is Westminster on the District, Circle and Jubilee Lines.

 

containing fragrances and essential oils in a solvent

This awesome pose is designed by Break and called BREAK 226 SKY LANTERN SET. There are 6 poses in this fatpack pack and contains: COUPLE POSES + SPECIAL SKY + SKY LANTERN PROP. They are static poses m/c/nt and include the lanterns! All poses with accessories were configured with other people's usability in mind. Therefore, all of them come with the objects configured to be rezzed at the time of use. EXCLUSIVE at the Treschic event from 19th December - 10 January 2025. Your ride:

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Tres%20Chic/165/56/146

  

The outfit I am wearing is designed by NANIKA and called NANIKA - Yuki T-shirt Bra Shorts. This t-shirt, bra and shorts combo is rigged for Maitreya, Legacy. Perly and eBody. The Fatpack includes bonus colors. You will find this at the Kinky event from November 28 till December 22, 2024: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Liberty%20City/47/126/32

Then available at the NANIKA mainstore: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Dulcis/128/130/27

  

Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/roxymystic/

My blog: roxymystic.wixsite.com/intothemystic

My FB: www.facebook.com/roxy.mistic.54/

 

COLLAB with Ben! TY xox

 

Up, Up And Away

www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-UQ0-8ktAM

  

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BREAK

  

BREAK 226 SKY LANTERN SET.

EXCLUSIVE at the Treschic event from 19th December - 10 January 2025.

Your ride:

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Tres%20Chic/165/56/146

  

More information about the BREAK Store:

 

Mainstore: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Break/93/138/23

 

Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/breaksl/

 

MP: marketplace.secondlife.com/stores/227049

 

Linktree: linktr.ee/breakstoresl

 

Facebook: www.facebook.com/breakstoresl

 

Instagram: www.instagram.com/breakstoresl/

 

Discord: discord.com/invite/PPajazqY3P

  

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NANIKA

  

NANIKA - Yuki T-shirt Bra Shorts

Available at the Kinky event from November 28 till December 22, 2024 maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Liberty%20City/47/126/32

Then available at the NANIKA mainstore: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Dulcis/128/130/27

  

More information about NANIKA:

 

Mainstore: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Dulcis/128/130/27

 

MP: marketplace.secondlife.com/stores/160991

 

Facebook: www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100018055363948

 

Flickr: www.flickr.com/groups/nanika/pool/

  

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Other information, items/accessories in picture:

  

HAIR

WINGS-EF0208-HAIR

  

JEWELRY

- Secrets - Love Is The Key Necklace

  

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