View allAll Photos Tagged Execution

the humourous juxtaposition of images.

Manequinns depicting executioner and his victim.

 

This is the part of basement of Palanok castle (Munkacsvár) in Mukachevo, which basement was used for such activities until mid-19th century, because Munkacsvár, then situated on Austro-Hungarian territory, was turned into all-European political prison after fall and demolition of the Bastille in 1789. Obviously, for the time passed all the blood was washed away. Taken with Sigma EF 12-24/4.5-5.6 EX HSM, bounce flash used © Ignat Solovey

in Long Island Sound, north of Sands Point, New York; the granite stone tower was built in 1850 and the keepers house in 1868.

Boy getting a haircut from very long to buzzcut

When demonstrations in Iran were at their height, the Shah of Iran learnt that US General Huyser had been in Tehran on some suspicious activities. He immediately had him summoned but as soon as they met the General asked the Shahinshah Aryamehr 'When are you leaving, Sir?'

 

The Shah later wrote that he was astonished when he learned that U.S. Air Force General Robert Huyser, then Deputy Commander in Chief of American forces in Europe, had been in Tehran for several days. "General Huyser's movements were normally laid down in advance. But this time nothing ... I questioned my generals. They, too, knew nothing. What, then, was this American general doing in Iran?"

 

The Shah believes that Huyser's mission was to "neutralize the Iranian army" when demonstrations turned violent. Encouraged by Huyser and U.S. Ambassador William Sullivan, the Shah went into exile. "General Huyser remained in Iran for several days after my departure. Having arranged for the generals to abandon Dr. Shahpour Bakhtiar, head of the coalition government formed to see the country through its hour of crisis, all that remained for the fulfillment of his mission was the decapitation of Iran's army.

 

"He was quickly to be satisfied. One by one they were executed ... Before the parody of a trial which preceded his execution, General Amir Hussein Rabii, commander in chief of the Iranian air force, was questioned about the role played by General Huyser. He replied to his judges: 'General Huyser threw the emperor out of the country like a dead mouse.' "

view from our lodge

 

For sale on Getty Images

  

Rob's photograph really.

I had a hand in the direction though.

 

No bovines were harmed in the creation of this shot.

Den of Imagination - Your Miniature Painting Service

 

We are a registered studio in Torun, Poland. We have been in line of work since 2008. Our still growing staff of painters and sculptors is ready to work on any project you can imagine!

 

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The Detroit round of the 2013 edition of the Ultimate Builder saw snow all three days and weather as warm as 12 degrees. But that is walking weather for the hearty families from Michigan as the Progressive International Motorcycle Show was packed with enthusiasts. The enthusiasts were checking out the J&P Ultimate Builder Custom Bike Show and were rewarded with outstanding FreeStyle, Mod Harley and Retro Mod motorcycles.

Ultimate Builder Class: FreeStyle

Don Weimer’s 2009 Weimer Rigid won Detroit’s J&P Ultimate Builder Custom Bike Show. His SoulShaker features an EVO 96” mil with custom frame, 9” stretch frame, drop seat and a custom gas tank located in the frame cradle.

 

1. Don Weimer – SoulShaker, 2009 Weimer Rigid

2. Tony Starita, Big Tony’s Chopp Shop – Peacemaker, ’12 BTCS Pro-Street

3. Poor Boy Choppers – Sinister, ’13 Poor Boy Chopper Softail Custom

 

Ultimate Builder Class: MOD Harley

Brian Ratkos of Baggers Unlimited won MOD Harley with a custom bagger that featured paint by ACP / Kustom Haus, raked triple trees, custom bars, 180mm wide rear kit, Legend rear air ride and Bagger Unlimited front air ride. The bike has significant work in the go fast department on the Harley-Davidson 108ci mil including ported and polished heads, Andrews Gear Drive Cams, Jims roller rocker arms and Jims rocker arm support.

 

1. Brian Ratkos, Baggers Unlimited – ’06 HD FLHX

2. Bob McAreavey – 2009 Roadking

3. Anthony LaMontia - FatAss Bagger, ’03 HD FLHTSI

 

Ultimate Builder Class: Retro MOD

You expect to see a few car guys in Detroit. Paul Anderson manages the building of show cars and you can see his level of detail and execution in his 1946 HD WLA. It’s original with a subtle 2-tone paint scheme. The normal rubber pieces have been replaced with belting leather with laser etching. The bike comes together in with an elegant ambience.

 

1. Paul Anderson – Once in Awhile, 1946 WLA

2. Ron Harris, Chop Docs Choppers – Sweet Lou, ’77 FXR

3. Ralph Spencer – Manx Titan, ’71 Suzuki T500 Titan

 

Ultimate Builder Class: Performance Custom

Jody Jendon built the Bud Light bike for Dylan Jendon, a 1999 Hayabusa with a big bore kit, Starr Racing heads, 22” extended swing arm, 360 rear tire, rear air ride and cut front shocks and LED lighting throughout.

 

1. Dylan Jendon – Bud Light, 1999 Hayabusa

2. GIO, Blacksmith Motoring – El Vaquero, ’77 Honda Gold Wing

  

Ultimate Builder Class: MOD Street

GIO from Blacksmith Motoring drove in from Chicago with his latest turbo build, El Vendetta, and took the win in MOD Street at Ultimate Builder in the Great white North. The 2008 Yamaha Retroliner features a Blacksmith 120ci stroker with forged pistons, lighten crank with HIPO heads & intake. The bike rolls with a 26” front wheel, air ride and 6 piston Hawg Halters brakes.

 

1. GIO, Blacksmith Motoring - El Vendetta, 2008 Yamaha Roadliner

2. GIO, Blacksmith Motoring – EL Patron, ’03 Suzuki Voluisa

 

Additional Awards

 

Bob McAreavey won the Show Dog Award sponsored by Rocking K Custom Leather for his promotion at the show. Bob McAreavey won the People’s Choice Award with his 2009 Roadking.

 

The Ultimate Builder Custom Bike Show is produced by www.bikerpros.com. At each round of the competition Biker Pros photographs each bike and makes them available in their Flickr gallery at www.flickr.com/photos/bikerpros.

 

We are awarding $100,000 in cash and prizes over our 13 event series. The big money winners to date are:

 

GIO - $8,500

Kyle Shorey - $5,000

Bruce Bolden - $3,000

Executions are so entertaining!

 

---

Musee Mechanique, San Francisco, CA

Yesterday I was a bit under the weather; today, you see how I feel like, by the look of my new creation. Congestion, soar throat.....

Kurdish emigres protest Paris murders at Turkish & French embassies : London 11.01.2013

 

On 11.01.2013 Kurdish emigres in London protested at the Turkish embassy and then marched to the nearby French embassy to protest about the shocking mass murder on 09.01.2013 in Paris of three female Kurdish political activists including PKK co-founder Sakine Cansiz in what French police believe to be an execution a targeted assassination. The bodies of the three women - Brussels-based Kurdistan National Congress’ (KNK) Paris representative Fidan Doan, political activist Leyla Söylemez and Kurdish Worker's Party (PKK) co-founder and Women's Movement organiser Sakine Cansız - were discovered behind several combination-locked doors in the Information Center of Kurdistan in Paris on Wednesday by friends who had been trying since the previous evening to contact the women and who had broken into the centre after discovering bloodstains on the outer doors.

 

Very shortly after French police were called to the scene (and with what many claim to be suspicious haste), Huseyin Celik, the deputy chairman of Turkey’s ruling party claimed that the murders were the result of “an internal feud” within the PKK. Celik did not offer any evidence to substantiate his assertion, yet also went on to suggest that the slayings were an attempt to derail the peace talks which have been taking place in the notorious high security prison on mralı Island between PKK founder Abdullah Öcalan - sentenced to death for treason against the Turkish state in 1999 but whose sentence was commuted to life imprisonment when Turkey was forced to abolish the death sentence as part of it's application to join the EU - and the Turkish government.

 

The PKK have waged an often violent war against the Turkish government for the last 34 years as part of their campaign to establish an autonomous Kurdish enclave in South-East Turkey. Kurds make up almost 20% of the Turkish population, yet are forbidden by law to even speak their own language and have suffered greatly under Turkish suppression. Since the insurrection began in 1978 it is estimated that over 40,000 people on both sides have lost their lives in violent actions perpetrated in this conflict, and even though the PKK has been proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the USA, the EU, NATO, Syria and others, the cause of Kurdish nationalism enjoys a huge level of support in the region. Turkish authorities have been concerned about PKK fighters entering Turkey from the autonomous Kurdish enclave in Northern Syria.

 

Kurdish populations are present in Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran, and have experienced many decades of suppression by their respective states as the Kurds attempt to loosely re-establish their traditional Kurdistan, eradicated during the Ottoman reign, and it is against this long background of armed struggle that has seen large numbers of ethnic Kurds fleeing to Europe to find sanctuary. The Kurdish people I spoke to in Haringey last night said that they no longer feel safe anywhere in Europe after this execution which they lay firmly at the door of what they describe as the "dark, ultra-nationalistic shadow government" operating behind the scenes in Turkey who are violently opposed to any form of settlement or discussion with the Kurds.

 

Huddled around tables in the large hall adorned with photographs of fallen comrades and a large centrepiece display of their political figurehead, Abdullah Öcalan, the Kurds were subdued and in a measured, reflective mood. During the day it had been established by French police that the women had all been shot in the head through the throat using weapons with suppressors (silncers), and it is initially thought that there was possibly more than one gunman. There was no sign of forced entry to the building, so it seems that they were known to at least one of the women - two of whom were slaughtered as they were organising suitcases for their journeys back to Belgium and Germany.

   

All photos © 2013 Pete Riches

Do not reproduce, alter, re-transmit or blog my images without my written permission. I remain at all times the copyright owner of this image.

Hi-Res, un-watermarked versions of these files are available on application solely at my discretion

 

If you want to license an image, please Email me directly.

Standard industry rates apply.

 

about.me/peteriches

Execution Chamber at the Fremantle Prison (Western Australia) complete with the Hangman's Noose, a dunking chair and curiously enough, a stand fan! Had to sneak this picture with a cellphone camera.

 

On Explore - Aug 16, 2004 #78

 

Execution Rocks Lighthouse

Pelham Bay Park

The Bronx, NY

December 20, 2021

Radu Portocala:

"L'execution des Ceausescu - La verite sur une revolution en trompe-l'oeil"

Editions Larousse, Paris 2009

 

ISBN: 978-2-03-584830-7

153 pages, 11,40 Euro

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

"The execution of the Ceausescus - the truth about a faked revolution"

 

"Executia sotilor Ceausescu - advearul despre o revolutie trucata"

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

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

 

PROLOGUE - The rise of a Satrap

Ch. 1 - An End foretold

Ch. 2 - Game of Mirrors

Ch. 3 - Timisoara the Genuine Dead

Ch. 4 - Timisoara the Fake Massacre

Ch. 5 - Dictator without Power

Ch. 6 - Renaissance in a Blood Bath

Ch. 7 - The Double Death of Ceausescu

EPILOGUE - The Silence of History

NOTES

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

TABLA DE MATERII

PROLOG - Drumul spre putere al unui satrap

Cap.. 1 - Un sfarsit anuntat cu anticipatie

Cap. 2 - Joc de oglinzi

Cap. 3 - Timisoara - adevaratii morti

Cap. 4 - Timisoara - simulacrul masacrului

Cap. 5 - Dictator neputincios

Cap. 6 - Renastere in baie de sange

Cap. 7 - Dubla executie alui Ceausescu

EPILOG - Tacerea istoriei

NOTE

 

www.romanianstudies.org/content/2010/03/radu-portocala-ex...

 

Thought it was more interesting than a portrait.

 

The 'execution' of former Tour winner Louison Bobet (1953-1955) by the French team, now riding for the new maître JACQUES ANQUETIL, directed by sports director Marcel Bidot.

A cartoon of the famous PELLOS in Miroir Sprint, June 30, 1957.

 

(During the Giro d'Italia, Louison Bobet, who had gone over his power limits, announced that he would not contest the Tour, allowing Jacques Anquetil to be included in the French team.)

A New Vision for the Future

Making its debut at the 2017 Geneva International Motor Show, the EXP 12 Speed 6e concept represents a bold statement on the future of electric cars – and of luxury mobility.

 

Designed to transform the EV sector in both concept and execution, the EXP 12 Speed 6e fuses the unrivalled hand craftsmanship for which Bentley is famous, with electric performance, heart-stopping design and the range of a true grand tourer.

 

The EXP 12 Speed 6e is a statement of Bentley’s intention to create the world’s first true luxury electric sports car – and an overt invitation for the public to feed back on Bentley’s vision for the road ahead.

 

Exterior Design

The EXP 12 Speed 6e is not just an opportunity to envision an electric Bentley. It represents the future of Bentley design, both inside and out.

 

The exterior body shell is a sleek expression of sports car design, inspired by contemporary architecture, aircraft fuselages and the geometry of the natural world.

 

A natural evolution of Bentley’s design DNA, it takes the marque’s trademark muscular haunch and powerline to exhilarating new heights. The short front overhang, long bonnet and wide, planted rear aspect all contribute to an unmistakable sense of speed, while the iconic matrix grille features an exquisite smoked stainless steel finish. Contrasting copper highlights offer subtle acknowledgement of the car’s status as a fully electric vehicle, while an illuminated ‘6’ logo can be seen through the grille.

 

Throughout the car, form coexists with function to support a more sustainable future. The twin bonnet scoops, for example, double as heat sinks, keeping down the temperature of the car’s batteries and drivetrain, without the need for additional cooling technology.

 

Interior Design

Bentley’s future is one of innovative materials as well as inventive technology. The entire central tunnel, for example, is hewn from a solid piece of glass, encompassing a high-definition OLED curved display. All principle onboard controls are accessible from here, including navigation, entertainment and climate control.

 

Just as they do on the outside of the car, copper details provide visual interest throughout the cabin, adorning the gear selector and Bentley Dynamic Drive dial control. Even the veneer panels inside the doors feature copper accents, drawing the eye to the handcrafted, natural wood finish.

 

Tomorrow’s luxury customers will expect intuitive technology and traditional craftsmanship to be integrated seamlessly – a demand that has dictated much of the car’s groundbreaking design. The wing mirrors dispense with the usual reflective glass in favour of cameras, feeding visual input directly to the dash. It’s one more example of Bentley’s future design direction – and the company’s ongoing commitment to exceeding customer expectations in everything it does.

 

Electric Performance

Luxury is only one side of the Bentley equation. That’s why the EXP 12 Speed 6e has been conceived as more than just a showcase of design and craftsmanship. It is an entirely new format for both urban and open-road driving.

 

Electric power provides an opportunity to exceed the performance limits of cars built on the conventional combustion engine. From a standing start, electric motors deliver phenomenal levels of torque, which translates into heart-stopping acceleration.

 

In order to deliver a true grand touring experience, the EXP 12 Speed 6e would be built with the capacity to drive from London to Paris or Milan to Monaco on a single charge. This impressive range would be supported by fast recharging, thanks to inductive technology.

 

New Technology, New Thinking

Not all new concept cars are truly innovative. The EXP 12 Speed 6e is about much more than a car, however. It represents a first step on a journey that will change the way today’s drivers think about mobility and what it can be. From rapid charging and fast acceleration to a world of connected lifestyle services, where onboard concierge software responds to complex voice input, the world of luxury transport is set to change immeasurably.

 

For Bentley’s design team, this means looking beyond the horizon, to a day when drivers become passengers and car ownership gives way to transport as a service. The car of the future will be more luxurious, more sustainable and more autonomous than ever before.

  

87th Geneva International Motor Show

Internationaler Auto-Salon Genf

Suisse - Schweiz - Switzerland

March 2017

These old wharves are apparently empty today and have not yet been converted into hip restaurants or housing. Between them lies King Henry's Stairs which used to lead to Execution Dock where individuals found guilty of crimes at sea where hanged including Captain William Kidd.

Poor villager who saw what he shouldn't. The mystical minotaur. And paid for it with his own life. Let his soul rest in peace.

SERIALS: THE EXECUTION

20" x 30 "

Aerosol + Acrylic on Canvas

 

"Interior information told me once I was a serial sexual predator and killer in my past life. I was never caught. I came into this lifetime wanting to be a cop. Perhaps, to balance things out, perhaps out of remorse and guilt.

 

I'm not a cop now. I'm a poet. I'm a painter. I practice magick. Perhaps, it is good that I don't need to repeat the life i had before. I keep things safe with fantasies. Or are they memories? I get thrilled and excited when I think i'm on the hunt. I look at strangers and I know exactly what I want to do with them. But I do not.

 

I write, I paint, I fantasize.

 

These things keep me safe and distanced from a very old itch, or at least that is what I believe. Perhaps, these things keep other people safe, from a deep and possible part of another me.

 

SERIALS attempts to capture this side of me, for whatever it's worth."

 

Pereira Irving Paul, March 2014

 

Nooses in the Apartheid Museum (South Africa) representing those who were executed or committed suicide in detention under the various terrorism laws.

26.11.13. The Bailiff of Stammheim, Hans Wirth, is beheaded in Baden on 28 September 1524 because of his Protestant faith. Detail from the bronze doors by Otto Münch (1885–1965), Zwingliportal, Grossmünster, Zürich, Switzerland

Coin, AD 63

 

Nero advertised his construction or improvement of public facilities on coins that set a new standard in the beauty and precision of their imagery. In AD 59, Nero dedicated the Macellum Magnum, a magnificent food market that supplied everything from staple foods to luxury goods, brought to Rome from all over the empire. The market is celebrated on this coin.

[British Museum]

  

Nero: the Man Behind the Myth

(May - Oct 2021)

 

Nero is known as one of Rome's most infamous rulers, notorious for his cruelty, debauchery and madness.

The last male descendant of the emperor Augustus, Nero succeeded to the throne in AD 54 aged just 16 and died a violent death at 30. His turbulent rule saw momentous events including the Great Fire of Rome, Boudicca's rebellion in Britain, the execution of his own mother and first wife, grand projects and extravagant excesses.

Drawing on the latest research, this major exhibition questions the traditional narrative of the ruthless tyrant and eccentric performer, revealing a different Nero, a populist leader at a time of great change in Roman society.

Through some 200 spectacular objects, from the imperial palace in Rome to the streets of Pompeii, follow the young emperor’s rise and fall and make up your own mind about Nero. Was he a young, inexperienced ruler trying his best in a divided society, or the merciless, matricidal megalomaniac history has painted him to be?

 

Nero was the 5th emperor of Rome and the last of Rome’s first dynasty, the Julio-Claudians, founded by Augustus (the adopted son of Julius Caesar). Nero is known as one of Rome’s most infamous rulers, notorious for his cruelty and debauchery. He ascended to power in AD 54 aged just 16 and died at 30. He ruled at a time of great social and political change, overseeing momentous events such as the Great Fire of Rome and Boudica’s rebellion in Britain. He allegedly killed his mother and two of his wives, only cared about his art and had very little interest in ruling the empire.

Most of what we know about Nero comes from the surviving works of three historians – Tacitus, Suetonius and Cassius Dio. All written decades after Nero’s death, their accounts have long shaped our understanding of this emperor’s rule. However, far from being impartial narrators presenting objective accounts of past events, these authors and their sources wrote with a very clear agenda in mind. Nero’s demise brought forward a period of chaos and civil war – one that ended only when a new dynasty seized power, the Flavians. Authors writing under the Flavians all had an interest in legitimising the new ruling family by portraying the last of the Julio-Claudians in the worst possible light, turning history into propaganda. These accounts became the ‘historical’ sources used by later historians, therefore perpetuating a fabricated image of Nero, which has survived all the way to the present.

Nero was born Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus on 15 December AD 37.

He was the son of Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus and Agrippina the Younger. Both Gnaeus and Agrippina were the grandchildren of Augustus, making Nero Augustus’ great, great grandson with a strong claim to power.

Nero was only two years old when his mother was exiled and three when his father died. His inheritance was taken from him and he was sent to live with his aunt. However, Nero’s fate changed again when Claudius became emperor, restoring the boy’s property and recalling his mother Agrippina from exile.

In AD 49 the emperor Claudius married Agrippina, and adopted Nero the following year. It is at this point that Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus changed his name to Nero Claudius Caesar Drusus Germanicus. In Roman times it was normal to change your name when adopted, abandoning your family name in favour of your adoptive father’s. Nero was a common name among members of the Claudian family, especially in Claudius’ branch.

Nero and Agrippina offered Claudius a politically useful link back to Augustus, strengthening his position.

Claudius appeared to favour Nero over his natural son, Britannicus, marking Nero as the designated heir.

When Claudius died in AD 54, Nero became emperor just two months before turning 17.

As he was supported by both the army and the senate, his rise to power was smooth. His mother Agrippina exerted a significant influence, especially at the beginning of his rule.

The Roman historians Tacitus, Suetonius and Cassius Dio all claim that Nero, fed up with Agrippina’s interference, decided to kill her.

Given the lack of eyewitnesses, there is no way of knowing if or how this happened. However, this did not stop historians from fabricating dramatic stories of Agrippina’s murder, asserting that Nero tried (and failed) to kill her with a boat engineered to sink, before sending his men to do the job.

Agrippina allegedly told them to stab her in the womb that bore Nero, her last words clearly borrowed from stage plays.

It is entirely possible, as claimed by Nero himself, that Agrippina chose (or was more likely forced) to take her own life after her plot against her son was discovered.

Early in his rule, Nero had to contend with a rebellion in the newly conquered province of Britain.

In AD 60–61, Queen Boudica of the Iceni tribe led a revolt against the Romans, attacking and laying waste to important Roman settlements. The possible causes of the rebellion were numerous – the greed of the Romans exploiting the newly conquered territories, the recalling of loans made to local leaders, ongoing conflict in Wales and, above all, violence against the family of Prasutagus, Boudica’s husband and king of the Iceni.

Boudica and the rebels destroyed Colchester, London and St Albans before being heavily defeated by Roman troops. After the uprising, the governor of Britain Suetonius Paulinus introduced harsher laws against the Britons, until Nero replaced him with the more conciliatory governor Publius Petronius Turpilianus.

The marriage between Nero and Octavia, aged 15 and 13/14 at the time, was arranged by their parents in order to further legitimise Nero’s claim to the throne. Octavia was the daughter of the emperor Claudius from a previous marriage, so when Claudius married Agrippina and adopted her son Nero, Nero and Octavia became brother and sister. In order to arrange their marriage, Octavia had to be adopted into another family.

Their marriage was not a happy one. According to ancient writers, Nero had various affairs until his lover Poppaea Sabina convinced him to divorce his wife. Octavia was first exiled then executed in AD 62 on adultery charges. According to ancient writers, her banishment and death caused great unrest among the public, who sympathised with the dutiful Octavia.

No further motives were offered for Octavia’s death other than Nero’s passion for Poppaea, and we will probably never know what transpired at court. The fact that Octavia couldn’t produce an heir while Poppaea was pregnant with Nero’s daughter likely played an important role in deciding Octavia’s fate.

On 19 July AD 64, a fire started close to the Circus Maximus. The flames soon encompassed the entire city of Rome and the fire raged for nine days. Only four of the 14 districts of the capital were spared, while three were completely destroyed.

Rome had already been razed by flames – and would be again in its long history – but this event was so severe it came to be known as the Great Fire of Rome.

Later historians blamed Nero for the event, claiming that he set the capital ablaze in order to clear land for the construction of a vast new palace. According to Suetonius and Cassius Dio, Nero took in the view of the burning city from the imperial residence while playing the lyre and singing about the fall of Troy. This story, however, is fictional.

Tacitus, the only historian who was actually alive at the time of the Great Fire of Rome (although only 8 years old), wrote that Nero was not even in Rome when the fire started, but returned to the capital and led the relief efforts.

Tacitus, Suetonius and Cassius Dio all describe Nero as being blinded by passion for his wife Poppaea, yet they accuse him of killing her, allegedly by kicking her in an outburst of rage while she was pregnant.

Interestingly, pregnant women being kicked to death by enraged husbands is a recurring theme in ancient literature, used to explore the (self) destructive tendencies of autocrats. The Greek writer Herodotus tells the story of how the Persian king Cambyses kicked his pregnant wife in the stomach, causing her death. A similar episode is told of Periander, tyrant of Corinth. Nero is just one of many allegedly ‘mad’ tyrants for which this literary convention was used.

Poppaea probably died from complications connected with her pregnancy and not at Nero’s hands. She was given a lavish funeral and was deified.

Centred on greater Iran, the Parthian empire was a major political and cultural power and a long-standing enemy of Rome. The two powers had long been contending for control over the buffer state of Armenia and open conflict sparked again during Nero’s rule. The Parthian War started in AD 58 and, after initial victories and following set-backs, ended in AD 63 when a diplomatic solution was reached between Nero and the Parthian king Vologases I.

According to this settlement Tiridates, brother of the Parthian king, would rule over Armenia, but only after having travelled all the way to Rome to be crowned by Nero.

The journey lasted 9 months, Tiridates’ retinue included 3,000 Parthian horsemen and many Roman soldiers. The coronation ceremony took place in the summer of AD 66 and the day was celebrated with much pomp: all the people of Rome saw the new king of Armenia kneeling in front of Nero. This was the Golden Day of Nero’s rule

In AD 68, Vindex, the governor of Gaul (France), rebelled against Nero and declared his support for Galba, the governor of Spain. Vindex was defeated in battle by troops loyal to Nero, yet Galba started gaining more military support.

It was at this point that Nero lost the support of Rome’s people due to a grain shortage, caused by a rebellious commander who cut the crucial food supply from Egypt to the capital. Abandoned by the people and declared an enemy of the state by the senate, Nero tried to flee Rome and eventually committed suicide.

Following his death, Nero’s memory was condemned (a practice called damnatio memoriae) and the images of the emperor were destroyed, removed or reworked. However, Nero was still given an expensive funeral and for a long time people decorated his tomb with flowers, some even believing he was still alive.

After Nero’s death, civil war ensued. At the end of the so-called ‘Year of the Four Emperors’ (AD 69), Vespasian became emperor and started a new dynasty: the Flavians.

[Francesca Bologna, curator, for British Museum]

 

Taken in the British Museum

Strategy and Execution - Special Management Program with Verne Harnish - Dec 2010 - Mumbai

ift.tt/1MQDCVE Execution of a German Communist in Munich (1919) [1024 x 663] #HistoryPorn #history #retro ift.tt/24cYRFz via Histolines

Through the last month 20 Iranian hostages executed by ruling rejim.

in the time that rejim knows better than others 99% of people hate it ,there is no other way for them to be in

power but terror ,torture,rape,executions.Actually the world is watching that the 70 million Iranians are hostaged by a rejim that every passing day proves its anti-iranian and anti -humanity manners.

Although there are more and more politicians insisting that such rejim must be controlled and managed

from other side of the Iranian borders.they believe such manners lead us to a barbaric thoughts which is deeply eager to ruling Iran completely.

Unlike Coulter, even supporters of capital punishment believe it should be done in a humane way and are aghast at hearing of this botched execution torturing the convict. Coulter’s inhumane response reminds us of why we should Never Trust Ann Coulter - at ANY Age, a new book available at www.coulterwatch.com/never.pdf.

 

Coulter commends executing teenagers who kill!:

 

“I enthusiastically embrace the death penalty [in the context of 14-year-old murderers].” – Ann Coulter, 4/10/97.

 

Coulter is OK with innocent people being executed if they’re guilty of other crimes:

 

“Sometimes people are innocent of the crime they were sentenced to death for, but perhaps not all crimes.” – Ann Coulter, 11/9/96.

 

Wants to kill people:

 

“I think that every day when I take the New York City subway. … I would like to kill all of them. I can analyze that and stop myself from killing people on a New York City street.” – Ann Coulter, 7/11/00

  

Execution site Herzogenbusch concentration camp

Dishonored: The Brigmore Witches

Sweetfx

3449x1940 Rendering

jim2point0's Cheat Engine Table

Torsos designed by 100customs

On the left is the original Robot Executioner. He kept trying to kill George by farting on him, so we had to get rid of him!

Actress Nina Gilhooly and actor Shane Jones in 'The Occultist'

W: 27" L: 18" 180 PPI Digital Photography

 

1/80 | ƒ/4.5 | ISO 8000 | 98 mm

 

Overall I like the idea of this photo, but not the execution. The lighting today was not idea which meant I had to use a small aperture. I wish I could have got every part of the fruit in focus but I ended up not being able to. I like the wood finish and how it contrasts with the fruit. I also really like the detail in the branch of the grapes.

 

To answer this weeks question I used basic shapes and lines with good detail and contrast to create a visually appealing photo. I used a simple set up with all natural light to provide good clean light. Overall it isn't my favorite photo but I still like it.

Title: Queretaro Chapel at place of Maximilians execution.

 

Creator: Waite, C. B. (Charles Betts), 1861-1927

 

Date: 1904

 

Part Of: Mexico

 

Place: Santiago de Queretaro, Queretaro, Mexico

 

Physical Description: 1 photographic print: gelatin silver; 20.2 x 12.6 cm

 

File: ag1983_0281_0736_queretaro_opt.jpg

 

Rights: Please cite DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University when using this file. A high-resolution version of this file may be obtained for a fee. For details see the sites.smu.edu/cul/degolyer/research/permissions/ web page. For other information, contact degolyer@smu.edu.

 

For more information and to view the image in high resolution, see: digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/mex/id/729

 

View the Mexico: Photographs, Manuscripts, and Imprints Collection

Tokyo, November, 2011.

More pics of Execution area. Added crowd and soldiers.

Would Donnie throw his boys "Under the Bus" to save his own ass? There is Jared,but Ivanka would be so upset with daddy!

 

Commander's log, date 05.03.2735:

 

My execution came and went. I had been 'cuffed again, and a hood had been put over my head. I was ready to die. I figured I could at least die with the satisfactory knowledge that I hadn't given away any DDF secrets. But then I heard some screams. They were the screams of the guards, as Jim was decapitating them. He rescued me, and I was quite astounded to see him. After all, I had believed him to be dead. But he explained the situation to me. He had actually come across a DM underwater patrol in the pond. It was the DM underwater patrol's blood I had seen, not Jim's. But he had gotten caught on a rock down there, so it was a while before he surfaced. He found a lone DM soldier and killed him to get weapons. Then he gathered intel and found me. And what a relief that was! Now, Jim and I shall return to base to resume our normal activities.

 

Jeremy Croup, Commander of the DDF, signing out.

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