View allAll Photos Tagged LifeGiving

Icon (by Fr. Theodore Jurewicz) on the south deacon's door of the iconostasis at Saint John's Monastery in Hiram, OH.

 

"O Lord, save your people and bless your inheritance. Give victory to those who battle evil, and with your cross protect us all."

 

"O cross of Christ, you are the hope of Christians and the guide of those who have strayed, haven of those tossed about by the storm of life, pledge of victory for all who battle evil, and resurrection for the fallen. By its power, O Christ, have mercy on us all."

 

"Bestow you mercies on all who bear your name, O you who freely let yourself be raised upon the cross. In your power, gladden all who battle evil, by gracing them with victory over every foe. For as long as they have you as their ally, they possess a weapon of peace, an unfailing trophy of victory."

 

(hymns for the feast)

When a cactus pad falls off to the ground, it never truly* dies. It lies dormant

for a while, losing its water slowly and changing colors. But if you check just

below the surface you will see tiny signs of life... root threads making their

way into the soil, just waiting for the lifegiving rains to fall so once again it

can rise up to begin a new cycle in life.

 

I've always been amazed at the purple prickly pears here in Arizona... they

are just glorious to look at.

2010....My focus word for the year was "Risk". The opportunity to test this was presented on January 1 2010 when a friend needed me during a tragic time. As weeks turned into months and as I began to realize just how fragile she was, I made a choice. I risked losing friends, I hardly saw the swans, did not even make time to visit, or keep in touch with most people. I stayed by my friends side, we planted a garden, took walks together, talked, and even laughed. We plotted and planned our re-emergence into the art world, started an exercise program and she appeared to bloom. What I gave her was so very little, and I hope it was enough, I hope I made a difference, because what I got back from this experience was unexpected. I was filled with the love and joy of a true friendship, and now I must do what friends do, I must honour her desire to die.

 

My friend is very very sick, physically and heartsick, she has seen one too many Christmases and way too many New Years Eve parties, she is tired and the lifegiving ability to breath is leaving her, she has advanced emphysema, and although I have tried to get her to quit smoking, I now must stand aside and let her live out her life on her own terms. I shall remain by her side for as long as she needs me.

 

I hope you all find your special doorway this year. Thank you all for your visits and friendship, you have no idea how important you have been to me, you have brought tears and smiles, some have passed on, others have just begun, and thus ends a perfectly normal year.

 

Hello 2011, I think I am going to like getting to know you.

  

(natures life provider........)

Mobility Scooter Sighting 68 - Brighton, Sussex

Here a Mobility Scooter is being towed away by Sussex council in downtown Brighton by an impounder’s truck. Let’s hope it’s not being taken to the boneyard to be crushed. Anecdotal evidence suggested the poor pavecraft became marooned on a double yellow line due to excessive battery usage - thus draining it of it’s lifegiving power. But the upside to this sorry debacle is that the traffic wardens would have got their commission for this episode - perhaps they will spend their bounty on the popular Bounty chocolate bar? Thanks to the Blind Tiger Club for submitting this picture.

 

www.alphabetclub.com

 

Have you snapped a mobility scooter? All submissions will be greatly appreciated.

 

Enjoyed this blog? Donate to Age…

 

www.ageuk.org.uk/get-involved/make-a-donation/

 

Enter our Mobility Scooter icon design competition…

 

mobilityscootersightings.tumblr.com/

Lilium "Stargazer" is a hybrid lily of the Oriental group. The ASPCA reports it as toxic to cats. When mature it grows to a height of 36 inches with a spread of 12 to 16 inches with an upright form. It has a fast growth rate and should be planted in full sun in well drained loamy or sandy soil. The flower is pink, red, and white, and is sweetly fragrant. The plant produces 4 to 5 flowers per stem.

 

The Stargazer lily was created in 1978 by Mr. Leslie Woodriff, a Lily breeder in California. It is an oriental hybrid lily which he called Stargazer because the blooms faced the sky. It is now fairly common throughout North America.

  

Walking by the water, I came across an abandoned chair. It looked so lonely, so out of place, so much of a mirror. I went and sat in it to keep it company. Funny, it made me feel lonelier than I was already. But then Valentine's Day is bound to be a reminder of the painfully obvious. I am alone, partly by choice, partly by circumstance, and I wish and hope that I'll have one great love before I make my big exit off this whirling, blue piece of amazing rock that revolves around our explosive and glorious, lifegiving star.

 

Hm. I always seem to write bad poetic prose when I'm feeling my feelings.

The Thomas Hammer Coffee bar at Eastern Washington University. These are my 3 favorite baristas in the 509 Area Code.

 

Taken for a Tech350 Assignment - "At Work"

The Church of the Vivifying Holy Trinity at the Borisovo Ponds is a metochion of the Patriarch of Moscow on Kashirskoe highway, a residential district of Orekhovo-Borisovo in South Moscow (on the way between city center and Domodedovo airport). The cathedral was built in 2001-2004 in Neo-Byzantine (Byzantine Revival) by architect Vladimir Kolosnitsyn in honor of the 1,000th anniversary of Christianity in Russia.

 

Photo #102 taken on August 26, 2010

©2010 Moscow Guide & Driver Arthur Lookyanov

how i LoVe bringing the outside in ❧ ...whether it be from my rose trees, or my goldfish, or my sweet basil, rosemary or my star jasmin, OR be it Trader Joe's sweet boquets ... having LIFE happening inside is so life~giving to me!

 

right now the house is full of fragrant~foliage, and i couldn't be happier or feel more alive. a pairing with nature. if you will, bringing the outside in ❧ is about as amazing for me, as you can imagine!

 

Have a wonderful and beautiful Thursday everyone!

 

...and maybe you will give a second thought to bringing the outside in ❧ ...

 

Sun shines through the leaf of an American Lotus lily pad revealing the intricate lifegiving veins at Fabick Nature Preserve.

Egg tempera on wood

Early Modern period, early 17th c. CE

From Crete

 

Photographed on display in, and in the collection of, the Icon Museum and Study Center (formerly the Museum of Russian Icons), Clinton, Massachusetts, USA

Gift of Dr. Emilio Bizzi

inv. R2022.02

This Church of the Lifegiving Spring of the most Holy Virgin of Kefalariotisas is at Kefalari, south of Argos, Greece

Ahmed Mater Al-Ziad Aseeri the 32 year old Saudi Arabian medical practitioner and artist, a prominent member of a contemporary artist group known as ‘Edge of Arabia”, has overseen the opening of an exhibition in Jeddah titled “We need to talk” curated by fellow artists Mohammed Hafiz and Stephen Stapleton. Edge of Arabia a nonprofit organization to support middle eastern artists, was launched to record breaking attendances with a major exhibition in London 2008 showcasing 17 Saudi Arabia artists. Mater claims prognosis is a central theme in his work, stating “from this knowledge of both loss and enlightenment [Mater] appears to have the ability to move from expressing sadness and anger to sharing … insights with a sense of humor and lifegiving lightness.” Reid Singer in an article published on Artinfo.com states “Though Saudi Arabia was largely unaffected by the wave of popular uprisings that took place across the Middle East during 2011's Arab Spring, the political environment in the country remains tense. In this atmosphere, many forward-thinking Saudi artists have downplayed the political significance of their work and couched it in conservative terms.”

Please View On Black

 

My grandfather is the fire

My grandmother is the wind

The Earth is my mother

The Great Spirit is my father

The World stopped at my birth

and laid itself at my feet

And I shall swallow the Earth whole

when I die

and the Earth and I will be one

Hail The Great Spirit, my father

without him no one could exist

because there would be no will to live

Hail The Earth, my mother

without which no food could be grown

and so cause the will to live to starve

Hail the wind, my grandmother

for she brings loving, lifegiving rain

nourishing us as she nourishes our crops

Hail the fire, my grandfather

for the light, the warmth, the comfort he brings

without which we be animals, not men

Hail my parent and grandparents

without which

not I

nor you

nor anyone else

could have existed

Life gives life

which gives unto itself

a promise of new life

Hail the Great Spirit, The Earth, the wind, the fire

praise my parents loudly

for they are your parents, too

Oh, Great Spirit, giver of my life

please accept this humble offering of prayer

this offering of praise

this honest reverence of my love for you.

  

Church of Life-Giving Trinity in Troitsko-Golenischevo

First documentary evidence of existence of village Golenischevo goes back to year 1406, the village and all nearby grounds were known for summer residence palace of Moscow Patriarchate situated here, in vicinity of river Setun’. Upon benediction of Gerontius, Metropolitan of Moscow at the spot was built wooden church dedicated to John the Evangelist. In 1644-46 the church was renovated in stone by Antipa Konstantinov, who was also the architect of Terem Palace of the Moscow Kremlin. Refectory and bell-tower was built later in 1660 and then renovated in year 1840. The church was closed in 1937 and returned to the Eastern Orthodox Church of Russia in year 1991.

WIKI

 

Keeping your hands clean can help keep you and your food safe from germs.

 

Photo courtesy of: SCA Svenska Cellulosa Aktiebolaget on flickr.

Feel free to use this image under the creative commons license with linked attribution to livewildphotos.com

 

Note: Every image posted in the Live Once Live Wild Flickr Photostream is available for use under the Creative Commons Attribution License.

21.08.2007: New Covenant window, Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges. An Old Testament type of the lifegiving power of Christ's resurrection. 1 Kings 17: 17-24.

 

For the whole window, see: www.flickr.com/photos/pelegrino/1356059879/in/set-7215760...

18 March 2012

 

We're midway in Lent, thus "the Sunday of the Holy and Life-giving Cross," a phrase that ought to be disturbing even for Orthodox Christians -- something like saying "the Sunday of the Holy and Life-giving Hangman's Noose" (or Electric Chair). How startling it is to celebrate the means of inflicting a tortuous death on anyone, least of all a man who harmed no one, healed many and saved one person from being stoned to death. But the ancient Christian teaching is that this instrument of death was used by Christ as a means of resurrection, and thus was made life-giving. Here's a photo taken today of our parish standing around a crucifixion icon.

View On Black

I heard this line in a poem recited by madonna called Bittersweet. In it she says something to the effect of , "whirling and dancing like a spinning wheel." apparently the poem was written by a 13th century Persian poet Rumi.. it's just amazing. I just loved the poem and that simile, "whirling and dancing like a spinning wheel".. it reminded me of how I should live my life.

I thank god for giving me life..

For awakening me with little moments that remind me to live my life with passion, love, and devotion..

Reminding me to be a flower "whirling and dancing like a spinning wheel" through each moment as though there is no tomorrow.

  

= Holy Trinity Cathedral Framed by Trees in Summer =

 

The view from Kashirskoye highway of the Cathedral of the Holy Vivifying Trinity framed by trees in summer. The beautiful temple with impressive blue domes was constructed at Borisovo Ponds in Moscow in 2001-2004 to commemorate 1000 anniversary of the baptism of Holy Russia. It is one dome cross-shaped church built by project of Vladimir Kolosnitsyn in Byzantine Revival style of architecture.

 

Read more: goo.gl/HHD7ge

 

Photo #031 taken on July 30, 2011

©2011 www.Moscow-Driver.com by Arthur Lookyanov​

Copyright © All rights reserved Peter Vahlersvik! Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media in any way without my explicit written permission.

 

Portrait of a sprouting plant reaching for cascading spring lifegiving light. Bokeh from lins without lenscap.

based on the ground, standing in the lifegiving water, connection to the sky

Design and art work: Sara Hernandez

Храм живоначальной троицы

Усадьба Свиблово

16.08.2017

 

// IMG_5571-w

The feast is celebrated on the anniversary of the day on which St. Helena found the True Cross on which Jesus of Nazareth was crucified.

The feast also commemorates the day in 335 AD on which the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem was dedicated,and the day in 629 AD on which Patriarch Sergius I elevated the True Cross at Hagia Sophia after it was recaptured from the Persians by Byzantine Emperor Heraclius.

 

Along with Great Friday, it is one of the two Orthodox feast days which is a strict fast.

Fasting is observed for this feast no matter on what day of the week it falls.

 

In Eastern Orthodox Christianity, the official name of the feast is "Universal Exaltation of the Precious and Lifegiving Cross".

During religious service on the feast day, a cross decorated with flowers is brought into the middle of the church by a procession, accompanied by candles and incense.

The priest elevates the cross in four cardinal directions, each time repeating a benediction.

The congregation also says the Doamne, miluieste!(Kýrie, eléison) a hundred times.

The Water Pollution Control Laboratory in Portland, Oregon includes an experimental pond for research on how contaminants in stormwater affect water quality. The outdoor laboratory's concentric circle design expresses stormwater's innate beauty as a landscape form. Rain is a lifegiving element but a nuisance known as stormwater when it collects pollutants from roofs and pavement and dumps them through storm sewers into waterways. Portland's Bureau of Environmental Services, the laboratory's owner, urges local businesses, industries, and homeowners to manage their stormwater on site to improve water quality and decrease flooding. So when BES chose a six-acre derelict factory site for its new laboratory, it walked the talk, asking landscape architecture firm Murase Associates to design an on-site treatment facility. Instead of replacing a collapsed storm sewer that would whisk the site's runoff to the Willamette River, the firm created a one-acre pond to retain runoff for a period and allow pollutants to settle out. BES stormwater specialist Tom Liptan, tracks the flow of pollutants in the pond and documents the effectiveness of the pond in removing them. Portland landscape architect Mike Faha notes that transforming the wet pond into a landscape sculpture is a bold statement contradicting the local norm. "This project raises the bar significantly," says Faha, "in that it celebrates rainfall and educates us to its fate within the urban environment better than previous projects." - Landscape Architect, Jan 99, p 58, by J. William Thompson.

 

Located opposite Calton Hill, just east of the City Centre in Edinburgh, this is a small but magical Cemetery.

 

Very old monuments to the dead, with nothing modern.

 

Cemeteries are free to visit (for obvious reasons), so instead of just walking past, pop in for a visit.

Guin stops in front of the fireplace, arms crossed and eyes unfocused as she stares into the flames. Pacing was doing nothing more than wearing the stones. Her mind is both blank and spinning, all at once, thoughts tumbling one over the other, turning in on themselves, uncoiling into nothing…

 

She sinks to her knees, willing the heat into her bones and blood, where she needed it. She knows she should pray. The words are etched into her mind, through years of repetition and belief and comfort. She couldn't forget them if she tried. And she'd been taught--she knew--that when all else failed, when her heart ached and life was in turmoil, there was always one place she could turn. All her life, every crisis… She had never wavered.

 

But now, with the oppressive silence draping her shoulders, she doesn't even know where to start.

 

"Lord, look upon me with eyes of mercy." Her whisper freezes in the air, and her hand curls in her lap. It's empty, and she desperately wants to hold onto something. "May your lifegiving powers flow into the depths of my soul, cleansing, purifying, restoring me to wholeness… " She shakes her head; a sharp, frustrated thing. It wasn't working. Just words, her own hollow, powerless voice.

 

"By reason of the weakness of our nature, we cannot stand upright… " Voice shaking, she presses her free hand against her chest. Her heart is pounding, the blood rushing in her ears drowning out all else. "That--that those evils which we suffer for our sins we may overcome… "

 

Somewhere, beyond the stillness, there was violence. Anger and darkness and fear. It came into their home, crept into their souls. The city was bathed in it, fed off of it… fed it, in return. She'd felt its teeth sink into her flesh, and couldn't shake it free. It haunted the place she loved, the people; they were, every one of them, caught in its snare.

 

"I need courage to fight." She clasps her hands together, with a calm edged in desperation. "I need Your help."

Cairnpapple is a prehistoric ceremonial, then burial site, located about 3 miles north of Bathgate, and about 6 miles west of Edinburgh.

 

Its sits on top of a hill that provides a breath taking vista on a good day, from Arthurs Seat to the East, North over the River Forth and the massive industrial site that is Grangemouth, to the hills of Western Fife.

 

It is believed to date from 3,000 BC, which makes it over 5,000 years old.

 

A concrete roof has been installed, and Historic Scotland now charge £4.50 to venture inside the small burial chamber.

 

It costs nothing however to visit the site and take in the atmosphere of its ancient history, and the fantastic views.

Carlos "Botong" V. Francisco (1912 - 1969)

Tinikling No. 2

 

signed and inscribed "Tinikling No.2 from the Original

by Carlos V. Francisco" (lower right)

ca. 1964

oil on canvas

41 1/4" x 121 3/4" (105 cm x 309 cm)

 

Opening bid: PHP 24,000,000

 

Property from the Estefania Aldaba-Lim Collection

 

Provenance: Acquired directly from the artist, thence by descent

 

ABOUT THE WORK

The Tapestry of Filipino Life by Botong Francisco

by Lisa Guerrero Nakpil

 

Botong Francisco was the master of rendering men and their lives larger than either of them, of elevating the commonplace to the spectacular, and in the process, of creating myths and legends. And he did this with the boldest of concepts — by focusing on the minutiae, the beloved, precise but often overlooked details that make the lives of the Filipino everyman, uniquely and particularly his own. In Tinikling No. 2, he records the end of the harvest as a twofaced Janus : On one hand, filled with the jubilation of dance and song but also another cycle of hardwork and discipline. The original owner of this work, the wonder-woman Estafania Aldaba Lim, is recorded by Nick Joaquin to have fallen in love with ballet when she watched a cinematic version of Swan Lake in a Malolos moviehouse as a girl. It’s not surprising that this work that has the Filipino ‘tinikling’ (that must be danced with both grace and skill while hopping between two bamboo poles) would capture her attention. The lead character sways to the sound of an imaginary tune a flower in her hair. It is a theme that Botong would return to, time and again. (‘Tinkling No. 1’, otherwise known as ‘Harvest Festival’ now a lost work, was last seen in the collection of Malacañan Palace, and is dated 1962.) Like that first Tinikling, the harvest ends with the grinding of the grain: two men put their backs to an unseen stone in the background. To the right, are a pair of men and a woman, pounding the rice. with long pestles in a shared mortar called ‘lusong’. Two women on either side of the work wield bilaos (circular flat baskets) to separate the chaff from the lifegiving grain. Another man seems to be gathering sheaves. Surrounding this beehive of activity is the community of Angono brethren: a man strumming a guitar, three others gape entranced, drinking in the flow of life. There are three boys as well as the town elder or shaman or apothecary ‘hilot’ who peers out of a window. (Botong typically portrayed this wizened figure in his paintings, and one suspects this character was a kind of alter-ego for the artist.) There are other figures that enrich this tapestry, peering here and there from the nooks and crannies of the work, another distinctive Botong conceit. The papaya and banana trees endemic to every small town in the Philippines book-end the piece, as do a glass jeroboam and a sleeping dog, a sheathed balisong and a gnarled tree trunk. Interestingly, Botong has included a vignette of what appears to be an artist’s home that we can glimpse through an open window: a candlestick on a dresser, and two paintings. it is, with this singular act of inviting the viewer into his home, Botong has allowed us to enter into his world, through the Kaleidescope of Filipino Life.

 

Lot 31 of the Leon Gallery live and online auction on November 30, 2024. Please see leon-gallery.com and leonexchange.com for more information and to place an online bid.

The feast is celebrated on the anniversary of the day on which St. Helena found the True Cross on which Jesus of Nazareth was crucified.

The feast also commemorates the day in 335 AD on which the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem was dedicated,and the day in 629 AD on which Patriarch Sergius I elevated the True Cross at Hagia Sophia after it was recaptured from the Persians by Byzantine Emperor Heraclius.

 

Along with Great Friday, it is one of the two Orthodox feast days which is a strict fast.

Fasting is observed for this feast no matter on what day of the week it falls.

 

In Eastern Orthodox Christianity, the official name of the feast is "Universal Exaltation of the Precious and Lifegiving Cross".

During religious service on the feast day, a cross decorated with flowers is brought into the middle of the church by a procession, accompanied by candles and incense.

The priest elevates the cross in four cardinal directions, each time repeating a benediction.

The congregation also says the Doamne, miluieste!(Kýrie, eléison) a hundred times.

The beautiful church of the Holy Vivifying Trinity was built at Borisovo Ponds in 2001-2004 to commemorate 1000 anniversary of the baptism of Holy Russia.

Style of Arhitecture: Byzantine Revival

Design by Vladimir Kolosnitsyn

Built in 2001-2004

 

Photo #081 taken on August 26, 2010

©2010 Arthur Lookyanov / ArtLook Photography

Our lifegiving sun dips below the horizon after giving us another day of warmth and life.

The feast is celebrated on the anniversary of the day on which St. Helena found the True Cross on which Jesus of Nazareth was crucified.

The feast also commemorates the day in 335 AD on which the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem was dedicated,and the day in 629 AD on which Patriarch Sergius I elevated the True Cross at Hagia Sophia after it was recaptured from the Persians by Byzantine Emperor Heraclius.

 

Along with Great Friday, it is one of the two Orthodox feast days which is a strict fast.

Fasting is observed for this feast no matter on what day of the week it falls.

 

In Eastern Orthodox Christianity, the official name of the feast is "Universal Exaltation of the Precious and Lifegiving Cross".

During religious service on the feast day, a cross decorated with flowers is brought into the middle of the church by a procession, accompanied by candles and incense.

The priest elevates the cross in four cardinal directions, each time repeating a benediction.

The congregation also says the Doamne, miluieste!(Kýrie, eléison) a hundred times.

Τον Δεκαπενταύγουστο, του Σταυρού (14/9), των Εισοδίων της Θεοτόκου (21/11) , της Ζωοδόχου Πηγής (2/5), των Αγίων Αναργύρων (1/7), την Κυριακή της Ορθοδοξίας που γιορτάζει η εκκλησία της Παντάνασσας, της Μεταμόρφωσης του Σωτήρος (6/8), του Άγιου Παντελεήμονα (27/8) και στη Γέννηση της Θεοτόκου (8/9), το χωριό συγκεντρώνεται για το πανηγύρι.

Ανάλογα με τη γιορτή και διαφορετικό έθιμο. Πάντως ο παπάς λειτουργεί και τα μακριά τραπέζια πάντοτε γεμίζουν με λογής-λογής καλά: φαβοκεφτέδες, γίγαντες, αμπελοφάσουλα, ψάρια και θαλασσινά, ρεβίθια, σικινιώτικο κρασί, ντόπιο γεμιστό κατσίκι.

Όλο το χωριό είναι καλεσμένο. Όλο. Και όλοι οι ξένοι που βρίσκονται στο νησί πρέπει κι αυτοί να έρθουν, να φάνε και να πιούνε. Μετά το τραπέζι αρχίζουν τα όργανα και ξεκινά ο χορός. Οι ευλογίες μέχρι τώρα πιάνουν τόπο, αφού κάθε χρόνο τα τραπέζια είναι γεμάτα και τα πρόσωπα γελαστά.

Οι Σικινιώτες παίρνουν πολύ στα σοβαρά την καλοπέρασή τους και την καλοπέραση όσων τυχαίνει να βρίσκονται παρέα τους.

Dormition of Virgin Mary (15/8), Exaltation of the Holy Cross (14/9), Entry of Virgin Mary (21/11), Lifegiving Font (Zoodohos Pigi, 2/5), the Holy Unmercenaries day (1/7), Sunday of Orthodoxy, also day of celebration for the Pantanassa church, Holy Transfiguration (6/8), Agios Panteleimonas (27/8), Navity of Virgin Mary (8/9): the local feasts are celebrated very diligently here.

Customs depend on the special occasion and everything has its significance: the church is meticulously prepared, women cook endless quantities of first class local dishes, houses are decorated.

After the holy mass and the blessings everybody is invited to lunch where everybody is invited to eat, drink, sing and dance.

The feast is celebrated on the anniversary of the day on which St. Helena found the True Cross on which Jesus of Nazareth was crucified.

The feast also commemorates the day in 335 AD on which the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem was dedicated,and the day in 629 AD on which Patriarch Sergius I elevated the True Cross at Hagia Sophia after it was recaptured from the Persians by Byzantine Emperor Heraclius.

 

Along with Great Friday, it is one of the two Orthodox feast days which is a strict fast.

Fasting is observed for this feast no matter on what day of the week it falls.

 

In Eastern Orthodox Christianity, the official name of the feast is "Universal Exaltation of the Precious and Lifegiving Cross".

During religious service on the feast day, a cross decorated with flowers is brought into the middle of the church by a procession, accompanied by candles and incense.

The priest elevates the cross in four cardinal directions, each time repeating a benediction.

The congregation also says the Doamne, miluieste!(Kýrie, eléison) a hundred times.

Does Wills Hill, the Earl of Hillsborough, the British Secretary of State for the Colonies from 1768 to 1772, deserve to have LIFEGIVING WATER named in his honor all these centuries after he finally died?

 

Of course not! We should forget his name!

 

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

 

In downtown Tampa, Florida, on November 23rd, 2021, the Hillsborough River as viewed from Plant Park.

 

There is the Kennedy Boulevard bridge (on Florida state roads 60 and 685; a bascule bridge built in 1913 as the Lafayette Street Bridge; 100002094 on the National Register of Historic Places).

 

Yonder is the Tampa Riverwalk. We have the skyscrapers "Rivergate Tower" (built 1988) Bank of America Plaza (built 1986), and "100 North Tampa" (built 1992).

 

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

 

Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:

• Hillsborough (county) (1002479)

• Tampa (7013974)

 

Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:

• bascule bridges (300007859)

• canopies (structural elements) (300069732)

• central business districts (300000868)

• historic structures (300386960)

• office towers (300007046)

• parks (recreation areas) (300008187)

• riverbanks (300008729)

• riverfronts (300008343)

• riverine landscapes (300435110)

• rivers (300008707)

• road bridges (300007891)

• sand (300014341)

• shelters (single built works) (300007688)

• skyscrapers (300004809)

• trails (recreation areas) (300000626)

• urban landscapes (300132447)

 

Wikidata items:

• 23 November 2021 (Q69306252)

• 100 North Tampa (Q2806673)

• 1910s in transport (Q96475176)

• 1913 in transport (Q109075670)

• Aloft Hotels (Q4734166)

• Bank of America Plaza (Q4856045)

• boom gate (Q852010)

• Central Florida (Q2920358)

• Downtown Tampa (Q5303592)

• Florida State Road 60 (Q2432466)

• Florida State Road 685 (Q2432998)

• Hillsborough River (Q3135678)

• John F. Kennedy Boulevard (Q9012429)

• National Register of Historic Places (Q3719)

• November 23 (Q3021)

• November 2021 (Q61312917)

• Plant Park (Q49543779)

• Rivergate Tower (Q17029640)

• Sheraton Hotels and Resorts (Q634831)

• Tampa Bay area (Q2828677)

• Tampa Bay drainage basin (Q7681700)

• Tampa Riverwalk (Q7681726)

• Treaty of Moultrie Creek (Q125312)

• urban park (Q22746)

 

Library of Congress Subject Headings:

• Bridges—Florida (sh85016855)

• Historic bridges (sh85061096)

• Parks—Florida (sh85098147)

• Rivers—Florida (sh85114300)

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