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Buddha's father wasSuddhodana, king of the Sakhyas.Buddha's mother was named Maya. Buddha was born in B.C.560 and died at the age of eighty in B.C.480. The place of his birth was a grove known as Lumbini, near the city of Kapilavastu, at the foot of Mount Palpa in the Himalayan ranges within Nepal.This small city Kapilavastu stood on the bank of the river Rohini, some hundred miles north east of the city of Varnasi. As the time drew nigh for Budda to enter the wold,the gods themselves prepared the way before him with celestial portents and signs, Flowers bloomed and gentle rains fell, although out of season; heavenly music was heard, delicious scents filled the air. The body of the child bore at birth the thirty -two auspicious marks (Mahavyanjana) which indicated his future greatness, besides secondary marks (Anuvyanjana) in large numbers. Maya died seven days after her son's birth. The child was brought up by Maya's sister Mahaprajapati, who become its foster-mother.

This is a rare photograph showing the north side of Lord Street from Castle Street.

Also because it pre-dates electric trams (and therefore postcards) by showing horse-drawn trams.

Unfortunately, there's not much else which helps to give it a more accurate date.

I think the white building is Frisby Dykes ("Can I do you now, Sir?" Google it.)

 

“What is experience? A poor little hut constructed from the ruins of the palace of gold and marble called our illusions.” ~ Joseph Roux ~

 

“Experience teaches us at the expense of our illusions.” ~ anon ~

 

“But time strips our illusions of their hue, And one by one in turn, some grand mistake casts off its bright skin yearly like the snake.” ~ Lord Byron ~

  

School teachers and a nurse holidaying at Lord Howe. "We used to stay at the "Dew Drop Inn" guest house. We felt very daring in shorts." (spoken by Naomi England 23.1.1988) - Lord Howe Island

 

Call Number: At Work and Play - 01826

 

Format: photograph

 

Find more detailed information about this photograph: www.acmssearch.sl.nsw.gov.au/search/itemDetailPaged.cgi?i...

 

Search for more great images in the State Library's collections: acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/search/SimpleSearch.aspx

 

From the collection of the State Library of New South Wales www.sl.nsw.gov.au

Pink 580exii - back right

Octa 580exii front right

Natural rim

 

The Château de La Ferté-Imbault (Loir-et-Cher) is a stately home in the Loire Valley, France. A fortress of the Middle Ages rebuilt during the Renaissance, it is the largest brick château in Sologne, and one of the oldest. It was the family seat of the House of d'Estampes for four centuries.

 

The seigneurie (lordship) of La Ferté-Imbault was the largest in the south of Sologne, whose lands included the parishes of Salbris, Saint-Genou (now Selles-Saint-Denis), Marcilly, Loreux and Souesmes. It comprised more than one hundred farms spread over tens of thousands of hectares, stretching from Loreux to Souesmes and from Saint-Viâtre to Theillay.

 

The château is a large "rectangular building, with large and fine windows, and flanked by four towers ; shrubberies and alleys of mature trees lend an air of grandeur and poetry that strikes both the heart and the imagination". Its position "is quite pleasant and joyful, in a place where the Sauldre divides into several channels ... The red turrets of the château rise amid these waters and this greenery, and crown marvellously the rich picture".

 

Traces of Roman occupation were found on the site of the present château.

 

The first medieval fortress was built around 980 by Humbold (or Humbault) Le Tortu, Seigneur de Vierzon and son-in-law of Thibault, comte de Blois. The foundations of the two main towers remain to this day, as does the old armoury. The nearby Sauldre feeds the moat. Hervé I, lord at Vierzon, a descendant of Humbold, on his return from the Crusades, had a collegiate church built in honor of Saint Taurinus. This church and the need to supply the fortress favored the emergence of the village of La Ferté-Imbault around it. In 1280 Jeanne de Vierzon, heiress to the lands of La Ferté-Imbault, married Godfrey of Brabant, comte d'Aerschot, son of Henry III, Duke of Brabant and Adelaide of Burgundy, Duchess of Brabant.

 

Godfrey of Brabant was the brother-in-law of the King of France, Philip III the Bold. His daughter, Alix de Brabant, married Jean III d'Harcourt in 1302. His marriage to the rich heiress Alix de Brabant, which brought him the seigneurie of La Ferté-Imbault, made him a close relative of Henry III, Duke of Brabant and the kings of France, as Alix was also the niece of the queen of France, Marie de Brabant.

 

The son of Jean III d'Harcourt and Alix de Brabant, Jean IV, first comte d'Harcourt, married Isabeau de Parthenay. Their son Guillaume d'Harcourt was the seigneur of La Ferté-Imbault. From his marriage to Blanche de Bray, Dame de Cernon, he had one daughter, Jeanne d'Harcourt, Dame de La Ferté-Imbault, who married Hugues de Montmorency. Their sons, Louis and Antoine, died at the Battle of Agincourt (1415) and the Battle of Verneuil (1424) respectively. Their sister, Catherine de Montmorency, inherited the vast estate of La Ferté-Imbault after the deaths of her two brothers.

 

During the Hundred Years' War, the castle and village were taken and destroyed by the troops of Edward the Black Prince. After belonging for several uninterrupted centuries to the dynasty of Humbold Le Tortu, Seigneur of Vierzon, by the alliance of the families of Brabant, Harcourt and Montmorency, the estate was sold by Catherine de Montmorency to Robert II d'Estampes, Seigneur de Valençay, in 1424. Joan of Arc stayed at La Ferté-Imbault on March 4, 1429.

 

The castle was rebuilt during the Renaissance. Royal power was present nearby in Blois, and Francis I of France came from neighboring Romorantin.

 

Partially destroyed by a fire in 1562 during the Wars of Religion, the castle was rebuilt and enlarged by the addition of two residential wings and a large outbuilding in the early seventeenth century by Jacques d'Estampes, marquis de Mauny, the richest landlord of the region, and the grandson of Guillaume de Hautemer, the duc de Grancey, better known as the Maréchal de Fervaques. (Stendhal used this name for one of the characters in The Red and the Black). Jacques d'Estampes, head of the House of d'Estampes, was also the first marquis of La Ferté-Imbault. His eldest son was the Seigneur de Salbris.

 

Born in the reign of Henry IV, the marquis de La Ferté-Imbault died in the reign of Louis XIV, after fighting alongside Louis XIII, whose bust still adorns the former guardhouse of the château. He was ambassador to England from 1641 to 1643, lieutenant-general of Orléanais, Vendômois and Dunois in 1645, and marshal of France in 1651. Louis XIV made him a knight of the Order of the Holy Spirit in 1661. His friendship with Gaston, Duke of Orléans, brother of Louis XIII (Monsieur, the King's brother), was flawless throughout his life; as a lieutenant of the company of gendarmes of the Duc d'Orléans, in 1620 he had a huge outbuilding constructed at the Château de La Ferté-Imbault to accommodate his company. His wife, Catherine-Blanche of Choiseul (whose godfathers were Maximilien de Béthune, Duke of Sully and the Prince of Rohan and whose father was Charles de Choiseul, marquis de Praslin, advisor to Marie de' Medici, one of the most remarkable men of the end of the sixteenth century), was first lady-in-waiting to la Duchesse d'Orléans.

 

The château had its apogee in the Grand Siècle. The hearts of the Maréchal d'Estampes and his wife, Madame la Marquise d'Estampes de la Ferté-Imbault, remain at La Ferté-Imbault in the chapel of Saint-Taurinus, under an epitaph. A full-length portrait of the Maréchal d'Estampes de La Ferté-Imbault was painted in 1835 by Jean-Léonard Lugardon for King Louis-Philippe. It hangs in the sixth hall of the marshals, in the Musée de l'Histoire de France at the Palace of Versailles.

 

In the eighteenth century, the Prince Regent, Philippe II, Duke of Orléans renamed the regiment of Chartres-Infantry the La Ferté-Imbault regiment.

 

In 1743, King Louis XV acquired the marquisate of La Ferte-Imbault for his mistress, Madame de La Tournelle, on whom he wanted to confer a prestigious title in order to present her to the court. Madame de La Tournelle eventually became Duchesse de Châteauroux.

 

The last marquise de La Ferté-Imbault was Marie-Thérèse Geoffrin d'Estampes, daughter of the illustrious Madame Geoffrin, whose literary salon in the rue Saint-Honoré was famed throughout Europe and as far away as Russia, where the Empress Catherine II wrote to her as a friend. The marquise, whose magnificent portrait by Jean-Marc Nattier is exhibited at the Fuji Art Museum in Tokyo, enjoyed La Ferté for "the freshness of large chestnut trees that extend their shade". Her presence was requested in Versailles; Louis XV asked her to teach philosophy to his granddaughters, the princesses Elisabeth and Clotilde de France (sisters of the Duc de Berry, future Louis XVI), on the recommendation of the governess of the Enfants de France, Marie Louise de Rohan, comtesse de Marsan. She also gave Madame de Marsan scripts for skits performed by the princesses for the Dauphin and the Dauphine Marie Antoinette. Madame de La Ferté-Imbault was invited to the coronation of Louis XVI in Reims on June 11, 1775.

 

Madame de La Ferté-Imbault was clever, recognized for her culture and moral qualities. A woman of letters, she regularly attended her mother's salon along with most of the great minds of the Enlightenment: Denis Diderot, Voltaire, Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelle, Montesquieu her tutor, and Jean le Rond d'Alembert. She never remarried despite her early widowhood and several marriage proposals, including one from Stanisław Leszczyński, King of Poland, father of the Queen of France Marie Leszczyńska, who called the marquise "my Imbault".

 

Queen of the "Sublime Order of Lanturelus", she resisted the intrigues of the court and won the friendship of the royal family (including Madame Elizabeth, who wrote to her, "You must love, said a princess. I go further, for I love you, Imbault, and I defy my critics and my rivals to find anything to say against my tenderness", and Louis Joseph de Bourbon, Prince de Condé, who invited her to Chantilly and always sought her advice, help and consolation) courtiers and favorites like the Marquise de Pompadour, who was her friend.

 

In the French Revolution the House of d'Estampes fell, and the Château de La Ferté-Imbault lost influence. The surrounding village was annexed to the neighboring town of Selles-Saint-Denis. The two wings of the château were torn down. The marquis de Pierrecourt, son of Sophie d'Estampes, owner of the château, was imprisoned during the Reign of Terror but later released. He sold the estate in 1807 to the Comte de Belmont, whose widow sold it in 1819 to the comtesse de Grandeffe, Marie-Louise de Poix.

 

In May 1824, a rich English family, the Lee-Kirbys from Leeds, acquired the estate of La Ferté-Imbault and moved into the château. They modernized local agriculture by adopting English innovations (forage plants and improving crops, such as clover and alfalfa) in their many farms, spread over 5,000 hectares. This foreign family was unappreciated in the village. In the Revolution of 1830, the people of La Ferté-Imbault invaded the château armed with pitchforks and spades, and sought to lynch the fleeing owner. The Protestant family's forceful proselytism led to serious opposition in the village community throughout the nineteenth century, as in 1868 during the construction of the new parish church of Saint-Taurinus, built in front of the main entrance to the château.[5] When William Lee died in 1853, his nephew and niece inherited the estate of La Ferté-Imbault and the estate was divided into two parts, the Sauldre forming the boundary. Mary-Ann Kirby received the château and part of the farms on 3,500 hectares, while Edward Howarth, her brother, received other farms and the area of La Place on the right bank of the river (on which a new château was built between 1880 and 1883), for a total surface of 1,500 hectares.

 

The village regained its administrative independence in 1860 but faced financial problems. The former collegiate church near the château was destroyed.

 

The château, whose land was significantly reduced after 1872 to a little over 1,100 hectares, was bought by the Comte Fresson. His niece, Marie Say, one of the richest heiresses of France and owner of the Château de Chaumont-sur-Loire, married Prince Amédée de Broglie, then Louis-Ferdinand d'Orléans-Bourbon, Infante of Spain. Many trips were undertaken between the two châteaux. The park, of about 50 hectares, was surrounded at that time by a brick wall.

 

The Château de la Ferté-Imbault, sold in 1900 to Dr. Georges Bouilly, then to Henry-René Bertrand, was seized by the Kommandantur on June 17, 1940, and saw four years of German occupation. The building suffered extensive damage in a bombing raid on May 8, 1944.

 

In August 1960, a "sound and light" show tracing its millennial history was organized in the castle with the voices of actors Madeleine Sologne and André Le Gall.[7] It has since been sold to new private owners but is open to visitors during the summer.

iPhone 6

Union app

Mextures

Stackables

Lord and lady Bellingham on holiday, Lake Garda, Italy, prepare to go for their evening walk, resident as every year, at the Hotel Grand Liberty, Riva Del Garda, Italy for the month of August, they return every year and would not consider going anywhere else “It is a proper hotel, with table cloths and service you expect from a first class hotel”

( thanks to Jeff Wharton for Lord and Lady photo, background photo from my own collection )

 

Some of the highlights of my shoot with sith Lord Vader...

 

Lots more at www.scottlewisphotography.eu

The twilight is no more... Now it is time for the endless darkness!

 

I got a better pic of him now.

Closed in December 2020.

Bain News Service,, publisher.

 

Lord Riddell

 

[between ca. 1920 and ca. 1925]

 

1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.

 

Notes:

Title from unverified data provided by the Bain News Service on the negatives or caption cards.

Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress).

 

Format: Glass negatives.

 

Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication. For more information, see George Grantham Bain Collection - Rights and Restrictions Information www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/274_bain.html

 

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

 

Part Of: Bain News Service photograph collection (DLC) 2005682517

 

General information about the George Grantham Bain Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbain

 

Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ggbain.33383

 

Call Number: LC-B2- 5593-6

 

a rare privilege to visit Lord Palmers House...

As soon as I saw The LEGO Movie, I knew I had to try and make my own Lord Business with the pieces I had. This isn't 100% screen-accurate, but it's still "super sweet".

Bain News Service,, publisher.

 

Lord Tennyson

 

[between ca. 1920 and ca. 1925]

 

1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.

 

Notes:

Title from unverified data provided by the Bain News Service on the negatives or caption cards.

Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress).

 

Format: Glass negatives.

 

Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication. For more information, see George Grantham Bain Collection - Rights and Restrictions Information www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/274_bain.html

 

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

 

Part Of: Bain News Service photograph collection (DLC) 2005682517

 

General information about the George Grantham Bain Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbain

 

Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ggbain.33075

 

Call Number: LC-B2- 5546-2

 

Hot Rods

For me are special cars. Why? In 2007 i was interested Hot Rods. Finally in 2008 i ended my dark age when i bought 6561 Hot Rod Club. I have connected my new interest with my childhood's passion.

aka 34046 'Braunton' working 1Z67 Kings Cross to Matlock (Rowsley) through Long Eaton 22/05/2016

The Noreen and Kenneth Murray Library (2012) can now be accessed via the neighbouring Nucleus Building (2022).

 

Architects Austin-Smith:Lord (2012). www.austinsmithlord.com/projects/noreen-and-kenneth-murra...

 

The Nucleus building is a learning, teaching and social hub at the University of Edinburgh's King’s Buildings campus. It opened fully in January 2023. The building has seven large and medium flexible teaching spaces and a specialist chemistry teaching laboratory (top floor). It provides more than 400 student study spaces. Additional facilities are: a cafe, Students' Association Shop and a Careers Service centre. The building directly connects to the Murray Library and the Students’ Association’s King's Buildings House.

 

Murray library: www.ed.ac.uk/information-services/library-museum-gallery/...

Building project - Murray library: www.austinsmithlord.com/projects/university-of-edinburgh-...

Urban Realm article (2013): www.urbanrealm.com/news/3941/University_of_Edinburgh_unve...

 

The Nucleus building: www.ed.ac.uk/science-engineering/about/nucleus

Overview of the Nucleus Phase 1 project: www.ed.ac.uk/estates/campus-development/kings-buildings/c...

KB Campus Vision & Masterplan: www.ed.ac.uk/estates/campus-development/kings-buildings/v...

New to Billy Smart in 1946, for whom it worked powering the circus and funfair with its Ruston generators.

 

2015 Bedfordshire Steam & Country Fayre, Old Warden

 

Listed for sale Spring 2017 and despite initial reports that it had found a buyer in Australia, this remains in the UK

Photo taken using iphone.

 

SR Light Pacific No 34046 Braunton operating as No 34052 Lord Dowding climbs the lower reaches of Hatton Bank near Budbrook with the Steam Dreams 'The Cathedrals Express' railtour from Langley to Stratford-on-Avon and return on Saturday 22 April 2017.

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