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The Zwickau priests' houses are among the oldest residential buildings in Germany. 13th Century.

 

Die Zwickauer Priesterhäuser, gehören mit zu den ältesten Wohnbauten im gesamten Bundesgebiet. Die Ursprünge dieses bauhistorisch wertvollen Ensembles liegen im 13. Jahrhundert.

 

Museum: www.priesterhaeuser.de/

Scharrachbergheim - Alsace - France

 

- This picture is not a photography....

- This picture is just an illusion of illustration.

The reason I got the RULK suit..this gold skin!

A priest enters the gateway to the Kaisan-do garden, Tofuku-ji temple, Kyoto japan.

I loved how political Priests was and how lead singer Katie Alice Greer urged to crowd to be informed and do everything we could to resist Trump. There's a really great article about this band in Rolling Stone:

 

www.rollingstone.com/music/features/how-dc-punks-priests-...

  

You can listen to the Washington D.C. based band here:

 

priests.bandcamp.com/album/nothing-feels-natural

 

**If you use this photo on your blog/online, please credit and link back. All photos are copyrighted. **

 

Flooded field priest lane

After waiting for what has felt like weeks, we finally had a clear night last night and I hurried over to Cape Cornwall to photograph the Milky Way as it was rising. The bright light on the left is Sennen and Land's End and the lght below the Milky Way on the horizon is Longships Lighthouse. It was great to be out at night again under the stars even though it was a little too windy.

Coolest Allied figures Brickmania has ever produced... note that one of the tan torsos is MRU

young priests at the ceremony of consecration of the church. photo taken during the Cossack festival in Moscow.

Priests Cove, Cape Cornwall UK

Sunset, J. Percy Priest Lake - Rutherford County, Tennessee.

 

A winter sunset reflection on the surface of Percy Priest Lake near Smyrna, TN.

 

©2011 Nature's Spectrum, For consideration only, no reproduction without prior permission.

Pend Oreille Valley Railroad's Sandpoint Turn arrives at Priest River, Idaho, on September 24, 2021.

Here's another version of this.

During Sunday service at one the famous rock-hewn churches of Lalibela, Ethiopia.

THANKS FOR YOUR VISIT AND FAVES

ON THE REACTIONS I WILL TRY TO RESPOND BACK

 

De Griekse priester

Je kunt in Griekenland de Griekse priesters - of pappas, zoals zij worden genoemd - overal tegenkomen. Ze zijn te herkennen aan hun lange, zwarte of blauwe kleding en hun hoed. Ze zijn niet verplicht om steeds hun priesterkleren te dragen, maar ze doen het meestal wel, uit praktische overwegingen en omdat ze op die manier gemakkelijker herkenbaar zijn. De Griekse priester kan huwen en kinderen hebben.

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The Greek priest

You can in Greece, the Greek priest - or Pappas, as they are called - encounter everywhere. They are recognizable by their long, black or blue clothes and their hats. They are not required to always wear their priest clothes, but they do usually, for practical reasons and because they are easier to identify in that way. The Greek priests can marry and have children.

Durante muito tempo ele foi o padre superior do Santuário do Caraça, lá ele se tornou amigo dos lobos, talvez por ter a aparencia de um deles.

 

For a long time he was the Father Superior of the Sanctuary of Caraça, there he became a friend of the wolves, perhaps for having the appearance of one.

 

Santuário do Caraça

Caraça

Minas Gerais

  

Dusty old negs revisited. Greece, 1978.

bratislava, slovakia

Down at Priest Cove, at Cape Cornwall this morning in filthy weather, shooting into the wind. This is the only image I could salvage, all the others were covered in a mass of rain and seawater spots.

 

www.fluidr.com/photos/40629145@N02

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malham_Cove

  

Malham Cove is a limestone formation 0.6 miles (1 km) north of the village of Malham, North Yorkshire, England. The large, curved feature was formed by a waterfall carrying meltwater from glaciers at the end of the last Ice Age more than 12,000 years ago. Today it is a well-known beauty spot within the Yorkshire Dales National Park. A large limestone pavement is above the cove.

  

Geology

  

The cove was formed by a large Ice-age river that fell at this point as a cataract. The water drop was 80 m (260 ft) high and more than 300 m (980 ft) wide. The colossal amount of water flowing over the waterfall created the curved shape of the cove because the lip was more heavily eroded than the sides.

 

Today the water course is marked by a stream that flows out of Malham Tarn 1.5 mi (2.4 km) north of the cove. It becomes a subterranean stream at 'Water Sinks' about 1 mi (1.6 km) before the top of the cove. Another stream named Malham Beck emerges from a cave at the bottom of the cove. The two streams were once thought to be one and the same. However, experiments with dyes have shown that they are two separate waterways that go underground at different locations. Their paths cross without mixing behind the limestone cliff re-emerging a few miles apart. The experiments show that there is complex system of caves and tunnels within the limestone cliff. The system is estimated to be about 50,000 years old. Cave divers, entering the system through the cave at the base of the cove, have so far explored about 1 mi (1.6 km).[1]

 

The cave systems usually carry away any waters before they reach the fall; however, Malham Cove temporarily became a waterfall for what is believed to be the first time in centuries on 6 December 2015, after heavy rainfall from Storm Desmond.

  

History

  

The priest and noted antiquary, Thomas West described the cove in 1779 as, "This beautiful rock is like the age-tinted wall of a prodigious castle; the stone is very white, and from the ledges hang various shrubs and vegetables, which with the tints given it by the bog water. & c. gives it a variety that I never before saw so pleasing in a plain rock."[4]

 

On the west side of the 80 metre (260 foot) high cliff face are about 400 irregular stone steps: these form part of the route of the Pennine Way and lead to an uneven limestone pavement at the top.

 

Today the cove is very popular with climbers because of its number of climbing routes (many of which can be ascended in the rain). They include easy to hard traditional climbs as well as sport climbing. Due to the cliff's south face, it is a popular venue for rock climbing in winter, its aspect making it a sun trap; in summer, however, the rock face can become unbearably hot.[5]

  

Media appearances

  

The cove, along with nearby Gordale Scar, was featured in an episode of the BBC TV series Seven Natural Wonders as one of the natural wonders of Yorkshire.[6]

 

The Pavement was used as a shooting location for the 1992 film version of "Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights"[7]

 

The cove was also featured in the film Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Part 1) as one of the places Hermione and Harry travel to. The scenes were filmed in November 2009.[8]

 

The limestone pavement and general location of Malham featured in an episode of The Trip starring Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon which aired on BBC2 on 29 November 2010.[9]

 

The cove is the bridgehead of an alien invasion in Charles Stross’ 2016 novel The Nightmare Stacks.

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