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All along the 13th century the fortifications of Vide have been done and undone due to the dynastic dispute of King Dom Dinis with his brother, which owned these lands and had the pretension of becoming king, despite not being the first-born son of King Afonso III.
In 1279, Dom Dinis interpreted the fortification of the existing castle by his brother Prince Afonso Sanches as a covered operation to launch an assault to the crown, and departed with the royal troops to siege Castelo de Vide in 1281.
After solving the dispute, the fortifications previously built have been destroyed - a tower and several segments of walls.
Later, Dom Dinis permuted the lands owned by his brother for others away from the frontier, and assigned them to a noble he trusted to defend Portugal and his crown against Spain.
Since then, Dom Dinis ordered the reinforcement of the castle and the construction of a wall surrounding the town which gave the current name to the locality, Castelo de Vide (Castle of Vide).
The castle itself is located in a corner of the fortification complex and integrates the beautiful Medieval Borough.
Spotted Sandpiper (Actitis macularius) hunting for insect prey among barnacles on a rock by the seashore in the Scripps Coastal Reserve, La Jolla, California
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California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger fields questions from reports at the Utah Governor's Mansion. The Governator was in town to watch the guy in the background -- Utah Governor Jon Huntsman, Jr. -- add his state to the Western Region Climate Action Initiative.
Questions and Answers Note: Visit our bogger : creativeartssolutionfoundation.blogspot.com.ng/2017/07/ar.... To Post your Question and Answers, if you have any?
Riddle:
What can a MAN do 3
times a day but a
Woman does once in life?
I’m waiting for your answer.
Spin the riddle to see what your friend will say
Question A:
What is the best way in which people enrich themselves?
Pick any of this answers below by voting.
A. Hard work.
B. Property/Ritual
C. Politics/Political means
D. Religion
Question B:
What are the challenges or conflict you’ve face at work or personal experience just to mention a few and how you deal with it?
Express yourself in brief.
Political Opinions Note: Visit our bogger : creativeartssolutionfoundation.blogspot.com.ng/2017/07/ar... . To Post your Political Opinions , if you have any?
freedom of thought - the right to hold unpopular ideas
human right - (law) any basic right or freedom to which all human beings are entitled and in whose exercise a government may not interfere (including rights to life and liberty as well as freedom of thought and expression and equality before the law). ...........
Religious Belief. Note: Visit our Blogger : creativeartssolutionfoundation.blogspot.com.ng/2017/07/ar.... To Post your opinion's and personal encounter or challenges that you're experiencing if you have any?
Belief is the state of mind in which a person thinks something to be the case, with or without there being empirical evidence to prove that something is the case with factual certainty. Another way of defining belief sees it as a mental representation of an attitude positively oriented towards the likelihood of something being true.In the context of Ancient Greek thought, two related concepts were identified with regards to the concept of belief: pistis and doxa. Simplified, we may say that pistis refers to "trust" and "confidence", while doxa refers to "opinion" and "acceptance"
Find it on Instagram: Questions A: www.instagram.com/p/BX2adzEFIg1/
Riddle: www.instagram.com/p/BX2aVEOFmgc/
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Question Mark | Polygonia interrogationis | Wingspan: 2.25 to 3.0 in
Family: Nymphalidae | Subfamily: Nymphalinae | Tribe: Nymphalini
Small three colour lino reduction print with horned owl and text.
I rarely make reduction prints, and never work in oil-based inks, like we did in this class. Also, this was printed on an actual press, rather than with my poor arm and a Japanese bare
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Just another one of the beautiful species in the Butterfly House at Hershey Gardens. This species is quite common, I've had them in my yard this year but no good specimens to photograph.
This butterfly looked just like a fall leaf. He does have a question mark on him but it's rather faint.
Polygonia interrogationis. The common name comes from a mark on the wings (not visible here) which some people think looks like a question mark.
George Wyllie celebrations.Part of the series of projects taking place to celebrate his work in his 90th year this one is located at the timber ponds near Port Glasgow. georgewyllie.com/
I've tried in vain to clean my camera lens. Yet, starting today, this black dot is appearing on all my pictures. Can anyone give me advice? I haven't dropped the camera or exposed it to dirt . . .
Railways minister Suresh Prabhu being greeted by Governor ESL Narasimhan ahead of Centre for Transportation Research and Management's 15th National Seminar on "PPP and FDI in Indian Railways" at IRISET in Hyderabad on Monday. Express Photo by A Radhakrishna.
Although popular legend blames Napoleon and his troops during the French campaign in Egypt (1798-1801) for having shot the nose off the Great Sphinx, in fact this story just isn't true. I have yet to locate an original source for this myth. The idea that Napoleon was to blame for the Sphinx's missing nose dates at least to the beginning of the twentieth century.
One traveler to Egypt around the time of World War One wrote the following: "To take our photos sitting in front of the Sphinx on a camel was the aim of another. ...And so, repulsing the hordes of robbers on all sides, we came to the wonderful, inscrutable, worth-millions-of-pounds-to-authors Sphinx. The great riddle of the mysterious East. How many reams of rubbish have been written about this misshapen block of stone. Napoleon, a practical man, fired a few cannon balls at its face. High explosive shells were not invented in those days." [From: Sommers, Cecil. Temporary Crusaders. (London: John Lane, 1919) Chapter VI. "19th April."] Another book from about the same time (In the Footsteps of Napoleon (1915) by James Morgan, p 85) states "There is a tradition among the Arabs of the Pyramids that all the scars of time and the wounds of a hundred wars, which the Sphinx carries, were inflicted by Napoleon's soldiers, who used its mystifying and majestic countenance as a target. That, however, is only a legend for the tourist. Long before the discovery of gunpowder, the Arabs had laid iconoclastic hands on the beard of this god of the desert..." Though the Arab guides may have spread this tale, this myth has been perpetuated over the years by countless teachers the world over who have passed this bit of "history" on to their students