View allAll Photos Tagged Referencement

Reference: APAAME_20060911_FFR-0415

Photographer: Francesca Radcliffe

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works

leper graveyard, robben island, cape town

  

Robben Island

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robben Island shown within Western Cape

Location within Cape Town [show]

Coordinates:

 

33.806734°S 18.366222°ECoordinates:

 

33.806734°S 18.366222°E

CountrySouth Africa

ProvinceWestern Cape

MunicipalityCity of Cape Town

Area[1]

• Total5.18 km2 (2.00 sq mi)

Population (2011)[1]

• Total116

• Density22/km2 (58/sq mi)

Racial makeup (2011)[1]

• Black African60.3%

• Coloured23.3%

• White13.8%

• Other2.6%

First languages (2011)[1]

• Xhosa37.9%

• Afrikaans35.3%

• Zulu15.5%

• English7.8%

• Other3.4%

PO box7400

 

UNESCO World Heritage Site

TypeCultural

Criteriaiii, vi

Designated1999 (23rd session)

Reference no.916

State PartySouth Africa

RegionAfrica

 

Robben Island (Afrikaans: Robbeneiland) is an island in Table Bay, 6.9 km west of the coast of Bloubergstrand, Cape Town, South Africa. The name is Dutch for "seal island." Robben Island is roughly oval in shape, 3.3 km long north-south, and 1.9 km wide, with an area of 5.07 km².[2] It is flat and only a few metres above sea level, as a result of an ancient erosion event. Nobel Laureate and former President of South Africa Nelson Mandela was imprisoned there for 18 of the 27 years he served behind bars before the fall of apartheid. To date, three of the former inmates of Robben Island have gone on to become President of South Africa: Nelson Mandela, Kgalema Motlanthe,[3] and current President Jacob Zuma.

Robben Island is a South African National Heritage Site as well as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[4][5]

 

History[edit]

  

Robben Island as viewed from Table Mountain towards Saldanha Bay.

Since the end of the 17th century, Robben Island has been used for the isolation of mainly political prisoners. The Dutch settlers were the first to use Robben Island as a prison. Its first prisoner was probably Autshumato in the mid-17th century. Among its early permanent inhabitants were political leaders from various Dutch colonies, including Indonesia, and the leader of the mutiny on the slave ship Meermin.

After the British Royal Navy captured several Dutch East Indiamen at the battle of Saldanha Bay in 1781, a boat rowed out to meet the British warships. On board were the "kings of Ternate and Tidore, and the princes of the respective families". The Dutch had long held them on "Isle Robin", but then had moved them to Saldanha Bay.[6]

In 1806 the Scottish whaler John Murray opened a whaling station at a sheltered bay on the north-eastern shore of the island which became known as Murray's Bay, adjacent to the site of the present-day harbour named Murray's Bay Harbour which was constructed in 1939–40.[7][8]

After a failed uprising at Grahamstown in 1819, the fifth of the Xhosa Wars, the British colonial government sentenced African leader Makanda Nxele to life imprisonment on the island.[9] He drowned on the shores of Table Bay after escaping the prison.[10][11]

The island was also used as a leper colony and animal quarantine station.[12] Starting in 1845 lepers from the Hemel-en-Aarde (heaven and earth) leper colony near Caledon were moved to Robben Island when Hemel-en-Aarde was found unsuitable as a leper colony. Initially this was done on a voluntary basis and the lepers were free to leave the island if they so wished.[13] In April 1891 the cornerstones for 11 new buildings to house lepers were laid. After the introduction of the Leprosy Repression Act in May 1892 admission was no longer voluntary and the movement of the lepers was restricted. Prior to 1892 an average of about 25 lepers a year were admitted to Robben Island, but in 1892 that number rose to 338, and in 1893 a further 250 were admitted.[13]

During the Second World War the island was fortified and BL 9.2-inch guns and 6-inch guns were installed as part of the defences for Cape Town.

From 1961, Robben Island was used by the South African government as a prison for political prisoners and convicted criminals. In 1969 the Moturu Kramat, which is now a sacred site for Muslim pilgrimage on Robben Island, was built to commemorate Sayed Abdurahman Moturu, the Prince of Madura. Moturu, who was one of Cape Town's first imams, was exiled to the island in the mid-1740s. He died there in 1754. Muslim political prisoners would pay homage at the shrine before leaving the island.

The maximum security prison for political prisoners closed in 1991. The medium security prison for criminal prisoners was closed five years later.[14]

With the end of apartheid, the island has become a popular destination with global tourists. It is managed by Robben Island Museum (RIM); which operates the site as a living museum. In 1999 the island was declared a World Heritage Site. Every year thousands of visitors take the ferry from the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront in Cape Town for tours of the island and its former prison. Many of the guides are former prisoners. All land on the island is owned by the state of South Africa with the exception of the island church. It is open all year around, weather permitting.

 

Access to the island[edit]

Robben Island is accessible to visitors through tours that depart from Cape Town's waterfront. Tours depart three times a day and take about 3.5 hours, consiststing of a ferry trip to and from the island, and a tour of the various historical sites on the island that form part of the Robben Island Museum. These include the island graveyard, the disused lime quarry, Robert Sobukwe’s house, the Bluestone quarry, the army and navy bunkers, and the maximum security prison including Nelson Mandela’s cell.[15]

 

Maritime hazard[edit]

  

Dutch map of the island, from 1731.

Seagoing vessels must take great care navigating near Robben Island and nearby Whale Rock (it does not break the surface) as they pose a danger to shipping.[16] A prevailing rough Atlantic swell surrounds the offshore reefs and the island's jagged coastline. Stricken vessels driven onto rocks are quickly broken up by the powerful surf. There are a total of 31 known vessels that have been wrecked around the island.[17]

In 1990, a marine archaeology team from the University of Cape Town began Operation "Sea Eagle". It was an underwater survey that scanned 9 square nautical miles of seabed around Robben Island. The task was made particularly difficult by the strong currents and high waves that make sailing in these waters treacherous. Nevertheless, the group managed to find 24 vessels that had sank around Robben Island. Most wrecks were found in waters less than 10 metres (33 ft). The team concluded that poor weather, darkness and fog were the cause of the sinkings.[17]

Maritime wrecks around Robben Island and its surrounding waters include the 17th century Dutch East Indiaman ships, the Yeanger van Horne (1611), the Shaapejacht (1660), and the Dageraad (1694). Later 19th century wrecks include several British brigs including the Gondolier (1836) and the American clipper, A.H. Stevens (1866). In 1901 the mail steamer SS Tantallon Castle struck rocks off Robben Island in dense fog shortly after leaving Cape Town. After distress cannons were fired from the island, nearby vessels rushed to the rescue. All 120 passengers and crew were taken off the ship before it was broken apart in the relentless swell. A further 17 ships have been wrecked in the 20th century, including British, Spanish, Norwegian and Taiwanese vessels.

 

Robben Island lighthouse[edit]

Due to the maritime danger that Robben Island presents to shipping, Jan van Riebeeck, the first Dutch colonial administrator in Cape Town in the 1650s, ordered that huge bonfires were to be lit at night on top of Fire Hill, the highest point on the island (now Minto Hill). These were to warn VOC ships approaching the island.

In 1865 Robben Island lighthouse was completed on Minto Hill.[18] The cylindrical masonry tower, which has an attached lightkeepers house at its base, is 18 metres (59 ft) high with a lantern gallery at the top. In 1938 the lamp was converted to electricity. The lighthouse utilises a flashing lantern instead of a revolving lamp; it shines for a duration of 5 seconds every seven seconds. The 46,000 candela beam flashes white light away from Table Bay. It is visible up to 24 nautical miles (28 mi).[19] A secondary red light acts as a navigation aid for vessels sailing south southeast.

 

Wildlife and conservation[edit]

When the Dutch arrived in the area in 1652, the only large animals on the island were seals and birds, principally penguins. In 1654, the settlers released rabbits on the island to provide a ready source of meat for passing ships.[20]

The original colony of African penguins on the island was completely exterminated by 1800. However the modern day island is once again an important breeding area for the species after a new colony established itself there in 1983.[21] The colony grew to a size of ~16,000 individuals in 2004, before starting to decline in size again. As of 2015, this decline has been continuous (to a colony size of ~3,000 individuals) and mirrors that found at almost all other African penguin colonies. Its causes are still largely unclear and likely to vary between colonies, but at Robben Island are probably related to a diminishing of the food supply (sardines and anchovies) through competition by fisheries.[22] The penguins are easy to see close up in their natural habitat and are therefore a popular tourist attraction.

Around 1958, Lieutenant Peter Klerck, a naval officer serving on the island, introduced various animals. The following extract of an article, written by Michael Klerck who lived on the island from an early age, describes the fauna life there:[23]

My father, a naval officer at the time, with the sanction of Doctor Hey, director of Nature Conservation, turned an area into a nature reserve. A 'Noah's Ark' berthed in the harbour sometime in 1958. They stocked the island with tortoise, duck, geese, buck (which included Springbok, Eland, Steenbok, Bontebok and Fallow Deer), Ostrich and a few Wildebeest which did not last long. All except the fallow deer are indigenous to the Cape. Many animals are still there[24] including three species of tortoise—the most recently discovered in 1998—two Parrot Beaked specimens that have remained undetected until now. The leopard or mountain tortoises might have suspected the past terror; perhaps they had no intention of being a part of a future infamy, but they often attempted the swim back to the mainland (they are the only species in the world that can swim). Boats would lift them out of the sea in Table Bay and return them to us. None of the original 12 shipped over remain, and in 1995, four more were introduced—they seem to have more easily accepted their home as they are still residents. One resident brought across a large leopard tortoise discovered in a friend's garden in Newlands, Cape Town. He lived in our garden and grew big enough to climb over the wall and roam the island much like the sheep in Van Riebeeck's time. As children we were able to ride his great frame comfortably, as did some grown men. The buck and ostriches seemed equally happy and the ducks and Egyptian Geese were assigned a home in the old quarry, which had, some three hundred years before, supplied the dressed stone for the foundations of the Castle; at the time of my residence it bristled with fish. Recent reports in Cape Town newspapers show that a lack of upkeep, a lack of culling, and the proliferation of rabbits on the island has led to the total devastation of the wildlife; there remains today almost none of the animals my father brought over all those years ago; the rabbits themselves have laid the island waste, stripping it of almost all ground vegetation. It looks almost like a desert. A reporter from the broadcasting corporation told me recently that they found the carcass of the last Bontebok.

There may be 25,000 rabbits on the island. Humans are hunting and culling the rabbits to reduce their number.[

25]

List of former prisoners held at Robben Island[edit]

* Autshumato, one of the first activists against colonialism

* Dennis Brutus, former activist and poet

* Patrick Chamusso, former activist of the African National Congress

* Laloo Chiba, former accused at Little Rivonia Trial

* Eddie Daniels (political activist)

* Jerry Ekandjo, Namibian politician

* Nceba Faku, former Metro Mayor of Port Elizabeth

* Petrus Iilonga, Namibian trade unionist, activist and politician

* Ahmed Kathrada, former Rivonia Trialist and long-serving prisoner

* Koesaaij, Malagasy co-leader of the Meermin slave mutiny in February, 1766

* Langalibalele, The King of the Hlubi people, one of the first activists against colonialism[citation needed]

* John Kenneth Malatji, former activist and special forces of ANC - Tladi, Soweto

* Njongonkulu Ndungane,[26] later to become Archbishop of Cape Town

* Mosiuoa Lekota, imprisoned in 1974, President and Leader of the Congress of the People

* Mac Maharaj, former accused at Little Rivonia Trial

* Makana, one of the activists against colonialism

* Nelson Mandela, African National Congress leader and former President of South Africa (first black president)

* Gamzo Mandierd, activist

* Jeff Masemola, the first prisoner sentenced to life imprisonment in the apartheid era

* Amos Masondo, former Mayor of Johannesburg

* Massavana, Malagasy leader of the Meermin slave mutiny in February, 1766

* Michael Matsobane, leader of Young African Religious Movement. Sentenced at Bethal in 1979; released by PW Botha in 1987.

* Chief Maqoma, former chief who died on the island in 1873

* Govan Mbeki, father of former President of South Africa Thabo Mbeki. Govan was sentenced to life in 1963 but was released from Robben Island in 1987 by PW Botha

* Wilton Mkwayi, former accused at Little Rivonia Trial

* Murphy Morobe, Soweto Uprising student leader

* Dikgang Moseneke, Deputy Chief Justice of South Africa

* Sayed Adurohman Moturu, the Muslim Iman who was exiled on the island and died there in 1754

* Griffiths Mxenge, a South African Lawyer and member of the African National Congress

* Billy Nair, former Rivonia Trialist and ANC/SACP leader

* M. D. Naidoo, a South African lawyer and member of the African National Congress

* John ya Otto Nankudhu, Namibian liberation fighter[27]

* John Nkosi Serving life but released by PW Botha in 1987

* Samuel Sisulu Founder of South African Freedom Organisation

* Nongqawuse, the Xhosa prophetess responsible for the Cattle Killing

* Maqana Nxele, former Xhosa prophet who drowned while trying to escape

* John Nyathi Pokela, co-founder and former chairman of the PAC

* Joe Seremane, former chairperson of the Democratic Alliance.

* Tokyo Sexwale, businessman and aspirant leader of the African National Congress

* Gaus Shikomba, Namibian politician

* Walter Sisulu, former ANC Activist

* Stone Sizani, ANC Chief Whip

* Robert Sobukwe, former leader of the PAC

* Andimba Toivo ya Toivo, Namibian politician

* Sakaria Nashandi, Namibian politicia

* Jacob Zuma, President of South Africa and leader of the African National Congress

* Achmad Cassiem

* Setsiba Paul Mohohlo, former APLA unit commander

* Micheal Ludumo Buka, former ANC Activist

* Kgalema Motlanthe, South Africa's first Pedi president

* John Aifheli Thabo, an ANC political activist[citation needed]

* Ezra Mvuyisi Sigwela, an ANC political activist

* Xolani Casper Jonas, an ANC political activist

* Kwezi Nontsikelo, ANC political activist, Advisor to the Minister of Defence

 

Storyville, red light district of New Orleans, Lousiana

 

My first goal is to build te left house out of Lego.

Naoko (Volks Madoka/Shizu) on the SD16 body.

Reference librarian, Jean Hlady helping a patron at one of the public computers.

“Drawing from Reference” is a group exhibition of works from local and national artists that explore new contexts, methods, and materials related to the process of drawing. Participating Artists include: Angel Chen, Ed Gomez, Alicia Gorecki, Luis Hernandez, Jonathan Howard, Caroline Maxwell, Dominic Miller, Lauren Strohacker, Tessa Sutton, and Jen Urso. Curated by Jeff Chabot

This is meant to be used as anatomy reference or use in art. Please see my profile for usage rules!

 

Name: Jack

Species: Virginia Opossum

Sex: Male

Location from: Ohio

Other: An adult male that dropped dead in my barn when I lived in a rural area in Ohio. He was found in the morning, already beginning to decay, likely died early in the night before. He has evidence of a severe infection in his lower left jaw, and a broken right top canine with sign of beginning infection in the bone of the root canal of the same tooth. His incisors are missing post mortem.

 

Species Info: Opossums are known for their playing-dead characteristic, which helps preserve them when faced with a threat. They have an unusually short lifespan of up to 2 years (4 in captivity) and are omnivorous, preferring fruit, grain, insects, worms, and small animals like birds and snakes.

 

Opossum are native to Central and East North America and most of Mexico. They are not native to West US, but a small percentage have been introduced. Opossums do not do well in cold environments and thus are not found in the majority of Canada or North-West states.

Reference: APAAME_20060911_FFR-0413

Photographer: Francesca Radcliffe

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works

Third athlete rides similar straigt shape pursuit bars

Reference desk at Terrebonne Parish Library

Title: Title: Media - Television and Radio

Archives reference: ABHJ W3602 Box 10

Photographer: unidentified

Date: [1965]

collections.archives.govt.nz/web/arena/search#/?q=R2106587

 

On 31 March, 1965, The Thelonious Monk Quartet arrived in Christchurch for the first performance of their 1965 nationwide tour. Thelonious Monk, the ‘high priest of bebop’, is widely considered one of the jazz greats, alongside the likes of Billie Holiday, John Coltrane and Dizzy Gillespie.

 

Manuscripts held at the Alexander Turnbull Library provide some details about the planned tour, performances, and the players themselves. The quartet consisted of:

 

Thelonious Monk, piano

- Born October 10, 1917 in North Carolina

 

Larry Gales, bass

- Born March 25, 1937 in New York

 

Ben Riley, drums

- Born 17 July, in 1933 in Georgia

 

Charlie Rouse, tenor saxophone

- Born 6 April, 1924 in Washington, D.C.

 

Also in the travelling party was Mrs. Nellie Monk, as “Thelonious never travels anywhere without his wife”.

 

Concerts began on 1 April in Christchurch, traveled as far north as Auckland, and returned to the South Island finishing in Dunedin on 14 April. They included performances of the classic jazz standards ‘Off Minor’, ‘Straight, No Chaser’, and ‘Round Midnight’.

 

Pictured above, Monk is dressed in his signature style (pressed suit, hat and tie), possibly with Eddie Harris of the NZBC News Service.

 

The image was created by the Broadcasting Corporation of New Zealand and is from a photographic series of various subjects, including: personalities, disasters, industry, and sport.

 

For further enquiries please email Research.Archives@dia.govt.nz

 

For updates on our On This Day series and news from Archives New Zealand, follow us on Twitter www.twitter.com/ArchivesNZ

 

Caption information from text accompanying the photograph and Alexander Turnbull Library:

Thelonius Monk Quartet (1965) - Artists' papers. Ref: 83-012-060;

Thelonius Monk Quartet (1965) - Newspaper cuttings and photocopies of photos. Ref: 83-012-061.

natlib.govt.nz/

 

Material from Archives New Zealand Te Rua Mahara o te Kāwanatanga

 

This is meant to be used as anatomy reference or use in art. Please see my profile for usage rules!

 

Name: Jack

Species: Virginia Opossum

Sex: Male

Location from: Ohio

Other: An adult male that dropped dead in my barn when I lived in a rural area in Ohio. He was found in the morning, already beginning to decay, likely died early in the night before. He has evidence of a severe infection in his lower left jaw, and a broken right top canine with sign of beginning infection in the bone of the root canal of the same tooth. His incisors are missing post mortem.

 

Species Info: Opossums are known for their playing-dead characteristic, which helps preserve them when faced with a threat. They have an unusually short lifespan of up to 2 years (4 in captivity) and are omnivorous, preferring fruit, grain, insects, worms, and small animals like birds and snakes.

 

Opossum are native to Central and East North America and most of Mexico. They are not native to West US, but a small percentage have been introduced. Opossums do not do well in cold environments and thus are not found in the majority of Canada or North-West states.

This is meant to be used as anatomy reference or use in art. Please see my profile for usage rules!

 

Name: Jack

Species: Virginia Opossum

Sex: Male

Location from: Ohio

Other: An adult male that dropped dead in my barn when I lived in a rural area in Ohio. He was found in the morning, already beginning to decay, likely died early in the night before. He has evidence of a severe infection in his lower left jaw, and a broken right top canine with sign of beginning infection in the bone of the root canal of the same tooth. His incisors are missing post mortem.

 

Species Info: Opossums are known for their playing-dead characteristic, which helps preserve them when faced with a threat. They have an unusually short lifespan of up to 2 years (4 in captivity) and are omnivorous, preferring fruit, grain, insects, worms, and small animals like birds and snakes.

 

Opossum are native to Central and East North America and most of Mexico. They are not native to West US, but a small percentage have been introduced. Opossums do not do well in cold environments and thus are not found in the majority of Canada or North-West states.

I was given a pile of foam core and made a new work wall with it, covering it with printmaking paper so I can write notes as well as pin up fabric. So nice to combine the two!

We used a Microsoft Kinect and SCENECT to laser scan 3D models of various objects.

We're currently in the process of digitizing the Lear Siegler ADM-3A serial terminal.

BugBlue is monitoring the scan progress and giving instructions to MacSimski (the Kinect operator).

 

MacSimski built the rotating disc out of a motor, computer power supply, skateboard wheels and some wood. Both speed and direction can be adjusted.

 

Our IBM Office System/6 can be seen in the background.

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