View allAll Photos Tagged URLs
These capitals - the Capital with Acanthus and Crosses and the Engaged Capital with Windblown Acanthus - may have been found in Northern Syria and presumably come from a large and important church. Both capitals are decorated with leaves of acanthus, a fleshy plant with jagged leaves native to the Mediterranean area. One capital is symmetrical with crosses in its ornament, the other is asymmetrical and gives the impression of windblown leaves.
Byzantium, Northern Syria, Byzantine period, 5th century
limestone
Overall: 53.4 x 75 x 76.2 cm (21 x 29 1/2 x 30 in.)
John L. Severance Fund
TSU SURF/ TAY ROC VS K SHINE/ DNA SMACK/ URL REACTIONS battledomination.com/tsu-surf-tay-roc-vs-k-shine-dna-smac...
These eight woodcuts (1959.99.8-15) progress from Gabriel’s announcement to Mary that she would bear the Son of God, to the events of her early motherhood and beyond. This included the joy of sharing her pregnancy with her cousin Elizabeth, Jesus’s birth, and the subsequent arrival of the magi. After Jesus’s circumcision and presentation at the temple the Holy Family fled to Egypt to avoid Herod and stayed there for several years. The seemingly out of place last scene shows a glimpse of their daily life in Egypt as Joseph continues his carpentry and Mary spins wool. The Holy Family is surrounded by angels and helpful putti and are blessed by God the Father and the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove overhead.
Germany, early 16th Century
woodcut
Dudley P. Allen Fund
CHRISTY-FLORIST94503374網誌一覽Background背景stage婚嫁EVENT場所裝飾POSTER婚慶Idea 宴會婚禮場地禮堂BANNER結婚FoamBoard大型噴畫style場合PARTY擺酒宴會DECO香港HK婚宴構思統籌晚會GARPHIC網頁|TRACKBACK_URL_FOR THIS POSTS佈置網誌一覽蘼鮮花批發及專業婚禮場地佈置設計公司Since1989WHATSAPP//TEL94503374地址香港九龍尖沙咀漆咸道南45至51號其士大廈尖東堡商場地庫B65舖 masterwin@ymail.com
http//www.flickr.com/photos/94503374/
//blog.xuite.net/wedding_decorations/hkblog
http//www.weshare.hk/94503374decoration
http//christyflorist.tumblr.com/
http//eventdecoration.pixnet.net/blog
http//plus.google.com/106737217008195886143
//youtu.be/W1AXoqcKAZA //
youtu.be/VNilzfUuWwQ?t=1m49s
www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0lR1RKfTcw
www.flickr.com/photos/wedding-decoration
eventdecoration.pixnet.net/blog/
//printing-style.blogspot.hk/
. condition. If you experience palpitations sign, you should report this to your healthcare provide. r People who can feel their heartbeat, or flutter, may be experiencing of a serious palpitations. This may be due to stress, anxiety, medications, or it may be a
heart
Project URL: www.wibwabweb
Client: arrowquick.com
© All rights reserved
Any reproduction or non-authorised distribution of all or parts of this work is prohibited.
URL: www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWDFzsq3rbI
LOVE FROM THE BOTTOM OF MY HEART
I fly like a bird
to be where you are,
to spend just an evening
in your place afar.
Beautiful music
and exquisite dinner -
never has love been
quite so divine!
But soon I must leave
so kiss me farewell,
the last dance is over
as love stories tell.
I'll never forget
the magic of you,
as I'm flying back home
OH! are you coming too?
Beautiful romance
it's love on the wing,
never has true love
made my heart and soul sing.
~ MODELA AKA JULIET ~
The vast number of surviving Byzantine coins attests to the level of trade across the empire. Controlled and supervised by the emperor, the producers of coins took care to represent his authority and reflect his stature. Talented artists were recruited to engrave the dies (molds) used for the striking of coins. Emperors increasingly came to include their heirs and co-emperors on their coinage, as well as other family members or even earlier rulers. Coins were recognized, then as now, as small, portable works of art. With their inscriptions and images, Byzantine coins provide valuable documentation of historical events and a record of the physical appearance of the emperors. The coins shown here include the solidus, the basic gold coin of 24 karats; the tremissis, a gold coin of one-third the weight and value of the solidus; and the nomisma, which in the 10th century replaced the solidus as the standard gold coin.
Byzantium, Constantinople, late 7th-early 8th century
gold
Diameter: 2 cm (13/16 in.)
Gift of William Mathewson Milliken, in memory of his father Thomas Kennedy Milliken