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Nestinarka - a woman dancing on embers - oil on canvas, 2025, signed KAC25.
The dimensions of the painting are 11.81" / 30 cm by 15.75" / 40 cm.
Nestinar Dance - Dance on coals. Dance of redemption. A dance with which the nestinarka (nestinarite) pray for the forgiveness of the sins of all those present. The dancers pray for the recovery of the sick present.
www.tiktok.com/@danidim777/video/7103630118769233157?is_f...
Brig. Gen. John W. Heltzel, director of the Kentucky Department of Emergency Management
Kris Krüg - www.staticphotography.com
Trying out the MotoRokr S9 bluetooth stereo headphones Sprint sent out today. Works great with the Samsung Upstage, playing tunes from the Sprint cellular music store, as well as Pandora which works similarly as the music recommendation webapp in the phone. Pandora is amazing since it streams online music via EVDO.
The motorokr S9 pairs with the iPhone and my MacBook Pro, but does little until Apple implements A2DP support.
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www.paris.cl/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/productLP_10001_40...
Weltkrieg 1914-1918
Frauenkirchen serbenfriedhof (cemetery)
www.frauenkirchen.net/webapp/post.php?post=118210
Serben lager 1914-1918
derstandard.at/2000007511539/Allerheiligen-am-pannonische...
На плочи пише :
"На овом и околним пољима леже посмртни остаци хиљада српских интернираца заточених у аустрија за време првог светског рата "
"Од заборава их чува српски народ"
Auf der Speicherkarte geschrieben wird :
"Für diese und Umgebung liegen die Überreste von Tausenden von serbischen Internierten in Österreich festgenommen während des Ersten Weltkriegs"
"Vergessen sie hält serbische Volk"
On the memory boards is written :
"For this and surrounding areas lie the remains of thousands of Serbian internees detained in Austria during the First World War"
"Of forgetting them keeps Serbian people"
www.frauenkirchen.net/Spiritualit%C3%A4t+%7C+F%C3%BChlen/...
www.brettl.at/brettl/homepage/frame_buecher.htm
" Sie leben nicht mehr der Gegenwart, sondern der Zukunft zuliebe."
Das Kriegsgefangenenlager in Frauenkirchen ist eines der ältesten Lager der Monarchie, das bereits im September 1914 aufgebaut wurde. Waren zunächst russische Gefangene darin inhaftiert, so wurde das Lager zunehmend zu einem sog. "Serbenlager". Neben Kriegsgefangenen, ab 1916 waren auch italienische Offiziere untergebracht, hielt man von Beginn an auch verschleppte Zivilinternierte aus Serbien und Montenegro im Lager fest. Im Jänner 1915 befanden sich bereits 12.905 Gefangene im Lager Boldogasszony. Wegen des massiven Zustromes an Kriegsgefangenen musste das Lager zweimal erweitert werden und hatte ab 1916 einen Lagerstand von rund 30.000 Gefangenen, wobei sich rund 2/3 der Gefangenen außerhalb des Lagers auf Arbeitseinsatz befanden.
Die Errichtung der Lager erfolgte unter massivem Zeitdruck und finanziellen Einschränkungen, sodass es zu erheblichen Missständen kam. Mangelhafte hygienische Vorkehrungen und die massive Konzentration von Personen auf engstem Raum führten im Winter 1914/15 dazu, dass sich eine Flecktyphusepidemie rasch ausbreiten konnte, die in Frauenkirchen rund 4.000 Personen, beinahe 40% der Inhaftierten, das Leben kostete. Der Friedhof in Frauenkirchen ist bis heute erhalten geblieben und ist das letzte sichtbare Zeichen des Kriegsgefangenlagers
www.brettl.at/brettl/homepage/frame_buecher.htm
"They no longer live the present, but for the sake of the future."
The prisoner of war camp in churches woman is one of the oldest stock of the monarchy, which was already established in September 1914. While at first Russian prisoners detained therein, as the camp "Serbs camp" was increasingly called to a.. In addition to prisoners of war in 1916 Italian officers were housed, was held from the beginning also displaced civilian internees from Serbia and Montenegro in the camp established. In January 1915, there were already 12,905 prisoners in the camp Boldogasszony. Due to the massive influx of prisoners of war, the camp had to be extended twice and had since 1916 a stock level of around 30,000 prisoners, with about 2/3 of the prisoners were to work outside the camp.
The establishment of the camp took place under massive pressure of time and financial constraints, so that there was substantial adversities. Poor hygiene measures and the massive concentration of people in a confined space in the winter of 1914-15 led to the fact that a typhus epidemic could spread rapidly to around 4,000 people, nearly 40% of the prison, cost the lives of women in churches. The cemetery in women's churches is still preserved and is the last visible sign of the PoW camp
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
This photo has been used in the following blog(s):
www.getinfrontblogging.com/communication/7-signs-youre-no...
Excerpt from webapp.driftscape.com/map/2bd0cefe-e3a6-11eb-8000-bc1c5a8...:
Islington -The way we were Part 2- 1912
Hello, I am Priya Prabhu. “Islington The way we were” are a pair of murals named Part One and Part Two respectively on opposite walls as you can see, Part One is located on the side 4972 Dundas Street West behind you and Part Two is in front of you on the side of 4984 Dundas Street West.
Part Two of this mural is particularly fascinating. Did you know that this mural painted by John Kuna in 2006 is actually based on an early photograph of Islington around 1912?
The most striking of all is the Islington Hotel with its two-story veranda that would have stood on the north side of Dundas. It was originally built as a grocery store in 1829, and was later converted to a hotel in 1873. In 1910 it was owned by Clarence and Emily Nolan. It remained as a fixture in Islington until it was demolished in 1986. What a vast contrast from the shops that stand here today! Let us go back in time for a moment and imagine what it must have been like to stay at the Islington Hotel in those days.
To the east of the hotel is its large drive shed. This shed also had a ballroom of two storeys. A few neighbouring shops are also depicted in this mural. To the west of the hotel is James Pinchin’s grocery store. This store plot was later sold to William Clayton as a butcher shop in 1922. It successfully operated in Islington for three generations of this family.
On the south side of Dundas street, shown on the left of the mural, a team of men are working on the road. Islington was to be developed into a bustling neighbourhood and building good roads connecting to it was inevitable.
Just behind these men we can see what is called a ‘hay ladder’ most likely belonging to a local farmer. These hay ladders were used to transport hay from fields to barns.
This sepia toned mural is rather different from the other colourful murals in the Islington Village neighbourhood. One look at it and we might feel transported back to the 1900s. Now imagine walking on Dundas street at the Cordova or Burnhamthorpe intersection back in those days. What would you be buying? What would you possibly be wearing? How many of the neighbouring families would you have known? One can only imagine.
As seen from Ping Tom Park in Chicago's China Town. I posted a similar photo last year but this is a new version which I much prefer.
More info on this bridge from the Chicago Landmarks page.
I also wrote about this on my blog.
© Andy Marfia 2012
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.