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Rohtas, Museum. Shield of the Pashtun conqueror, Sher Shah Suri, or so they tell us...

Not a great season, but we did beat our two big rivals (Michigan State and that ohio university down south).

 

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The Rear View clearly shows the Life-Support and Communication Systems, as well as the Gatling-Gun Ammunition Boxes

CHIRK CASTLE WAS COMPLETED IN 1310 DURING THE REIGN OF THE CONQUERING EDWARD I TO SUBDUE THE LAST PRINCES OF WALES. BUILT ON AN OUTCROP ABOVE THE MEETING POINT OF THE RIVERS DEE AND CEIRIOG, THE IMPOSING CASTLE WAS A BROODING STATEMENT OF ENGLISH INTENT IN THESE DISPUTED WELSH LANDS.

WITH OVER 700 YEARS OF HISTORY, AND AS THE LAST CASTLE FROM THIS PERIOD STILL LIVED IN TODAY, CHIRK CASTLE'S MANY OCCUPANTS HAVE LEFT BEHIND LAVISH INTERIORS AND A BEAUTIFUL AND ECLECTIC COLLECTION. THE STATE ROOMS INCLUDE A 17TH-CENTURY LONG GALLERY, GRAND 18TH-CENTURY SALOON WITH RICH TAPESTRIES, SERVANTS' HALL, AND THE RESTORED EAST RANGE, CONTAINING THE LIBRARY AND 1920S STYLE BOW ROOM SHOWING OFF CHIRK CASTLE’S CONNECTIONS TO HIGH SOCIETY.

THE AWARD-WINNING GARDENS COVER 5.5 ACRES OF MANICURED LAWNS, CLIPPED YEWS, HERBACEOUS BORDERS, BEAUTIFUL ROSE, SHRUB AND ROCK GARDENS, AND THE WOODED PLEASURE GROUND – PERFECT FOR A STROLL. DON'T MISS THE TERRACE OVERLOOKING THE 18TH CENTURY HA-HA AT THE BOTTOM OF THE GARDEN, WITH STUNNING VIEWS OVER THE CHESHIRE AND SALOP PLAINS.

CHIRK CASTLE HAS OVER 480 ACRES OF ESTATE PARKLAND FOR YOU TO EXPLORE, WITH WILD PONIES, SHEEP, VETERAN TREES, AND A BEAUTIFULLY PRESERVED SECTION OF OFFA’S DYKE. THE ESTATE IS LOCATED WITHIN AN AREA OF OUTSTANDING NATURAL BEAUTY AND HAS ALSO BEEN DESIGNATED A SITE OF SPECIAL SCIENTIFIC INTEREST AS AN IMPORTANT HABITAT FOR RARE INVERTEBRATES, BATS, FUNGI, AND WILD FLOWERS.

CHIRK CASTLE DOVECOTE IS A BUILDING INTENDED TO HOUSE PIGEONS OR DOVES. DOVECOTES MAY BE SQUARE, CIRCULAR OR IN THIS CASE OCTAGONAL IN SHAPE, AND ARE ALMOST ALWAYS FREE STANDING STRUCTURES OR CAN ALSO BE BUILT INTO THE END OF A HOUSE OR BARN.

THIS BUILDING IS NOT USED FOR ITS ORIGINAL PURPOSE AND STOOD DERELICT FOR MANY YEARS, IT IS NOW PART OF THE CHIRK CASTLE'S PLANS TO RESORTE SOME OF THE LESSER BUILDINGS ON THE SITE.

 

Meet Todd. Todd IS the definition of artist.

 

Todd's a painter. Todd's a drummer, motorcyclist, cyclist, off-roader, truck enthusiast, louger, boarder, health nut, enthusiast, runner, and just pretty much else you can throw at him. Oh yeah, and he does all of this on roughly 4 hours of sleep a night.

 

If Todd can conquer all of these things, what can YOU conquer...on possibly slightly more sleep.

 

check out todd's work at www.solo-artist.net

 

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5dmk2

50mm f1.4

YN 560 + full power + full zoom

bright sunlight

vintage editing

texture added

Taken with a 20mm Quantaray.

 

This is a custom gaming computer that I built for a friend. The case is a Cougar Conquer, which looks awesome, but makes the build a bit more difficult. The pipes in the computer are part of the custom loop water cooling system; each one was bent by hand. The symbol on the right is a dokkeabi, a mischievous spirit in Korean legend. This build was challenging, but a lot of fun, and I'm very happy with how it turned out!

Pickering Castle is situated on the southern edge of the North York Moors on a limestone bluff which formerly overlooked the meeting point of two of the main highways through the north of England: the east-west route along the Vale of Pickering and the north-south route through Newton Dale to Malton. The monument consists of a single area which includes the site of the 11th century motte and bailey castle and the 13th century shell keep castle. The former was built by William the Conqueror either during or shortly after the 'harrying of the north' in 1069-70. It consisted of an earth motte crowned by a timber palisade, flanked on the north-west side by a crescent-shaped inner bailey and, on the south-east side, by a contemporary or slightly later outer bailey. The inner bailey measured c.120m by c.35m and was bounded to the north by a steep natural slope surmounted by a palisade and to the south by deep 15m wide ditches linked to the ditch encircling the motte. The outer bailey, which measured c.185m by c.25m, was protected on the north side by these same ditches and, on the south side, by a 5-8m high palisaded bank with an outer ditch. To the immediate east of the outer bailey ditch a further earthwork bank may have provided additional defence on this side; alternatively it may be part of a medieval defence system associated with the adjacent settlement. The motte is c.20m high and has a base diameter of c.60m. It is not yet clear whether this is the original 11th century motte or a later medieval reconstruction. In the latter case, the earlier motte will have been preserved inside the later while, in addition, the buried remains of a wide range of domestic and service buildings will survive within the open areas of the baileys.

 

The reconstruction of the castle in stone largely took place between 1180 and 1236. There were three main phases to the work at this time, the earliest involving the late 12th century replacement of the palisade round the inner bailey with a curtain wall and also the probable construction of the first shell keep on the motte. In its present form the shell keep dates to the early 13th century but the foundations of the earlier wall will survive underneath. The remains of the early curtain wall still stand round the inner bailey, surviving best where the curtain was incorporated into later buildings. The earliest buildings so far identified are the early or mid- 12th century Old Hall, a free-standing residence whose surviving foundations show it to have been half-timbered, and the Coleman Tower, constructed at the same time as the inner curtain and an integral part of it. The Coleman Tower guarded the entry across the inner bailey ditch and was also a prison; hence its earlier name, the King's Prison. It was square in plan and had its entrance on the first floor, the level underneath being where the prisoners were kept. On the east side are the remains of a small building and also a stairway leading onto an adjacent wall. This wall, built across the motte ditch in the late 12th century, replaced an earlier palisade and provided access to the summit of the motte. A similar and contemporary length survives on the opposite side of the motte, crossing the ditch and joining the curtain alongside the later Rosamund's Tower. The keep consisted of a rubble wall enclosing a roughly circular area 20m wide. A wall walk would have lined the inside of the wall above a series of garrison buildings. The foundations of some of these buildings survive but it is not certain whether they date to the 13th or the 14th century. In some cases they will have replaced earlier timber structures whose buried remains will also survive. Also of uncertain date are the foundations of a number of buildings in the inner bailey, including a service range to the south-west and a group of buildings referred to as the Constable's Place in the accounts of the years 1441-43. The latter were half-timbered and some sections predate the inner curtain though others were clearly added later. A survey of 1537 lists a number of distinct structures, including the Constable's hall, a kitchen, buttery and pantry, and quarters for staff and servants. At the southern end of the group were a number of storage buildings, one of which is believed to have been the wool house. Two additional service buildings lay adjacent to the Old Hall and are thought, originally, to have been contemporary with it. To the south of these is the chantry-chapel which dates from c.1227 and is still complete though in a much altered state.

 

To the west of this is the early 14th century New Hall, initially built as a residence for Countess Alice, wife of Earl Thomas of Lancaster. This was later used as a courthouse which gave rise to it being named King's Hall or Motte (moot) Hall in later surveys. It was a penticed or lean-to building of two storeys which utilised the inner curtain for its outer wall. The inner walls were timber-framed and, as much of the surviving stonework is late 12th or early 13th century, it clearly replaced an earlier building. The upper chamber or solar of the 14th century hall was an elaborate plastered room with a decorated fireplace. The last major programme of building dates to 1324-26 when Edward II ordered extensive works to be carried out which included replacing the whole of the timber palisade round the outer bailey with a stone wall. This outer curtain included three projecting towers, a gatehouse with a drawbridge over the outer ditch and a postern gate which led from the north-east arm of the inner bailey ditch, underneath Rosamund's Tower and out onto the rampart. A second gate and drawbridge, built at this time alongside the Coleman Tower, had fallen out of use by the 16th century and can now no longer be seen. The three projecting towers, named from north-east to south-west, Rosamund's Tower, Diate Hill Tower and Mill Tower, are all square in plan and all would have led out onto the wall-walk along the inside of the curtain though, in the case of the Mill Tower, the curtain to either side has not survived sufficiently well to demonstrate this. The ground-floor entrance to the Mill Tower consisted of two doors linked by a short passage, in which the first door opened inwards and the second outwards indicating that the tower was built as a prison, a role it took over from the Coleman Tower. North of the Mill Tower, the outer curtain crossed the inner bailey ditch which can also be seen outside the castle walls on the west and north sides. This section of the ditch was part of the original 11th century defences and was quarried out of the rock on which the castle was built.

 

A levelled area alongside the inner edge indicates that quarrying of the rock-face continued after the ditch was cut. The quarried stone would have gone towards the construction of at least some of the castle buildings. Aside from its strategic and administrative roles, Pickering Castle had two other functions: to guard and manage the large forest which lay adjacent and to provide a court and place of detention for those found guilty of offences against it, such as poaching, unauthorised clearance and the theft of timber. The forest was an extremely important economic resource during the Middle Ages and its particular importance at Pickering can be seen in the great use made of wood in the castle buildings and also, most significantly, its continuous use in the defences down to the 14th century. Also important to the castle economy during the 14th century was the sale of wool, and it also had responsibility for managing the royal stud created by Edward II in c.1322. Possibly the stables known to have been located against the outer curtain at this time, between the gatehouse and Diate Hill tower, were connected with this. According to the Domesday Book, in 1086 the manor of Pickering was held by the king, that is, William the Conqueror. The castle established at this time as part of the subjugation of the rebellious North remained in royal hands until 1267 when it was conferred with the title Earl of Lancaster on Edmund Crouchback, younger son of Henry III. Edmund's son Thomas succeeded to both title and estates in 1296 but was executed for treason by Edward II in 1322, whereupon his estates reverted to the king. Following the unsuccessful Scottish campaign of the same year, and the ensuing retaliatory attacks on the north of England by Robert the Bruce, Edward ordered the building works noted above, clearly intending to keep Pickering a royal castle. However, in 1326 his son Edward III confirmed Henry, the younger brother of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, in his brother's titles and estates, and, in 1351, the castle became part of the Duchy of Lancaster when that title was created. Upon the elevation of the House of Lancaster to the throne in 1399, and in 1413, the succession of Henry V, the Duchy reverted to the Crown and Pickering became a royal castle once again. It has been in State care since 1926. A number of features within the protected area are excluded from the scheduling. These include the ticket office/sales point and its paved base and steps, all English Heritage fixtures and fittings such as bins, bridges, safety grilles, signs, railings and interpretation boards, the surfaces of all modern steps and paths inside and outside the castle walls, lighting and the modern walls and fences round the outside edge of the protected area but the ground beneath all these features is included.

Death conquering love, 2019,

painting on electricity distribution cabinet,

Maria Hospital

Lapinlahdenkatu 16, Helsinki

artistmoberg.com/

A gig poster I designed back in October for one of my dad's friends to celebrate the 42nd Anniversary of his first band, Conqueror Worm opening two shows for The Cream in 1968. Not many people get to say they opened for Eric Clapton so my dad and I thought it'd be a cool idea to recreate a poster for him. No information was available about the artwork, so this was reproduced from a previous poster of Clapton's

Hopefully these guys will be available soon.. =)

He ripped the coconut head off the body lying in the sand. It's a long story.

Some say he's a douchebag war machine;

 

Some say he's a robot womaniser;

 

All we know is, he's a conqueror, with a touch of style...

November 15th, 2014

Club Relevant

Chesapeake, VA

WNYP OL-2 is about to cross Gardeau road again after conquering Keatting summit

I just finished this painting for my church. The painting is 26" x 19.5" on Arches hotpress 156lb watercolor paper. Painting was done using DaVinci Fluid Acrylic paint.

  

Murals on walls.

Pompeii was an ancient Roman town-city near modern Naples, in the Campania region of Italy, in the territory of the comune of Pompei. Pompeii, along with Herculaneum and many villas in the surrounding area, was mostly destroyed and buried under 4 to 6 m (13 to 20 ft) of volcanic ash and pumice in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.

Researchers believe that the town was founded in the seventh or sixth century BC by the Osci or Oscans. It came under the domination of Rome in the 4th century BC, and was conquered and became a Roman colony in 80 BC after it joined an unsuccessful rebellion against the Roman Republic. By the time of its destruction, 160 years later, its population was estimated at 11,000 people, and the city had a complex water system, an amphitheatre, gymnasium, and a port.

The eruption destroyed the city, killing its inhabitants and burying it under tons of ash. Evidence for the destruction originally came from a surviving letter by Pliny the Younger, who saw the eruption from a distance and described the death of his uncle Pliny the Elder, an admiral of the Roman fleet, who tried to rescue citizens. The site was lost for about 1,500 years until its initial rediscovery in 1599 and broader rediscovery almost 150 years later by Spanish engineer Rocque Joaquin de Alcubierre in 1748.[1] The objects that lay beneath the city have been preserved for centuries because of the lack of air and moisture. These artefacts provide an extraordinarily detailed insight into the life of a city during the Pax Romana. During the excavation, plaster was used to fill in the voids in the ash layers that once held human bodies. This allowed archaeologists to see the exact position the person was in when he or she died.

Pompeii has been a tourist destination for over 250 years. Today it has UNESCO World Heritage Site status and is one of the most popular tourist attractions in Italy, with approximately 2.5 million visitors every year.

Stage presentations and performances from major Conquer Entertainment artists like American Idol finalist, Phil Stacey, Justina and more at this years 2011 ma® World Conference. To learn more about Conquer Entertainment, visit their website.

Local band from Kissimmee, Florida

 

Check them out!

www.facebook.com/ConquerorConsumerFL

Lower right is the winch compartment, winches have been temporarily removed. Pack includes 27 litre Rolls Royce M120 fuel injected V12 petrol engine

 

www.rememuseum.org.uk/vehicles/trrv/vehconq.htm

Conquering Lion is dub/reggae/hardcore band from Tetovo (Macedonia) who started his opus in April 2007. In October 2009 the band release his first album (LP) simply titled as “I” for PMG Recordings on which you can hear 10 songs including the collaboration with the Jamaican artist Jah Clarity on the song “Jah Love”. Until now, besides the performances through Macedonia, the band has performed in Germany, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece, Romania and Kosovo. The second album was released on 26th of August 2011 and after that the band toured the Balkan from 1st to 25th of September. Until now Conquering Lion has performed with some bigger names in the reggae scene like Gentleman, Ras Zacharri, Donald Minott, Hornsman Coyote...At the moment the band is working on the upcoming third album and a video for the song "Fire" which came out as a single from the second album.

 

www.facebook.com/pages/Conquering-Lion/141737223754

myspace.com/conqueringli0n

www.last.fm/music/Conquering+Lion

November 15th, 2014

Club Relevant

Chesapeake, VA

Aaron stands on the summit of Joffre Peak while the sun sets on the never-ending horizon below.

Olympus E-P1

Super-Takumar 50mm f/1.4 w/ M42 adapter

almost asleep...

 

well this are my sets for day number six... we where supposedly going for a movie with eric last night but unfortunately a short noticed meeting was requested for the upcoming sfc qnc, so eric couldn't come so we rescheduled the plan. like always, nowhere to go so we stayed at home, watch tv and just sit on the sofa. around 10pm i went to check what giro and wifey was doing, and i found out that giro is ready to sleep. then i remembered that i need to shoot something for my project... hehhe almost forgot about it... grab my camera, did some test shots, then fire away. this was before giro went to sleep (supposedly), but because he is funned of posing. he opened his eyes widely and start to smile again... hahahah he slept at around 11:30pm... he's very pumped up after a few photos.

 

Project: "CONQUER MY CAMERA"

 

A challenge for myself if I can control my camera. For the next 30 days, I will post photos directly from my camera. No post processing only watermark. The rules for this project are listed below:

 

1. No Post Processing or whatever.

2. Only watermark is allowed to be added to each photo.

3. Atleast one photo a day should be uploaded.

4. Title for each photo will be "Project Conquer My Camera - Day No. - Photo No."

 

Settings:

 

Flash: no flash

Shutter: 1/15

Aperture: ƒ/2.8

ISO: 800

Treatment: Resize to my normal uploading resolution and watermark

Conqueror Mk 2 heavy tank of BAOR, Germany, circa 1957

Monument to the Conquerors of Space and Memorial Museum of Cosmonautics, Moscow, Russia

 

The Memorial Museum of Cosmonautics (also known as the Memorial Museum of Astronautics (in English) or Memorial Museum of Space Exploration) is a museum in Moscow, Russia, dedicated to space exploration. It is located within the base of the Monument to the Conquerors of Space in the north-east of the city. The museum contains a wide variety of Soviet and Russian space-related exhibits and models which explore the history of flight; astronomy; space exploration; space technology; and space in the arts. According to the Russian tourist board, the museum's collection holds approximately 85,000 different items and receives approximately 300,000 visitors yearly

 

Samarkand is a city in southeastern Uzbekistan and among the oldest continuously inhabited cities in Central Asia. Samarkand is the capital of the Samarkand Region and a district-level city, that includes the urban-type settlements Kimyogarlar, Farhod and Khishrav. With 551,700 inhabitants (2021)] it is the third-largest city in Uzbekistan.

 

There is evidence of human activity in the area of the city dating from the late Paleolithic Era. Though there is no direct evidence of when Samarkand was founded, several theories propose that it was founded between the 8th and 7th centuries BC. Prospering from its location on the Silk Road between China, Persia and Europe, at times Samarkand was one of the largest cities in Central Asia, and was an important city of the empires of Greater Iran. By the time of the Persian Achaemenid Empire, it was the capital of the Sogdian satrapy. The city was conquered by Alexander the Great in 329 BC, when it was known as Markanda, which was rendered in Greek as Μαράκανδα. The city was ruled by a succession of Iranian and Turkic rulers until it was conquered by the Mongols under Genghis Khan in 1220.

 

The city is noted as a centre of Islamic scholarly study and the birthplace of the Timurid Renaissance. In the 14th century, Timur made it the capital of his empire and the site of his mausoleum, the Gur-e Amir. The Bibi-Khanym Mosque, rebuilt during the Soviet era, remains one of the city's most notable landmarks. Samarkand's Registan square was the city's ancient centre and is bounded by three monumental religious buildings. The city has carefully preserved the traditions of ancient crafts: embroidery, goldwork, silk weaving, copper engraving, ceramics, wood carving, and wood painting. In 2001, UNESCO added the city to its World Heritage List as Samarkand – Crossroads of Cultures.

 

Modern Samarkand is divided into two parts: the old city, which includes historical monuments, shops, and old private houses; and the new city, which was developed during the days of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union and includes administrative buildings along with cultural centres and educational institutions. On 15 and 16 September 2022, the city hosted the 2022 SCO summit.

 

Samarkand has a multicultural and plurilingual history that was significantly modified by the process of national delimitation in Central Asia. Many inhabitants of the city are native or bilingual speakers of the Tajik language, whereas Uzbek is the official language and Russian is also widely used in the public sphere, as per Uzbekistan's language policy.

Like a conqueror raising its flag against a defeated foe, Sterling Bay's "Lincoln Yards" banners are seen at the former site of the A. Finkl Steel Mill. Well Finkl isn't really "vanquished" as the company did move to a newer facility on Chicago;'s South Side (and more importantly kept its jobs within the city).

 

I'm all for progress yet with the demolition of the former Finkl Steel Plant, I think a vast amount of the neighborhood's history was ripped away. Will the area be overbuilt with McCondos devoid of any real character (as what seems to be happening in other parts of the city)?

 

Below are two very good articles. Apparantly there had been proposals to keep some of the Finkl buildings in adaptive re-use.

 

beltmag.com/manufacturing-consent-chicagos-oldest-steel-m...

 

preservationchicago.org/FinklSteel.pdf

  

fears are aspects of ourselves us to measure our growth~ the fears you conquer... battle against ... or

just admit that to having ... help you become an updated version of yourself...

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