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Divinity Library. Faculty of Divinity. University of Cambridge.
Copyright: libraries@cambridge
Credit: Rachel Marsh
The Retrospectiva Art Opening in the Vanderbilt Divinity School Arts Room with the artist, Jairo Prado, his wife, Susan Prado, the Asst. Dir of the Religion and the Arts and Contemporary Culture, Dave Perkins. (Vanderbilt University / Steve Green)
The Wake Forest School of Divinity and the Office of the Chaplain celebrate the opening of the renovated Davis Chapel with a service of dedication on Thursday, September 24, 2015.
The Retrospectiva Art Opening in the Vanderbilt Divinity School Arts Room with the artist, Jairo Prado, his wife, Susan Prado, the Asst. Dir of the Religion and the Arts and Contemporary Culture, Dave Perkins. (Vanderbilt University / Steve Green)
This is a sexy long dress with pearls giving it a very sensual look. Along with pearls falling elegantly along with the material from the flower.
Includes appliers for:
Lolas tango
Mirage
Omega
Cute/Phat
Sking Brazilia
G. Inc Perfect body (uses omega appliers)
Ghetto Booty
Slink physique clothing applier
wowmeh appliers
Eve appliers hud pulpy and slim
I have an inworld shop.
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Static%20Beats/84/236/59
Marketplace store.
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/Sexy-Dreams-Divinity-gold-lo...
Struck by the magnificent colours of this madonna statue in the cidatel cathedral of Victoria, I had to take a picture.
Back in the village I grew up, a smaller madonna is the reason of a whole week of pelgrimage by the end of June. The local madonna is carried around in a procession on the closing Sunday.
SERIES: SPAIN
A modern tainted glass work at the church of Santa MarÃa del Mar in Barcelona, Spain.
My camera : Canon EOS 40D
My lens : Canon EF-S 17-85mm f/4-5.6 USM
My settings : 1/30s . f/8.0 . ISO 100 . 61 mm
Fun tonight at The Orient Social Garden
Visit this location at The Orient Social Garden in Second Life
The Temple of Hathor was first erected in the 1st century BC and then reconstructed in the 2nd century AD. It contained Neo-Punic inscriptions listing the 32 generous patrons who paid for the temple.
I was fascinated with these rock sculptures in Xian. There were many temples in Xian that were filled with these. Look at the amount of effort that goes into sculpting this, makes me think there was a hidden treasure inside each rock.
This was taken in Xian, in the "Big Goose" temple commemorating "Tong-Xan-Zhong", the monk who brought back Buddhist scriptures from India, and in fairy tale land, Monkey King's master.
There were many of these displayed throughout the garden of this temple. It was built with 7 stories high, coinciding with the Chinese proverb "Saving one person's life is worth more than erecting a 7-story temple". Everything in China is symbolic. The number "9" was reserved by the Emperor, so no building can be 9 stories high if you are not the King. The number "8" was claimed by Empress Wu, so the next number down was "7" which resulted in 7 storey-high temples. Incidentally, Empress Wu built an 8-storey high tower beside the Big Goose Temple to prove she was more superior than Tong (of course, we all know she was one of the most cunning women in history).
We were not allowed to take photos inside temples, so I had to settle for garden pictures. Big Goose Temple is definitely worth the visit if you are ever in Xian.