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Leaded lights such as this used to be considered very prestigious about these parts at one time.Any housewife with leaded lights in her front window could at least have pretensions to being middle-class, or "posh." These leaded lights are in a pub, and I'd make a quizz of it if it weren't for the knowledge that somebody would get it right within seconds of me posting the picture. I've seen a lot of people in this pub, in fact, you never know who you'll meet in it.
I think I managed to use 14 weights in all. These shots were taken nearly a year after I did the mod. Everything looks fine but as I was putting it back together the three weights on the left side of the mouse fell off. I would suggest lightly sanding the surface of the plastic so the hotglue can get a good grip.
Heidi Anksorus introduces participants to various dosage forms. LEAD Program 2013, high school students.
A series of pictures showing the stripping down and examining of an extension lead. It was 30m long and made using some rubber insulated cable manufactured some time before the mid 1970s. The cable cross sectional area was circa 0.75mm^2. Part way along there was a taped repair.
The plug was relatively modern as it carried a WEEE symbol.
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1800 532 326
leadconveyancing.com.au/victoria/conveyancing-frankston/
info@leadconveyancing.com.au
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The guy running the produce stand was making these. As my dad so unfortunately found out when he picked one up, they were very fresh and very hot!
Lead me on, lead me on
To a place where the river runs
Into Your keeping
Lead me on, lead me on
The awaited deliverance comforts the seeking
Lead on
-Bethany Dillon
Canyonlike streets lead south from Plaza de la Corredera to the BalcĂłn de Zabaleta. This little mirador has stunning views over the southern part of town and up to the Castillo de la Yedra and mountains beyond.
The Castle
The Yedra Castle is an ancient defensive enclave located in the Spanish municipality of Cazorla. It is located at the foot of the Salvatierra hill, on the Cerezuelo River, in the province of Jaén Andalusia, Spain. It is a construction that dates back to the Berber period, although it was finished as we know it today by the Castilians. From its enclave, at 831 meters above sea level, the city of Cazorla and its surroundings can be seen.
In its architecture, several Muslim features can be observed, although over the centuries the Christians finished giving it its definitive form, so the Gothic style predominates.
Located at 850 meters above sea level, south of the municipality and the Cazorla River, this Castle, called Yedra or Las Cuatro Esquinas, is well preserved, and three successive areas can be distinguished in it; The citadel, the enclosure and the courtyard.
Structures
The citadel occupies the most prominent place. It includes the keep and the small courtyard that surrounds it. This small enclosure is in keeping with the shape that supports it. It is accessed through a tortuous and curved passage, almost a postern that would also serve to facilitate the watering of the neighbouring fountain.
The intermediate enclosure is embedded in the courtyard. This is easily divisible in turn into two independent courtyards. The entrance to the enclosure that leads to the citadel is especially tortuous, narrow and twisted, with a ramp and flights of stairs. The walls of the citadel are of regular masonry. The walls of the enclosure are in some sectors of stone and rubble and in others of adobe wall. The courtyard is partially destroyed. The remains of its walls show that they are of adobe wall to which some ashlar towers were added in later times.
The most notable feature of the castle is its keep, which houses a cistern in the lower area and three superimposed rooms. The building has a square floor plan with dimensions of thirteen metres and forty centimetres on each side at the base, which is reduced to thirteen metres at the upper parapet. On the south-east side the tower reaches a height of thirty metres and fifty centimetres. On the ground floor the walls are four metres thick.
Another interesting feature is the gate to the castle grounds, which opens onto the albacara. It is made of masonry framed with ashlars and brick repairs. The entrance is a pointed horseshoe arch covered by a semicircular relieving arch on which the coat of arms of Sandoval y Rojas, archbishop, and a date: 1606, appear.
History
The Castle of Yedra has caused some confusion in the questions of its dating. Three construction stages can be distinguished.
First: Muslim (Andalusian), probably from the 11th or 12th century. A rubble enclosure that housed the small population of the place within the walls and would correspond to what is known as the albacara.
Second: correspondng to the strengthening works undertaken by the Christian conquerors in the second half of the 12th century.
Third. During the pontificate of Don Pedro Tenorio, between 1357 and 1399 the layout of the castle was radically altered. In the upper part he arranged the small citadel with the keep. Other reinforcements would be the ashlar towers adapted to the albacara.
It is also worth noting that ceramic elements appear in the place that show an occupation from the Roman period, of which there are no visible structures, although there are ceramic elements.
The reference to the year 1606 that appears on the door of the Castle enclosure that opens onto the albacara, must correspond to the date of the realization of certain repairs in the fortress.
The Yedra Castle was acquired by virtue of Decree 1427/72 of May 10 (BOE. No. 136 of June 7, 1972) by which the works and services to be carried out were declared to be of public utility. To achieve this purpose, the acquisition by expropriation of said castle was authorized, which at that time was property of the "MarĂn GarcĂa" Foundation of the Mercedarian Sisters of Charity.
Later and by Decree 337/73 of December 23 (B.O.E. No. 21 of January 25, 1973), the "Alto Guadalquivir" Museum of Arts and Customs was created in Cazorla. It consists of two very different parts: History Section and Arts and Customs Section.