View allAll Photos Tagged malate
Our first long drive after contracting a near-fatal Covid infection brought us to our favorite spot along Manila Bay: Harbor Square in Malate, Manila.
Patrona de los Infantes y Mujeres Embarazadas
may sign . . . .
I should go to Malate impromptu!
My Interest in Santos intensified when i first saw her.... 8 years ago....
Jeepneys are iconic Filipino minibuses, born from WWII surplus U.S. jeeps. Customized with bright colors and local flair, they became vital public transport across the country. Privately owned and low-cost, jeepneys serve millions daily. While they symbolize Filipino creativity and culture, they also face challenges as the government pushes for modernization to address pollution and safety concerns.
Model : Mai
Location: Malate
strobist info: 430EX with diffuser 1/8 power, top
Expore Frontpage! Thanks jonnoj for the screenshot!! :D also featured in interestingness page
Taken from roxas blvd malate, manila. The sun just hide from the dark clouds. This is my 2nd attempt of taking the beautiful sunset of manila bay. At mid day the temp is around 37 deg c while in the late afternoon the white clouds turned to dark then the rain falls. I'm so frustrated...... The effect of global warming. Can't believe it, rainy days in summer?
A young man peddles his tricycle pineapple business along the streets of Malate in search of customers. Filter textures added for the grunge effect.
MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL MY FLICKR FRIENDS AND CONTACTS!!!
your support througout my ordeal this year has been so important.
outtake from our previous malate shoot.
FP May 27, 2009! Thanks bmugzyj for the Screenshot!
Thanks Friends!!
"It's not far to never never land
No reason to pretend
And if the wind is right you can find the joy
Of innocence again
The canvas can do miracles
Just you wait and see
Believe me."
Christopher Cross
In Lima's Parque de las Leyendas there's so much Fauna and Flora and also a great regard for fine naturalists such as Celestino Kalinowski (1924-1986) - a great diaramist - and a linguist-anthropologist such as Ernst Wilhelm Middendorf (1830-1908) - a deep-digging scholar of Peruvian languages to both of whom small but delightful museums here are devoted, that it would take a book or two to adquately tell you about all of this.
So all I'll do - not to tax your patience - is tell you that this Tufted Airplant (see inset) has found an interesting way to cope with the arid climates in which it grows. During the day it closes its stomata so that water evaporation is brought back to a minimum. But that doesn't allow either for CO2 to enter the plant, necessary for photosynthesis. So when the stomata open up at night, CO2 enters and forms a kind of chemical bond (an acid malate) in its cells. During the day that acid is transported to the chloroplasts and there converted back to CO2, and photosynthesis - the plant's life, in fact - is carried on. Wow!
Four Filipino men paint a corregated metal room of an eight-story building in Malate, Philippines, wearing sandals and with only one rope for safety.
Santa Juana de Cuza
Saint Joanna, the Myrrh-bearer
Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady on Thorns (Aranzazu)
Municipality of San Mateo
Province of Rizal
Philippines
Grand Lenten Exhibit
Hermandad de la Sagrada Pasion
Harisson Plaza Annex
Malate, Manila
Philippines
February 08 to 17, 2008
Special thanks to:
Atty. Oliver Magtanong
Francis Santos
Jomai Josef
Kuya Puti dela Paz
About SAINT JOANNA
Venerated in:
Roman Catholicism
*Especially venerated by the Jesuits
Orthodox and Eastern Christianity
Lutheran
Anglicanism
Canonized: Pre-Congregation
Feast:
Roman Catholic: May 24
Lutheran: August 03
Orthodox: June 27
Eastern Catholic: 3rd Sunday of Pascha
Symbol: Lamb, Ointment box
Derivatives: St. Jessica, St. Jennifer.
Joanna was one of the women associated with the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth, often considered to be one of the disciples. In the Bible, she is one of the women recorded in the Gospel of Luke as accompanying Jesus and the twelve: "Mary, called Magdalene, ... and Joanna the wife of Herod's steward Chuza, and Susanna, and many others, who provided for them out of their resources" (Luke 8:2-3).
Joanna is also among the women who went to prepare Jesus' body in Luke's account of the Resurrection, and who later told the apostles and other disciples about the empty tomb and words of the "two men in dazzling clothes".
It is said that she has given the head of St. John the Baptist an honorable burial.
Both Richard J. Bauckham and Ben Witherington III conclude that the disciple Joanna is the same woman as the Christian Junia mentioned by Paul in his Epistle to the Romans (Romans 16:7).
She is honoured as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church on the "Sunday of the Myrrhbearers", which is two Sundays after Pascha (Easter), and in the Roman Catholic Church on May 24. She is commemorated in the Calendar of Saints of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod on August 3 together with Mary, the Mother of James and Salome.
Joanna in Literature: Joanna was a secondary character in Margaret George’s 2002 novel Mary, Called Magdalene. In the novel, Joanna, cast from Herod’s household by Chuza for being possessed, is healed by Jesus in Capernaum. She then joins the other disciples. She is the second woman, after Mary, and becomes her friend.
Joanna is the main character in Mary Rourke's 2006 novel Two Women of Galilee. In Rourke's telling, Joanna is the daughter of a family that had become Hellenized and ceased to practice Judaism as they obtained a privileged position in the court of Herod. Mary is Joanna's long-lost cousin from a branch of the family that was still observant. When they meet they become close friends. Joanna meets Jesus through her friendship with Mary and he heals her of tuberculosis. The story centers on the friendship of Joanna and Mary, retelling events from the Gospel from the women's point of view.
Reference:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Joanna
The Manila Hotel is a 500-room, five star hotel in Manila, Philippines, located in the heart of the Manila Bay area. The Manila Hotel is the oldest premiere hotel in the Philippines, built in 1909 to rival Malacañang Palace, where the Philippine president now lives, and opened in 1912.It was built on 3.5 hectares (376,736.9 sq ft) of land along Roxas Boulevard. It was the residence of General Douglas MacArthur from 1935 to 1941.
On January 17, 2008, at Number One Rizal Park, the Manila Hotel Tent City's blessing and grand opening was held at 5:00 p.m. Its conference halls seat 7,000 guests, and it will accommodate another 2,500 guests, for wedding receptions, anniversaries, conventions, and exhibitions.
The hotel contains the offices of several foreign news organizations, including The New York Times.It has hosted numerous historical persons and celebrities, including authors Ernest Hemingway and James A. Michener, U.S. President John F. Kennedy, The Beatles, King of Pop Michael Jackson, Actors Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and John Wayne, publisher Henry Luce, entertainer Sammy Davis, Jr., Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden, and many various world leaders
Santa Juana de Cuza
Saint Joanna, the Myrrh-bearer
Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady on Thorns (Aranzazu)
Municipality of San Mateo
Province of Rizal
Philippines
Grand Lenten Exhibit
Hermandad de la Sagrada Pasion
Harisson Plaza Annex
Malate, Manila
Philippines
February 08 to 17, 2008
Special thanks to:
Atty. Oliver Magtanong
Francis Santos
Jomai Josef
Kuya Puti dela Paz
About SAINT JOANNA
Venerated in:
Roman Catholicism
*Especially venerated by the Jesuits
Orthodox and Eastern Christianity
Lutheran
Anglicanism
Canonized: Pre-Congregation
Feast:
Roman Catholic: May 24
Lutheran: August 03
Orthodox: June 27
Eastern Catholic: 3rd Sunday of Pascha
Symbol: Lamb, Ointment box
Derivatives: St. Jessica, St. Jennifer.
Joanna was one of the women associated with the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth, often considered to be one of the disciples. In the Bible, she is one of the women recorded in the Gospel of Luke as accompanying Jesus and the twelve: "Mary, called Magdalene, ... and Joanna the wife of Herod's steward Chuza, and Susanna, and many others, who provided for them out of their resources" (Luke 8:2-3).
Joanna is also among the women who went to prepare Jesus' body in Luke's account of the Resurrection, and who later told the apostles and other disciples about the empty tomb and words of the "two men in dazzling clothes".
It is said that she has given the head of St. John the Baptist an honorable burial.
Both Richard J. Bauckham and Ben Witherington III conclude that the disciple Joanna is the same woman as the Christian Junia mentioned by Paul in his Epistle to the Romans (Romans 16:7).
She is honoured as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church on the "Sunday of the Myrrhbearers", which is two Sundays after Pascha (Easter), and in the Roman Catholic Church on May 24. She is commemorated in the Calendar of Saints of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod on August 3 together with Mary, the Mother of James and Salome.
Joanna in Literature: Joanna was a secondary character in Margaret George’s 2002 novel Mary, Called Magdalene. In the novel, Joanna, cast from Herod’s household by Chuza for being possessed, is healed by Jesus in Capernaum. She then joins the other disciples. She is the second woman, after Mary, and becomes her friend.
Joanna is the main character in Mary Rourke's 2006 novel Two Women of Galilee. In Rourke's telling, Joanna is the daughter of a family that had become Hellenized and ceased to practice Judaism as they obtained a privileged position in the court of Herod. Mary is Joanna's long-lost cousin from a branch of the family that was still observant. When they meet they become close friends. Joanna meets Jesus through her friendship with Mary and he heals her of tuberculosis. The story centers on the friendship of Joanna and Mary, retelling events from the Gospel from the women's point of view.
Reference:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Joanna
Santa Juana de Cuza
Saint Joanna, the Myrrh-bearer
Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady on Thorns (Aranzazu)
Municipality of San Mateo
Province of Rizal
Philippines
Grand Lenten Exhibit
Hermandad de la Sagrada Pasion
Harisson Plaza Annex
Malate, Manila
Philippines
February 08 to 17, 2008
Special thanks to:
Atty. Oliver Magtanong
Francis Santos
Jomai Josef
Kuya Puti dela Paz
About SAINT JOANNA
Venerated in:
Roman Catholicism
*Especially venerated by the Jesuits
Orthodox and Eastern Christianity
Lutheran
Anglicanism
Canonized: Pre-Congregation
Feast:
Roman Catholic: May 24
Lutheran: August 03
Orthodox: June 27
Eastern Catholic: 3rd Sunday of Pascha
Symbol: Lamb, Ointment box
Derivatives: St. Jessica, St. Jennifer.
Joanna was one of the women associated with the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth, often considered to be one of the disciples. In the Bible, she is one of the women recorded in the Gospel of Luke as accompanying Jesus and the twelve: "Mary, called Magdalene, ... and Joanna the wife of Herod's steward Chuza, and Susanna, and many others, who provided for them out of their resources" (Luke 8:2-3).
Joanna is also among the women who went to prepare Jesus' body in Luke's account of the Resurrection, and who later told the apostles and other disciples about the empty tomb and words of the "two men in dazzling clothes".
It is said that she has given the head of St. John the Baptist an honorable burial.
Both Richard J. Bauckham and Ben Witherington III conclude that the disciple Joanna is the same woman as the Christian Junia mentioned by Paul in his Epistle to the Romans (Romans 16:7).
She is honoured as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church on the "Sunday of the Myrrhbearers", which is two Sundays after Pascha (Easter), and in the Roman Catholic Church on May 24. She is commemorated in the Calendar of Saints of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod on August 3 together with Mary, the Mother of James and Salome.
Joanna in Literature: Joanna was a secondary character in Margaret George’s 2002 novel Mary, Called Magdalene. In the novel, Joanna, cast from Herod’s household by Chuza for being possessed, is healed by Jesus in Capernaum. She then joins the other disciples. She is the second woman, after Mary, and becomes her friend.
Joanna is the main character in Mary Rourke's 2006 novel Two Women of Galilee. In Rourke's telling, Joanna is the daughter of a family that had become Hellenized and ceased to practice Judaism as they obtained a privileged position in the court of Herod. Mary is Joanna's long-lost cousin from a branch of the family that was still observant. When they meet they become close friends. Joanna meets Jesus through her friendship with Mary and he heals her of tuberculosis. The story centers on the friendship of Joanna and Mary, retelling events from the Gospel from the women's point of view.
Reference:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Joanna
Santa Juana de Cuza
Saint Joanna, the Myrrh-bearer
Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady on Thorns (Aranzazu)
Municipality of San Mateo
Province of Rizal
Philippines
Grand Lenten Exhibit
Hermandad de la Sagrada Pasion
Harisson Plaza Annex
Malate, Manila
Philippines
February 08 to 17, 2008
Special thanks to:
Atty. Oliver Magtanong
Francis Santos
Jomai Josef
Kuya Puti dela Paz
About SAINT JOANNA
Venerated in:
Roman Catholicism
*Especially venerated by the Jesuits
Orthodox and Eastern Christianity
Lutheran
Anglicanism
Canonized: Pre-Congregation
Feast:
Roman Catholic: May 24
Lutheran: August 03
Orthodox: June 27
Eastern Catholic: 3rd Sunday of Pascha
Symbol: Lamb, Ointment box
Derivatives: St. Jessica, St. Jennifer.
Joanna was one of the women associated with the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth, often considered to be one of the disciples. In the Bible, she is one of the women recorded in the Gospel of Luke as accompanying Jesus and the twelve: "Mary, called Magdalene, ... and Joanna the wife of Herod's steward Chuza, and Susanna, and many others, who provided for them out of their resources" (Luke 8:2-3).
Joanna is also among the women who went to prepare Jesus' body in Luke's account of the Resurrection, and who later told the apostles and other disciples about the empty tomb and words of the "two men in dazzling clothes".
It is said that she has given the head of St. John the Baptist an honorable burial.
Both Richard J. Bauckham and Ben Witherington III conclude that the disciple Joanna is the same woman as the Christian Junia mentioned by Paul in his Epistle to the Romans (Romans 16:7).
She is honoured as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church on the "Sunday of the Myrrhbearers", which is two Sundays after Pascha (Easter), and in the Roman Catholic Church on May 24. She is commemorated in the Calendar of Saints of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod on August 3 together with Mary, the Mother of James and Salome.
Joanna in Literature: Joanna was a secondary character in Margaret George’s 2002 novel Mary, Called Magdalene. In the novel, Joanna, cast from Herod’s household by Chuza for being possessed, is healed by Jesus in Capernaum. She then joins the other disciples. She is the second woman, after Mary, and becomes her friend.
Joanna is the main character in Mary Rourke's 2006 novel Two Women of Galilee. In Rourke's telling, Joanna is the daughter of a family that had become Hellenized and ceased to practice Judaism as they obtained a privileged position in the court of Herod. Mary is Joanna's long-lost cousin from a branch of the family that was still observant. When they meet they become close friends. Joanna meets Jesus through her friendship with Mary and he heals her of tuberculosis. The story centers on the friendship of Joanna and Mary, retelling events from the Gospel from the women's point of view.
Reference:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Joanna
Santa Juana de Cuza
Saint Joanna, the Myrrh-bearer
Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady on Thorns (Aranzazu)
Municipality of San Mateo
Province of Rizal
Philippines
Grand Lenten Exhibit
Hermandad de la Sagrada Pasion
Harisson Plaza Annex
Malate, Manila
Philippines
February 08 to 17, 2008
Special thanks to:
Atty. Oliver Magtanong
Francis Santos
Jomai Josef
Kuya Puti dela Paz
About SAINT JOANNA
Venerated in:
Roman Catholicism
*Especially venerated by the Jesuits
Orthodox and Eastern Christianity
Lutheran
Anglicanism
Canonized: Pre-Congregation
Feast:
Roman Catholic: May 24
Lutheran: August 03
Orthodox: June 27
Eastern Catholic: 3rd Sunday of Pascha
Symbol: Lamb, Ointment box
Derivatives: St. Jessica, St. Jennifer.
Joanna was one of the women associated with the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth, often considered to be one of the disciples. In the Bible, she is one of the women recorded in the Gospel of Luke as accompanying Jesus and the twelve: "Mary, called Magdalene, ... and Joanna the wife of Herod's steward Chuza, and Susanna, and many others, who provided for them out of their resources" (Luke 8:2-3).
Joanna is also among the women who went to prepare Jesus' body in Luke's account of the Resurrection, and who later told the apostles and other disciples about the empty tomb and words of the "two men in dazzling clothes".
It is said that she has given the head of St. John the Baptist an honorable burial.
Both Richard J. Bauckham and Ben Witherington III conclude that the disciple Joanna is the same woman as the Christian Junia mentioned by Paul in his Epistle to the Romans (Romans 16:7).
She is honoured as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church on the "Sunday of the Myrrhbearers", which is two Sundays after Pascha (Easter), and in the Roman Catholic Church on May 24. She is commemorated in the Calendar of Saints of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod on August 3 together with Mary, the Mother of James and Salome.
Joanna in Literature: Joanna was a secondary character in Margaret George’s 2002 novel Mary, Called Magdalene. In the novel, Joanna, cast from Herod’s household by Chuza for being possessed, is healed by Jesus in Capernaum. She then joins the other disciples. She is the second woman, after Mary, and becomes her friend.
Joanna is the main character in Mary Rourke's 2006 novel Two Women of Galilee. In Rourke's telling, Joanna is the daughter of a family that had become Hellenized and ceased to practice Judaism as they obtained a privileged position in the court of Herod. Mary is Joanna's long-lost cousin from a branch of the family that was still observant. When they meet they become close friends. Joanna meets Jesus through her friendship with Mary and he heals her of tuberculosis. The story centers on the friendship of Joanna and Mary, retelling events from the Gospel from the women's point of view.
Reference:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Joanna
Manila is located on the eastern shores of Manila bay, which rests on the western shores of Luzon. The city lies 800 miles (1,300 km) from mainland Asia. The Pasig River bisects the city. Almost all of the city sits on top of centuries of prehistoric alluvial deposits built by the waters of the Pasig and on some land reclaimed from Manila Bay. The city's land has been altered substantially by human intervention, with considerable land reclamation along the waterfronts since the American colonial times. Some of the natural variations in topography have been evened out due to the urbanization of the city. The city occupies an area of 38.55 square kilometers and was divided into 897 barangays, the smallest unit of local government in the Philippines. Each barangay has its own chairperson and councilors. For administrative convenience, all the barangays in Manila are grouped into 100 zones and which are further grouped into 16 geographical districts. These zones and districts have no form of local government. These 16 geographical districts are further grouped into the six legislative districts of Manila.
A shot I took while walking the streets of Malate, Manila, Philippines. I was crossing a road and approaching the street corner when I took this candid. (sometimes I just shoot a shot off from the hip and get an interesting image if the lens is pointed in the right direction) ;-)
December 29, 2008
Sandaling paglalakad kasama ang ibang kaibigan sa grupo ng PHOTO KALYE.
Ito ay mga regular na tanawin at eksena na makikita sa kalsada habang nilalakad ang lugar ng Manila. Kwentuhan, tawanan, konting kainan habang nagpapalitan ng mga magagandang kaalaman at pananaw sa nakikitang kalagayan ng ating bayan.
The church has a style similar to churches found in Ilocos where the bell tower is built some distance away from the church-convent complex, connected only by a small passage.
The massive bell tower has semi-circular windows crowned by railings with dome. Its massiveness counterbalances the weight of the convent found at the opposite end.
The facade looks neat and simple and the white texture gives it a pseudo-rococo look. The simplicity of line and the airy pattern of pillars, voids and volumes create an impression of calmness.
The Manila North Cemetery (or Cementerio del Norte formerly known also as "Paang Bundok"), which measures 54 hectares, is considered the biggest and one of the oldest cemeteries in Metro Manila. Beside it are two other important cemeteries, namely the La Loma Cemetery and the Manila Chinese Cemetery. The cemetery is owned by the Manila city government and has initiated an expansion program to build more "apartment tombs" and a crematorium.
The cemetery is also notable because of the numerous families living inside the more commodious mausoleums
Staking Out New Territory's.
Tek potovanja nesrečen spomin jezen kašelj temne vizije raztezanje rok taverne prepiri skrčeni sovražniki vrhunska vprašanja,
dedfrydu cosb am fywyd gwaharddedig lladradau heb eu cofnodi nwydau cryfion llawryf ego ego gusting dyheadau traddodiad ystrydebol troseddol dreisgar,
ponts affalés taudis obscurs temps harcelant étapes douloureuses conversions flamboyantes approchant versets brisant des indications de faux,
nuvole malate povere lacrime benevolenza gente che si agita preti strade che cadono denti penetranti pagine estreme documenti preziosi segni sbiaditi,
tanfolyamok átadása írásbeli tudás látomások ébresztése múlt üzenetek firkáló foglalkozások csapkodó imák nedves trükkök függő sötétség gyötrő előrejelzés,
不当な笑いを集めた悲鳴を上げる引用は、悪名高い満足を計算する肉屋が冥界の夢を暴動させるという即時の推論の不吉な見解をアピールします。.
Steve.D.Hammond.
Nestled next to a busy street is a family owned sari sari, grocery store, where neighbors and find cheaper produce and condiments than shopping at the big supermarkets in Malate, Manila, Philippines.
December 29, 2008
Sandaling paglalakad kasama ang ibang kaibigan sa grupo ng PHOTO KALYE.
Ito ay mga regular na tanawin at eksena na makikita sa kalsada habang nilalakad ang lugar ng Manila. Kwentuhan, tawanan, konting kainan habang nagpapalitan ng mga magagandang kaalaman at pananaw sa nakikitang kalagayan ng ating bayan.