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The Großer Markt is a centrally situated place in the Weseler city centre. It is a location of the Willibrordi cathedral and the historical city hall of the town. Twice weekly a weekly market takes place.

 

One and a half centuries after the lending of the town rights the first city hall of the town originated in 1390 in the big market. In 1391 the davorliegende place was paved. Already in 1455 the city hall building was torn off again because it was not held representative enough in since 1407 to the Hanse alliance belonging Wesel for and claimed, besides, too much place at the market. As a result the historical city hall of Wesel originated in the Flemish style which existed till 1945 and whose facade was reconstructed till 2011. The wealth of the Weseler businessmen flowed in onto the building. Besides, in 1540 the cathedral was finished, so that the big market since then with city hall, cathedral and weekly market was the centre of the town. For example, the main guard of the Spanish troops also lay there when held this Wesel in the early 17th century occupied.

Surrounded by nothing but turquoise lagoon which melts into sapphire blue, the Maldives island of Anantara Kihavah and its pure white sands rise up out of the ocean like a mirage.

 

For centuries, this was where Arab traders sailing to the Far East took shelter; a lush paradise blessed by coconut, papaya and mango trees. Navigating archipelago to archipelago by the stars, the seafarers were also drawn by the riches of the ocean surrounding the island – where a prehistoric volcano sank back into the depths, leaving blooming corals within a house reef and a wealth of lagoon fish.

 

Wishing to keep the pristine nature of the island intact, not one tree has been moved – as evidenced by the villas growing up around them. The design pays homage to the seafarers of old, fusing Indian Ocean, Arab and Portuguese motifs with indigenous materials.

Where there are friends, there is also wealth.

Waar vrienden zijn, is tegelijk rijkdom.

 

Thanks for all the nice comments, it is much appreciated

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission. copyright all rights reserved.

 

Regards, Bram van Broekhoven (BraCom)

My Website

Same Mistakes ♫ - James Blunt

 

Immortality

by Lindsay Laurie

 

Mortal are us human kind

seeking peace with baited breath.

Immortality imparts the mind

to believe there is no death.

Immortality is really history …

writings from the then times wealth.

Replayed in a similar mode

as history repeats itself.

Each tiny fraction of the puzzle,

is ancient generations text,

leads the way to consider

what right now is needed next …

Each year reaches new horizons,

the past has been addressed -

and we live our life believing,

our time is the very best.

Health is the greatest gift, contentment the greatest wealth, faithfulness the best relationship

'Showered with Wealth' is a macro photograph of a tulip with water droplets.

Dahlia with a dark bokeh background ...

Dahlia has a rich symbolism: the flower stands for wealth and elegance, and also for love and involvement. It's a perfect flower to express your love!

Great wealth often comes from exploitation, child labor, weapons and drug dealing. Not always but often ...

!! Every ten seconds, a child dies from the effects of hunger. !!

www.superyachttimes.com/yacht-news/motor-yacht-hawaii-launch

www.yachtcharterfleet.com/luxury-charter-yacht-54436/proj...

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_number_of_bill...

Cold Water

 

Feat. kalback, Deadwool, Urban Wealth, Sleepy Eddy, little bones, Half Deer, We're Closed, dust bunny, alirium, revival

 

Blog | ♫ Song ♫ | Sim: It all starts with a smile

 

Tag: IASWAS autumn contest

Jean-Mich' est mort dimanche dernier.

Son corps a été retrouvé dans la Sarthe.

 

Jean-Mich' faisait partie de ces visages familiers des rues d'Alençon. Depuis sa sortie de prison, il n'avait guère de vie sociale autrement que par le truchement de la rue, qui lui permettait, par la générosité de quelques passants, de manger un minimum ou fumer un cigarillo.

 

Oh non, Jean-Mich' n'était pas un Saint. Il est même probable que vous-même, qui me lisez, l'auriez regardé de travers en connaissant les rumeurs de Radio-Prison qui circulaient à son sujet.

 

Et personnellement, ces rumeurs ne m'ont pas mis à l'aise. Du tout.

  

Cependant, je l'ai vu, au fil des mois. J'ai vu sa santé se dégrader, ses espoirs déçus, sa difficulté au quotidien.

 

Il était un ex-taulard, il était aussi un laissé pour compte.

 

Quelle facette de ce personnage garder ?

 

Voici la seule que je connaisse : celle d'un gars prisonnier dehors après avoir été détenu entre quatre murs.

 

La rue ne tue pas, pourtant.

La pauvreté, elle, oui.

C'est elle qui assassine les laissés pour compte, en définitive, drapée dans ses oripeaux urbains.

 

Ce n'est pas une mince affaire de garder une certaine retenue, une distance minimale avec les personnages récurrents qui habitent les rues d'Alençon, quand on est un Foutographe aussi visible que je puis l'être dans ce petit univers alençonnais...

 

Je m'y suis efforcé, et continuerai à m'y efforcer, car d'autres nouvelles de cet acabit arriveront... Et je n'ai ni le coeur, ni l'envie, ni l'aveuglement nécessaire pour me plonger dans les eaux troubles de la compassion débridée

  

Je n'avais pas pour but de publier cette image, quand je l'ai prise, il y a quelques semaines.

Mais cela devient aujourd'hui ma "meilleure" image de Jean-Mich' et de ce qu'était sa vie alors que je le croisais presque quotidiennement.

 

Quand la photo de rue flirte avec le photoreportage...

Well, I got up early in the morning hoping for the sun to rise.

..."get up and get up when the sun comes up

Don't lay there dozin' like a lazy pup

Health and wealth will overflow your cup

If you get up early in the morning" - that's what Roger Miller sang.

 

Today I've spent some time working on this image. My cup is still half empty.

 

Superb Fairywren

(Malurus cyaneus)

"Dandelions are masters of survival. They can take root in places that seem little short of miraculous, and then are impossible to get rid of, as homeowners have found. But why is this plant so hard to kill? It’s because they are fast growers. The sunny yellow flowers go from bud to seed in days. Their lifespan is long, too – an individual plant can live for years, so the dandelion lurking in a corner of the playground might be older than the children running past it. The roots sink in deeper over the years, and can go down 15 feet.

 

Like the Hydra who sprouted two new heads for every one that was cut off, the roots clone when divided; a one-inch bit of dandelion root can grow a whole new dandelion. Dandelion leaves can shove their way though gravel and cement, and thrive in barren habitats."

 

More information can be found at... www.mofga.org/resources/weeds/ten-things-you-might-not-kn...

Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! ❤️ ❤️ ❤️

You can just see the wife walking down the road on the left.

 

The beautiful village of Eyam offers a perfect day out for visitors to this part of the Peak District. Set in a stunning location, it has a fascinating and inspiring history, and its narrow lanes are filled with pretty cottages and a wealth of interesting buildings.

Stay close. Wait for the trickle-down effect. You know that there is a very good reason, they say, that governments should help the rich to get richer even easier and much faster. Yes, it is the trickle-down effect. One day, eventually that is, some of the new wealth will trickle down into my watering can and make me rich too. I live in hope. And I am staying ever so close to my watering can. Helios 44M-7 manual lens at F2, one LED lamp.

Rothenburg ob der Tauber is a small town with a big reputation. Nowhere else will you find such a wealth of original buildings dating from the Middle Ages. You can't help but ask yourself whether time has stood still, as you amble past the beautiful old houses, secluded squares and tucked-away corners of the old quarter, where towers, taverns and town gates alternate with fountains, fortifications and former storehouses.

“Modeling is not just beauty and smile, it takes boldness and style.”

― Amit Kalantri, Wealth of Words

Wikipedia states..."Chives, (scientific name...Schoenoprasum), is an edible species of the genus Allium. Its close relatives include the garlic, shallot, leek, scallion, and Chinese onion."

 

What I know about this beautiful plant is that the bees love to traverse the hills and valleys of this flower. Once the bloom has faded, you'll find tiny black seeds inside the folds of each blossom. What a great way to spread the wealth. Life is wonderful that way!

Looking down from The Peak, highest point on Hong Kong Island, towards the Skyline of Hong Kong Island.

 

As early as the 19th century, the Peak attracted prominent European residents because of its panoramic view over the city and its temperate climate compared to the sub-tropical climate in the rest of Hong Kong. The sixth Governor of Hong Kong, Sir Richard MacDonnell had a summer residence built on the Peak circa 1868. Those that built houses named them whimsically, such as The Eyrie, and the Austin Arms. These original residents reached their homes by sedan chairs, which were carried up and down the steep slope of Victoria Peak. This limited development of the Peak until the opening of the Peak Tram funicular in 1888.

 

The boost to accessibility caused by the opening of the Peak Tram created demand for residences on the Peak. Between 1904 and 1930, the Peak Reservation Ordinance designated the Peak as an exclusive residential area reserved for non-Chinese. They also reserved the Peak Tram for the use of such passengers during peak periods. The Peak remains an upmarket residential area, although residency today is based on wealth.

 

The Peak is home to many species of birds, most prominently the black kite, and numerous species of butterflies. Wild boar and porcupines are also seen, along with a variety of snakes.

 

With seven million visitors every year, the Peak is a major tourist attraction of Hong Kong with its views of the city and its waterfront. The viewing deck also has coin-operated telescopes that the visitors can use to enjoy the cityscape. The number of visitors led to the construction of two major leisure and shopping centres, the Peak Tower and the Peak Galleria, situated adjacent to each other.

 

The Peak Tower incorporates the upper station of the Peak Tram, whilst the Peak Galleria incorporates the bus station used by the Hong Kong public buses and green minibuses on the Peak. The Peak is also accessible by taxi and private car via the circuitous Peak Road, or by walking up the steep Old Peak Road from near the Zoological Botanical Gardens or the Central Green Trail from Hong Kong Park.

 

Victoria Peak Garden is located on the site of Mountain Lodge, the Governor's old summer residence, and is the closest publicly accessible point to the summit. It can be reached from Victoria Gap by walking up Mount Austin Road, a climb of about 150 metres. Another popular walk is the level loop along Lugard and Harlech Roads, giving good views of the entire Hong Kong Harbour and Kowloon, as well as Lantau and Lamma Islands, encircling the summit at the level of the Peak Tower.

 

Information Source:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_Peak

www.timeout.com/hong-kong/things-to-do/the-peak

 

Wild Geranium flowers fill my flower garden each year. I've never intentionally planted them. However, the geranium ensures that it can spread the wealth. After blooming, fruit capsules are produced 3-5 weeks later. Each consists of a long, central beak-like column (resembling a crane’s head) and five basal cells, each containing one seed. The carpels of the fruit curl upward and backward to spring open when ripe, expelling the seeds 10-30 feet from the mother plant. More information can be found at : www.npsnj.org/photo_galleries/photo_pages/geranium_macula...

I'd give all wealth that years have piled,

The slow result of Life's decay,

To be once more a little child

For one bright summer day.

~Lewis Carroll,

 

Did you know Lewis Carroll was also a photographer?

 

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Gōtokuji Temple, located in the Setagaya ward of Tokyo, is a Buddhist temple that is said to be the birthplace of the maneki-neko, or “luck-inviting cat figurine.”

 

These small statues, which portray a cat sitting up and beckoning with its front paw, have become quite popular all over the world with cat-lovers.

 

Although there are many different kinds of maneki-neko raising either their right or left paws, Gotokuji Temple specializes in the right-pawed version of this good-luck symbol.

 

Temple legend states that during the early 17th century, Ii Naotaka (then the second lord of the Omi-Hikone Domain) escaped from being caught in a sudden thunderstorm after being invited inside the temple by a cat that lived there.

To show his gratitude to the cat, Naotaka decided to dedicate the temple to the Ii clan. After Naotaka passed away, the temple was renamed to Gotokuji, from his posthumous Buddhist name “Kyushoin-den Gotokuten ei-daikoji.”

 

The cat that created that opportunity for the temple to grow into a respectable and important place was deified as “Fortune-Inviting Kannon.”

The cat was later said to bring good fortune, being called “shou-fuku byou-ji” or “maneki-neko.” Gotokuji Temple has been filled with lucky cat figurines donated by worshippers ever since.

Stay close. Wait for the trickle-down effect. You know that there is a very good reason, they say, that governments should help the rich to get richer even easier and much faster. Yes, it is the trickle-down effect. One day, eventually that is, some of the new wealth will trickle down into my watering can and make me rich too. I live in hope. And I am staying ever so close to my watering can. Helios 44M-7 manual lens at F2, contre-jour, reflector.

In “The Wealth of Nations”, Adam Smith said we should all do what we do best, and rely on others for the rest. In “A Brief History of Equality”, Thomas Piketty emphasizes that Nature’s balance sheet accounts for externalities, which we ignore at our peril. Somewhere, Yogi Berra observed that in theory, theory and practice are the same, but in practice they’re different.

08:15 CDT

Mon bien s'en va.........

 

Wishing you health, wealth, and happiness in the New Year.

Cheers to 2025!

 

© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Use without permission is illegal.

Please, don't fave and run, you will get yourself blocked.

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Wealth is power. With wealth many things are possible.

George Clason

 

Power is not all bad, if wielded properly, you can change the world for the better. It gets a bad name from those who abuse it.

 

For those who may think power is bad, remember the power of Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr., Princess Diana, and others who sought to bring positive changes to the world.

This is called 'The Fountain Of Wealth'. When I was setting up for this shot, there were suddenly 15 kids jumping between the lit waterjets. Inside I was yelling, nooooo, please, it's not the moment. I had to take about 20 pics to blend the different parts together. It has been a hell of a job, removing the kids and matching the shifting colors of the jets.

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This image was created with:

Haida 150mm filterholder

Haida CPOL / Haida 3 stops ND / Haida Clear Night

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HAIDA BELGIUM / HAIDA PHOTO

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Ambalavao (Madagascar) - Echoppe éphémère sur le grand marché de la ville qui se tient chaque mercredi. C’est un jour important à Ambalavao car c’est le jour du marché au zébus qui attire beaucoup de monde. Ces dames sont venues d’un village de brousse ou leur famille possède quelques arpents de rizière. A Madagascar être propriétaire d’une rizière ou de quelques zébus est un signe de richesse.

Le rachat en masse ces dernières années par les Chinois de la majeure partie de la production rizicole nationale a fait exploser les cours, de sorte que le riz disparait progressivement de l’alimentation des malgaches.

  

Rice disappears from the Malagasy diet

 

Ambalavao (Madagascar) - Pop-up stall on the city's large market held every Wednesday. It is an important day in Ambalavao because it is the day of the zebu market which attracts a lot of people. These ladies came from a bush village where their family owns a few acres of rice fields. In Madagascar, owning a rice field or a few zebus is a sign of wealth.

The mass purchase in recent years by the Chinese of most of the national rice production has caused prices to explode, so that rice is gradually disappearing from the Malagasy diet.

 

  

THIS is the last place we took my lovely son, Michel when he was here.

It was quiet, peaceful and calm, only the wind caressing your ears, strange little birds chirping and sheep blaring.

Michel seemed to come to rest from his all too busy life.

The three of us absorbed the epic surroundings, no words were needed.

I would like to say to you all, do not ever leave a loved one on a bad note, you NEVER know if you will meet again.

Due to circumstances, like a virus and lockdowns... this was the last time we hugged, when he left, and like usual, we told each other: I love you, take care.

 

Malham Moor and the surrounding area is wonderfully rich in natural history.

This wealth stems from the climate and the geology – the limestone laid down beneath ancient seas and capped by sandstone deposits, raised up, fractured by fault lines and scoured by glaciers to form the watershed of our modern rivers.

 

With love to you and thank you for ALL your faves and comments, M, (* _ *)

  

For more: www.indigo2photography.com

IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

 

epic, landscapes, green, Malham, Moors, meadow, North-Yorkshire, Michel, grass, summer, colour, Nikon D7200, magda indigo

Angkor, Cambodia, 2013

 

From about 900 to 1200 AD, Angkor was home to 300.000 to 1.000.000 people (information, facts and scientific guesses vary wildly). Wealth and power of Angkor at least partly derived from an intricatly designed waterway and water storage system, where a river was rerouted over 20 or so kilometers to allow several rice harvests per year. Angkor Wat is well known, though there must be about 80 temples around in the Angkor area. The size of some of those temples is amazing. To my understandig, it is not clear what caused the downfall of this civilazation. Possibly, they were unable to even mainenance the water system (less water, less harvest, less money, less power) or the change of religion from hinduism to buddism (one aspect of the latter is a less hierarchic set of beliefs) caused the end of the Khmer reign over South East Asia. End of wealth, end of story....

Listen Lullaby - Loreena McKennitt

 

O for a voice like thunder, and a tongue

To drown the throat of war! - When the senses

Are shaken, and the soul is driven to madness,

Who can stand? When the souls of the oppressed

Fight in the troubled air that rages, who can stand?

When the whirlwind of fury comes from the

Throne of God, when the frowns of his countenance

Drive the nations together, who can stand?

When Sin claps his broad wings over the battle,

And sails rejoicing in the flood of Death;

When souls are torn to everlasting fire,

And fiends of Hell rejoice upon the slain,

O who can stand? O who hath caused this?

O who can answer at the throne of God?

The Kings and Nobles of the Land have done it!

Hear it not, Heaven, thy Ministers have done it!

 

Poem by William Blake (1757-1827)

Music by Loreena McKennitt

 

Loreena Isabel Irene McKennitt, C.M. (born February 17, 1957) is a Canadian singer, composer, harpist and pianist most famous for writing, recording and performing world music with Celtic music and Middle Eastern themes.

 

A small town in the province of Lleida which sits at the foot of the Sierra del Tallat mountains, in the valley of Maldanell. Its origins date back to a Cistercian monastery which came to be the most important female monastery of the Catalonian-Aragonese Crown.

 

The monastery was founded in the 12th century and when the Trento Council decided that female monasteries must not be left abandoned, the inhabitants of the area built a village around it. At present, the monastery of Vallbona de les Monjes houses a significant female community. Its architectural wealth lies in the wide variety of styles on display on its walls and exterior, the best of examples of which are the church door, the cloister and the chapter house. Vallbona de les Monges forms part of the so-called Cistercian triangle, along with the monasteries of Poblet (Conca de Barberà) and Santes Creus (Alt Camp).

 

In Wordpress In Blogger photo.net/photos/Reinante/ In Onexposure

Ferrari 458 Italia photographed July 2010, Montreal. More to come.

 

Thanks to Joshua McRae for assisting me on this shoot!

 

Still need to fix the haloing around the House.

the Super Yacht Senses Anchored in Belfast Lough with Kilroot Power Station in the background mist and haze. This Yacht was previously owned by the by Larry Page. Senses is a motor yacht with an overall length of 59.22 m. The yacht's builder is Fr. Schweers Shipyard from Germany, who launched Senses in 1999. The superyacht has a beam of 12.7 m, a draught of 4.5 m and a volume of 993 GT.

To view more of my images, of Belton House, please click "here" ! Click any image to view large!

 

Belton House is a Grade I listed country house in Belton near Grantham, Lincolnshire, England. The mansion is surrounded by formal gardens and a series of avenues leading to follies within a larger wooded park. Belton has been described as a compilation of all that is finest of Carolean architecture, the only truly vernacular style of architecture that England had produced since the Tudor period. The house has also been described as the most complete example of a typical English country house; the claim has even been made that Belton's principal facade was the inspiration for the modern British motorway signs which give directions to stately homes. Only Brympton d'Evercy has been similarly lauded as the perfect English country house. For three hundred years, Belton House was the seat of the Brownlow and Cust family, who had first acquired land in the area in the late 16th century. Between 1685 and 1688 Sir John Brownlow and his wife had the present mansion built. Despite great wealth they chose to build a modest country house rather than a grand contemporary Baroque palace. The contemporary, if provincial, Carolean style was the selected choice of design. However, the new house was fitted with the latest innovations such as sash windows for the principal rooms, and more importantly completely separate areas for the staff. As the Brownlows rose from baronets to barons upward to earls and then once again became barons, successive generations made changes to the interior of the house which reflected their changing social position and tastes, yet the fabric and design of the house changed little. Following World War I (a period when the Machine Gun Corps was based in the park), the Brownlows, like many of their peers, were faced with mounting financial problems. In 1984 they gave the house away—complete with most of its contents. The recipients of their gift, the National Trust, today fully open Belton to the public. It is in a good state of repair and visited by many thousands of tourists each year The Brownlow family, a dynasty of lawyers, began accumulating land in the Belton area from approximately 1598. In 1609 they acquired the reversion of the manor of Belton itself from the Pakenham family, who finally sold the manor house to Sir John Brownlow I in 1619. The old house was situated near the church in the garden of the present house and remained largely unoccupied, since the family preferred their other houses elsewhere. John Brownlow had married an heiress but was childless. He became attached to two of his more distant blood relations: a great-nephew, also called John Brownlow, and a great-niece, Alice Sherard. The two cousins married each other in 1676 when both were aged 16; three years later, the couple inherited the Brownlow estates from their great-uncle together with an income of £9,000 per annum (about £ 1.17 million in present day terms) and £20,000 in cash (equivalent to about £ 2.59 million now). They immediately bought a town house in the newly fashionable Southampton Square in Bloomsbury, and decided to build a new country house at Belton. Work on the new house began in 1685. The architect thought to have been responsible for the initial design is William Winde, although the house has also been attributed to Sir Christopher Wren, while others believe the design to be so similar to Roger Pratt's Clarendon House, London, that it could have been the work of any talented draughtsman. The assumption popular today, that Winde was the architect, is based on the stylistic similarity between Belton and Coombe Abbey, which was remodelled by Winde between 1682 and 1685. Further evidence is a letter dated 1690, in which Winde recommends a plasterer who worked at Belton to another of his patrons. Whoever the architect, Belton follows closely the design of Clarendon House, completed in 1667. This great London town house (demolished circa 1683) has been one of the most admired buildings of its era due to "its elegant symmetry and confident and common-sensical design". Sir John Summerson described Clarendon House as "the most influential house of its time among those who aimed at the grand manner" and Belton as "much the finest surviving example of its class". John and Alice Brownlow assembled one of the finest teams of craftsmen available at the time to work on the project. This dream team was headed by the master mason William Stanton who oversaw the project. His second in command, John Thompson, had worked with Sir Christopher Wren on several of the latter's London churches, while the chief joiner John Sturges had worked at Chatsworth under William Talman. The wrought-ironworker John Warren worked under Stanton at Denham Place, Buckinghamshire, and the fine wrought iron gates and overthrow at Belton may be his. Thus so competent were the builders of Belton that Winde may have done little more than provide the original plans and drawings, leaving the interpretation to the on-site craftsmen. This theory is further demonstrated by the external appearance of the adjoining stable block. More provincial, and less masterful in proportion, it is known to have been entirely the work of Stanton.

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Southwest Colorado Landscapes. San Juan Mountains. Uncompahgre National Forest.

 

I help aspiring and established photographers get noticed so they can earn an income from photography or increase sales. My blog, Photographer’s Business Notebook is a wealth of information as is my Mark Paulda’s YouTube Channel. I also offer a variety of books, mentor services and online classes at Mark Paulda Photography Mentor

 

All images are available as Museum Quality Photographic Prints and Commercial Licensing. Feel free to contact me with any and all inquiries.

 

Follow My Once In A Lifetime Travel Experiences at Mark Paulda’s Travel Journal

Title of this display.

It is neither wealth nor splendor; but tranquility and occupation which give you happiness.

Thomas Jefferson

 

Enhanced with two of Kim Klassen's fabulous textures.

 

Please view in large.

Symbol of fertility an wealth.

Wünsche Euch für das neue Jahr alles, was der Granatapfel symbolisiert.

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