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Carmina Burana is a cantata composed in 1935 and 1936 by Carl Orff, based on 24 poems from the medieval collection Carmina Burana.Its full Latin title is Carmina Burana: Cantiones profanae cantoribus et choris cantandae comitantibus instrumentis atque imaginibus magicis ("Songs of Beuern: Secular songs for singers and choruses to be sung together with instruments and magical images").
The Adoration of the Magi, copy woven 1894 for the Corporation of Manchester. The Adoration of the Magi is a Morris & Co. tapestry depicting the story in Christianity of the Three Kings who were guided to the birthplace of Jesus by the star of Bethlehem. It is sometimes called The Star of Bethlehem [1] or simply The Adoration. [2]
William Tyndale No. 990 (1839) Mamma and her Child (1843) The Oldest Fisherman the World Ever Saw, and Other Stories (1879) The Cup and the Kiss (1888) Adopted, or An Old Soldier's Embarrassments (circa 1891) Wallaby Hill (1880s-1890s) By-paths of Bible Knowledge (1884-1904) The Jew (circa 1890) Homes and Haunts of the Pilgrim Fathers (1899)
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Delnero, Paul, "A Land with No Borders: A New Interpretation of the Babylonian “Map of the World”", Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History, vol. 4, no. 1-2, pp. 19-37, 2017; Finkel, Irving, "The Babylonian Map of the World, or the Mappa Mundi", in Babylon: Myth and Reality, ed. Irving Finkel and Michael Seymour. London: British Museum ...
She also had a stuffed kitten named John Grady Cole, the hero's name in McCarthy's "The Border Trilogy," which follows three runaways who have a stolen Colt revolver.
From ancient history to the modern day, the clitoris has been discredited, dismissed and deleted -- and women's pleasure has often been left out of the conversation entirely. Now, an underground art movement led by artist Sophia Wallace is emerging across the globe to challenge the lies, question the myths and rewrite the rules around sex and the female body.
Folio 15v: Christ on the Mount of Olives. The book was for centuries known as the "Vienna Hours of Charles the Bold", [4] [5] and thought to have been intended to mark the death of Charles the Bold, ruler of the Burgundian Netherlands, at the Battle of Nancy on 5 January 1477, and thus as a book of mourning, intended for either his widow, Margaret of York, or his daughter, Mary.