Belmonte Calabro, Calabria, Italy
Photos by @carlo_audino
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If I Could Sleep Deeply Enough: Poems, “Insomniac’s Prayer” by Vassar Miller
[ID: Oh, who will unsnarl my body / into gestures of love?]
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Anatomy of a serpent. Rand, McNally & co.’s encyclopedia and gazetteer. 1889.
Internet Archive
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Emil Riester, Brooch, 1905/07. Pforzheim, Germany. © Schmuckmuseum Pforzheim Foto Rüdiger Flöter
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Flintlock Pistol, 1670, Art Institute of Chicago: Arms, Armor, Medieval, and Renaissance
George F. Harding Collection
Size: L. 48 cm (18 7/8 in.) Barrel L. 30.8 cm (12 1/8 in.) Wt. 1 lb. 12 oz. Caliber .52
Medium: Steel, iron, and walnut
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/116566/
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The “Bohemian” or “Palatine” crown: gold, enamel, sapphires, rubies, emeralds, diamonds, pearls; height 18 cm, diam. 18 cm), western Europe, around 1370-80. It is composed of 12 freestanding stylized lilies set on a hinged ring.
The only surviving crown from medieval England. All the rest were melted down in the English Civil War in the 17th century.
The crown is recorded in England in a list of jewels and plate drawn up in 1399. It probably belonged to King Edward III or Anne of Bohemia, the wife of King Richard II, who was deposed that year by Henry IV. Henry’s daughter, Princess Blanche, married the Palatine Elector Ludwig III in 1402 and the crown passed to the Palatine Treasury in Heidelberg as part of her dowry.
In 1782 it was transferred to the Munich Treasury along with other jewels belonging to the Palatine branch of the Wittelsbach family. This is the oldest surviving crown of England.
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ARACHNE Illustration by Gustave Doré of 1861 edition of Dante’s Inferno.
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