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YOU ARE THE REASON
Cosmic Funnies
cherry valley forever
art blog(derogatory)
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
i don't do bad sauce passes

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

if i look back, i am lost
Not today Justin
Mike Driver

titsay
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

ellievsbear
Xuebing Du

Andulka

Discoholic 🪩
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wallacepolsom
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@julietjournal
Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Gothic Cathedral by the Waterside (detail)
Rome, Italy | elisabettalilly
The “Appennine Colossus” by Giambologna, Villa di Pratolino, Italy.
nelsonmouellic.tumblr.com / @nelsonmouellic
Ferdinand II armour. Created by Lucio Piccinino (1550-1589). Gift from Alessandro Farnese, Duke of Parma and Piacenza
He was an avid collector of art and the collection of the famous Castle Ambrasnear Innsbruck was started in his time. He had begun to work on it even during his time in Bohemia and subsequently moved it to Tyrol. In particular, the gallery of portraits and the collection of armor were highly expensive, which is why the archduke incurred a high level of debt.
My mental illness is kicking me in the butt today
Nuremberg Rally 1936, ‘Wehrmacht’ (the Defense Force) troops marching through the (Tiergaertner Gate’ in Nuremberg) September 1936
Purple Haze
Christian Hoiberg
Ancients
Print Shop
Stayin’ out late.
Farmhouse lane - Brevard by wrcarroll57
May 8, 1917 - Allied Offensive at Salonika Frustrated by Dogged Bulgarian Defense
Pictured - A Bulgarian mans the trenches.
A renewed Entente attack on the Bulgarian lines at Salonika met with failure on May 8. British soldiers crept into no-man’s land for a night attack, but the Bulgarians used search-lights to illuminate them as targets. Artillery smashed in the assault. On a two-mile front, the British only gained 500 yards. Attacking on the following day, Russian, Serbian, Italian, and French troops, including soldiers from French Indochina, attacked north and west of Monastir, but failed to make any large gains. Central Powers artillerymen rained down death from high-peaks with “high-sounding names.” Alan Palmer, a historian of the campaign, writes that “Not a single Allied soldier had come within two miles of the Grand Couronné, the central keep of the Devil’s citadel; from its ramparts the Eye would stand sentinel for another sixteen months, watching and counting and waiting.”