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JBB: An Artblog!
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JVL

Love Begins
we're not kids anymore.
cherry valley forever

roma★
Misplaced Lens Cap
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ellievsbear
Monterey Bay Aquarium
occasionally subtle
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
One Nice Bug Per Day
Keni
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Janaina Medeiros

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@katielaura
井口病院♡うさぎは正義さんのツイート: “ニホンウサミミチョウの観察絵日記 https://t.co/fxDiwbPuuK”
Rabbit in Bluebell Woods
by warren photographic
Hungarian Chef Turns Ordinary Cookies Into Stunning Embroidery-Inspired Art
Motherhood in ancient Egypt
Motherhood was extremely important in ancient Egypt. Children were the main reason for setting up a household. If a woman could not give her husband children, he would probably divorce her. Some divorced women went back to their parents’ households, but many ended up as servants. Within the home, women did jobs like brewing and weaving, but they relied on their husbands to support them. For this reason, women prayed to goddesses like Hathor and Isis to grant them a child. They also relied heavily on magic during their pregnancy and especially as they were about to give birth. In the ancient world, many women died in childbirth. Only magical objects showed pictures of pregnant women because it was such a dangerous condition in those days.
During labour and after children were born, parents prayed to deities like Taweret to protect them. Taweret, ‘the Great One’, had the body of a hippopotamus, the limbs of a lion and the tail of a crocodile, making her a powerful and dangerous creature. With her fearsome appearance, she warded off evil, just as she had protected Isis and her new-born son Horus against the murderous intent of Osiris’s brother, Seth.
This statue of Taweret was discovered in Karnak (modern Luxor), which was believed to be the birthplace of Osiris. The smooth polished surface of the dark green stone marks it as a majestic example of art from the Saite period (26th Dynasty, 664–525 BC). Standing on her hind legs, her front paws rest above large hieroglyphic signs meaning ‘protection’. Here, she only bares her teeth and sticks out her tongue, but she is often shown holding a knife in each hand ready to strike down any threat.
You can see these statues in the BP exhibition Sunken cities: Egypt’s lost worlds, opening 19 May 2016.
Seated statue of Isis. Saqqara, 570–526 BC. Egyptian Museum, Cairo. Photo: Christoph Gerigk. © Franck Goddio/Hilti Foundation.
The goddess Taweret, 664–610 BC. Egyptian Museum, Cairo. Photo: Christoph Gerigk. © Franck Goddio/Hilti Foundation.
IDK WHY I LAUGHED SO FUCKING HARD AT THIS
The world paints pictures everyday, you just have to look in the right places.
neko atsume as pokemon 2 - eeveelutions please give credit if using & do not remove caption
Current mood
James Sterling, Andrew Melville Hall, St Andrews University, 1968, Fife, Scotland
www.typetoy.tumblr.com
www.typetoy.tumblr.com