Gene Cernan, Apollo 17
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Gene Cernan, Apollo 17
Preparing for jump ๐ฉ
I think one of the Worst Things about wanting to find period clothing from other cultures, is trying to find fucking casual/work clothes. Like no, I do not want to see all these fancy intricate kimonos, I want to see jinbei, and field work outfits so I don't put a damn obi on this poor boy so he has a belt to hang his knife from.
ok but i found the best picture ever
look at her she's so cute and happy i love this photo
source
This image comes from a whole gallery of Taishล era b&w photos, many of them showing everyday work clothes.
Spitfire pilots of No. 43 Squadron RAF keeping warm in their dispersal hut at Drem airfield, East Lothian.
e-hon ็ตตๆฌ -ย โYakusha sangaikyล ไฟณๅชไธ้่โ, 1801, VOLUME 2 auteur : Author : Shikitei Sanba ๅผไบญไธ้ฆฌ (1776 - 1822) Editeur : Nishimiya Shinroku ่ฅฟๅฎฎๆฐๅ ญ Description : 2 volumes - estampes encre et couleur sur papier.
Utagawaย Toyokuniย ๆญๅท่ฑๅฝย (1769 - 1825).
Source : http://pulverer.si.edu/node/549/title/2
hand-colored postcard. Cherry-blossom viewing in Ueno Park from the late Meiji period to the early Taisho period
Justus Takayama Ukon: The Great Japanese Missionary of the Sixteenth Century | Ukon as an example and intercessor for the Church and society
Justus Takayama Ukon lived the Christian faith with tenacity, rigor and loyalty, characteristics we should emulate in this time
Christian Samurai and Shimabara
At least 48 sword guards used by samurai warriors during the feudal era belonged to hidden Christians. The artifacts are related to the early history of 16th and 17th century Japan, which saw the persecution of Christians and the Shimabara Rebellion, an uprising of Catholic Christian peasants.
According to The Asahi Shimbun , the Sawada Miki Kinenkan museum in Kanagawa Prefecture, owns 367 sword guards, which were examined by Yuhiko Nakanishi, chairman of nonprofit group Nihon Token Hozon Kai (Japan Sword Preservation Association), and other researchers, and 48 were identified as belonging to Christians. The research took six months, and the results were recently presented.
A sword guard identified as belonging to a hidden Christian has a statue of Jesus Christ inside it, while a foreign vessel is engraved on its outer side. (Nobuyuki Watanabe)
The Sawada Miki Kinenkan Museum claimed that the items, which went back on display at the museum on May 10, were suspected as belonging to Christians, but the discovery by the team of Nakanishi provided important evidence confirming the legends about Christian samurais.
The discovery is extremely rare due to the anti-Christian policies in Japan at the time, which caused Christians to hide their religion for many centuries. According to the analysis, more than 10 sword guards were made during the Sengoku (Warring States) period (1467-1568). Other swords are believed to have been created after the domination of Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598). They were also in use after the anti-Christian measures.
The symbols discovered by Nakanashi, which proved the existence of the Christian samurais, included carefully hidden Christian crosses in their designs. During Japanโs anti-Christian policies, Christians were also known to have drawn crosses on objects, such as Buddhist statues and other artifacts. Their aim was to manifest the existence of their secret religion, which the ruling elite tried to stamp out.
(The Christian martyrs of Nagasaki. 17th-century Japanese painting.)
In the recently published book, Christโs Samurai: The True Story of the Shimabara Rebellion , by Jonathan Clements, a Visiting Professor at Xi'an Jiaotong University in China, the author described the difficult fate of the Christians in the 17thย century. Christianity in Japan has a very old tradition, but for centuries it was not allowed to follow the Christian path, which was made officially illegal in 1614 by Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu. Christians were branded with hot irons , crucified and dipped repeatedly in boiling water to punish them for being a part of an uprising. One of the famous places of torture was Shimabara castle .
Clements wrote in the introduction to his book :
โIn 1638, the ruler of Japan ordered a crusade against his own subjects, a holocaust upon the men, women and children of a doomsday cult. โฆ Introduced a century earlier by foreign missionaries, the sect was said to harbour dark designs to overthrow the government. Its teachers used a dead language that was impenetrable to all but the innermost circle of believers. Its priests preached love and kindness, but helped local warlords acquire firearms. They encouraged believers to cast aside their earthly allegiances and swear loyalty to a foreign god-emperor, before seeking paradise in terrible martyrdomsโฆโ
Clements described in his book a story of a pregnant woman, who was kept in a submerged cage leading to the death of both mother and the baby. This incident perhaps triggered the Shimabara Rebellion, which lasted from December 17, 1637, to April 15, 1638, during the rule of Edo bakufu, the last feudal Japanese military government. The shogun forces slaughtered thousands of Christians. The leader of the rebels was Jerome Amakusa, who has remained an icon of Japanese Christianity until now.
On January 2016, Pope Francis approved the beatification of Takayama Ukon , a Japanese samurai. He was born in 1552, and was baptized at the age of 12. He was a daimyo, a member of the class of ruling feudal lord, who ranked second to the shogun in medieval and early modern Japan. In 1587, when Hideyoshi started a persecution of Christians, Takayama and his father chose instead to forsake their estates and honors to maintain the faith. He was exiled to Manila in 1614, with a group of 300 Catholics. He died there of disease on February 5, 1615.
In 2007 Pope Benedict XVI confirmed that 188 Japanese Christians who died from persecution by the Tokugawa government were selected for beatifications. The ceremonies were held a year later in Nagasaki.
https://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/sword-guards-confirm-samurai-warriors-secretly-followed-christianity-005952
... mosaic ...
In 1831, beneath layers of volcanic ash within the ancient city of Pompeii, an extraordinary mosaic came to light. This artwork, a truly remarkable rediscovery, adorned the floor of a room within the House of Faun.
Known as the "Alexander Mosaic," it had weathered the passage of time remarkably well. Although certain sections showed signs of damage, two figures stood out prominently amidst the intricate design: Alexander the Great and his cherished steed, Bucephalus.
The mosaic is made up of approximately 1.5 million tiny colored tiles.
Men of the 118th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron astride one of their P-39Ns at Aiken Army Airfield, South Carolina, summer 1943
A Senegalese WW1 soldier who lost both his arms writes a letter with his new prosthetic limbs at the Vocational Rehabilitation School for Amputees in Paris, 1918.
He was part of the Senegalese Tirailleurs, a corps of colonial infantry in the French Army.
Extremely rare woman's tie in muslin embroidered with blue flowers and branches. Shaped with Ariadne's thread covered with sky blue silk. Identical choker closed by a hook.
1832-1833
Hungarian swords, 14th century, at the Topkapi Palace Museum in Istanbul. The middle sword is 8ft long
Harry Houdini
I turned in the book manuscript for INTERMEDIARIES, the forgotten history of the first transgender clinic 1918-1933.
It follows the story of Dora Richter, the first transgender woman to undergo complete MTF surgery (not Lili Elbe; she was third!) Itโs taken me two years of blood, sweat, and tears. A lot of tears, actually.
The Nazis raided the Institute for Sexual Science; they burned the library. They banned the books that remained. They attacked, arrested, and ultimately killed trans and homosexual people along with disabled people and 6 million Jews.
The news today, 2023, reads a lot like news in 1923 with the rise of hatred against LGBTQ, attacks on reproductive rights, and increasing racism and antisemitism. The Nazis rose throughout the 1920s, coming into power 1930-1933.
The world said never again; we must now be the ones to stop a slide into hatred and violence. Before itโs too late.
Here is a preview of the book; it will be available for pre-order this winter (I hope), coming out in 2024.
The Institute for Sexual Research in Berlin would be a century old if it hadn’t fallen victim to Nazi ideology