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Esta es la túnica y el hacha que usó Giovanni Bugatti, el verdugo oficial del Papa de 1796 a 1864. Finalizó su carrera con 514 ejecuciones.
Te contamos su historia aquí:
Los Estados Potificios de Roma, los terrenos donde gobernaba el Papa, tenían un verdugo oficial: Giovanni Battista Bugatti.
After sewing myself a towel tunic, I've gotta say that this thing is fantastic!
Echoing what the Baron of Bonwicke said to us: YOU REALLY GOTTA GET ONE OF THESE
It's two bath towels sewn together on the corners of one short end to make the shoulders/sleeves with a large neck hole between, then sewn most of the full length down, starting with generous slack under the arm pits, to make the sides. I've been using towels wrong my entire life...
Also, with it rucked up over a rope or belt this thing looks like I stepped out of a classical painting
USO Y DISFRUTE
Te acaricio por doquier,
te entrego mi amor,
te salvas por tu honor...
y, mientras... se marchita
la túnica roída,
floreciendo rojos intensos
de amor cárdeno.
Máximo E. Guiral
Le Fan’nu - Experimental Film
-CREDIT- Performed by Erena Hasegawa Mishio Tokita Yuka Tayama Filmed by Daisuke Inoue Music by Yu Nakanishi Hair & Makeup Aya Watanabe
Moncacht-Apé
The first known transcontinental journey across North America was done in the early 1700s by Moncacht-Apé, a Native American man of the Yazoo people. The Yazoo was a subset of the Tunica people living in what is now the Mississippi-Yazoo River Delta, in the northwest of the state of Mississippi.
An accomplished journeyman, Moncacht-Apé was called "the Interpreter" for his knowledge of many Native languages. His journey started in Mississippi and went first up the rivers and past Niagra Falls, before he retraced his steps and then followed the Missouri River west. In this, he traveled from the shores of the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean, to the Pacific Northwest tribes. Moncacht-Apé says that the people here told him their ancestors had come to North America on a land bridge.
His account was published in a book by Frenchman Le Page, who also made a map based on it. The English translation of this book was an essential resource for the later Lewis and Clark Expedition, making Moncacht-Apé another example of a Native person who was essential to their success.
realmente no tengo qué descripción poner...
Comenten su signo ahre
For all the historical fashion bae´s out there: Coptic tunica in a museum I visited today!
Coptic tunica out of flax with decorations in wool. This model was probably common in the late Roman and early Christian era. Several could be worn at once. They are woven in one piece, from sleeve to sleeve, so the only seams are at the sides.
Example of such a garment on a mosaic: