fabulous day or recording today! Thanks to Kristen McQuinn, Jane Hayter Hames and the wonderful - That’s Victorians and Housing, King’s John’s wives, Learning timo Love the French in the 19thC and the Fall of Charles I 🤗 coming soon on

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How lovely: 'God spede the & sende us korne enow' - even the oxen look happy (though the ploughmen less so), and we’re suddenly in the room with the scribe illustrating the frontispiece to his 14thC manuscript of Piers Plowman (https://t.co/9KJTxTGLCX, f.001v).

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Just finished this 'The North Wind Doth Blow' It's inspired by the 16thC English rhyme & is a for next year's new secular
This is, I think, the 1st time a has appeared on one of my festive I hope you like it.❤️

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🦄Mythical alert!🦄

Headed straight for with a trail of magical dust behind her! 💫

ID this strain & ill airdrop you a "Blasted Nug"!

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🌟Magical alert!🌟

A dank new strain is inbound to ! I can see the trail of magic it left behind! 🪄

Help me ID this strain & ill airdrop you a "Blasted Nug"!

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Bluebeard’s secret, locked chamber is burned in fairy-tale memory. Perrault’s French, 17thc version is the tale we know. It haunts us: his murdered wives stowed away & hidden in that secret room, the bloody key -the symbolism & histories are rich. (See below 🗝)

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*In the not-too-distant past furisode (振袖) indicated that a young woman was single and of marriageable age.

Interestingly it was only in the 19thC that furisode became gendered, and only in the 20thC that they (in part due to Western influence) were restricted to girls/women.

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Finally got to see inside "...the finest 18thC church in London" , St Mary le Strand. Thanks to the works to pedestrianisation part the Aldwych, the church is no longer a traffic island.

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Minted that insane THC by at .
It'll perfectly fit my twitter poster.

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Tarring and Feathering Attacks in America - Although the phrase appears to have originated just prior to the American Revolution, the practice was much older having first happened in Europe. One of the ... https://t.co/390CHZZ4Ts

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"This is a fantastic story with a bright, resourceful, and strong protagonist that grabbed my heart and wouldn't let go." OnMyKindleReview

Paper or eBook for Any Device: https://t.co/AGhpFM0lxb

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Gerrit and Cornelis Schellinger as children c. 1675-85 by the exquisitely talented Gesina Ter Borch (Rijksmuseum)

She is one of my favourite artists of the 17thC - transports you right there.

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28 Dec 1636: Wenceslaus Hollar arrives in beginning a long & flourishing career which has determined quite a bit of our visual vocabulary of 17thC and

(BM/Folger)

Some of his female figures here, along with a depiction of him

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【eCORNsystem】
SPOファッションシリーズ🌈
今回はTHC HIROさん❗🔥🌟

浮遊人写真をイメージしたcardanoジャンピングガールどうかな🥰😍💫🎶



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Emerson made reflection the most important metaphor in 19thC American culture: in a republic, the government reflects the electorate.

Accordingly, Church, Gifford, and Watkins all made reflection metaphors primary in their work.

So too Wayne Thiebaud, over and over.

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Bought a second THC. Love this one. Big brain move? 🧠💗

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