#Sophie Castille
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downthetubes · 8 months ago
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Lakes International Comic Art Festival and VIP Brands Ltd. launch 2024 “Sophie Castille Award – English” for Comics in Translation
VIP Brands Ltd. has announced the 2024 Sophie Castille Award – English, this year’s award to again be presented in partnership with Comica and the Lakes International Comic Art Festival, at the Festival’s annual event in Bowness-on-Windermere this autumn
VIP Brands Ltd. has announced the 2024 Sophie Castille Award – English, this year’s award to again be presented in partnership with Comica and the Lakes International Comic Art Festival, at the Festival’s annual event in Bowness-on-Windermere this autumn, taking place Saturday 28th September – Sunday 29th September. The Sophie Castille Awards for Comics in Translation are for the best…
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graphicpolicy · 1 year ago
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Around the Tubes
Here's some comic news and reviews from around the web to start the week. #comics #comicbooks
It’s a new week and we have a lot coming at you! There’s still some SDCC coverage and of course Otakon too! While we gear up for that and cons to come, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web to start the week. Book Riot – 8 Graphic Novels like NIMONA with Murder Teens and Queer Pining – What would you suggest? The Beat – Joann Sfar retrospective exhibition coming to Paris Jewish…
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can you name all 59 women
1. Anne Bonny: a lesbian
2. Mary Read: a lesbian
3. Mary Read again: an abusive, cheating wife
4. Mary, Queen of Scots: a lesbian. (But also not a lesbian because Hester Mary MacKenzie was also her concubine.)
5. Isabella 'Bella' Baldwin: a lesbian
6. Queen Elizabeth of Parma, also known as Isabelle d'Este, was the Empress of Modena. She's one of several queens whose non-biological children were legitimized by the church.
7. Mary, Queen of France (before and during her marriage to Henry III).
8. Charlotte of Savoy: a lesbian
9. Elizabeth of York, also Elizabeth Stuart: a lesbian
10. Anna Ivanovna Demushkin: a lesbian (Ivan the Terrible's wife, as well as Mary Queen of Scots')
11. Mary, Duchess of Orleans: a lesbian
12. Mary, Duchess of Orleans again: a lesbian
13. Isabella of France: a lesbian
14. Margaret of Anjou, wife of Francis Plantagenet: a lesbian.
15. Mary 'Mary of Guise', daughter of Margaret of Anjou and Francis Plantagenet: a lesbian
16. Queen of Denmark: a lesbian (Anne's daughter, Sophie of Poland and Denmark)
17. Catherine Howard: a lesbian
18. Katherine Howard: a lesbian
19. Mary, Queen of England: a lesbian (Mary Tudor)
20. Eleanor of Austria, daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella: a lesbian (Mary Tudor's daughter, also Queen of England)
21. Mary, Queen of Bohemia: a lesbian
22. Catherine Parr: a lesbian
23. Eleanor of Austria, again: a lesbian (Mary Tudor's daughter, also queen of England)
24. Mary Tudor: a lesbian
25. Queen of Scots: a lesbian
26. Catherine Parr again: a lesbian
27. Christine de Bourgogne: a lesbian, as well as a queen of France.
28. Jane Seymour, wife of Thomas Seymour and mother of Edward Seymour. Also a lesbian.
29. Mary Stuart: a lesbian
30. Isabella of Castile: a lesbian
31. Mary Stuart again, daughter of Mary I of England: a lesbian
32. Jane Seymour again: lesbian (Edward Seymour's mom)
33. Anne Fitzwilliam, Duchess of Norfolk: a lesbian
34. Barbara Tacy, Countess of Pembroke: a lesbian
35. Mary Tudor again: a lesbian. (Mary Stuart's daughter again)
36. Jane Buckley: a lesbian
37. Catherine Parr: Elizabeth Howard, Parr's daughter, was Queen of England after her mother's death and died without an heir.
38. Margaret Cecil: a lesbian
39. Anna of Cleves: Anne Beaton, wife of Frederick V, Elector of Saxony and of James I and Mary, Queen of Scots; and her granddaughter, Lady Jane Grey, daughter of King Henry VIII and Edward Seymour.
40. Henrietta Maria Stuart: lesbian
41. Anne of Cleves: lesbian
42. Mary Queen of France: lesbian
43. Mary Queen of France again: a lesbian
44. Margaret, Countess of Lennox: lesbian
45. Elizabeth Howard: another lesbian
46.
Anne Stafford: a lesbian
47.
Jane Stafford: a lesbian
48. Jane Seymour again: a lesbian
49. Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots: lesbian
50. Princess Margaret: a lesbian
51. Anne of Cleves again, this time as a mother: Mary Tudor's daughter; Queen of England for less than a month in 1553
52.
Jane Stafford again: lesbian
53. Margaret Howard, Countess of Stafford: lesbian
54. Lady Jane Grey again: a lesbian
55. Princess Anne: a lesbian. (Princess of Portugal and the two Marianas, of Portugal and England.)
56. Elizabeth Howard again: lesbian
57. Margaret of Anjou, Lady of Woodville, wife of Ralph Neville, son of the Duke of Northumberland (Henry Tudor).
58.
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the-paintrist · 5 months ago
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Eugenie Servieres - Maleck-Adhel attendant Mathilde au tombeau de Josselin de Montmorency - 1820
oil on canvas,
Brest’s Museum of Fine Arts, France
Maleck-Adhel waiting for Mathilde at the tomb of Josselin de Montmorency'. The scene is inspired by Sophie Cottin's novel, Mathilde or Memoirs from the History of the Crusades (1805). Mathilde of England asked her brother, King Richard the Lionheart, for the key to the mausoleum of Josselin de Montmorency to meet her lover, Maleck-Adhel, brother of Saladin. Here we see Maleck-Adhel, dressed in oriental fashion, waiting for Mathilde in the dark mausoleum, leaning on the tomb.
Eugénie Honorée Marguerite Servières, née Charen (1786 – 20 March 1855) was a French painter in the Troubadour style. She specialized in genre period paintings.
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Portrait of Eugénie Servières by Jean-Baptiste Wicar 1810
In 1807 she married the playwright Joseph Servières. She trained with her stepfather, Guillaume Guillon-Lethière, Director of the French Academy in Rome.
Beginning in 1808, she exhibited her paintings, on a wide variety of subjects, in several venues. In 1808 and 1817, The Paris Salon awarded her medals. In 1825, she displayed two works at the Salon in Lille.
Her paintings include Hagar in the Desert, Lancelot and Genevieve, Louis XIII and Mlle. de Lafayette, Alain Chartier and Marguerite d'Écosse, Valentine de Milan, Desdemona Singing the Romance of the Willow, and Blanche de Castille Delivering the Prisoners of Châtenay.
Her Mathilde converts Malek-Adhel to Christianity (1812, from a novel about the Crusades by Sophie Cottin) was purchased by the Empress Marie Louise for her personal collection, while the evocative Inez de Castro and her Children at the feet of the King of Portugal is preserved at the Trianon Palace at Versailles, near Paris.
Most of her works were personally commissioned, and very few are in museums. She had several students.
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lacoronarp · 2 years ago
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Which characters would fit best for fc of color?
Here are some faces I think would make marvelous additions to Corona:
Sophie Okonedo as Magdalena, Queen of Castile
Thalissa Teixeira, Kylie Bunbury, or Laura Harrier as Philippa of Portugal
Oscar Isaac or Santiago Cabrera as Arthur, Duke of Lennox
Antonia Thomas as Luzia of Portugal
Sope Dirisu, David Gyasi, or Paapa Essiedu as Charles of France
Aaron Cobham as James of Valois
Dev Patel, Cengiz Coşkun, or Yasen Atour as Philip de Guzman (Aragon)
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natequarter · 4 months ago
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🤐😈👀 for the wip asks! For Ghosts. If you’ll indulge me - thelastplantagenet 💚
🤐: Do you like keeping projects secret or do you like talking about them?
both!!! it really depends. when it's something i'm mildly ashamed of/don't think is very good/really like and want to keep secret, i ain't sharing it. however! i am an attention whore. so i'll easily spill, at least in private, especially when it comes to sharing my writing
😈: What's an evil idea of yours that you're most proud of?
not sure! or, actually, i do know... it's a mostly unwritten wip where humphrey & sophie get their marriage act together in their early twenties and then he immediately dies in france. cue posthumous son who must Burden The Legacy and a remarriage
👀: Any snippets you could share?
for ghosts:
“Also, I would not marry you.”
“You know, I’m starting to see flaws in this plan.”
“If it helps,” she said, “it is nothing personal. I would not marry anyone, not even the love of my life. Not—now.”
“Damn it,” Humphrey said, “there goes that engagement ring I bought.”
and non ghosts, because i think i'm hilarious:
“Your Grace,” said Jasper, “you are the king. If you wanted to invade Castile—”
“Which would be foolish,” Stanley put in.
“—then we would be bound to oblige.”
“Oh,” said Edward. “I don’t like that.”
“That is the way of the world,” he said. “Of course, your advisors would be well-placed to tell you that invading Castile would be unwise, but at the end of the day, it is your word against the rest of us. Such is kingship.”
“Is Castile nice?” Edward said.
“As fair as any of God’s kingdoms,” Stanley said. “Well played, Sir Jasper, well played. Tell me, who in Brittany taught you the art of poesy?”
(link)
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brookstonalmanac · 10 months ago
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Events 2.12
1096 – Pope Urban II confirms the foundation of the abbey of La Roë under Robert of Arbrissel as a community of canons regular. 1404 – The Italian professor Galeazzo di Santa Sophie performed the first post-mortem autopsy for the purposes of teaching and demonstration at the Heiligen–Geist Spital in Vienna. 1429 – English forces under Sir John Fastolf defend a supply convoy carrying rations to the army besieging Orléans in the Battle of the Herrings. 1502 – Isabella I issues an edict outlawing Islam in the Crown of Castile, forcing virtually all her Muslim subjects to convert to Christianity. 1502 – Vasco da Gama sets sail with 15 ships and 800 men from Lisbon, Portugal on his second voyage to India. 1541 – Santiago, Chile is founded by Pedro de Valdivia. 1593 – Japanese invasion of Korea: Approximately 3,000 Joseon defenders led by general Kwon Yul successfully repel more than 30,000 Japanese forces in the Siege of Haengju. 1689 – The Convention Parliament declares that the flight to France in 1688 by James II, the last Roman Catholic British monarch, constitutes an abdication. 1733 – Georgia Day: Englishman James Oglethorpe founds Georgia, the 13th colony of the Thirteen Colonies, by settling at Savannah. 1771 – Gustav III becomes the King of Sweden. 1817 – An Argentine/Chilean patriotic army, after crossing the Andes, defeats Spanish troops at the Battle of Chacabuco. 1818 – Bernardo O'Higgins formally approves the Chilean Declaration of Independence near Concepción, Chile. 1825 – The Creek cede the last of their lands in Georgia to the United States government by the Treaty of Indian Springs, and migrate west. 1832 – Ecuador annexes the Galápagos Islands. 1889 – Antonín Dvořák's Jakobín is premiered at National Theater in Prague. 1894 – Anarchist Émile Henry hurls a bomb into the Cafe Terminus in Paris, killing one person and wounding 20. 1909 – The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is founded. 1909 – New Zealand's worst maritime disaster of the 20th century happens when the SS Penguin, an inter-island ferry, sinks and explodes at the entrance to Wellington Harbour. 1912 – The Xuantong Emperor, the last Emperor of China, abdicates. 1919 – The Second Regional Congress of Peasants, Workers and Insurgents is held by the Makhnovshchina at Huliaipole. 1921 – Bolsheviks launch a revolt in Georgia as a preliminary to the Red Army invasion of Georgia. 1935 – USS Macon, one of the two largest helium-filled airships ever created, crashes into the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California and sinks. 1945 – A devastating tornado outbreak in Mississippi and Alabama kills 45 people and injures 427 others. 1946 – World War II: Operation Deadlight ends after scuttling 121 of 154 captured U-boats. 1946 – African American United States Army veteran Isaac Woodard is severely beaten by a South Carolina police officer to the point where he loses his vision in both eyes. The incident later galvanizes the civil rights movement and partially inspires Orson Welles' film Touch of Evil. 1947 – The largest observed iron meteorite until that time creates an impact crater in Sikhote-Alin, in the Soviet Union. 1947 – Christian Dior unveils a "New Look", helping Paris regain its position as the capital of the fashion world.
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enchantedtm · 2 years ago
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can I please ask for some fcs for princess Anna from frozen, please? Thank you!
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castille  landon,  abigail  cowen,  sophie  skelton,  charlotte  hope,  luca  hollestelle,  eleanor  tomlinson,  rose  leslie,  sophie  turner,  marina  ruy  barbosa,  jessica  green,  ruby  barker,  zendaya  coleman,  ryan  destiny,  marina  moschen,  shin  yeeun  ,  jessica  sula  ,  thaddea  graham,  asli  bekiroglu,  alina  boz,  baba  fumika,  moon  gayoung,  alia  bhatt,  gabbi  garcia,  kiersey  clemons,  simay  barlas,  bahar  sahin,  ella  hunt,  kitty  chicha,  lana  condor,  or  madeleine  madden.
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ccnountche · 2 years ago
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Les hommages du monde du livre, notamment celui de Dargaud Editions, où Sophie Castille a été pendant 26 ans directrice des droits étrangers, affluent deux jours après l’annonce de sa disparition tragique.
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thetudorslovers · 5 years ago
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✠︎ʜɪꜱᴛᴏʀɪᴄᴀʟ ꜰɪɢᴜʀᴇꜱ x ᴍᴏᴅᴇʀɴ ᴀᴇꜱᴛʜᴇᴛɪᴄꜱ✠︎ pt 3
♕ Elizabeth I
♕ John of Gaunt
♕ Katherine Swynford
♕ Edward , The Black Prince
♕ Joan of Kent
♕ Pedro I
♕ William Shakespeare
♕Catherine Parr
♕ Isabella of Castile
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sartorialadventure · 3 years ago
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A ferronnière [fɛʁ.ɔn.jɛʁ] is a style of headband that encircles the wearer's forehead, usually with a small jewel suspended in the centre. The original form of the headband was worn in late fifteenth-century Italy, and was rechristened a ferronnière at the time of its revival in the second quarter of the nineteenth century for both day and (more frequently) formal and evening wear.
The original ornament that later became called a ferronnière was popular in 15th-century Italy, where it could be made from metal or jewels.
The nineteenth-century ferronnière was worn from the late 1820s to the early 1840s, when it was considered to enhance a high forehead, and by the 1850s, it had fallen out of fashion. One contemporary source from 1831 describes the ferronnière as "a small plait of hair, adorned in the centre of the forehead by a large brilliant, from which depends another brilliant of the pear shape." It has been described as one of the most widely worn examples of historicism in early Victorian fashion, worn as a tribute to the Renaissance alongside beaded belts called cordelières inspired by medieval clothing and hairstyles named after historic women such as Agnès Sorel and Blanche of Castile. The ferronnière could be worn for either day or evening. Alternative terms for similar ornaments were the bandelette and the tour de tête.
The term “ferronnière“ originates in 1831, and is believed to come from a 1490s portrait attributed to the school of Leonardo da Vinci, erroniously called the La belle ferronnière since the 18th century.  “Ferronnière” is the feminine form of the word for “ironmonger” (in this case, referring to the wife of an ironmonger.
1.  Portrait of Natalia Pushkina by Alexander Brullov, 1831-2 2.  La belle ferronnière, school of Leonardo da Vinci, 1490-96 3.  Portrait of the Marquise Chasseloup-Laubat, Joseph-Désiré Court, 1831 4. Lilian Russell 5.  Théodolinde de Beauharnais, Princess of Leuchtenberg, 1840 6. Mary of Bavaria, Queen of Saxony 7.  Moritz Daniel Oppenheim, Portrait of Charlotte de Rothschild, 1836 8.  Francois Joseph Kinsoen (Kinson), Portrait of a Lady, 1810-15 9.  Portrait of Archduchess Sophie of Austria, neé Princess of Bavaria, mother of Kaiser Franz Josef. 1820′s
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downthetubes · 1 year ago
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Michele Hutchison announced as winner of inaugural Sophie Castille Awards for Comics in Translation
Michele Hutchison has been announced as the winner of the inaugural Sophie Castille Awards for Comics in Translation. More Awards for translation, inspired by the late Sophie Castille, are set to follow, across Europe
Michele Hutchison has been announced as the winner of the inaugural Sophie Castille Awards for Comics in Translation, for her translation of The Philosopher, The Dog and the Wedding by Barbara Stok, published in English by SelfMadeHero. More Awards for translation, inspired by the late Sophie Castille, are set to follow, across Europe. Michele Hutchison, winner of inaugural Sophie Castille…
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graphicpolicy · 2 years ago
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Around the Tubes
Some comic news and reviews from around the web to start the day! #comics #comicbooks
It was new comic book day yesterday! What’d you all get? What’d you like? Sound off in the comments below! While you think about that, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web. Kotaku – One Piece Creator Asked AI To Write A New Manga Chapter – Oh, this could be interesting. The San Francisco Standard – The First Woman To Draw Wonder Woman Wants You To Know She’s Alive and Well in…
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unknown-songs · 4 years ago
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BLACK LIVES MATTER
A list with black artists who have a song in the Unknown Songs That Should Be Known-playlist (Can be a black artist in a band or just solo-artist) (no specific genre)
Bull’s Eye - Blacknuss, Prince Prime - Funk Aftershow - Joe Fox - Alternative Hip-hop Strangers in the Night - Ben L’Oncle Soul - Soul Explore - Mack Wilds - R&B Something To Do - IGBO - Funk
Down With The Trumpets - Rizzle Kicks - Pop Dans ta ville - Dub Inc. - Reggae Dance or Die - Brooklyn Funk Essentials - Funk FACELESS - The PLAYlist, Glenn Lewis - R&B Tell Me Father - Jeangu Macrooy - Soul
Southern Boy - John The Conquerer - Blues Hard Rock Savannah Grass - Kes - Dancehall Dr. Funk - The Main Squeeze - Funk Seems I’m Never Tired of Loving You - Lizz Wright - Jazz Out of My Hands - TheColorGrey, Oddisee - Hip-Hop/Pop
Raised Up in Arkansas - Michael Burks - Blues Black Times - Sean Kuti, Egypt 80, Carlos Santana - Afrobeat Cornerstone - Benjamin Clementine - Indie Shine On - R.I.O., Madcon - Electronic Pop Bass On The Line - Bernie Worrell - Funk
When We Love - Jhené Aiko - R&B Need Your Love - Curtis Harding - Soul Too Dry to Cry - Willis Earl Beal - Folk Your House - Steel Pulse - Reggae Power - Moon Boots, Black Gatsby - Deep House
Vinyl Is My Bible - Brother Strut - Funk Diamond - Izzy Biu - R&B Elusive - blackwave., David Ngyah - Hip-hop Don’t Ever Let Nobody Drag Your Spirit Down - Heritage Blues Orchestra - Blues Sastanàqqàm - Tinariwen - Psychedelic Rock
Disco To Go - Brides of Funkenstein - Funk/Soul Circles - Durand Jones & The Indications - Retro Pop Cheesin’ - Cautious Clay, Remi Wolf, sophie meiers - R&B Changes - Charles Bradley - Soul The Sweetest Sin - RAEVE - House
Gyae Su - Pat Thomas, Kwashibu Area Band - Funk What Am I to Do - Ezra Collective, Loyle Carner - Hip-hop Get Your Groove On - Cedric Burnside - Blues Old Enough To Know Better - Steffen Morrisson - Soul Wassiye - Habib Koité - Khassonke musique
Dance Floor - Zapp - Funk Wake Up - Brass Against, Sophia Urista - Brass Hard-Rock BIG LOVE - Black Eyed Peas - Pop The Greatest - Raleigh Ritchie - R&B DYSFUNCTIONAL - KAYTRANADA, VanJess - Soul
See You Leave - RJD2, STS, Khari Mateen - Hip-hop Sing A Simple Song - Maceo Parker - Jazz/Funk Have Mercy - Eryn Allen Kane - Soul Homenage - Brownout - Latin Funk Can’t Sleep - Gary Clark Jr. - Blues Rock
Toast - Koffee - Dancehall Freedom - Ester Dean - R&B Iskaba - Wande Coal, DJ Tunez - Afropop High Road - Anthony Riley - Alternative Christian Sunny Days - Sabrina Starke - Soul
The Talking Fish - Ibibio Sound Machine - Funk Paralyzed - KWAYE - Indie Purple Heart Blvd - Sebastian Kole - Pop WORSHIP - The Knocks, MNEK - Deep House BMO - Ari Lennox - R&B
Promises - Myles Sanko - Soul .img - Brother Theodore - Funk Singing the Blues - Ruthie Foster, Meshell Ndegeocello - Blues Nobody Like You - Amartey, SBMG, The Livingtons - Hip-hop Starship - Afriquoi, Shabaka Hutchings, Moussa Dembele - Deep House
Lay My Troubles Down - Aaron Taylor - Funk  Bloodstream - Tokio Myers - Classic Sticky - Ravyn Lenae - R&B Why I Try - Jalen N’Gonda - Soul Motivation - Benjamin Booker - Folk
quand c’est - Stromae - Pop Let Me Down (Shy FX Remix) - Jorja Smith, Stormzy, SHY FX - Reggae Funny - Gerald Levert - R&B Salt in my Wounds - Shemekia Copeland - Blues Our Love - Samm Henshaw - Soul
Make You Feel That Way - Blackalicious - Jazz Hip-hop Knock Me Out - Vintage Trouble - Funk Take the Time - Ronald Bruner, Jr., Thundercat - Alternative Thru The Night - Phonte, Eric Roberson - R&B Keep Marchin’ - Raphael Saadiq - Soul
Shake Me In Your Arms - Taj Mahal, Keb’ Mo’ - Blues Meet Me In The Middle - Jodie Abascus - Pop Raise Hell - Sir the Baptist, ChurchPpl - Gospel Pop Mogoya - Oumou Sangaré - Wassoulou Where’s Yesterday - Slakah The Beatchild - Hip-hop
Lose My Cool - Amber Mark - R&B New Funk - Big Sam’s Funky Nation - Funk I Got Love - Nate Dogg - Hip-hop Nothing’s Real But Love - Rebecca Ferguson - Soul Crazy Race - The RH Factor - Jazz
Spies Are Watching Me - Voilaaa, Sir Jean - Funk The Leaders - Boka de Banjul - Afrobeat Fast Lane - Rationale - House Conundrum - Hak Baker - Folk Don’t Make It Harder On Me - Chloe x Halle - R&B
Plastic Hamburgers - Fantastic Negrito - Hardrock Beyond - Leon Bridges - Pop God Knows - Dornik - Soul Soleil de volt - Baloji - Afrofunk Do You Remember - Darryl Williams, Michael Lington - Jazz Get Back - McClenney - Alternative Three Words - Aaron Marcellus - Soul
Spotify playlist 
In memory of:
Aaron Bailey Adam Addie Mae Collins Ahmaud Arbery Aiyana Stanley Jones Akai Gurley Alberta Odell Jones Alexia Christian Alfonso Ferguson Alteria Woods Alton Sterling Amadou Diallo Amos Miller Anarcha Westcott Anton de Kom Anthony Hill Antonio Martin Antronie Scott Antwon Rose Jr. Arthur St. Clair Atatiana Jefferson Aubrey Pollard Aura Rosser Bennie Simons Berry Washington Bert Dennis Bettie Jones Betsey Billy Ray Davis Bobby Russ Botham Jean Brandon Jones Breffu Brendon Glenn Breonna Taylor Bud Johnson Bussa
Calin Roquemore Calvin McDowell Calvin Mike and his family Carl Cooper Carlos Carson Carlotta Lucumi Carol Denise McNair Carol Jenkins Carole Robertson Charles Curry Charles Ferguson Charles Lewis Charles Wright Charly Leundeu Keunang Chime Riley Christian Taylor Christopher Sheels Claude Neal Clementa Pickney Clifford Glover Clifton Walker Clinton Briggs Clinton R. Allen Cordella Stevenson Corey Carter Corey Jones Cynthia Marie Graham Hurd Cynthia Wesley
Daniel L. Simmons Danny Bryant Darius Randell Robinson Darius Tarver Darrien Hunt Darrius Stewart David Felix David Joseph David McAtee David Walker and his family Deandre Brunston Deborah Danner Delano Herman Middleton Demarcus Semer Demetrius DuBose Depayne Middleton-Doctor Dion Johnson Dominique Clayton Dontre Hamilton Dred Scott
Edmund Scott Ejaz Choudry Elbert Williams Eleanor Bumpurs Elias Clayton Elijah McClain Eliza Woods Elizabeth Lawrence Elliot Brooks Ellis Hudson Elmer Jackson Elmore Bolling Emantic Fitzgerald Bradford Jr. Emmett Till Eric Garner Eric Harris Eric Reason Ernest Lacy Ernest Thomas Ervin Jones Eugene Rice Eugene Williams Ethel Lee Lance Ezell Ford
Felix Kumi Frank Livingston Frank Morris Frank Smart Frazier B. Baker Fred Hampton Fred Rochelle Fred Temple Freddie Carlos Gray Jr.
George Floyd George Grant George Junius Stinney Jr. George Meadows George Waddell George Washington Lee Gregory Gunn
Harriette Vyda Simms Moore Harry Tyson Moore Hazel “Hayes” Turner Henry Ezekial Smith Henry Lowery Henry Ruffin Henry Scott Hosea W. Allen
India Kager Isaac McGhie Isadore Banks Italia Marie Kelly
Jack Turner Jamar Clark Jamel Floyd James Byrd Jr. James Craig Anderson James Earl Chaney James Powell James Ramseur James Tolliver James T. Scott Janet Wilson Jason Harrison Javier Ambler J.C. Farmer Jemel Roberson Jerame Reid Jesse Thornton Jessie Jefferson Jim Eastman Joe Nathan Roberts John Cecil Jones John Crawford III John J. Gilbert John Ruffin John Taylor Johnny Robinson Jonathan Ferrell Jonathan Sanders Jordan Edwards Joseph Mann Julia Baker Julius Jones July Perry Junior Prosper
Kalief Browder Karvas Gamble Jr. Keith Childress, Jr. Kelly Gist Kelso Benjamin Cochrane Kendrick Johnson Kenneth Chamberlain Sr. Kenny Long Kevin Hicks Kevin Matthews Kiwane Albert Carrington
Lacy Mitchell Lamar Smith Laquan McDonald Laura Nelson Laura Wood L.B. Reed L.D. Nelson Lemuel Penn Lemuel Walters Leonard Deadwyler Leroy Foley Levi Harrington Lila Bella Carter Lloyd Clay Louis Allen Lucy
M.A. Santa Cruz Maceo Snipes Malcom X Malice Green Malissa Williams Manuel Ellis Marcus Deon Smith Marcus Foster Marielle Franco Mark Clark Maria Martin Lee Anderson Martin Luther King Jr. Matthew Avery Mary Dennis Mary Turner Matthew Ajibade May Noyes Mckenzie Adams Medgar Wiley Evers Michael Brown Michael Donald Michael Griffith Michael Lee Marshall Michael Lorenzo Dean Michael Noel Michael Sabbie Michael Stewart Michelle Cusseaux Miles Hall Moses Green Mya Hall Myra Thompson
Nathaniel Harris Pickett Jr. Natasha McKenna Nicey Brown Nicholas Heyward Jr.
O’Day Short family Orion Anderson Oscar Grant III Otis Newsom
Pamela Turner Paterson Brown Jr. Patrick Dorismond Philando Castile Phillip Pannell Phillip White Phinizee Summerour
Quaco
Ramarley Graham Randy Nelson Raymond Couser Raymond Gunn Regis Korchinski-Paquet Rekia Boyd Renisha McBride Riah Milton Robert Hicks Robert Mallard Robert Truett Rodney King Roe Nathan Roberts Roger Malcolm and his wife Roger Owensby Jr. Ronell Foster Roy Cyril Brooks Rumain Brisbon Ryan Matthew Smith
Sam Carter Sam McFadden Samuel DuBose Samuel Ephesians Hammond Jr. Samuel Hammond Jr. Samuel Leamon Younge Jr. Sandra Bland Sean Bell Shali Tilson Sharonda Coleman-Singleton Shukri Abdi Simon Schuman Slab Pitts Stella Young Stephon Clark Susie Jackson
T.A. Allen Tamir Rice Tamla Horsford Tanisha Anderson Timothy Caughman Timothy Hood Timothy Russell Timothy Stansbury Jr. Timothy Thomas Terrence Crutcher Terrill Thomas Tom Jones Tom Moss Tony McDade Tony Terrell Robinson Jr. Trayvon Martin Troy Hodge Troy Robinson Tula Tyler Gerth Tyre King Tywanza Sanders
Victor Duffy Jr. Victor White III
Walter Lamar Scott Wayne Arnold Jones Wesley Thomas Wilbert Cohen Wilbur Bundley Will Brown Will Head Will Stanley Will Stewart Will Thompson Willie James Howard Willie Johnson Willie McCoy Willie Palmer Willie Turks William Brooks William Butler William Daniels William Fambro William Green William L. Chapman II William Miller William Pittman Wyatt Outlaw
Yusef Kirriem Hawkins
The victims of LaLaurie (1830s) The black victims of the Opelousas massacre (1868) The black victims of the Thibodaux massacre (1887) The black victims of the Wilmington insurrection (1898) The black victims of the Johnson-Jeffries riots (1910) The black victims of the Red summer (1919) The black victims of the Elaine massacre (1919) The black victims of the Ocoee massacre (1920) The victims of the MOVE bombing (1985)
All the people who died during the Atlantic slave trade, be it due to abuse or disease.
All the unnamed victims of mass-incarceration, who were put into jail without the committing of a crime and died while in jail or died after due to mental illness. 
All the unnamed victims of racial violence and discrimination. 
...
My apologies for all the people missing on this list. Feel free to add more names and stories. 
Listen, learn and read about discrimination, racism and black history: (feel free to add more)  Documentaries: 13th (Netflix) The Innocence Files (Netflix) Who Killed Malcolm X? (Netflix) Time: The Kalief Browder Story (Netflix) I Am Not Your Negro
YouTube videos: We Cannot Stay Silent about George Floyd Waarom ook Nederlanders de straat op gaan tegen racisme (Dutch) Wit is ook een kleur (Dutch) (documentaire)
Books: Biased by Jennifer Eberhardt Don’t Touch My Hair by Emma Dabiri Freedom Is A Constant Struggle by Angela Davis How To Be An Anti-Racist by Ibram X. Kendi I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou Me and White Supremacy by Layla Saad So You Want To Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo They Can’t Kill Us All by Wesley Lowery White Fragility by Robin Deangelo Why I’m No Longer Talking To White People About Race by Reni Eddo-Lodge Woman, Race and Class by Angela Davis
Websites: https://lynchinginamerica.eji.org/report/ https://museumandmemorial.eji.org/ https://archive.org/details/thirtyyearsoflyn00nati/page/n11/mode/2up https://lab.nos.nl/projects/slavernij/index-english.html https://blacklivesmatter.com/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/
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kellyvela · 2 years ago
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Not an asoiaf ask so feel free to ignore, but what are you watching now? I don’t have any tv shows that I’m into rn and wondered what your favs are?
I rewatched The Staircase documentary in order to watch the new HBO show The Staircase with Sophie Turner.
Before that, I watched a Spanish period drama about Isabella of Castile, called Isabel.
Before that I watched the final season of Killing Eve.
And before that I watched some Scandinavian crime dramas like Karppi (AKA Deadwind), The Valhalla Murders and The Chestnut Man (Kastanjemanden).
Thanks for your message :)
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redladydeath · 4 years ago
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Mmm, fancasted my mega-Sixed queen designs
Image one: Matilda of Flanders/Viquichele Cross, Matilda of Scotland/Jasmine Shen, Adeliza of Louvain/Megan Leung, Empress Matilda/Vicki Manser, Matilda of Boulogne/Karis Oka Image two: Eleanor of Aquitaine/Zara MacIntosh, Berengaria of Navarre/Jarneia Richard-Noel, Isabelle of Angouleme/Samantha Pauly, Eleanor of Provence/Sophie Isaacs, Eleanor of Castile/Liv Alexander Image three: Margaret of France/Courtney Monsma, Isabella of France/Elizabeth Walker, Philippa of Hainault/Amelia Walker, Anne of Bohemia/Hana Stewart, Isabella of Valois/Brittney Mack
Image four: Joan of Navarre/Abby Mueller, Catherine of Valois/Vidya Makan, Margaret of Anjou/Courtney Mack, Elizabeth Woodville/Lori McLare, Anne Neville/Rebecca Wickes Image five: Margaret Beaufort/Kara-Ami McCreanor, Elizabeth of York/Scarlet Gabriel, Catharine of Aragon/Adrianna Hicks, Anne Boleyn/Millie O’Connell, Jane Seymour/Natalie Paris Image six: Anna of Cleves/Alexia McIntosh, Katherine Howard/Alicia Corrales-Connor, Catherine Parr/Maiya Quansah-Breed, Jane Grey/Mallory Maedke, Mary I/Courtney Stapleton
Image seven: Elizabeth I/Grace Mouat, Mary Queen of Scots/Cherelle Jay, Anne of Denmark/Shannen Quan, Henrietta Maria of France/Chloe Zuel, Catherine of Braganza/Courtney Bowman Image eight: Mary of Modena/Lucy Aiston, Mary II/Nicole Kyoung-Mi Lambert, Queen Anne/Shekinah McFarlane, Caroline of Ansbach/Annabel Marlow, Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz/Renee Lamb Image nine: Caroline of Brunswick/Amy Bridges, Adelaide of Saxe-Meinigen/Aimie Atkinson, and Queen Victoria/Collette Guitart
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