#dipteros
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
respect-the-locals · 10 months ago
Text
🐠 Daily Fish Fact: 🐠
Atlantic Spadefish: The scientific name is derived from the Greek word "chaíti" meaning "mane" and "dipteros" meaning "with two fins." The Spadefish is also known by numerous other names, including angelfish, white angelfish, threetailed porgy, ocean cobbler, and moonfish. It is the symbol of the North Carolina Aquariums.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
47 notes · View notes
arte1h · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
TITOLO: tutte le tipologie di tempio greco
DATAZIONE: I Primi templi compaiono in età arcaica tra l’ottavo e il VII secolo a.C.
LUOGO DI CONSERVAZIONE: Grecia
LIOGO DI RITROVAMENTO: Grecia
TECNICA: scultura greca che si è sviluppata a partire o dall’antico megaron miceneo per il colonnato all’ingresso o dalla casa greca per la forma del tetto a spioventi.
DETTAGLI: I templi greci generalmente sorgevano nell’acropoli o nei santuari, poiché rappresentavano le abitazioni degli dei che non potevano essere vicine a quelle dei mortali. Venivano considerati inviolabili e a differenza delle chiese cristiane non erano pensati per ospitare molte persone all’interno. All’interno presentano una sala principale chiamata naos, Con dinnanzi un pronaos e alle spalle un opistodomo. A seconda della quantità e della disposizione di colonne il tempio greco può essere di diversi tipi. Abbiamo il tempio in antis, che presenta due colonne all’ingresso del pronaos, il doppio inantis che presenta due colonne all’ingresso del pronaos e due colonne all’ingresso dell’opistodomo, Il prostilo che presenta quattro colonne all’ingresso del pronaos e l’anfiprostilo che presenta quattro colonne sia l’ingresso del pronaos che all’ingresso dell’opistodomo. inoltre vi sono altri tipi di templi che comprendono una o più file di colonne lungo tutta la superficie del tempio chiamata peristasi, divisa dal naos da un deambulatorio. se la peristalsi è singola si parla di periptero se è doppia di diptero. Infine vi è il Tholos che ha una forma circolare e una perìstasi lungo tutta la superficie.
0 notes
bioalm · 4 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Eristalis pertinax, Syrphidae Tapered drone fly, Eristalis pertinax, Syrphidae Se puede distinguir de especies similares por el tarso frontal completamente naranja / amarillo. Se puede distinguir aún más del Eristalix tenax común por tener la tibia posterior pálida en la mitad basal. Can be distinguished from similar species by the entirely orange/yellow front tarsi. It can be further distinguished from the common Eristalix tenax by having the hind tibia pale in the basal half. #kingslynn #reinounido #unitedkingdom #inglaterra #england #entomology #entomologia #insects #insectos #animals #animalsofinstagram ##diptera #dipteros #fotocatchers #fotoshoot #fotos #fotooftheday #fotodeldia #natura #nature #naturephotography #moscas #flies #syrphidae #eristalispertinax (en King's Lynn, Norfolk) https://www.instagram.com/p/CGzRHt8q2EO/?igshid=1qdxh1npokdyz
0 notes
fulviomeloni · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
mosca común / Fly by heradius http://ift.tt/2fYpqNv #macro
1 note · View note
peachesannndgravy · 6 years ago
Text
@dick-greenwood tagged me to put my playlist on shuffle and post the first 10 songs, so thank youuuuu.
Heavy in the Game -- 2Pac
Eternalists -- Talib Kweli && Hi-Tek
Préludes Op.28: No.8 in F-sharp Minor -- Chopin
‘Cause I’m a Man -- Tame Impala
Try Me -- Bob Marley
Diptero -- Sekta Core
I would never have guessed -- Sade
Success -- Interpol
Burndt Jamb -- Weezer
Last Dance -- Donna Summer
What a trip. lol. I’ll tag..... @rainbowcakejoy @babelievesinlouis @zlcarusfalls @excuisiteme @waitingforaflickerofniall @leighhecking && anyone else. 
9 notes · View notes
luispinango1992 · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Los tábanos son Dipteros que actúan como plaga para el ganado... https://www.instagram.com/p/CefegFZOVi7/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
1 note · View note
tachiraventaslego · 4 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Las moscas al igual que otras Plagas, se la pasan en medio de la basura, trayendo consigo infinidad de bacterias que producen daños en nuestra salud. Ellas pertenecen al orden de los dipteros, y pueden transmitir más de cien enfermedades. Algunas de ellas muy graves como la salmonella, fiebre tifoidea, disentería de basilos, cólera, tuberculosis, antrax, gusanos, parásitos. Alejalas de tu vida, negocio, local, panadería, carnicerías. Vive un lugar libre de Plagas al contactarnos @fumigacionesfuseragri a tu servicio. #carnicerias #charcuterias #panaderias #comidarapida #buencomer #moscas #ceroplagas #noticiastachira #tachiranews_ #sancristobal #SanCristobal #tachiranews #ventastachira #serviciocontroldeplagas #controldeplagas #sanitizacion #barrioobrero #tariba #abejales #palmira #rubio #junin #abasto #alimento #masvenezolanos https://www.instagram.com/p/CLH7i91BpAQ/?igshid=16f8qmea8ovxb (en San Cristobal - Edo Tachira) https://www.instagram.com/p/CLIKJDGBTRJ/?igshid=7fhxfbbyo45t
0 notes
crystaloccult · 7 years ago
Text
Hekate Resources
Note: I pulled this list from here. It is not my own but thought Tumblr would find it useful.
________________________________________________________________
I've had this for some time and though it might be useful to others who are sworn to Hekate or at least interested in her. I have purposely omitted some items due to language usage or audience focus, aimed at 3 - 10 years of age type thing. It's a large list and reflects my own biases and interests regarding the subject of reference material for Hekate / Hecate. ..............................
Books, Articles and Various for Hekate / Hecate reference
Section 1: Books
01.  Hekate Soteira: A Study of Hekate's Roles in the Chaldean Oracles and Related Literature (American Classical Studies, No by Sarah Iles Johnston, 1990, 200 pages. PB, ISBN 1555404278 // ISBN 155540426X 02. Restless Dead: Encounters between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece by Sarah Iles Johnston, 2013-PB, 352 Pages, ISBN 0520280180 // ISBN 0520217071 03. Mantike: Studies in Ancient Divination (Religions in the Graeco-Roman World) by Sarah Iles Johnston, 2005, 322 pages, ISBN 9004144978  04. The Goddess Hekate by Stephen Ronan, 1992, 166 pgs, ISBN 0948366214 05. Hekate in Ancient Greek Religion by Ilmo Robert Von Rudloff, 1999, 176 pages, ISBN is 978-0-9696066-8-0 / 9780969606680 06. Hekate Liminal Rites: A Study of the rituals, magic and symbols of the torch-bearing Triple Goddess of the Crossroads by Sorita d'Este,  2009, 194 pages, ISBN 1905297238 07. HEKATE: Keys to the Crossroads - A collection of personal essays, invocations, rituals, recipes and artwork from modern Witches, Priestesses and Priests ... Goddess of Witchcraft, Magick and Sorcery by Sorita d'Este, 2006, 156 pages, ISBN-13: 9781905297092 // ISBN: 1905297092 08. HEKATE Her Sacred Fires by Sorita d'Este, 2010, 308 pages, ISBN-13: 9781905297351 // ISBN: 1905297351 09. Artemis: Virgin Goddess of the Sun & Moon--A Comprehensive Guide to the Greek Goddess of the Hunt, Her Myths, Powers & M by Sorita d'Este, 2005, 156 pages, ISBN-13: 9781905297023 // ISBN: 1905297025 10. Thracian Magic: Past and Present by Georgi Mishev, 2012, 338 pages, ISBN 1905297483 11. Rotting Goddess: The Origins of the Witch in Classical Antiquity by Jacob Rabinowitz, 1998, 154 pages, ISBN 157027035X 12. Crossroads by Greg Crowfoot, 2005, 188 pages, ISBN 1593303025 13. Bearing Torches: A Devotional Anthology for Hekate by Bibliotheca Alexandrina, 2009, 200 pages, PB, ISBN 1449917046 14. The Cults of the Greek States, Volume II [Vol. 2] by Lewis Richard Farnell, CHAPTER XVI - HEKATE pp. 501-519, ISBN 1236589580, Online ISBN: 9780511710438, Paperback ISBN: 9781108015448 15. Sacred Places of Goddess: 108 Destinations by Karen Tate, 2006, ISBN-13: 978-1-888729-17-7 // ISBN-10: 1-888729-17-1 16. Hecate I: Death, Transition and Spiritual Mastery (2nd Edition) by Jade Sol Luna, 2009, 260 pages, ISBN 1442184515 - Hecate I: Death, Transition and Spiritual Mastery (1st edition) Paperback – October 31, 2008 by Jade Sol Luna (still being sold) 17. Hecate II: The Awakening of Hydra by Jade Sol Luna, 2009, 326 pages, ISBN 0615344755 18. Triple Hekate mainly on votive reliefs, coins, gems and amulets by Elpis Mitropoulou (Very rare have not found a copy yet printed 1978), Pyli Ed, 1978  19. Curse Tablets and Binding Spells from the Ancient World, by John G. Gager, Softcover, 1999, 296 pages, ISBN 0195134826 // ISBN 0195062264 20. A History of Discoveries at Halicarnassus, Cnidus and Branchidae, Volume 2, Part 2, Charles Thomas Newton and Richard Popplewell Pullan, CHAPTER XXIV pp. 554-572, Original Publication Year: 1863, Online ISBN:9780511910302, Paperback ISBN:9781108027274 About Lagina – Historical reference 21. The Temple of Hekate at Lagina, by Ahmet A. Tirpan – Zeliha Gider – Aytekin Buyukozer pg 181 – 202, Dipteros und Pseudodiptoros, BYZAS, Veroffenllichungen des Deutschen Archologischen Institits Istanbul, ISBN 978-605-5607-74-6 (English) 22. Labraunda and Karia, Proceedings of the International Symposium Commemorating Sixty Years of Swedish Archaeological Work in Labraunda, The Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities Stockholm, November 20-21, 2008, ISSN 0346-6442 // ISBN 978-91-554-7997-8 - The Archaic architectural terracottas from Euromos and some cult signs by Suat Ateşlier, Pg 279 - 290  23. A N O D O S, Studies of the Ancient World, 6-7/2006-2007, CULT AND SANCTUARY THROUGH THE AGES, (From the Bronze Age to the Late Antiquity),  - DAŞBACAK, Coşkun: Hecate Cult in Anatolia: Rituals and Dedications in Lagina pg 143-148;  - SÖ��ÜT, Bilal: Naiskoi From the Sacred Precinct of Lagina Hekate: Augustus and Sarapis, PG 421-432 24. The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation, Including the Demotic Spells, edited by Hans Dieter Betz, 1997, 406 pages, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-04444-0 25. RITUAL TEXTS FOR THE AFTERLIFE, Orpheus and the Bacchic Gold Tablets Fritz Graf and Sarah Iles Johnston, 2013, 296 pages 26. ANCIENT GREEK CULTS, A guide by Jennifer Larson, 2007, 320 pages, ISBN-13: 978-0415491020 ISBN-10: 0415491029   27. Magika Hiera, Ancient Greek Magic and Religion, Edited by Christopher A. Faraone & Dirk Obbink, Oxford University Press, 1997, 312 pages, ISBN 0-19-504450-9 / ISBN 0-19-511140-0 28. From Artemis to Diana: The Goddess of Man and Beast, 12 Acta Hyperborea 2009, Museum Tusculanum Press, University of Copenhagen, 2009, 585 pages 29. Magic, Witchcraft, and Ghosts in the Greek and Roman Worlds by Daniel Ogden, Oxford University Press, 2002 ISBN 0-19-513575-X; ISBN 0-19-515123-2 30. CHALDÆAN ORACLES, Translated and Commented by G. R. S. Mead (1908) version uses Hecat where later re-releases indicate Hecate. 31. Women’s Religions in the Greco-Roman World: A Sourcebook, ROSS SHEPARD KRAEMER, Editor, Oxford University press, 2004, ISBN 0-19-517065-2 (cloth); 0-19-514278-0 (pbk.) 32. Greek Religion by Walter Burker, – July 26, 1985, 512 pages 33. Various catalogs and Literature about Coin Collecting & Numismatics. A great deal of info and depictions of Hecate / Hekate on coins, tokens, can be discovered in the literature. These are just a few of the many journals, books, reports that are available. Requires a bit of determination on the part of the researcher to identify and discover how the coins reflect religion, economics, culture, geographical, etc influences. An underutilized source of information on many gods / goddesses.   - A Catalog of Greek Coins in the British Musuem, 28 Volumes - ERIC - The Encyclopedia of Roman Imperial Coins – 2005 by Rasiel Suarez - COINAGE AND IDENTITY IN THE ROMAN PROVINCES, Edited by Christopher Howgego, Volker Heuchert, Andrew Burnett, Oxford University Press, 2005
Section 1a: Books more LHP in focus 
01. Queen of Hell by Mark Alan Smith, 2010,  02. The Red King (Trident of Witchcraft) by Mark Alan Smith, 2011,  03. MAGICK OF THE ANCIENT GODS, Chthonic Paganism & the Left Hand Path by Michael W. Ford, 2009, 254 pages, ISBN 978-0-578-02732-6 04. Book of the Witch Moon: Chaos, Vampiric & Luciferian Sorcery, The Choronzon Edition by Michael W. Ford, 2006, 456 pages, Hecate Queen of Witches, pg 98 - 107 05. HECATE'S WOMB (And other essays) by Jason Perdue, 2004, 146 pages
Section 1b: Have heard both good and bad reviews of these books
01. The Witches' Craft: The Roots of Witchcraft & Magical Transformation by Raven Grimassi, 2002, 282 pgs 02. The New Book of Goddesses & Heroines by Patricia Monaghan, 3rd edition, 1997, 384 pgs 03. Hecate - The Witches' Goddess – November 4, 2011 by Gary R. Varner, PB, 120 pages (more bad than good reviews on this one) 04. The Temple of Hekate - Exploring the Goddess Hekate through Ritual, Meditation And Divination by Tara Sanchez, 2011, 192 pgs, ISBN 1905297491 (Myself I’d not recommend it) 05. Goddess Connections Workbook Hekate [Kindle Edition] by Tara Reynolds, 17 pages
Section 1c: Books questionable history and / or heavily MMC influenced (Not ones I’d recommend)
01. Mysteries of the Dark Moon: The Healing Power of the Dark Goddess Paperback – May 22, 1992, 304 pages, by Demetra George 02. Hecate: Queen of the Witches or Wise Crone? (Celebrate the Divine Feminine; Reclaim Your Power with Ancient Goddess Wisdom) by Joy Reichard, Chapter 13, 2011 03. Queen of the Night: Rediscovering the Celtic Moon Goddess by Sharynne MacLeod Nic Mhacha, 2005, Forth Lunation (chapter 4) 04. Goddess Enchantment, Magic and Spells Volume 2: Goddesses Love, Abundance and Transformation by Carrie Kirkpatrick, 2011, Chapter 4, pg 68-77 05. Lost Goddesses of Early Greece: A Collection of Pre-Hellenic Myths Paperback, by Charlene Spretnak – August 3, 1992, 144 pages (This book has been compared to Robert Graves THE WHITE GODDESS in the author’s ability to suggest opinion as historical fact) Feminist seem to endorse it while historical based opinions find it to questionable. 06. Hecate (Monsters of Mythology) Library Binding, by Bernard Evslin – September, 1988, 87 pages (Most reviews and such suggest incorrect info and best to just toss it, part of his Monsters of series of books) Could not bring myself to read it entirely. Publishing date of 1988 suggests part of the issue’s presented, theories which are no longer endorsed or supported.
Section 2: Historical / Archaic / Modern Plays & Poetry
01. The Homeric Hymns (HYMN TO DEMETER) by Homer 01a The Homeric Hymn to Demeter: Translation, Commentary, and Interpretive Essays by Helene P. Foley, 1993, 320 pages. 02. The Argonautica by Apollonius of Rhodes 03. Medea by Euripides 03a Medea: Essays on Medea in Myth, Literature, Philosophy, and Art Paperback, by James J. Clauss (Editor), Sarah Iles Johnston (Editor)– January 12, 1997, 376 pages, ISBN-13: 978-0691043760 ISBN-10: 0691043760 04. Hesiod: Volume I, Theogony. Works and Days. Testimonia (Loeb Classical Library No. 57N) by Hesiod (Author), Glenn W. Most (Translator) – 2007, 308 pages,  05. The Orphic Hymm to Hekate 06. IDYLL 2: THE SPELL by THEOCRITUS 07. Ovid – The Metamorphoses - book vii & The Epistles of Ovid 08. John Keats – To Homer & On the Sea 09. William Shakespeare’s Plays - A Midsummer Night's Dream, Act 5, Scene 1 - King Henry VI. Part I., Act 3 Scene 2 - Hamlet, Act III, Scene 2 - Macbeth, Act II, scene 1 - King Lear, Act 1, Scene 1  10. Pausanias' Description of Greece II.30.2 11. The Comedies of Plutus by Aristophanes 12. The Aeneid by Virgil, Robert Fitzgerald translation 13. Hymm to Minerva by Proclus – Eleusinian and Bacchic Mysteries by Thomas Taylor, 1891, Pgs 225 – 227.
Section 2a: Historical / Archaic / Modern Plays & Poetry more LHP
01. Aleister Crowley Invocation of Hecate 02. Invocation of Hecate , Queen of All Witchcraft
Section 3: Academic research articles
01. A Group of Marble Statuettes in the Ödemiş Museum” – Part of The Stone Artifacts of the Ödemiş Museum 02. Structure, Sculpture and Scholarship Understanding the Sanctuary of Hekate at Lagina, Amanda Elaine Herring, University of California (L.A.), 2011 03. Apollo, Ennodia, and fourth-century Thessaly by C.D. Graninger, Kernos 22 (2009), Varia 04. Karian, Greek or Roman? The layered identities of Stratonikeia at the sanctuary of Hekate at Lagina by Christina Williamson 05. SANCTUARIES AS TURNING POINTS IN TERRITORIAL FORMATION. LAGINA, PANAMARA AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF STRATONIKEIA by Christina Williamson 06. City and Sanctuary in Hellenistic Asia Minor. Sacred and Ideological Landscapes by Christina Williamson 07. Hekate: Bringer of Light by Shelly M. Nixon, California Institute of Integral Studies. 08. Hekate with Apollo and Artemis on a Gem from the Southern Black Sea Region by MANOLIS MANOLEDAKIS 09. HEKATE: HER ROLE AND CHARACTER IN GREEK LITERATURE FROM BEFORE THE FIFTH CENTURY B.C. by CAROL M. MOONEY, B.A., McMaster University February, 1971 10. PLATO’S X & HEKATE’S CROSSROADS, ASTRONOMICAL LINKS TO THE MYSTERIES OF ELEUSIS by George Latura, Independent Researcher, Mediterranean Archaeology and Archaeometry, Vol. XX, No X, pp.xx-xx 11. Medea, Cytissorus, Hekate, they all came from Aea. Historical and Cultic Evidence from Hellas in the Golden Fleece Myths, Debbie Turkilsen and Joost Blasweiler, Publisher: Arnhem (NL) Bronze Age, ISBN/EAN: 978-90-820497-1-8 2014 Arnhem –Sydney 12. The Hecate of the Theogony, Jenny Strauss Clay, 1984, Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 25: 27-38 13. A Portrait of Hekate by Patricia A. Marquardt, in the American Journal of Philology, Volume 102 14. DOG SACRIFICE IN ANCIENT AND MODERN GREECE: FROM THE SACRIFICE RITUAL TO DOG TORTURE (KYNOMARTYRION) by Manolis G. Sergis
Section 4: JSTOR articles
01. Diana Nemorensis by Andrew Alföldi, American Journal of Archaeology Vol. 64, No. 2 (Apr., 1960), pp. 137-144, Published by: Archaeological Institute of America, Article Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/502539 02. Hecate: A Transfunctional Goddess in the Theogony By Deborah Boedeker Transactions of the American Philological Association (1974-) Vol. 113, (1983), pp. 79-93 Published by: American Philological Association, Article Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/284004 03. Hecate: Greek or “Anatolian”? by William Berg, Numen Vol. 21, Fasc. 2 (Aug., 1974), pp. 128-140 Published by: BRILL Article Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3269561 04. The Running Maiden from Eleusis and the Early Classical Image of Hekate, Author(s): Charles M. Edwards Source: American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 90, No. 3 (Jul., 1986), pp. 307-318 Published by: Archaeological Institute of America Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/505689 05. Empousa, Dionysus and the Mysteries: Aristophanes, Frogs 285ff Author(s): Christopher G. Brown Reviewed work(s): Source: The Classical Quarterly, New Series, Vol. 41, No. 1 (1991), pp. 41-50 Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/639022 06. Crossroads, Author(s): S. I. Johnston Reviewed work(s): Source: Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, Bd. 88 (1991), pp. 217-224 Published by: Dr. Rudolf Habelt GmbH, Bonn (Germany) Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20187554  07. The Chthonic Gods of Greek Religion Author(s): Arthur Fairbanks, Source: The American Journal of Philology,Vol. 21, No. 3 (1900), pp. 241-259 Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/287716 08. A Portrait of Hecate by Patricia A. Marquardt, The American Journal of Philology, Vol. 102, No. 3 (Autumn, 1981), pp. 243-260, Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press Article Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/294128 09. The House-Door in Greek and Roman Religion and Folk-Lore Author(s): M. B. Ogle Source: The American Journal of Philology,Vol. 32, No. 3 (1911), pp. 251-271 Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/288616 
41 notes · View notes
juarezesdeporte · 4 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
BARRERA DE SOL
DON BENITO
Manolo de la Laguna
Escuchamos hambrientos, con el *guitarrista de Algeciras, España, "Fantasía Flamenca", esperando que la "señá"  Manchega, nos de, cuando menos, un mendrugo de pan para cenar, porque creemos que lo merecemos, después de tanto encierro pandémico, más lo mucho que falta; solo nos reconforta aquello de que... no hay mal que dure cien años, ni pueblo que lo soporte. ¿Estamos?.
En este texto taurino, no nos vamos a referir a un versito que mamá, nos decía cuando éramos pequeñitos: Mañana domingo se casa Benito, con un pajarito (qué nombre tan taurino) que canta bonito; tampoco nos vamos a referir a Don Benito Juárez, ni a Benito Andrés Manuel y mucho menos al estúpido de Benito Mussolini, sino a un pueblecillo español donde nació una de las nietas.
Don Benito, pertenece a Badajoz, en la región de Extremadura y ¡claro!, tiene su plaza de toros, tiene también sus fiestas y entre ellas, la más bella de todas las fiestas, la fiesta brava; lo que no sabemos es si juegan frontón a mano o con palmeta, aclarando que a nosotros, sólo nos gusta el jai-alai on juego de pelota vasca, aunque en México, ya no se juega, quizá porque se acabaron los buenos pelotaris o ya no dejaron apostar  a los aficionados a ese viril juego de pelota.
Resulta que con esto del corona virus, los festejos taurinos se suspendieron en todos los países donde la lidia de reses bravas, dentro de la población, tiene un profundo arraigo artístico-cultural, aunque los animalistas digan lo contrario y como cada cabeza es un mundo, pues mejor ahí lo dejamos.
Poco a poco en la España de hoy en día, empresarios, ganaderos de bravo y matadores de toros, están desesperados y se jalan de los pelos, porque las plazas, están cerradas en beneficio de todos, hasta en tanto la ciencia médica, no descubra algún medicamento o vacuna, que acabe con este terrible mal, que desde diciembre del 2019, azota la humanidad entera.
Y al parecer, en Don Benito, el pueblo y sus autoridades, ya no aguantaron más el confinamiento, el quédate en casa y la sana distancia y con motivo de sus festividades anuales, celebrarán una corrida de toros el próximo 6 de septiembre que, para los mexicanos, es el mes de la patria y nomás por los dídimos de un tabasqueño que gobierna este país de gloria suma, la raza tendrá en el zócalo, su grito de independencia el 15 por la noche y er 16, el tradicional desfile militar y todos con...tenis.
Más retomemos la dura senda por donde han ido los pocos sabios que en er mundo han sido o sea, la de los toros y el cartel de la corrida en Don Benito, está conformado por el jóven rejoneador Guillermo Hermoso de Mendoza, con un toro de Los Espartales y a pie: "El Amante de Almería", Enrique Ponce, Gines Marín y el lusitano Joao (Juan) Silva "Juanito", con un encierro de Cayetano Muñoz.
Esperemos que la corrida sea todo un éxito y que de perdis, los aficionados extremeños, llevan su cubreboca, porque según los enteraos ¡joder!, en boca cerrada no entran dipteros. *Paco  de Lucía. Vale. (Manolo de la Laguna)
0 notes
giorgiapuglisi · 4 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Nome:Tempio di Artemide (ricostruzione) ad Efeso
Periodo:VI secolo a.C.
Caratteristiche: diptero, octastilo di ordine ionico
0 notes
matildecavina · 4 years ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Tempio di Artemide
Efeso
VI secolo a.C.
Diptero octastilo di ordine ionico
0 notes
filo4242 · 4 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Tempio di Artemide (ricostruzione)
VI Secolo a.C
Diptero octastilo di ordine ionico
Efeso, Grecia
0 notes
giuliatomaino · 4 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Tempio di Artemide (ricostruzione) ad Efeso
VI secolo a.C.
Diptero, octastilo di ordine ionico
0 notes
nonunbuonnome · 6 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Autore: sconosciuto Nome: Tempio di Artemide a Efeso Data e periodo: VI secolo a.C., età arcaica Materiale e tecnica: marmo, tempio diptero
0 notes
giorgiapuglisi · 4 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Ricostruzione del Tempio di Artemide a Efeso, una delle sette meraviglie del mondo, andata distrutta
Periodo: VI secolo a.C.
Caratteristiche: diptero octastilo di ordine ionico
0 notes
juancazorla · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Las flores compuestas del Pajito (Anacyclus radiatus) llaman la atención de los pequeños insectos polinizadores. El huerto se llena de flores, se llena de insectos, #biodiversidad.
0 notes