King David from “The Icon” by Kurt Weitzmann
Maxfield Parrish - The Young King of the Black Isles, 1910
Jude Duarte is a human and the High Queen of Elfhame. She is the daughter of Eva and Justin Duarte, foster daughter of Madoc and Oriana, daughter-in-law to Lady Asha, half-sister to Vivienne, twin sister of Taryn Duarte, foster sister to Oak, wife of Cardan Greenbriar, great-granddaughter-in-law to Mab Greenbriar, daughter-in-law to Eldred Greenbriar, sister-in-law to Balekin, Elowyn, Dain, Rhyia and Caelia Greenbriar and the aunt of Leander. High Queen Jude is also the current leader of a spy g
Corium University Trilogy is a dark mafia college romance, meaning the book contains dark themes, including dub-con, non-con that happens during the characters' college year. If this is a trope you love, you can check out more dark romance books I’ve read and review here ! Tha
4/4 SBI Icons ! Free to use with credit.
Look back at the royalty from all over the world who have appeared on The Oprah Show.
“drawing without the overlay :)”
While Europe was experiencing its Dark Ages, a period of intellectual, cultural and economic regression from the 6th to the 13th centuries, Africans were
Pär Boström
Fennel seeds give this tender Slavic bread a distinctive licorice flavor, and vinegar gives it slight tang.
“생일축하해”
Debutante balls, or cotillions, are a centuries old tradition with roots in Europe as far back as the 1700s. The word “debutante” translates to female beginner in French, and refers to a young woman making her debut into polite society. The first of these lavish events was held by King George III in 1780 in…
“The Black Poet” touched by the ClayshaperOriginal piece by Jean-Léon Gérôme in 1888.
See inside a new show of rarely seen west African sculptures at the British Museum
Owned by the Revd WH Wayne from at least 1886; sold by Wayne to A Smith of Albert Gate Art Galleries, from whom it was purchased by the National Portrait Gallery. Purchased 1898 (NPG 1173). The National Portrait Gallery acquired this portrait as Margaret Tudor, sister of Henry VIII and wife of James IV of Scotland. However, both the style and the lack of any securely identified portraits of Margaret Tudor make this identification unlikely. The painterly technique suggests a French or possibly Flemish origin. The woman's costume is also in the style of French court dress of the early 16th century. Her gold jewellery and the stylised pomegranate and leaf pattern, commonly reproduced on expensive silks of the period, hint at her noble status. Recent microscopic examination of her medallion has revealed a horseman hunting with a falcon. Falconry and courtly love were frequently linked in medieval literature, so it is possible that this woman is wearing a love token.