A transitional Rapier with a pierced blade,
OaL: 50 in/127 cm
Weight: 1.7 lbs/765 g
England or Germany, ca. 1635-1645, housed at the Royal Armouries War Gallery, Leeds.
Codex Rotundus “266 almost perfectly circular pages of parchment have been bound together to build a block of 3cm height with a diameter of only 9cm.”
The initials of the metal clasps point us to Adolph of Cleves, Lord of Ravenstein (1425 - 1492) as the owner.
Phidias Showing the Frieze of the Parthenon to his Friends (1868) by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema
© Nona Limmen {Instagram / Shop}
1967 Ferrari 330 P4
Invocating Pan to the Devil’s Revelry
Salvador Dali, Women Flowers, 1970
The Dance of Death Anonymous - German 16th Century
No, witchcraft book market, I would actually like professionally cited texts on actual ancient folk practice based on actual archeology and historical text, not another garbage modern deconstructionist take on mythology you didn't even understand in the first place.
Lili Ország (1926-1978) — Labyrinth: House of Secrets (oil on fibreboard, 1977)
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