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Wind Rider
The Road May End But Not Our Spirit of Adventure & Peace...
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Wind Rider's conversations
Nice shot.
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ΠΑΝΕΜΟΡΦΗ !!!!!
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Eine schönes blütenbild. Toll dieser pink/weiß/gelb kontrast. Schön gemacht. L!
Nelly
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Very beautiful this night picture with the moon, Denise! Like
My best wishes, PiGì
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beautiful picture ..like
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joli coup d'oeil! bravo bonjour de France
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J' aime beaucoup
Domi
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It was a scientific experiment PiGì, looking at carbon cycle and gas emissions from forest fires which are a common and natural occurrence in these forests. Pleased you found it interesting.
Greetings from Arizona, Chris
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ΠΟΛΥ ΟΜΟΡΦΗ!!! ΑΡΕΣΕΙ,
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@meisaleh & @wind rider Zenobia, Queen of Palmyra Zenobia was born to a man of Arab or Aramaean origin and his wife, supposedly an Egyptian, in Palmyra (modern-day Syria) probably in the early 240's A.D. Zenobia had a very illustrious background. She claimed to be a descendent of Cleopatra VII, but it is a fact that she came from a very long line of Syrian and Assyrian queen, starting with the legendary Queen of Sheba. Zabibi and Julia Maesa, two powerful Syrian queens, were in Zenobia's ancestry. Zenobia married the Odenathus, King of Palmyra, in her teenage years and became his second wife. Palmyra was an empire in modern-day Syria that had greatly adopted the Egyptian culture, which had almost completely died out. Zenobia was prepared for her role as queen. She was fluent in many languages, like Cleopatra: Greek, Latin, Egyptian, and Amharic. She was a beauty, also like Cleopatra. It is said that her voice was very harmonious, that her teeth were pearly white, that her eyes and hair were very dark, and she had manly strength. Zenobia bore Odenathus a son, though he had an heir, Hairan, by his first wife. Both were mysteriously assassinated in 267 A.D.. Many believe to this day that Zenobia may have been part of the assassination. Zenobia was now the Queen of Palmyra in her own right, as regent for her son. Immediately Zenobia shocked the world when she led her armies into Egypt in 269 A.D. and while Rome was busy in North Italy fighting off the Goths, Zenobia took Egypt from the Roman Empire and added it onto the tiny kingdom of Palmyra. That same year, Zenobia annexed most of Syria's small neighboring lands. Then Zenobia took large chunks from the Asia Minor. At the beginning of her reign, Palmyra was small and weak. Now Palmyra stretched from the Nile River in Egypt to the Bosphorus River in modern-day Turkey. The Romans were enraged, and were even more so when Zenobia declared her empire independent of Rome. Zenobia embraced all the cultures of her empire. She respected the long taunted Jews of Alexandria, she met often with the bishops at Antioch, and she had a great sense of humor. One tale goes that when Zenobia was to judge a trial about a merchant who overcharged his customers, she brought the merchant into an arena. Thinking he was going to be attacked by a beast, Zenobia let the cage open and out popped a chicken.
She committed suicide like Cleopatra, her hero She was paraded through the Roman streets in triumph, along with the defeated Goths, Amazons, and Vandals. She walked defiantly, her head held high. Afterwards she married a Roman governor and retired to a life at her villa in Tivoli.
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