The Bath of Venus (1898-1904, oil on canvas) | Charles Shannon
Photograph of Stonehenge, taken from inside the circle looking through the standing stones towards the ‘Sunrise Stone’ or 'Friar’s Heel’, Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire
Photograph of Stonehenge, Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire
Godfrey Bingley, 1892
International Congregation of Lord Rayel not only support Isis but support Terrorists. LORD RAYEL Clergy support TERRORISTS – False Prophets Exposed https://falseprophetsexposed.wordpress.com/2016/09/06/lord-rayel-clergy-support-terrorists/ #angelusdomini #raymondlear #religiouscult #lordrayelexposed #lordrayel
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qXZvN-kllU&feature=share
John Dee and Edward Kelley's Great Table of Earth (From a reconstruction by Teresa Burns and J. Alan Moore).
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Bills of Mortality. In 16th- and 17th-century London, in response to recurrent epidemics of bubonic plague, authorities instituted the tradition of publishing a Bill of Mortality each week. The Bills were formulated initially to track disease (principally plague) and enumerate burials and christenings but from the mid 17th century. They also listed causes of death including murders, suicides and accidental or unexplained violent deaths. It is these reports that provide an insight into the form and frequency of sudden violent death throughout the period of the early modern metropolis. The content of the Bills was provided by the parish clerks who reported weekly accounts from each parish to the Hall of the Company of Parish Clerks. The Company then collated and printed a weekly sheet; one side held a listing of the number of burials by parish and from the mid 17th century the reverse listed a summary count of those killed by named ‘diseases and casualties’. These covered a wide range of illnesses, some of which are readily identifiable to the modern reader and some which are not.