Traditional Europe
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๐Ÿ’ฌ๐ŸŒณ๐Ÿ›๐Ÿ–ผ๏ธ๐Ÿ“œ Quotes, nature, architecture, art and history about our homeland, Europe.
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The bronze tomb of Bishop Huyshe Wolcott Yeatman-Biggs who died in 1922 was the only thing within the cathedral to survive the blitz although one of the bishop's hands which holds a small model of the cathedral, was severed.


๐Ÿ“ธ Coventryโ€™s Medieval Cathedral, Canterbury, England.
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Children sailing their boats in a park's pond in Paris, 1900
"Parade of the arts", by Enrique Simonet
Crown Prince Wilhelm and Princess Victoria Louise, both children of Kaiser Wilhelm II, posing in hussar uniforms. 1910s
Vae victis (โ€œwoe to the conqueredโ€) is a Latin phrase expressing that the defeated are at the mercy of the victor.

According to Roman tradition, in 390 BC the Gauls, led by Brennus, captured Rome except for the Capitoline Hill. The Romans agreed to pay 1,000 pounds of gold to lift the siege. When the gold was weighed, the Romans protested that the Gauls were using unfair weights. Brennus responded by throwing his sword onto the scale and declaring, โ€œVae victis,โ€ forcing them to add more gold.

Some ancient sources later claimed that Camillus arrived in time to defeat the Gauls and prevent the ransom from being paid, though other accounts contradict this version of events.
"The dance of the maenads", roman copies of greek originals (ca. 420 a.C.).

Around 410 B.C. In Athens, which was then celebrating Dionysus with the tragedies of Sophocles and Euripides, a large monument decorated with reliefs of bacchantes had to be built. It was undoubtedly intended to honor the memory of some winner in dramatic contests, and its motifs had lasting success, being imitated on multiple occasions. From four of these maenad reliefs, attributed to Callimachus.

The maenads were legendary nurses of Dionysus, who protected him in his childhood and became his first followers. However, the Dionysian cult involved the conversion into maenads or bacchantes of those women who, seized by Bacchic ecstasy, danced until exhaustion at the god's festivals, waved their thyrsus, wore the nebris or fawn skin and destroyed animals, feeding on its raw meat.



๐Ÿ“ธ Prado Museum, Madrid