Thursday, September 26, 2013

Jerpoint Abbey

Jerpoint Abbey

Time has taken its toll on the many ruins of Ireland, Jerpoint Abbey is unique for the surviving stone carvings and cloister arcade which have managed to ride out the years with surprising clarity.
Established in 1180, Jerpoint Abbey was built for the Cistercian sect of Catholic monks, by the King of Osraige on the site of an earlier Benedictine monastery. The remaining ruins date from different time periods, but all of them are impressive in their ability to last; the tower dates from the 15th century, the church from the 12th, and the transept chapels vary in age. After the Dissolution of Monasteries when the last abbot, Oliver Grace, surrendered the abbey during the reign of King Henry VIII, Jerpoint was given to the 9th Earl of Ormond and became primarily a place of interment. 
Among the notable carvings in the ruins are the saintly religious reliefs known as "the weepers," and a sarcophagus that is surrounded by medieval Christian reliefs. Many of the pillars and incidental spaces in the ruined abbey are covered in similar figure carvings. The expansive cloister arcade also remains and visitors can relax among the tranquil ruins. Despite being deteriorating over the centuries, the Jerpoint Abbey ruins offer as contemplative an experience to modern visitors as it did to the original clergy.       


Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Golden Goose Awards for Science.

http://www.goldengooseaward.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/Golden-Goose-Awards-Ceremony-Honors-Seven-Researchers-9-19-13.pdf


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Barry Toiv
September 19, 2013 Association of American Universities
202-408-7500, barry.toiv@aau.edu
SECOND ANNUAL GOLDEN GOOSE AWARDS CEREMONY HONORS ODD,
OBSCURE RESEARCH THAT LED TO KIDNEY EXCHANGE, DIABETES
MEDICINE, BIOTECH INDUSTRY
Seven researchers, including two Nobel Prize winners, will be honored today at the second
annual Golden Goose Award ceremony, celebrating researchers whose seemingly odd or obscure
federally funded research turned out to have a significant impact on society.
The awardees will be honored at a ceremony on Capitol Hill, where they will receive their
awards from a bipartisan group of Members of Congress. The scientists are:
- David Gale (deceased), Lloyd Shapley, and Alvin Roth, whose work, decades apart, grew
from theoretical mathematical algorithms about marriage stability and moneyless markets to
school choice programs for urban school systems, the program that matches new medical
school graduates with their first hospital residencies, and the national kidney exchange that
matches compatible patients and donors from around the country. Shapley and Roth were
awarded Nobel Prizes in 2012. (Gale, having died, was not eligible for a Nobel.)
- John Eng, a medical researcher and practicing physician whose study of the poisonous
venom produced by the Gila monster led to a drug that protects millions of diabetics from
such complications as blindness, kidney failure, and nerve damage.
- Thomas Brock and Hudson Freeze, whose discovery of a heat-resistant microorganism at
Yellowstone National Park helped make possible the biotechnology industry and the
genomics revolution.
The purpose of the Golden Goose Award is to demonstrate the human and economic benefits of
federally funded research by highlighting examples of seemingly obscure or unusual studies that
have led to major breakthroughs and have had a significant impact on society. Such
breakthroughs may include development of life-saving medicines and treatments; gamechanging social and behavioral insights; and major technological advances related to national
security, energy, the environment, communications, and public health.
The Golden Goose Award was originally the idea of Representative Jim Cooper (D-TN). It was
created and jointly launched by a coalition of organizations, listed below, which believe that
federally funded basic scientific research is the cornerstone of American innovation and essential

Armor misconception throughout history


Interesting article  concerning armour thru the ages.
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/aams/hd_aams.htm


Monday, September 23, 2013

Pulp Shakespeare Trailer - 2011

Tempests Trailer Aliens meets Shakespeare



Trailer for Tempests, Tedious Brief Productions' entry into the 2011 Minnesota Fringe Festival. The film Aliens is re-imagined as a Shakespearean sequel to The Tempest. After 20 years, Miranda must return to the island of her childhood to confront her greatest nightmare.

For more info, head to http://www.tediousbrief.com/

Music Provided by www.freeplaymusic.com.

Friday, September 20, 2013

A tale of Benjen Stark A fan film


 A fan film set in the world of Game of Thones Followin Benjen Stark on a scouting mission.
Ho[pefully more will follow.

Friday, September 13, 2013

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Rolling High: Attacks of Opportunity



Great little video about gaming combat very three stooges meets Gaming.

Metalworks - The Knight's Tale Great Video about full Plate Armour.


Great Video About Full Plate Armour. Interesting details about production and symbolization. .

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Parque Gulliver

Parque Gulliver


PARQUE GULLIVER

This massive concrete Gulliver turns every visitor into a Lilliputiand


In Gulliver's Travels, the titular character is tied down by fearful Lilliputians who climb all over him in an attempt to subdue the "giant" and visitors can relive this famous literary scene at the Parque Gulliver in Spain.
This surreally large play park is constructed to resemble a giant stylized Gulliver which kids and adults alive can climb all over a slide down. The structure features multiple slide and stairways hidden around the massive body and hidden in the concrete folds of his clothes. The park's sleeping colossus is so large that even the strands of Gulliver's hair are huge slides. Gulliver's towering hat lies off to the side of the playground as though casually dropped at his side, and in a meta-flourish there is a miniature model of the recumbent Gulliver park so that visitors can get an idea of what the site looks like from above

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Lycian Tomb Uçagiz

Lycian Tomb Uçagiz

LYCIAN TOMB UÇAGIZ

A mysterious ancient cemetery with Roman sarcophagi and Lycian 

inscriptions







Teimiussa lies directly east of today's village of Üçagiz, you can visit some of the ruins at the eastern end of Üçagiz's harbour.
Not much is known about the history of the city and it has no known coinage.  Tombs with Lycian inscriptions point to settlement by the fourth century BC.  The city seems to have had ties with Myra and Cyaneae.  An ancient road leads directly from it to Cyaneae and some of Teimiussa's tombs bear inscriptions saying that they belong to citizens of Cyaneae and Myra.  Teimiussa was probably a small settlement tied administratively to these two cities.
The main ruins here are a necropolis to the east with a large cluster of sarcophagi, mainly from the Roman period.  The oldest ruins are a few rock-cut house-type tombs at the eastern end of Üçagiz's harbour.  One of these has a relief of a nude young man and an inscription tells us that the tomb belonged to a person named "Kluwanimiye".
At the eastern end of the city is a large dock, 28 metres long and 8 metres wide, carved out of living rock
.