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#andrea cavalcanti
roseillith · 1 year
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oozeandgoo-art · 15 days
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rowan-e-ravenwood · 9 months
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have you got any tcomc playlists? 👁️👁️
OH, ABSOLUTELY I DO
i posted them a while back but i can't be bothered to find the post, so if i do i'll delete it to keep from clogging up the tags...
as i've said before, it's been a hot minute since i've really participated in the fandom (i'd like to remedy that), so some of my views on the characters have changed a bit since i made these? so not all of the song choices are perfect imo anymore... but i am constantly tweaking these playlists so it's whatever.
oh also also, a couple of these are major WIPs, lol. ANYWAY.
putting them under a read-more cut so that nobody hates me for the length of the post, lmao
here's Edmond's:
here's Fernand:
here's Villefort:
here's Danglars (one of the ones i'm less happy with lol):
here's Caderousse (my favourite character heheh):
here's Mercédès:
here's Albert (idk this one's a WIP):
here's Benedetto (another of my favourites!!):
and finally, Valentine! (my beautiful darling sweetheart):
i also have playlists for a couple ships i like, so if you're interested in those, feel free to ask, but they're not quite as good lol
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hoangfngocjnhi · 8 months
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Eugenie in the background: What are you guys even talking about?
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meageramountoflouis · 12 days
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Some Count of Monte Cristo characters as bracelets
(My friend made the Dantès and Villefort ones)
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urgeeky-friend22 · 1 year
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after the musical and another phase of mine of The Count of Monte Cristo, this damn fella is the only reason I can exist a bit rn
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natitoonfan · 8 months
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ponds-of-ink · 10 months
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Re-reading a bit of the Spooky AU to pass the time and wow.
I forgot that I made Vampire Andrea roast the living daylights out of an intruder. The man doesn’t just bite people’s necks, he tears into any annoyance just so it doesn’t ruin his beauty sleep.. if he does still sleep.
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lapolani · 2 years
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Carcente, frazione del Comune di San Siro (CO), 20 agosto 2022
"L'introvabile pantera dal respiro profumato". Le origini della lingua e della poesia italiana.
Ringrazio ciascuna persona del pubblico per la calorosa partecipazione e l'affetto dimostrato; l'intero gruppo del Museo Casa Rurale di Carcente per l'eccellente organizzazione e la generosa ospitalità; Daniela Bruni per la toccante introduzione; Ernesto Blotto, Giorgio Borroni e Alberto Ferrari per le intense fotografie.
Lapo Lani
_______________
Proprietà della fotografia di copertina: Ernesto Blotto.
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pedanther · 1 year
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The Count's really in there like, This is Andrea Cavalcanti who's a viscount from a very old and very rich family or so I've been told by my friend who's never wrong about these things but may be completely mistaken this time and anyway I've never met him before so don't come crying to me later because I'll deny everything
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roseillith · 1 year
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pwlanier · 11 months
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Andrea Cavalcanti known as the Buggiano (Borgo a Buggiano, Pistoia 1412 - Florence 1462), Maddalena orante, about 1440. Carved and gilded wood, Pescia (Pistoia), oratory of the church of Santa Maria Maddalena.
Courtesy Alain Troung
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lullybaju · 12 days
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It's already April and i'm happy to tell that i'm not only halfway through the The Count of Monte Cristo, but i'm already past the 1000th page - about chapter 77. HELL YEAH!
Anyway, apart from the man who plans and controls every aspect of his existence in a way to give life to his revenge, there's a selected bunch of aristocratic people in 1830s Paris, who are acting as if a big cockroach is flying over their heads, that i would love to share here my thoughts about.
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Roses are red, violets are blue and Albert is still annoying, Franz is still a promising supporting character and Maximillien and Valentine are boring as fuck, like the most of romantic core of novels. However, as a protagonist he is, Albert kept developing his character and showed few more layers of himself by proving to be a kind of a late modern Narcissus - and a freudian case - as he explained that he doesn't intend to marry any woman because his mother is the most perfect of them all.
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De Villefort family and Danglars family are the two cores of the big four traitors that caught my attention the most. M. de Villefort is the strongest villain and his family is the most villainous - especially Héloïse de Villefort, who is trying to kill almost the entire family by poisoning them with poison she compounds by herself - but the Danglars family are the one serving villainous taste of entertainment: they are the fabulous mix of the stupid greedy husband, the adulterous wife and the pretentious "i'm not like other girls" teen daughter. They don't have the best plans, but they do have the people!
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As a dark horse, Benedetto or Andrea Cavalcanti rises by being a character who plays a character... in a character. He's so layered that i think he competes directly with Albert for secondary protagonism at second half of the novel - and with great potential to beat him. Does Benedetto or Andrea Cavalcanti really know who are him? Certainly not. Unfortunately, his multiversed personality entirely seems to love pursuing dumb scam plans.
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karamazovapologist · 2 months
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"[L]ife is so uncertain that one should grasp happiness as soon as it comes within reach."
Alexandre Dumas (Andrea Cavalcanti), The Count of Monte Cristo (tr. Robin Buss, p. 896)
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deathshallbenomore · 10 months
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andrea cavalcanti al processo in appello, circa 1868, colorised
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personal-reporter · 9 months
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Custodi di arte e fede: Basilica di Santa Croce a Firenze
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Il cuore della storia della città del Medici e una delle chiese più amate del mondo… La Basilica di Santa Croce è da sempre la chiesa dei fiorentini, infatti fu proprio la cittadinanza a finanziare i lavori di costruzione alla fine del Duecento. Alle origini collocata fuori dalle mura cittadine, la basilica venne  edificata su una chiesa francescana,  molto probabilmente su progetto di Arnolfo di Cambio. Se la facciata, in stile gotico rivisitato, risale alla metà dell’Ottocento, l’interno della chiesa ospita la cappelle riccamente affrescate dedicate alle prestigiose famiglie  che ne finanziarono la costruzione e molti monumenti funebri di illustri fiorentini. Fra le tante opere della Basilica la più importante è il Crocifisso di Donatello, causa di una disputa fra l’artista e Brunelleschi che, trovandolo “rozzo e contadino”, ne fece uno più bello. Altre importanti opere sono l’Annunciazione Cavalcanti di Donatello e il Pulpito di Benedetto da Maiano, oltre a una Cappella Medici, opera di Michelozzo. La Basilica di Santa Croce,luogo di sepoltura di benestanti cittadini di Firenze, divenne dall’Ottocento un vero e proprio Pantheon di artisti e letterati, con nomi come Michelangelo, Galileo, Leon Battista Alberti, Vittorio Alfieri, Ugo Foscolo che riposano nella chiesa. Fu progettato un grandioso monumento per il più grande dei poeti della città di Firenze, Dante Alighieri, ma la sua salma restò nella città di Ravenna dove era morto in esilio. Da vedere sono il Monumento funebre di Carlo Marsuppini, realizzato da Desiderio da Settignano, la tomba di Michelangelo disegnata dal Vasari, il Monumento funebre di Vittorio Alfieri di Antonio Canova, il Monumento a Niccolò Machiavelli, un esempio di neoclassicismo fiorentino. Il Museo dell’Opera di Santa Croce è parte integrante del complesso della chiesa e dei chiostri adiacenti, fu istituito nel 1959 in spazi precedentemente occupati dal convento e accuratamente restaurato dopo i danni provocati dall’alluvione del 1966, e ospita splendide opere d’arte di scuola fiorentina. Capolavoro assoluto della storia dell’arte è il Crocifisso di Cimabue collocato nel Refettorio trecentesco, simbolo del passaggio alla pittura moderna, mentre gli interventi cinquecenteschi alla chiesa avevano coperto splendidi affreschi di Taddeo Gaddi e dell’Orcagna, che ora è possibile ammirare nel museo. Arricchiscono il patrimonio di Santa Croce una collezione di terracotte invetriate dei Della Robbia, una scultura in bronzo dorato raffigurante San Lodovico di Tolosa di Donatello, alcuni dipinti e arredi lignei. Gioiello architettonico del complesso è la Cappella Pazzi realizzata da Brunelleschi, un gioiello rinascimentale che vanta anche decorazioni di Desiderio da Settignano e Luca e Andrea della Robbia, cui si accede dallo splendido chiostro trecentesco del convento. Read the full article
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