@McDonaldsSupport I tried to order the travis scott burger and the employees set upon me and beat me with their fists, and spat upon me. And I let out a great wail liken unto a beast.
This magnificent pendant is the ultimate proof that the “Dark Ages” is an academic concept. Rather than Europe plummeting into darkness because of the “fall” of the Western Roman Empire, it’s more the lack of academic interest in the Early Middle Ages.
This Anglo-Saxon pendant was found on King’s Field (Kent) and is made of gold and garnet, but decorated extremely intricately with gabuchon, filigree and granulation. The garnet was used to form a triskele with round centre and ending in bird heads. At just 3,5 cm across, this was made by a master craftsman with materials from all over the known world.
The pendant might have been worn on a bit of string or rope, or it may have been worn as part of a glass beaded necklace. The pendant likely belonged to a woman.
The question you asked is identical to a clay tablet found buried in Iran from 3200 BCE. This thread has thereby been locked and your account has been suspended permanently.
As a 19-year-old sophomore at Stanford, Elizabeth Holmes decided to transform diagnostic medicine so she dropped out of college and used her tuition money to start her own company, Theranos. Ten years later, Holmes, pictured here holding a micro-vial, is on the cutting edge of medical technology — her new blood testing method allows hundreds of tests to be run using only a few drops of blood. And, Holmes’ methods are cheaper, faster, more accurate, and less invasive than conventional methods which often require a separate vial of blood for every test.
As Holmes told Wired.com earlier this year, “I started this company because I wanted to spend my life changing our health care system. When someone you love gets really sick, most of the time when you find out, it’s too late to be able to do something about it. It’s heartbreaking… We wanted to make actionable health information accessible to people everywhere at the time it matters most. That means two things: being able to detect conditions in time to do something about them and providing access to information that can empower people to improve their lives.”
Anthologia Palatina 6.241 = Antipater of Thessalonica (Julio-Claudian period)
I, this helmet, received a double grace:
I am both pleasant for my friends to look on
And a source of dread for anyone who’s hostile.
Piso has me, taken from Pylaemenes:
Neither did the helmet suit any other locks,
Nor would his hair suit any other helmet.
ἡ κόρυς ἀμφοτέρην ἔλαχον χάριν· εἰμὶ δ᾽ ὁρᾶσθαι
καὶ τερπνὴ φιλίοις, καὶ φόβος ἀντιπάλοις.
ἐκ δὲ Πυλαιμένεος Πείσων μ᾽ ἔχει: ἔπρεπεν ἄλλαις
οὔτε κόρυς χαίταις, οὔτε κόμη κόρυθι.
Ceremonial Greek bronze helmet, crowned with a griffin. Artist unknown; manufactured in South Italy between 350 and 300 BCE. Now in the Getty Villa, Malibu. Photo credit: Davide Ferro/Wikimedia Commons.
The Transfiguration. Folio (tempera colors and gold leaf on parchment) from a 13th century Byzantine manuscript by an unknown illuminator. Now in the Getty Center, Malibu, CA.