Tea at Trianon

Web Name: Tea at Trianon

WebSite: http://teaattrianon.blogspot.com

ID:240971

Keywords:

Tea,at,Trianon,

Description:

keywords:
description:
Tea at Trianon

A place for friends to meet... with reflections on politics, history, art, music, books, morals, manners, and matters of faith.A blog by Elena Maria Vidal.

Visit my Etsy Shop!
Trianon Bouquet Beauty CreamsVisit our Boutique!
The Elegance of SimplicitySt. Joan of Arc
Pray for us!
Please support this site!Looking for a Good Book?Subscribe to my Newsletter!The Tea at Trianon Forum
Join the Discussion!Novels by Elena Maria VidalTrianonMadame RoyaleThe Night's Dark ShadeAlso available as E-Books
Kindle, Nook, Sony Reader, Kobo, Adobe Digital Editions, Apple iPad and others (Click on image)Subscribe to This Blog's FeedSubscribe in a readerE-mail Me When This Blog is UpdatedWhat I'm ReadingLouis XVI and Marie-Antoinette sitesAll Things GeorgianAlmanach de GothaAssociation Marie-AntoinetteAux armes de France et de NavarreCarmelle: Domain of ThoughtsChateau de VersaillesDiana Reid HaigElisabeth Vigee-LebrunHistoriaHistory's Untold TreasuresJohn Wilson CrokerLady ReadingLe Boudoir de Marie-AntoinetteLost in the Myths of HistoryLouis XVILouis XVI and the CoursacsLouis XVIIMadame CampanMadame de Tourzel, Vol. 1Madame de Tourzel, Vol. 2Madame GuillotineMadame RoyaleMarie Antoinette's Cercle PrivéMarie-Antoinette in New AdventMarie-Antoinette OnlineMarie-Antoinette, Queen of FranceMarie-Antoinette's Gossip GuideMason Gross SurvivorMaxime de la RocheterieMozart's ChildrenOverheard in Eighteenth Century ParisPhilippe DelormePortraits of the Eighteenth Century by Sainte-BeuvePrincess de LamballeReading Treasure: A Marie-Antoinette Book BlogRoyalty.nuSimone BertièreSusan NagelThe Canticle ReviewThe King and IThe Trial of Marie-AntoinetteTitillating TidbitsTrianon de la ReinaVersailles Second LifeVive la ReineMaxime de la Rocheterie on Marie-Antoinette"She was not a guilty woman, neither was she a saint; she was an upright, charming woman, a little frivolous, somewhat impulsive, but always pure; she was a queen, at times ardent in her fancies for her favourites and thoughtless in her policy, but proud and full of energy; a thorough woman in her winsome ways and tenderness of heart, until she became a martyr."

~The Life of Marie-Antoinette by M. de la Rocheterie, 1893
John Wilson Croker on Marie-Antoinette"We have followed the history of Marie Antoinette with the greatest diligence and scrupulosity. We have lived in those times. We have talked with some of her friends and some of her enemies; we have read, certainly not all, but hundreds of the libels written against her; and we have, in short, examined her life with if we may be allowed to say so of ourselves something of the accuracy of contemporaries, the diligence of inquirers, and the impartiality of historians, all combined; and we feel it our duty to declare, in as a solemn a manner as literature admits of, our well-matured opinion that every reproach against the morals of the queen was a gross calumny that she was, as we have said, one of the purest of human beings."

~from History of the Guillotine by John Wilson Croker, 1844

Edmund Burke on Marie-Antoinette"It is now sixteen or seventeen years since I saw the queen of France, then dauphiness, at Versailles; and surely there never lighted on this orb, which she hardly seemed to touch, a more delightful vision. I saw her just above the horizon, decorating and cheering the elevated sphere she had just begun to move in, glittering like a morning star full of life and splendor and joy. Oh, what a revolution....Little did I dream that I should have lived to see such disasters fall upon her, in a nation of gallant men, in a nation of men of honor and of cavaliers! I thought ten thousand swords must have leaped from their scabbards, to avenge even a look which threatened her with insult. But the age of chivalry is gone; that of sophisters, economists, and calculators has succeeded...."

~Edmund Burke, October 1790A Note on ReviewsUnless otherwise noted, any books I review on this blog I have either purchased or borrowed from the library, and I do not receive any compensation (monetary or in-kind) for the reviews.CopyrightCopyright 2006- 2021, M.E. Russell. All rights reserved worldwide.Free Clip ArtLabel CloudAbominationsAdventAfricaApocalypseArchaeologyArchitectureArtAsiaAt the MoviesBalkansBalletBalticBeautyBette DavisBlogHerBooksBooks; Fairy-talesByzantiumCanadaCanticle MagazineCatherine DelorsCharles ICharles IIChivalryChristina CroftChristmasClassic FilmsCoffeeCommunismCourtesansCrown JewelsDarkest PennsylvaniaDown UnderDrinkEasterEconomicsEgyptEmmaus HomeEnfants de FranceEric HesterEtiquetteFairy-talesFatima JubileeFoodGardensGareth RussellGermanyGreeceHeadcoveringsHealthHenrietta MariaHolidaysHoly RussiaHoly WeekHumorHungaryIndiaItalyJames IIJesusJudy GarlandLand of the FreeLatinLentLiturgyLouis XVILouis XVIIMadame RoyaleMarie-AntoinetteMarriageMartyrsMary StuartMexicoMotherhoodMusicMy FamilyMythsNetherlandsOperaOur LadyPersiaPhilippinesPoetryPolandPoliticsPortugalPrincessesQueens of EnglandQueens of FranceSaintsSavageScandinaviaScienceScriptureSocial MediaSouth AmericaSpainSt. JosephStephanie MannStyleSwitzerlandTeaThe DonaldThe Far EastThe Fersen MythThe Good Old DaysThe Holy FatherThe House of AustriaThe House of IsraelThe IrishThe Mystery of IniquityThe Nights Dark ShadeThe Old Line StateThe Old SouthThe Order of CarmelThe Paradise TreeThe Persecuted ChurchThe RevolutionThe ScotsThe Scots. The DonaldThe StuartsThe Year of FaithThe Year of MercyThe Year of the PriestTheaterTurkeyTyrantsVirginsWars and Rumors of WarsWineWork Friday, November 19, 2021 The Sale of Charles Is Collection

Rubens' Crucifixion, similar to the one in Henrietta Maria's Chapel at Somerset House

From Kings, Collectors, and Paintings in the Seventeenth Century:

The first authorized moves (Haskell) may have been carriedout at the end of October, 1642. Nine months after the King left London,parliamentary troops seized Windsor Castle and removed the magnificent silverplate made by Christian van Vianen for the ceremonies of the Order of theGarter lost, presumably melted down. From early 1643 onwards, more systematicconfiscation and destruction followed and an inventory was made of Queenshangings and household stuff. A Rubenss altarpiece may have been thrown inthe Thames and it may have had some connection with James Is CatholicSecretary of State, Sir George Calvert.[1]This Crucifixion by Rubens definitelyhung in the Queens Chapel, and it seems to have been a victim of Puritan anger.It is known that instructions were given to deface superstitious paintings inthe chapel of St Jamess Palace, but it is not known which, although it lookslike Rubenss altarpiece was destroyed by an enraged Parliamentary commissionerin March 1643 on site rather than being thrown in the river.[2]Despite this vandalism, the Kings pictures survived the war relativelyunscathed. The Kings collection became a target for the Puritans in whom it arousedanger because of the large sums spent on it, at a time when Charles was engagedin levying taxes without summoning Parliament. (Read more.)

Share0comments
Old Men Forget

From The Imaginative Conservative:

Generational differences are often exaggerated, but Ive always thought them useful. Are younger liberals and conservatives different from their elders? I think its obvious that the young Wokesters differ from the older ones in significant ways that are often terrifying to the oldsters. When many of our proto-woke Silent Generation and Boomer Liberals said to stick it to the man, they seem never to have seriously considered that they would ever be the Man to whom it was being stuckor that the younger generation would not even be able to say what a man is. Yet that is what has come to pass.

Similarly, many conservatives who had found the perfect three-legged stool in Reaganite fusionism never dreamed that there would be challenges to a view of the world that was liberal but aware of the illiberal foundations necessary for a liberal polity and a kind of modified liberal philosophy to survive. I think sometimes that my slightly older friends and colleagues are mystified as to why younger people are turning away from the more traditional conservativism that characterized so much of the Republican party and the world of think tanks over the last few decades. That devotion to keeping the institutions going while trimming back excesses that characterizes the conservatism of the last few decades is now derided by many younger conservatives who refer to Conservative Inc. Older conservatives are often mystified by the turn among the religious conservatives toward more radical views of liturgy, moral theology, and sometimes ecclesiology and church-state relations. In a recent discussion, a stalwart older scholar claimed, to my surprise, that one of the Catholic academic guilds to which we both belong ought to reject the Traditional Latin Mass.

Old men forget, Henry V says in Shakespeares famous speech. Yet Ive come to think that the problem with old men is not that they forget, but that they cannot forget. Specifically, they cannot forget the battles that raged when they were in their twenties and thirties.

Many conservatives of Silent Generation and Boomer vintage found that in Reagan, John Paul II, and Billy Graham a political and religio-cultural modus vivendi had been reached. No longer would conservatives be reactionary. They would make a kind of peace in politics with the New Deal and the Administrative State and even, to a certain extent, the Great Society. They would make peace with what is good in the Enlightenment, feminism, liberalism, ever-expanding human rights, and all the restmaking sense of the modern world even though it could not do so itself. (Read more.)


Share0comments
The Psychology of Reading and Writing Crime Fiction

From Crime Reads:

Thats a bit like asking a therapist why people should talk about difficult life experiences. (Full disclosure: In addition to being a fiction writer, Im also a family counselor.)

In both cases, its because the stories we tell and the ones we read help us process conflicting emotions and contend with complex relationships. Numerous studies confirm what every fiction writer knowsthat story is an incomparable vehicle for the exploration of human social and emotional life. Literary critics and philosophers have long advanced the notion that one of fictions main jobs is to raise consciousness.

Jonathan Gottschall wrote in his book, The Storytelling Animal that, Human minds yield helplessly to the suction of story. No matter how hard we concentrate, no matter how deep we dig in our heels we cant resist the gravity of alternate worlds.

The act of reading fully engages the brain impacting memory, learning, and problem-solving. Steven Pinker author of How the Mind Works suggests, that stories equip us with a mental file of dilemmas we might one day face, along with workable solutions. (Read more.)


Share2comments
Thursday, November 18, 2021 Rose Uniackes Historic London Home

From Architectural Digest:

Rose Uniacke at Home offers an intimate look inside Uniackes thoughtful, carefully layered design process over the course of the sites three-and-a-half-year revamp, for which she also sought out architectural insight from Antwerp designer Vincent Van Duysen and gardening expertise from London landscape architect Tom Stuart-Smith.

By first stripping the house down to its rawest form, Uniacke was able to make the most of the homes immense volume and existing architectural features. From there, the final look came together through a series of enchanting interventions: Canvas walls and a 17th-century Mughal rug in the study, and circa 1900, straw-woven Orkney chairs beside the basement poolto note just a few examples.

The book, which has been produced in a small run and comes wrapped in lush wool fabric, features ethereal photographs shot by legendary photographer François Halard. His images capture Uniackes penchant for understated tranquility, each one highlighting a significant level of humanistic detail. The volume also contains 23 jaw-dropping gatefolds, nearly double the number of a typical book of this size. Uniackes rooms look comfortable and lived-in, exuding a sense of warmth that is heightened by the designers own words. (Read more.)


Share0comments
Tom Bombadil in Narnia

From The Imaginative Conservative:

Tom, Prof. Wiley explains, is the master of the forest, but he does not own it. He holds dominion over the trees and rivers and woodland creatures, but he does not dominate them. While Saruman uses nature, manipulating and exploiting it to secure his power, Bombadil knows and loves and communes with it. Tom, like Gandalf, is a steward; Saruman, like Sauron, is a possessor.

In that sense, Saruman is like the modern world [whose] quest for knowledge is premised on the belief that the natural world is nothing more than a vast machine. Since it is merely a machine, learning how it works entails disassembly, breaking things down into their constituent parts. Bombadil, in sharp contrast, will not so reduce the natural world that it becomes merely the sum of its parts.

Lewis shared Bombadils, and Tolkiens, holistic vision of creation and of the rational creatures who live upon and within it. In chapter 14 of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, when Eustace Clarence Scrubb, a product of modern empiricism, materialism, and logical positivism, learns that the magician Ramandu is a star, he falls back into the same kind of reductive thinking that corrupts Saruman. In our world, he exclaims, a star is a huge ball of flaming gas.

Ramandus reply is one that our age, blind as it is to transcendent truths and metaphysical realities, needs to hear: Even in your world, my son, that is not what a star is but only what it is made of. Once a civilization objectifies nature, robbing her of her mystery, wonder, and integrity, it is only a matter of time before it does the same to man. True conservatism must ever resist the commodification of Gods creation and the dehumanization of Gods image-bearing creatures. When virtue-based wisdom that seeks to unite and edify morphs into power-based knowledge that seeks to dissect and deconstruct, the industrial appropriation of nature and the social engineering of man is at hand.

Come, Master Bombadil, and teach us again how to be rulers and not conditioners. (Read more.)


Share0comments
Henry Jermyn

Henrietta Maria's close friend and faithful retainer. From BCW Project:

Henry Jermyn was the second surviving son of Sir Thomas Jermyn (1573-1644) of Rushbrook in Suffolk, a court official who was appointed governor of Jersey in 1631. Henry followed his father into royal service around 1622 and joined the household of Queen Henrietta Maria as a gentleman usher in 1627. He quickly became the Queen's favourite and confidante but in 1633, King Charles banished him to France over his scandalous refusal to marry Eleanor Villiers, whom he had seduced. Jermyn was allowed to return to court in 1636 and was appointed master of horse to the Queen in 1639. He was elected MP for Corfe Castle in the Short Parliament and for St Edmundsbury in the Long Parliament (1640).

In the spring of 1641, Jermyn took a leading part in the so-called "Army Plot", in which Royalist officers conspired to bring the northern army to London to coerce the King's enemies in Parliament. Jermyn was forced to flee to France when the plot was discovered in May 1641. The following year, with civil war about to break out in England, he joined Henrietta Maria at The Hague and assisted her efforts to raise loans, buy weapons and recruit troops for the Royalist cause. Jermyn returned to England with the Queen in February 1643 and was appointed colonel of the Queen's bodyguard on her march south to rejoin King Charles during the summer of 1643. At the Queen's request, he was raised to the peerage as Baron Jermyn of St Edmundsbury (8 September 1643).

In July 1644, Jermyn accompanied the Queen when she left England for France where he continued to assist her efforts to raise foreign support for the Royalist cause. He succeeded his father as governor of Jersey in 1644 and proposed a plan to cede the Channel Islands to France in exchange for military aid. This brought him into conflict with Sir Edward Hyde and his supporters which was exacerbated in June 1646 when Jermyn brought the Prince of Wales from Jersey to Paris against Hyde's advice, and in 1647 when he encouraged the King to promise a Presbyterian church settlement in England in order to gain Scottish support. After the defeat of the Royalists in the Second Civil War, it fell to Jermyn to break the terrible news of the King's execution to Henrietta Maria. (Read more.)

Share0comments
Wednesday, November 17, 2021 I Just Cant be Cheerful in the Morning.

From Alice von Hildebrand at Finer Femininity:

The French author Balzac writes, Its easier to be a lover than a husband, because its easier to say witty things occasionally than to be witty every day.

Balzac is highlighting the fact that an illicit relationship is limited to a short time, when you put on your most attractive face. But marriage is marriage, early in the morning and late at night. This is one of the difficulties all spouses encounter in marriage: theyre together when theyre not at their best. As youve discovered, sleeping together is a great and beautiful intimacy; but it also means you wake up together, which for most of us isnt the best moment of the day. Were disheveled, groggy with sleep, not interested in talking, and usually rushing around to get ready for the days work. Unless this potentially disillusioning aspect of the intimacy of marriage is counter-balanced by a deepening of your love and spiritual life and a great measure of patience its bound to cause difficulties that dont crop up in a casual relationship.

There are ways to deal with these problems. If youre not cheery in the morning, then talk with Michael about it but do it later, when youre brighter and more clearheaded. Let him know youre sorry and are trying to change, but arent having much success. Assure him that in the early morning he just isnt encountering your true self and ask him to avoid discussions at these times, because theyre bound to end badly. (Hasnt Michael asked you to do the same for him when he comes home from work tired and grumpy?)

Yes, Balzac is right: it is easier to be a lover than a spouse, because its easier to be at your best occasionally than to be at your best all the time. But our concern isnt with what is easier; our concern is with what is more beautiful: a relationship based on the feelings of the moment or a deep enduring love, sealed by marriage, in which the spouses love each other in good times and bad, in sickness and in health, until theyre parted by death. Marriage is the beautiful mystery of faithful love a theme so profound and so fascinating that it unleashes in me a torrent of thoughts which I long to share with you. (Read more.)


Share2comments
Why Children Need Minimalism

From Becoming Minimalist:

I always said, I am just messy, period. Like it was some kind of personality trait:Messy.Cluttered.Overwhelmed.Anxious.

As a kid 30 years ago, I needed minimalism. But todayfor my kids? Minimalism is essential.

I grew up in the time before Amazon and one-click ordering. This was the time before snack-catchersexisted for children to carry around snacks and mindlessly eat around the clock. The time before kids needed iPadshanging over their carseatsto survive a trip.The time before you could get virtually anything on television at a moments notice.

The kids of today need minimalism more than ever.

Childhood of today is beyond messy and cluttered.Its chaotic. Research shows us the way we are raising kids in America todaycauses stress and anxiety to overwhelm both children and parents alike. As parents, we have so much going on that we have resorted to convenience parenting to hold it all together. If your kids wont sit down for a meal, theres a device for that. If your kids wont ride quietly in the car, theres an app for that.

As parents, we just try to survive. We struggle to hold it all together. Because its consuming. Its heavy. (Read more.)


Share1 comments
Older PostsSubscribe to:Posts (Atom)La Reine-Martyre
Marie-Antoinette "en gaulle" by Elisabeth Vigée-LebrunComing November 25! Available for pre-order from Kindle!An Audible Bestseller!#1 in Kindle Biographies of Royalty!Marie-Antoinette's DaughterIn Kirkus Top 20 for 2014! And #1 in Kindle Historical Mystery, Thriller Suspense FictionAn Amazon Bestseller!#1 in Kindle History of France!Listen to Tea at Trianon Radio
All about Marie-Antoinette!Visit My Tumblr!
East of the Sun, West of the MoonSt. Teresa of Avila, pray for us!
"...Bud forth as the rose planted by the brooks of waters. Give ye a sweet odor as frankincense. Send forth flowers, as the lily...and bring forth leaves in grace, and praise with canticles, and bless the Lord in his works." Ecclesiasticus 39:17-19Click here For a signed copy. (No Paypal account necessary.)PagesHomeTrianon LinksLouis XVI and Marie-Antoinette GalleryPrivacy PolicyCharitiesAid to the Church in NeedBishop Gassis Sudan Relief FundCatholic Near EastFood for the PoorHuman Life InternationalPlease Stop By for a visit!Elena Maria Vidal WebsiteMayapple BooksMy Other BlogsFountain of EliasGuide to Confession1 day agoTrianon Health and BeautyHomemade Face Masks1 year agoArticles about Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette by Elena Maria Vidal"Let Them Eat Cake"A Reputation in ShredsCharitable Works of Louis XVI and Marie-AntoinetteChildhood of Marie-AntoinetteChildren of Louis XVI and Marie-AntoinetteCoppola FilmDeath of Louis XVIInterview with Susan NagelLast Letter of Marie-AntoinetteLast Will and Testament of Louis XVILouis XVI, Marie-Antoinette and FreemasonryMarie-Antoinette and FriendshipMarie-Antoinette and the Carmelite OrderMarie-Antoinette and the RevolutionMarie-Antoinette the MotherMarie-Antoinette's Gambling AddictionMarie-Thérèse: Child of TerrorThe Bourbons at HomeThe Fersen Legend, Part 1The Fersen Legend, Part 2The Fersen Legend, Part 3The Fersen Myth in LiteratureThe Queen's CompassionVow of Louis XVIJoin the Party on FB!Elena Maria Vidal

Promote Your Page TooThe Joy of NetworkingTweets by @emvidalParler
Read News. Speak Free.MeWe
The Next-Gen Social NetworkJoin us on Instagram!
My FriendsDisclaimerThe fact that a link is provided here in no way constitutes an endorsement of everything on the other end of the link.Comments PolicyComments are moderated. If a comment is not published, it may be due to a technical error. At any rate, do not take offense; it is nothing personal. Slanderous comments will not be published. Anonymity may be tolerated, but politeness is required.

I would like to respond to every comment but my schedule renders it impossible to do so. Please know that I appreciate those who take the time to share their thoughts.
Blog Archive 2021(1016) November(57)The Sale of Charles Is CollectionOld Men ForgetThe Psychology of Reading and Writing Crime FictionRose Uniackes Historic London HomeTom Bombadil in NarniaHenry JermynI Just Cant be Cheerful in the Morning.Why Children Need MinimalismBuilding a Habit of CuriosityMystery of the Pied Piper of HamelinCleveland Priest Gets LifeTo Overcome DepressionThe Politics of DesireMarxism and the Gender RevolutionHow to Become an Organized PersonClassic English Garden Style at Hollister HouseWhy Archaic Bible Translations Are BetterI Left My Homework in the HamptonsA Review and a Book TourA New UniversityAnimals That Lived Before the DinosaursThe Deadhouse at Somerset HouseThe Dossier DeceitHistorical Fiction Can Help Us Learn HistoryRegency Women: Pin Money and Private ExpensesThe New Anti-Catholic BigotryVincent van Goghs Favorite Works of French Litera...On Van Goghs Painterly Relationship to FranceReligious Facilities Banned From Using Infrastruct...The Strange State of the Novel in the Age of AmazonLilliotheaVirginias Attorney-General ElectTo Move the Nations CapitalComing November 25!Brutal Election LessonsLord MinimusA Drive Through the Ugliest Place in Maryland: P...C.S. Lewis Predicted Our DoomThe Lost Children of Charles IAn Exploration of the Ancient Celts Art History a...Modesty: A Veil for the SacredWho Was a Typical Oxford Student in the 14th Century?The True History Behind The Last DuelWhat Was the Reign of Terror?Alcohol Consumption in African Hunter-GatherersNew Research on the VikingsSexual Assault in Loudoun County, Virginia.The Tory Interpretation of HistoryMakeup in the 17th centuryTime to be BraveThree Priests Against the Witch ParanoiaFake News and Salacious Rumors at VersaillesPray at a Cemetery this NovemberCatholic Funerals and the Four Last ThingsMarie-Antoinette: Saint or Sinner?Festivals of AutumnAvenging Angels and Fauci October(96) September(91) August(93) July(99) June(92) May(94) April(96) March(108) February(92) January(98) 2020(1184) December(109) November(105) October(109) September(100) August(102) July(105) June(93) May(95) April(89) March(100) February(86) January(91) 2019(1147) December(88) November(93) October(95) September(88) August(97) July(99) June(92) May(108) April(104) March(97) February(91) January(95) 2018(1089) December(94) November(90) October(91) September(93) August(97) July(92) June(91) May(93) April(87) March(94) February(81) January(86) 2017(1017) December(82) November(84) October(90) September(89) August(92) July(93) June(90) May(91) April(84) March(90) February(56) January(76) 2016(1018) December(83) November(100) October(93) September(92) August(94) July(81) June(81) May(90) April(75) March(78) February(75) January(76) 2015(935) December(78) November(85) October(89) September(85) August(79) July(77) June(73) May(67) April(69) March(77) February(74) January(82) 2014(873) December(68) November(64) October(80) September(72) August(77) July(76) June(77) May(87) April(64) March(68) February(61) January(79) 2013(847) December(71) November(78) October(86) September(72) August(71) July(66) June(67) May(79) April(71) March(64) February(57) January(65) 2012(734) December(63) November(57) October(68) September(67) August(64) July(61) June(58) May(61) April(57) March(61) February(56) January(61) 2011(745) December(55) November(62) October(67) September(60) August(61) July(64) June(59) May(64) April(62) March(64) February(59) January(68) 2010(761) December(62) November(59) October(58) September(64) August(62) July(64) June(63) May(70) April(64) March(75) February(57) January(63) 2009(745) December(60) November(57) October(62) September(65) August(64) July(58) June(64) May(67) April(47) March(64) February(61) January(76) 2008(852) December(66) November(63) October(55) September(64) August(53) July(77) June(71) May(91) April(87) March(77) February(65) January(83) 2007(1271) December(89) November(84) October(90) September(86) August(99) July(124) June(134) May(158) April(137) March(112) February(75) January(83) 2006(46) December(35) November(11)Marie-Antoinette, Daughter of the Caesars

TAGS:Tea at Trianon 

<<< Thank you for your visit >>>

Websites to related :
Live Local Magazines | Denton Co

  keywords:
description:Explore all of our Live Local Magazines where we focus all content and editorial on the residents and businesses of Denton Count

جي فايف | جي فايف

  keywords:
description:مرحبا بكم في موقع جي فايف
تخطي إلى المحتوىجي فايف القائمة الرئيسية خدم

ColoredLion.com Photography and

  keywords:
description:

Home - ECSA 59: Using the best s

  keywords:
Coastal morphodynamics affected by engineering structures and sea-level rise,
From measuring to modelling hydro- and sediment dynamics,
Impa

BMC Psychology | Home page

  keywords:BMC Psychology, Psychology Research, Clinical Psychology, Cognitive Psychology
description:BMC Psychology welcomes articles on a broad range

Coinmama | Buy and Sell Cryptocu

  keywords:
description:Coinmama is the leading cryptocurrency exchange platform to buy & sell crypto with credit card, debit card or bank transfer. Joi

Aberfeldy Watermill - Bookshop,

  keywords:
description:
L o a d i n g . . .

仪陇县高青生鲜水果创意营销公司-

  keywords:
description:
Toggle navigation 仪陇县高青生鲜水果创意营销公司 网站首页 关于我们

Apache compatible URL rewriting

  keywords:
description:
Products Download Buy Articles Community Support Apache compatible URL rewriting for

Gallery Art Bissinger - Home

  keywords:fine art Painting Acrylic, Living Home ,Deco Wall ,Hangings Paintings, Abstract, Art
description:Abstract painting, original art, fine art f

ads

Hot Websites