Danice

53 posts

Danice

Danice

@Danicecppz

शामिल हुए Ocak 2026
95 फ़ॉलोइंग0 फ़ॉलोवर्स
Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@archeohistories Back then they were all African Egyptians this color Egyptians didn’t come time very very long time when a general married a woman Egyptians became this color, this did not happen till centuries later back when Aakhenaten ruled African Egyptians were what they were all African
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
Akhenaten, born Amenhotep IV, ruled ancient Egypt from approximately 1353-1336 BC as the tenth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty. He began his reign following traditional Egyptian customs, worshipping multiple gods and continuing his father's construction projects. Around his fifth year on the throne, he changed his name from Amenhotep IV to Akhenaten, meaning "Effective for the Aten." He abandoned Egypt's polytheistic religion and introduced Atenism, a faith centered on the sun disc Aten as the sole deity. Akhenaten declared himself the only person who could worship the Aten, making himself the required intermediary between the god and all Egyptians. He ordered the construction of a new capital city, Akhetaten, built on previously uninhabited land roughly halfway between Thebes and Memphis. The city was constructed using smaller, standardized building blocks called talatats, allowing for faster construction than traditional methods. Akhenaten ordered the defacement of Amun's temples across Egypt and had inscriptions of the plural word "gods" removed from monuments. His wife Nefertiti appears prominently in artwork performing actions traditionally reserved for pharaohs, suggesting she held unusual authority. The Amarna letters, a collection of 382 diplomatic texts, reveal that Akhenaten actively managed Egypt's foreign relations through correspondence with neighboring kingdoms and vassal states. He largely avoided direct military confrontation with the expanding Hittite Empire, relying instead on diplomacy to preserve Egypt's interests. A plague likely struck Egypt near the end of his reign, possibly causing the deaths of several of his daughters. Akhenaten died in his seventeenth regnal year and was initially buried in a tomb east of Akhetaten. His mummy was later moved, most likely to tomb KV55 in the Valley of the Kings, though its identification as Akhenaten remains disputed among Egyptologists. After his death, his son Tutankhamun reversed the religious reforms, restored traditional worship, and abandoned Akhetaten. Subsequent pharaohs systematically erased Akhenaten from official records, destroyed his monuments, and referred to him as "the enemy" in archival documents. Despite this erasure, his reign permanently altered the relationship between Egyptians and their gods, shifting religious practice toward more direct, personal worship that bypassed the pharaoh. His artistic legacy, known as Amarna art, broke sharply from tradition by depicting the royal family in naturalistic, intimate settings. Akhenaten remained essentially lost to history until the late nineteenth century, when excavations at Amarna brought his story back to light. Akhenaten's seventeen-year reign triggered one of the most dramatic religious and cultural disruptions in Egyptian history, dismantling a polytheistic system that had endured for centuries and replacing it, briefly, with a centralized worship of the Aten that concentrated all spiritual authority in the pharaoh himself. Although his successors erased his name from monuments and reversed his reforms, the damage to the old religious order proved permanent in subtle but profound ways, as Egyptians gradually shifted toward a more personal, direct relationship with their gods rather than relying on the pharaoh as intermediary, a structural change in Egyptian spirituality that persisted through the Nineteenth and Twentieth Dynasties and ultimately weakened pharaonic authority enough that, by the Twenty-first Dynasty, High Priests of Amun effectively governed parts of Egypt. His linguistic reforms also outlasted his reign, embedding vernacular elements into official written language that remained in use under subsequent dynasties. Akhenaten's rediscovery in modern era sparked broad scholarly debate about origins of monotheism and his potential influence on later Abrahamic religions, making him one of most analyzed and contested figures in ancient history. #archaeohistories
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@pallnandi Yes woman are definitely sneaky they can cheat on a man and know the other man does not want her so the man that provides for her she will let him beleive he is the father u can be with her all your life and lie an none of her kids are yours .b smart trust yourself.
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@MrPitbull07 This is exactly why it’s not are job to tip them anything it’s a nice gesture but this is there job what there paid for people tip as a thk u for waiting on us they got used to it we owe nothing I would have put that back in my pocket and said have a nice day .
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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
We went to a dinner as a group and had a $500 bill. We tipped $40. We were happy we can be able to give our server something, but her reaction was the opposite. She told us she assumed we're going to give her at least $120. When we asked for the manager, she said she was just joking, but she wasn't smiling at all. Idk, but is $40 tip enough for $500 bill? I just feel like expecting $120 is not realistic. ~Lea Robertson
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@EmilySm43 Taste good , give me more ,I like this get all you want .
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Emily 🦋
Emily 🦋@EmilySm43·
This is brilliant, What can you say?
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@archeohistories I’m proud of him I know his family was and black don’t crack look at him he looks so good still he is someone I would have loved to meet and talk to he was here when no one else was alive in that era he seen to much hate racism how whites felt hated blacks a hero .
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
106 year-old William Casby holding his great-great-granddaughter. He was born into slavery in Danville, Virginia in 1857, worked as a longshoreman, and lived to be 113, photograph by Richard Avedon, 1963.... Casby was born into slavery in 1857 in Danville, Virginia, just four years before the Civil War began. Emancipated as a child after 1865, he came of age during Reconstruction and later worked as a longshoreman. By the time this photograph was taken, he had witnessed slavery, the Civil War’s aftermath, Jim Crow segregation, two World Wars, and the early years of the Civil Rights Movement. Avedon photographed Casby as part of a series documenting people who had been born into slavery, creating minimalist portraits against stark white backgrounds to focus entirely on the subject’s presence and expression. The image is both intimate and monumental, the elder’s weathered face beside the softness of new life. Casby reportedly lived to be 113. When Casby was born, James Buchanan was president and Abraham Lincoln had not yet been elected, yet he lived long enough to see the presidency of John F. Kennedy and the dawn of the modern civil rights era. © History Pictures #archaeohistories
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@wavecheckers She definitely could have dressed differently this wasn’t giving at all she don’t really know how to find things that make her look nice that body suit was not it the shoes were not cute that’s why she needs a stylist
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ًWave Checkers
ًWave Checkers@wavecheckers·
Angela Simmons pulled up to Unrivaled in Miami 🩶
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@nobleisawinner No this government are on the same page they may argue over this problem that one at the end of the day they all are in the same Satan worshipping type of creature we seen her neck before it looked like a frog’s neck she wouldn’t have been better
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Honey 🇺🇸
Honey 🇺🇸@nobleisawinner·
yes or no
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@oelma__ All of these young man are wonderful but Samuel and Morgan are top tier in all the greatest movies
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Elma
Elma@oelma__·
Who's the greatest Black actor of all time?
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@chartdata Taylor swift is easily one of the best but there really is white privilege involved here no one saying she isn’t good but she is the only one came from nowhere has a satanic look alike is she a clone she isn’t what they claim.
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chart data
chart data@chartdata·
Taylor Swift becomes the first artist in history to be named IFPI's best selling artist of the year worldwide on six occasions (2014, 2019, 2022, 2023, 2024 & 2025).
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@archeohistories None of it makes sense this change of religion was not there focus they wanted a reason to invade and kill because no god would want anybody killed to change religion unless it was the devil himself now I see why the ottoman fell kill woman children u fall the same way as them
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
It was 1480, and the streets of Otranto were choked with bodies—men in torn doublets, women clutching lifeless infants, children whose cries had already gone silent. Across the harbor, the banners of the Ottoman Empire rippled in the sea breeze, their crimson field and crescent moon stark against the blue of the Adriatic. The city’s gates, battered and splintered, hung useless on their hinges. Behind them, in the cathedral square, eight hundred men stood bound in rows, their faces set, eyes fixed on the horizon. A Turkish officer read the final demand: embrace Islam or face the sword. When no one stepped forward, the blades began their work. Otranto had been the sentinel of Italy’s heel for centuries, a fortified port guarding the narrow channel between the Adriatic and the Ionian Seas. On July 28, 1480, a fleet of roughly ninety Ottoman galleys appeared offshore, carrying an invasion force of eighteen thousand under the command of Gedik Ahmed Pasha. The target was not merely a provincial town but the gateway to the Kingdom of Naples—and, potentially, all of Italy. Mehmet II, “the Conqueror” of Constantinople, had turned his gaze westward. If Otranto fell, nothing stood between the Sultan’s armies and the papal states. The siege began with cannon fire that shook the very limestone foundations of the walls. For fifteen days the defenders, numbering perhaps six thousand including civilians, resisted with crossbow bolts, arquebus fire, and boiling oil poured from the battlements. The city’s governor, Count Francesco Largo, fell early in the fighting, leaving Archbishop Stefano Pendinelli to rally both soldiers and townsfolk. Chroniclers tell of the archbishop walking the ramparts in full vestments, carrying the relics of St. Stephen and offering absolution to the dying. But the walls could not withstand the relentless pounding. On August 11, a breach yawned open, and the Ottoman troops surged in. What followed was a massacre. An estimated twelve thousand inhabitants were killed outright; five thousand more—mostly women and children—were chained for the slave markets and the harems of the east. The surviving men of fighting age, some eight hundred in number, were herded together. According to Italian and later Vatican accounts, they were offered their lives in exchange for conversion to Islam. Their spokesman, a humble tailor named Antonio Primaldo, answered for them all: they would remain faithful to Christ, whatever the cost. One by one, they were beheaded outside the city walls, their bodies left as a warning and their heads sent to the Sultan. The sack of Otranto shocked all of Christendom. Pope Sixtus IV called for a crusade, while Ferdinand I of Naples and the rulers of Spain scrambled to reinforce their coasts. Yet the wider Ottoman campaign stalled; Mehmet II died unexpectedly the following year, and in 1481 a Neapolitan force retook the ruined city. Still, the memory of those August days lingered. Otranto became a symbol—the last Italian city to fall to a Muslim army, and the place where, in the eyes of contemporaries, the fate of Europe teetered on a knife’s edge. In time, the eight hundred would be canonized as the Martyrs of Otranto, their bones enshrined in the cathedral. #archaeohistories
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@AntiLeftMemes Atleast his hair looks good the people who vote for trump are the same people stuck in time when Jim Crow was great
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@HenryFrank02 Yes I do but they were all just as bad as the one before and after he chose same sex marriage Jesus Christ didn’t so why would he they don’t beleive in Jesus obviously he talked about pizza on the Ellen show they beleive in someone other then the only lord Jesus Christ
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Henry
Henry@HenryFrank02·
🚨BREAKING: Clint Eastwood has said: "One day we will realize that the Barack Obama presidency was the biggest FRAUD ever perpetrated on the American people." Do you agree with Clint Eastwood? YES OR NO? IF Yes, Give me a THUMBS-UP👍!
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@QMegaTrump If a person was a serial child pedophile would you cut ties are continue to frequently be around him.if Epstein didn’t kill himself and was released trump also will so obviously this is common it happened for yrs they all involved themselves to sacrifice lives and human decency
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@archeohistories Because he was unhappy with the Catholic Church he destroyed them if it estimated 25 percent of Englands wealth I imagine how they received it from people who were poor paying churches Jesus Christ never took money to learn from his people.
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
Monasteries destroyed by Henry VIII during the Dissolution of the Monasteries - Between 1536 and 1541, Henry VIII ordered one of the most sweeping religious and political transformations in English history known as the Dissolution of the Monasteries. During this period, the Crown shut down more than 800 monasteries, abbeys, convents, and friaries across England and Wales. These institutions had existed for centuries, serving not only as religious centers but also as schools, hospitals, and providers of charity for the poor. The closures were driven partly by Henry’s break from the Catholic Church and the establishment of royal authority over religion. But finances also played a major role. Monasteries collectively controlled an estimated 20–25% of England’s landed wealth, and dissolving them transferred enormous property and resources directly to the Crown. Much of that land was later sold to nobles and wealthy landowners, permanently reshaping England’s social and economic structure. The impact on local communities was dramatic. Many towns lost their primary sources of healthcare, education, and food relief almost overnight. Historic buildings were stripped of valuables, dismantled, or left to ruin. Historians estimate the dissolution generated the equivalent of billions of dollars in modern wealth for the Crown, making it one of the largest transfers of property in British history and helping finance Henry VIII’s military campaigns and royal projects. Historians estimate that around 825 to 850 religious houses were suppressed or destroyed across England and Wales. #archaeohistories
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@glenn_tunes No problem he will not be sent to prison if Epstein did not have to they were the best of buddies this goes a lot deeper then imagined the law doesn’t apply to those white man only blacks .
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Glenn Tunes
Glenn Tunes@glenn_tunes·
LEAVE NOW ✊✊✊✊✊✊✊✊
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@elonmusk But were they being hung burned alive eaten I wonder were they treated differently then the slaves from Africa and after slaves we’re set free they were still not free mentally physically that day came long after I’m sure if they saved anything got them land it was taken burned .
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@archeohistories Something just didn’t add up with this house being from 1524 AD and it look this way I would imagine something far more Ancient this house looks like something from the 60s there making time lines up because it just isn’t adding up to me they change times in history
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
The oldest house in Hamburg, Germany in (1898). It was built in 1524 AD, and demolished on December 8th, 1910, despite protests from locals.... Built in 1524 AD, this remarkable timber-framed structure stood for nearly four centuries as Hamburg evolved from a medieval trading hub into a modern industrial port. Nestled among newer buildings by the late 1800s, the home served as both a residence and a cluster of small businesses, reflecting how older European buildings often adapted to changing urban life rather than being replaced outright. Despite its historical significance and strong public protests, the house was demolished on December 8, 1910. At the time, many cities across Europe were prioritizing modernization, sanitation improvements, and wider streets over preservation. Historic preservation laws were still in their infancy, and countless medieval and Renaissance-era buildings disappeared during this period of rapid urban expansion. Hamburg suffered catastrophic destruction during the Great Fire of 1842, which destroyed roughly one-third of the city. The survival of this 16th-century house through that disaster made it even more culturally significant before its eventual loss decades later. Ironically, just a generation after its demolition, public attitudes toward preservation shifted dramatically, leading Germany to establish stronger protections for historic architecture. © Historical Photos #archaeohistories
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@DavidWolfe Obviously transmitted diseases since Epstein files said prostitutes gave him sexual transmitted diseases
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@ClownWorld Trump new she would not say anything if she stayed quiet she will be fine as she is she was moved to a regular yard soon she will be released do you really think she tell Epstein will take care of her no doubt he is not dead obviously and the world has been doing this to kids
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Danice
Danice@Danicecppz·
@Matt_Pinner We don’t want no more white pedophile I’m sure every white president was pedophiles Obama as well bidan has been dead for so many yrs and he was a president but only it wasn’t even him it was not bidan at all he died long ago
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