Valentine
816 posts


@creepydotorg I'm curious if the car they are driving, electrical appliances,and even the weapons are not from the west..
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@north0fnorth Anyone know what this weird mountain-looking place is at the top of the picture?
What goes on there?

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hurts my pride a bit as a chicagoan to admit it, but new york city is just kinda the coolest shape a city can have. maybe it doesn’t have the best nature, but for overall vibes you really can’t beat this

Syntheticus Humanitus@TheChaosWeeber
I don't care what anybody says, Vancouver is the prettiest major city in north america and it's not even close
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@BleacherReport @noahweber00 You guys are filthy. He's talking about ball here.
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Jason Kidd says Coop needs to embrace the struggles of his rookie year to get him over the hump 👀
(via @noahweber00)

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@DaltonJ_Johnson Yea the nets team isn't some 'gimme' game anymore. Mess around and find out. Infact even if they don't mess around their defense is league best for a month now..
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@FrankDennis__ You don't believe in the warriors winning that game? 😭
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ein verrückter Cactus Mann 2 #music #horror #animals #horrorpodcast #pod... youtube.com/shorts/I-POpeC… via @YouTube

YouTube
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@katherine_deves @TRobinsonNewEra I always thought Australia would be last white country free of muslim scum, but now you invite them over and pay for the tickets... you are just like fucked up France, UK, GERMANY, Sweden. Greetings from Poland, last sane white people country.
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@Breaking911 @grok link me to an article where this incident happened
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Bucephalus (355-326 BC)
The most famous legendary war horse of antiquity, owned by Alexander the Great. He accompanied Alexander the Great on his campaigns from Macedonia to India. He died after the Battle of the Hydaspes in northern India and was buried in Bucephalus. Bucephalus is a city founded by Alexander the Great in memory of Bucephalus, located in present-day Pakistan and called Jhelum.
According to Plutarch, Bucephalus was one of the horses brought to Macedonia from Thessaly for training...
In 344 BC, Philoneicus, a horse trader, offered it to King Philip for sale. When the horse was presented to Philip, it became restless and could not be controlled, so Philip abandoned the purchase. However, Alexander, then 13 years old, offered the horse the chance to train it. Realizing the horse was restless because it was afraid of its own shadow, Alexander turned its head toward the sun, preventing the horse from seeing its own shadow, thus calming it.
According to Plutarch, Philip told his son, "Go seek another land, my son. This one is too small for you."
Alexander, who showed Bucephalus affection and affection, earned his loyalty and forged a strong bond between him and Bucephalus.
When Bucephalus was stolen by thieves in the city of Sadrakarta, Alexander warned the locals that the horse must be returned or the settlement would be razed to the ground. The thieves then returned the horse. Instead of punishing the thieves, Alexander rewarded them and allowed them to return.
Bucephalus, one of the legendary horses of the ancient world, has also inspired artists. The Louvre Museum houses a special exhibition of paintings of Alexander and Bucephalus. In the 2004 film "Alexander the Great," Bucephalus was portrayed by a Friesian horse. Bucephalus is also the name of a fantastical horse in the film The Adventures of Baron Munchausen.
Depicted as a long-maned, black, courageous, and massive-headed animal, Bucephalus has been the subject of numerous mythological tales, even being exalted above Pegasus in some myths. One myth mentions a Delphic oracle telling Philip that whoever succeeded in riding this horse would rule the world.
#archaeohistories

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