User:Itai
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![]() | This user is a translator from Hebrew to English on Wikipedia:Translation. |
![]() | This user is a translator and proofreader from Hebrew to English on Wikipedia:Translation. |
Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/April 18
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[edit](No longer Away.)
My Wikipedia time is limited at the moment, but I'm still around.
- ... that the spring blooming wildflower common starlily (pictured) develops its seeds underground?
- ... that singer Ano joined You'll Melt More! without an interview at the invitation of the group's producer?
- ... that a Chinese short story about a man's friendship with a rock may have been inspired by the painter Mi Fu, who was reportedly obsessed with rocks?
- ... that the efforts of oil industry lobbyist Donald Pearlman to prevent the adoption of the Kyoto Protocol were dramatized in the 2024 play Kyoto?
- ... that the 69th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest featured several tracks that were "laden thick with double entendre", including "Ich komme"?
- ... that Trump wrote a letter to Ali Khamenei in an effort to initiate new nuclear negotiations with Iran?
- ... that in 2004 the Wasps Women's coach Giselle Mather waited until the end of a match to go to hospital despite going into labour before half-time?
- ... that a Minnesota radio station forbade its announcers from saying what songs they had just played?
- ... that the fictitious subject of a hoax Wikipedia article was a nominee to be on an English £50 note?
Christ Crowned with Thorns, sometimes known as Christ Mocked, is an oil-on-panel painting by Hieronymus Bosch. It is held in the National Gallery in London, which dates it to around 1510, though some art historians prefer earlier dates. The painting combines two events from the biblical account of the Passion: the mocking of Jesus and the crowning with thorns. A serene Jesus, dressed in white at the centre of the busy scene, gazes calmly out of the picture, in contrast with the violent intent of the four men around him. Two armoured soldiers stand above and behind him, with two other spectators kneeling below and in front. The soldier to the right, with oak leaves in his hat and a spiked collar, grasps Jesus's shoulder, while the other soldier to the left, dressed in green with a broad-headed hunting crossbow bolt through his headdress, holds the crown of thorns in a mailed hand, about to thrust it onto Jesus's head. The position of the crown of thorns creates a halo above the head of Jesus. In front, the man to the left has a blue robe and red head covering, and the man to the right in a light red robe is grasping Christ's cloak to strip it off. The figures are crowded together in a small space in a single plane, in a manner reminiscent of Flemish devotional art of the type popularized by Hans Memling and Hugo van der Goes.Painting credit: Hieronymus Bosch
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9 April 2025 |
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