Tumgik
#D'Ars
retonans · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
45 notes · View notes
slahsk · 11 months
Text
Tumblr media
༺ (👁 👁) ༻
Как много тут всего поменялось....
Привет!
༺ 🗣🗣🗣 ༻
Это прикол с Туни с перерисовкой - (мое справа)
Ну, из интересного - живу на туни сейчас, а у вас как дела? 🤔🤔🤔 ↓↓↓ /Translate/ ↓↓↓ ༺ (👁 👁) ༻ How much has changed here.... Hi! ༺ 🗣🗣🗣 ༻ This is a thing on Toony with redrawing - (mine on the right) Well, from the interesting - I live on Toony now, and how are you? 🤔🤔🤔
___________________
Orig -> capuchin
8 notes · View notes
lecomtedelafere · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
3 notes · View notes
arttemperaaudran · 6 months
Text
0 notes
portraitsofsaints · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Saint John Vianney
The Cure d'Ars
1786 - 1859
Feast Day: August 4 (New), August 8 (Trad)
Patronage:  priests
After many obstacles and suffering, St. John Mary Vianney became one of the most celebrated parish priests in the Catholic Church.  He fought for souls in his small town in Ars, France by fasting, praying and hearing confessions until the wee hours of the morning.  He converted many souls and because of this, the Devil often tempted him in the middle of the night, but he was so strong and so rooted in prayer that he was able to triumph.  It is said that the Devil once told St. John Vianney, "If there were three such priests as you, my kingdom [in France] would be ruined."
Prints, plaques & holy cards available for purchase here: (website)
48 notes · View notes
lemonkris1 · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I wish every D'ars to teach her humble Knight of the Midnight Sun a lesson how to not be egocentric badass properly
45 notes · View notes
jeka-s-mile · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
After I played Dangeon Nights, I fell in love with a Pocketcat (it was well revealed), disliked D'Ars and wanted Ragnvaldr and Enki to go to the prom together.
(THE RAVEN WAS SO CUTE OMG)
30 notes · View notes
cvbarroso · 11 months
Text
Tumblr media
«¿Te avergüenzas, amigo, de servir a Dios, por temor de verte despreciado? Mira a Aquel que murió en esta cruz: pregúntale si se avergonzó Él de verse despreciado y de morir de la manera más humillante en aquel infame patíbulo». — Santo Cura de Ars.
«Are you ashamed, friend, to serve God, for fear of seeing yourself despised? Look at Him who died on this cross: ask Him if He was ashamed to see Himself despised and to die in the most humiliating way on that infamous scaffold.» — Curé d'Ars
29 notes · View notes
susieporta · 1 year
Text
“Se non si incontrassero di tanto in tanto alcune anime belle per riposare il cuore e consolare gli occhi del tanto male che si vede e si ascolta, non si potrebbe sopportare la vita".
(Santo Curato d'Ars)
65 notes · View notes
thosearentcrimes · 1 year
Text
20th March, 1861, London
Our protagonist, Étienne, is a Radical lately exiled from France for his revolutionary views. Today Étienne is seething about the bizarre theories of his fellow Londoner revolutionary emigre, Karl Marx. Oh sure, human society does progress linearly through stages, that's obvious, everyone knows that. But it's not because of accumulation or material conditions or whatever. Of course a guy who reads and writes about political economy and capitalism all day thinks all of politics is just political economy and capitalism. The French Revolution could not have happened until the late 18th century? Nonsense. The French Revolution couldn't have happened until the Enlightenment, sure, but the Enlightenment could have occurred sooner. All of the timing is just a historical accident, a matter of waiting for the right crisis in a country of the right (French) temperament and a Great Man or two possessed of the right concepts. You see, Étienne is very much an Idealist.
Étienne is a smart and well-educated man, and so a sympathetic acquaintance has managed to secure him a respectable position as an assistant curator at the new Museum of Manufactures in Kensington, and he quite enjoys his daily walk to work through the Kensington Gardens from his new home in one of the nicer streets of Paddington. Despite his intelligence, however, he is not a cautious man, which is how he ended up in London in the first place. Today it would have paid to be cautious. George F Train, a man of rather similar temperament to Étienne, has recently set up a tram line running along the north edge of Kensington Gardens. Étienne is crossing there at this very moment, too absorbed in his pondering of historical forces to notice the people yelling at him to stop or the carriage speeding towards him. He is pronounced dead at the scene.
???, Paris
Our protagonist, Étienne, has just been born to Isabelle Barbou, wife of the clothier Simon Marcel. How this has happened, or how it is possible, is not known to the author of these words. All that is known is that Étienne the son of the clothier Simon Marcel is very much the same person, with the same memories, as Étienne the aforementioned assistant curator. His first act, in his second (and yet preceding?) life, is quite characteristic for the newborn body he now occupies. He cries. For several years, as any baby does, he will compose himself. Étienne, however, is not getting used to the existence of the world, but rather to early 14th century France, a task by no means easy for a man used to the conveniences of 19th century urban life and goods.
12th June, 1315, Paris
Étienne had been fairly quick to orient himself. Easily he discovered his name and identity, though his knowledge of its meaning was rather hazy as his recollections of medieval history were not the best even when he was first alive. He was supposed to be some sort of traitor? That fit well enough. It took him longer to get a precise handle on the date. Even if he had been able to discern which Roi Philippe people were talking about and which Flemish Revolt they were discussing, he did not remember the precise years. Eventually he snuck enough peeks at contracts to be confident that the clustering of dates around 1311 roughly reflected the then-current year.
Étienne's first thought had been to prevent the Hundred Years War. Sure, tensions between the Kings of England and France were already high and unwinding those antagonisms would not be possible, but if the looming succession crisis of 1328 could be stopped the intensity and length of the warfare could be reduced and the repeated threats to French independence could be headed off entirely, and history could be advanced by up to the century otherwise lost to pointless war. Sure, the French people would be denied the glorious symbol of Jeanne d'Ar- hm. Was Jeanne someone like him? Were there others in his own new time? Well, that was a worry for another time.
It was the Tour de Nesle affair and the death of Philippe IV that prompted Étienne to seriously review the idea of preventing the succession crisis, and which eventually led him to dismiss it entirely. How was a young cloth merchant in Paris, whose father was not even all that rich or prominent, affect the family relations of the Capet family? Even if he were the fournisseur des draps for one of the princely houses, how would a wise choice of fabrics help? No, there really was no prospect of preventing the crisis.
Already since first hearing of the Flemish revolts, Étienne had been idly fantasizing about an alternative approach. Instead of preventing the crisis, he could take personal initiative and advance history by a great deal more taking advantage of the crisis. The Valois would certainly need to call the États Généraux to finance the war, and if he could get there Étienne could start rerunning the events of 1789. Certainly he would not be able to prevent the emergence of the Empire, likely he would not make it to a Republic, but perhaps he could give France (and by extension the world) a bit more of a head start.
Étienne's questions, rather odd even for a precocious child, got him the answers he needed. The elected position most likely to be invited to the États was the Prévôt des Marchands of Paris. Some modifications to the events of 1789 would be necessary, there was no Bastille to storm (storm the Louvre instead? or build a Bastille and storm that?) but in principle he had everything he needed. A crisis, the Parlement de Paris, a meeting of the États Généraux. Doing anything like this just one century earlier would have been much more difficult.
16 notes · View notes
philoursmars · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Deuxième étape de mon périple dans l'Ouest pour retrouver des ami(e)s lointain(e)s , Brigitte et Sylviane à La Rochelle. Ce jour-là, elles me font découvrir la charmante île de Ré.
Ici, la Digue d'Ars-en-Ré, entre l'océan Atlantique (sur la dernière photo, à droite côté Brigitte) et le Fier, marais salé (à gauche, côté Sylviane).
4 notes · View notes
S/O, seeing Eric in a kilt for the first time: Alan, sweetheart... Alan, glancing up from his ledger: hm? S/O, gesturing to Eric: ... is anything worn under the kilt?? Eric, thoroughly aware that's what they're asking, not even looking away from his newspaper: nae, d'ar, ev'rythin's in perfect workin' order.
5 notes · View notes
fifafootballfinal · 2 years
Text
La France qualifiée pour la finale de la Coupe du monde : les Bleus affronteront l'Argentine après avoir éliminé le Maroc
Theo Hernández et Randal Kolo Muani ont marqué alors que la France battait l'opprimé marocain, 2-0, au Qatar mercredi, envoyant les Bleus en finale de la Coupe du monde contre l'éternelle puissance argentine.
Attaquant sous un angle vif à 6 mètres, Hernandez a marqué sur une volée acrobatique à la cinquième minute au stade Al Bayt d'Al Khor, donnant à la France le seul but dont elle aurait besoin.
Tumblr media
La France a ajouté un but d'assurance à la 79e minute, lorsque la superstar Kylian Mbappé a attiré quatre défenseurs marocains vers lui dans la surface avant de glisser une passe à Muani, qui a marqué à bout portant.
Les Français, vainqueurs du trophée le plus convoité du football en 1998 et 2018, cherchent à devenir la première équipe à remporter des titres de Coupe du monde consécutifs depuis que le Brésil l'a fait en 1958 et 1962.
Tumblr media
L'entraîneur français Didier Deschamps s'est dit ravi pour son équipe et espère que ses joueurs ont pu savourer leur temps dans le tournoi.
""Je dis ceci à mon staff et à mes joueurs : profitez de chaque instant de la journée pour vraiment apprécier et savourer le moment", a déclaré Deschamps. "Dans quatre jours, nous allons jouer pour un titre mondial, et nous allons vraiment en profiter."
Et dans un doux moment après le match de mercredi soir, Mbappé a embrassé le Marocain Achraf Hakimi, son bon ami et coéquipier au Paris Saint-Germain. Ils ont échangé des maillots et Mbappé a célébré avec des supporters français portant le maillot n ° 2 marocain de Hakimi.
De l'autre côté du match massif de dimanche, la légende argentine de 35 ans Lionel Messi et ses coéquipiers chercheront à remporter le premier titre de Coupe du monde de leur pays depuis le tournoi de 1986, mieux connu pour la victoire de l'Argentine en quart de finale contre l'Angleterre, en partie grâce à Diego. Le but "Main de Dieu" de Maradona.
Même en tant que l'un des plus grands joueurs de son sport, Messi a longtemps été la cible injuste de fans frustrés à la maison pour l'échec de l'équipe nationale à remporter la Coupe du monde.
L'Argentine a remporté la Copa America, le championnat sud-américain, l'année dernière, avec une victoire 1-0 sur le Brésil en finale, mais les supporters exigeants de La Albiceleste - ainsi nommés pour leurs uniformes bleu ciel et blancs - ne seront satisfaits que Messi soulève la Coupe du monde.
Les bookmakers ont mis le match pour le titre de dimanche à égalité.
Le match pour le titre devrait débuter à 10 h HE du stade Lusail à Al Daayen.
Le Maroc, qui a captivé l'imagination du monde entier en tant que première équipe africaine à avoir atteint les demi-finales de la Coupe du monde, jouera pour la troisième place samedi contre la Croatie, vice-championne de 2018, au Khalifa International Stadium d'Ar-Rayyan.
La prochaine Coupe du monde aura lieu en Amérique du Nord en 2026, avec les États-Unis, le Canada et le Mexique comme hôtes.
5 notes · View notes
arttemperaaudran · 6 months
Text
0 notes
portraitsofsaints · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Saint John Vianney
The Cure d'Ars
1786 - 1859
Feast Day: August 4 (New), August 8 (Trad)
Patronage: all priests
After many obstacles and suffering, St. John Mary Vianney ( Jean-Baptiste-Marie Vianney) became one of the most celebrated parish priests in the Catholic Church.  He fought for souls in his small town in Ars, France by fasting, praying and hearing confessions until the wee hours of the morning.  He converted many souls and because of this, the Devil often tempted him in the middle of the night, but he was so strong and so rooted in prayer that he was able to triumph.  It is said that the Devil once told St. John Vianney, "If there were three such priests as you, my kingdom [in France] would be ruined."
Prints, plaques & holy cards available for purchase here: (website)
85 notes · View notes
reno-matago · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I found this pine wood years ago on an island in Brittany (the beautiful Ile d'Ars) and over time I think it will be perfect for honoring Dionysus in the future! (not to mention the united phallus-vulva, the eye, it's really fabulous)🍇
Provincial dance in honor of Dionysus, Tarente Museum
4 notes · View notes