Tumgik
#finnarts
nooryarts · 1 year
Text
“I’ve been to hell before & it spit me out because hell couldn’t handle my demons”
Finn Balor at wrestlemania39 this year taking out Edge inside a hell in a cell match 🔥
Tumblr media
9 notes · View notes
daydreamxart · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
THE PRINCE
FINN BÁLOR
6 notes · View notes
stardust-stitched · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
there I am!
there I am again!
19 notes · View notes
roguepumpkin · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
A Commission I did of @unabashedbranfanIt’s DnD character!!
I love this design!! theyre so cute!!
If you’re interested in a Comm here is a sheet for my base rates!
1 note · View note
scotianostra · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
On August 16th 1540 Sir James Hamilton of Finnart was executed.
If ever there was a fall from grace this is it, Hamilton was an architect and noble, known as the ‘Bastard of Arran, back in the day Bastard was not classed as a swear word, it merely meant being illegitimate, in this case he the son of James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Arran. Knighted aged around 17 and seems to have been well thought of, at least by his peers.
If you have visited some of the castles and palaces of Scotland you will have seen Hamilton’s’ work, he is credited with much f the Palace at Falkland you see today, and the Palace at Stirling Castle. He also built Craignethan Castle in South Lanarkshire  for himself after being gifted the Craignethan Castle  by King James V.
Hamilton was also involved in intrigue and persecution; he murdered John Stuart, the Earl of Lennox, and participated in the oppression of the Protestants, including his own cousin Patrick Hamilton, who was burnt at the stake in 1528. Known for his temper, Hamilton also provoked the infamous 'Clear the Causeway’ skirmish in Edinburgh.
Also called Cleanse the Causeway, the Skirmish was the result of enmity between the House of Hamilton and the “Red” Angus line of the House of Clan Douglas, both powerful noble families jealous of each other’s influence over King James V. The fight went badly for the Hamiltons, and Sir Patrick Hamilton and about 70 others were killed in the incident. The Earl of Arran and Sir James fought their way out, and escaped along a narrow close. Stealing a nearby pack-horse that had come into the city with coals, they fled through the shallows of the Nor Loch marshes.
Having survived this he seems to have still been in a good position of influence in the Royal Court and held the post of  Lord Steward of the Royal Household and Master of Works.
For unexplained reasons his fickle King became convinced that Hamilton was plotting against him and, despite there being no evidence to support this, arrested his old friend, some of the evidence the King offered on August 16th 1540 at the trial was from 12 years previous and reads;
“Sir James Hamilton of Finnart, having been convicted of the treasonable shooting of guns and firing of missiles outside the palace of Linlithgow and from the bell-tower of the same, at the king and the people in his company, both at the time the king came to the palace and when he withdrew from the same, and especially at his lodging place in the same town, the king being personally present at the time of the firing of the said missiles. And for art and part in the treasonable imagination, planning, and consultation, vulgarly called devising, of assassinations, at the time it is said he was with Archibald Douglas of Kilspindie and James Douglas of Parkhead at the chapel of St Leonard near Edinburgh, after the forfeiture of Archibald Douglas, formerly Earl of Angus, George Douglas of Pittendreich his brother, and the said Archibald Douglas, his father, and also during the siege of Tantallon Castle in consultation with the said Douglases, how he would enter by the window near the upper part of the bed, 'the bedhead’ (superiorem thori - literally above the pillows), in the King’s palace near Holyrood Abbey, and how there he would commit the slaughter of the King. And for common treason and conspiracy against the King, his realm and lieges. Therefore it was given that this James forfeited his life, lands, rents and possessions to the king as his escheat, to remain with him in perpetuity.”
That is how it read from the record books, they weren’t keen on paragraphs back then!
After losing his head in Edinburgh King James seized his lands, taking the silverwork from the chapel at Craignethan along with a chest of the families paperwork many of which were destroyed by crown officers. Cardinal Beaton gave money to his widow, as she was his relative.
That wasn’t the last the King heard from The Bastard of Arran though, Finnart is said to have appeared to the James V in a dream, and declared that he “would shortly lose both arms, then his head.” This prophecy came true, as the King lost both of his young sons in 1541, and died himself in 1542. The story was recorded by John Knox and George Buchanan.
Wiilliam of Hawthornden and George Buchanan both cited the execution as evidence of arbitrary cruelty and greed in the behaviour of James V, I've said it before that the Stewarts were a ruthless lot. The reasons for Finnart’s execution remain unclear and are still debated between some historians to this day.
Pics are of Linlithgow Palace and Craignethan Castle.
18 notes · View notes
roboraindrop · 10 months
Text
I keep looking at this fanart of Finn (Finnart, if you will) and getting emotional because he's just some guy!!! He's just a dude!! I care about him so very much 👉👈
7 notes · View notes
venicepearl · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Blackness Castle is a 15th-century fortress, near the village of Blackness, Scotland, on the south shore of the Firth of Forth.
It was built, probably on the site of an earlier fort, by Sir George Crichton in the 1440s. At this time, Blackness was the main port serving the Royal Burgh of Linlithgow, one of the main residences of the Scottish monarch. The castle, together with the Crichton lands, passed to James II of Scotland in 1453, and the castle has been crown property ever since. It served as a state prison, holding such prisoners as Cardinal Beaton and the 6th Earl of Angus.
Strengthened by Sir James Hamilton of Finnart in the mid-16th century, the castle became one of the most advanced artillery fortifications of its time in Scotland. A century later, these defences were not enough to prevent Blackness falling to Oliver Cromwell's army in 1650. Some years after the siege, the castle was repaired, and again served as a prison and a minor garrison. In 1693, the spur protecting the gate was heightened, and the Stern Tower shortened as a base for three heavy guns. Barracks and officers' quarters were added in the 1870s, when the castle was used as an ammunition depot, until 1912. The castle was briefly reused by the army during World War I. It is now a Scheduled Ancient Monument, in the care of Historic Environment Scotland.
Because of its site, jutting into the Forth, and its long, narrow shape, the castle has been characterised as "the ship that never sailed". The north and south towers are often named "stem" and "stern", with the central tower called the "main mast".
5 notes · View notes
petnews2day · 1 month
Text
Man charged and dog seized in connection with fatal chihuahua attack in Glasgow | UK News
New Post has been published on https://petnews2day.com/news/pet-news/dog-news/man-charged-and-dog-seized-in-connection-with-fatal-chihuahua-attack-in-glasgow-uk-news/?utm_source=TR&utm_medium=Tumblr+%230&utm_campaign=social
Man charged and dog seized in connection with fatal chihuahua attack in Glasgow | UK News
A man has been charged after a chihuahua was killed in a dog attack in Glasgow. Police Scotland launched an investigation after a 25-year-old woman was injured and her pet dog killed in an attack in the city’s Finnart Street on Monday 18 March. At the time, the force said the woman was left with […]
See full article at https://petnews2day.com/news/pet-news/dog-news/man-charged-and-dog-seized-in-connection-with-fatal-chihuahua-attack-in-glasgow-uk-news/?utm_source=TR&utm_medium=Tumblr+%230&utm_campaign=social #DogNews
0 notes
nooryarts · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
This is a thank you post for those great wrestlers who shared my artwork but not just for that but also thank you for showing care to your fans , thank you for encouraging us to do what we love the most , thank you for putting yourselves and your bodies everytime on line just to entertain us @finnbalor @rhearipley_wwe @biancabelairwwe #wwe #wwefanart #wweraw #finnbalor #rhearipley #biancabelair #finnart #digitalart #fanart #art https://www.instagram.com/p/Ck834vqjjbB/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
3 notes · View notes
birdsinspace · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
here’s an art? should I start posting art here??
34 notes · View notes
stardust-stitched · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
coraline looking mf 
1 note · View note
designercereal · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media
It’s spooky szn
31 notes · View notes
scotianostra · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
DavysStreams
@davysstreams
A Tumblr blog for my streams, Sports, TV Shows and Movies, give me a shout if you want anything posted.
Blog settingsAsk me anythingFollowing
Posts
Pinned Post
davysstreams
Jan 18, 2022
Tumblr media
If you don’t want to miss a game why not go for an IPTV set up.  DM @Gabbo1980 on Twitter, and mention my name, you get ALL the games and more the costs just £10 a month or £70 for a full year, it is the way forward and in my eyes a bargain. You’ll need an Android box or better still a Amazon Firestick, which costs around £30, but you wont regret it. Some TV’s have also got Android on them nowadays. As well as sports you get loads of other stuff, all the Sky Cinema channels,  documentaries, kids channels, channels from around the world including Irish TV channels, USA Movies,  if you were paying for this through Sky, BT, Virgin etc it would be over £100 per month.
4 notes
davysstreams
4m ago
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
May 13th 1568 saw the Battle of Langside.
The army under King James VI name was under the command of the Regent and Mary’s half brother James Stewart, Earl of Moray whilst his deputy and commander of the vanguard was James Douglas, Earl of Morton. The army consisted of troops hastily assembled but included some experienced soldiers - notably William Kirkcaldy of Grange.  Furthermore the Regent’s cause was widely supported amongst the Scottish nobility, many of whom had profited from the Reformation not least from the cheap acquisition of former church lands.
The Queen’s army, whilst nominally headed by the Mary, was under the military command of Archibald Campbell, Earl of Argyll. It included a number of a notable magnates amongst them the Earls of Eglinton, Casselis and Rothes.
With The Earl of Morton in command of his main force, Moray appointed Kirkcaldy to have ‘special care as an experimented captain to oversee every danger‘. Kirkcaldy took two hundred hagbutters “musketeers” forward to occupy cottages on each side of Long Loan, where garden walls offered protection from cannon fire, and he reserved two hundred pikemen and cavalry on the west side of the village.  
Realising the danger, Mary sent Maitland to negotiaite with Moray, but the Hamilton’s were spoiling for a fight and jumped the gun. Kirkcaldy rode from wing to wing to supervise the defences, while the twenty-five-year-old Lord Claud Hamilton advanced with Mary’s main army of 2,000 men supported by and George, 5th Lord Seton’s cavalry.  They stormed into Long Loan, where Kirkcaldy picked them off easily with his hagbutters backed by Ker of Cessford and Home, on foot with pike in hand, leading his six hundred spearmen.  Mary’s troops fought their way forward bravely despite the cost, and almost turned Moray’s right flank, but Kirkcaldy, ever vigilant, saw the danger.  He called up the rear-guard led by Sir William Douglas and Lindsay as reinforcement.
Kirkcaldy had orders from Moray to minimise bloodshed, and his forces struck the enemy on their flanks and faces, throwing them into confusion.  Mary’s van needed support from the main body of her troops under Argyll, but it is said that at this critical moment he fainted, possibly with an epileptic fit, and the leaderless Argylls refused to budge without him.  According to a French source, Mary rode forward from a nearby hill to lead them into battle herself, but the Argylls continued to quarrel among themselves and would not listen to her ‘eloquence’.  Yet it is more probable that she made good her escape.
Kirkcaldy now moved forward, sending in pikemen against the Hamilton’s, but obeying Moray’s instruction to avoid loss of life and to capture as many as he could.  Mary’s troops were routed, and the Argyll’s broke away, fleeing back to the Highlands.  Argyll, the unwitting cause of Mary’s disaster, escaped to Dunoon, and would not submit to Moray.  Only a hundred of Mary’s men were slain but three hundred, including Seton, James, 4th Lord Ross, and Sir James Hamilton of Finnart, were taken prisoner.   Robert Melville, who had not been involved in the fighting, was also captured, but, with Kirkcaldy as his brother-in-law and two brothers supporting Moray, he was soon freed.  The whole skirmish that sealed Mary’s fate, and it was little more than this, took three-quarters of an hour.
A couple of interesting asides is the map’s depiction of Glasgow at this period. Despite its cathedral and university, it was little more than a town surrounding its castle. And  William Kirkcaldy of Grange, who basically won the battle for King James as the only experienced “general”, went on to support Mary suggesting a peaceful settlement with her was possible
Grange went on to hold Edinburgh Castle in her name in what is known as the “lang siege” after surrendering he was hanged on 3rd August 1573.
9 notes · View notes
theworldofotps · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media
🔥😈👑
(I love how this turned out❤️)
31 notes · View notes
demon-king-balor · 5 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
The boy who came back from space ( @davide_esz on IG)
- Finn
72 notes · View notes
the-busy-ghost · 4 years
Text
I’m writing a post about a historical event that took place on Epiphany right now and it’s just been a whole day of sweating profusely in the May sun trying to remind myself ‘Think January, think winter, come on you can do this, don’t put sunny tunes on your playlist, think snow’
3 notes · View notes