Ticket #4938 (new)

Opened 2 months ago

Do this daily for NEW KNEES in 30 days

Reported by: "Restoring Healthy Joint" <PainfulKnees@…> Owned by:
Priority: normal Milestone: 2.11
Component: none Version: 3.8.0
Severity: medium Keywords:
Cc: Language:
Patch status: Platform:

Description

Do this daily for NEW KNEES in 30 days

http://manukaitchy.us/yTGAeZVCUKhbBsHmSK7WL_M7Cuxi31xicIQ8u8uoiuytuB6CHw

http://manukaitchy.us/ryatxcaz2eEx90FBQkM7HeKfHPQOlDGtZSekSLJT05BF-13lBg

oming something of a backwater.

This made it an attractive destination for the painter Vincent van Gogh, who arrived there on 21 February 1888. He was fascinated by the Provençal landscapes, producing over 300 paintings and drawings during his time in Arles. Many of his most famous paintings were completed there, including The Night Cafe, the Yellow Room, Starry Night Over the Rhone, and L'Arlésienne. Paul Gauguin visited van Gogh in Arles. However, van Gogh's mental health deteriorated and he became alarmingly eccentric, culminating in the well-known ear-severing incident in December 1888 which resulted in two stays in the Old Hospital of Arles. The concerned Arlesians circulated a petition the following February demanding that van Gogh be confined. In May 1889, he took the hint and left Arles for the Saint-Paul asylum at nearby Saint-Rémy-de-Provence.
Jewish history
Main article: History of the Jews in Arles

Arles had an important and prominent Jewish community between the Roman era and the end of the 15th century. A local legend describes the first Jews in Arles as exiles from Judaea after Jerusalem fell to the Romans. Nevertheless, the first documented evidence of Jews in Arles is not before the fifth century, when a distinguished community already existed in the town. Arles was an important Jewish crossroads, as a port city and close to Spain and the rest of Europe alike. It served a major role in the work of the Hachmei Provence group of famous Jewish scholars, translators and philosophers, who were most important to Judaism throughout the Middle Ages. In the eighth century, jurisdiction over the Jews of Arles was passed to the local Archbishop, making the Jewish taxes to the clergy somewhat of a shield for the community from mob attacks, most frequent during the Crusades. The community lived relatively peacefully until the last decade of the 15th century, when they were expelled out
  of the city never to return. Several Jews did live in the city in the centuries after, though no community was found ever after. Nowadays, Jewish archaeol

untitled-part.html Download

Attachments

untitled-part.html Download (4.6 KB) - added by PainfulKnees@… 2 months ago.
Added by email2trac

Change History

Changed 2 months ago by PainfulKnees@…

Added by email2trac

Changed 2 months ago by PainfulKnees@…

This message has 1 attachment(s)

Note: See TracTickets for help on using tickets.