Home About us Products Services Contact us Bookmark
:: wikimiki.org ::
Pontormo

Pontormo

Jacopo Carrucci (Pontorme, proche de Empoli, 1494 - Florence, 1557), connu sous le nom de Jacopo da Pontormo, ou plus simplement il Pontormo, était un peintre florentin et un des représentants les plus importants du mouvement maniériste dans la peinture du . Catégorie:Naissance en 1494 Catégorie:Décès en 1557 Catégorie:Peintre italien Catégorie:Peintre en P Catégorie:Peintre maniériste ja:ヤコポ・ダ・ポントルモ

Florence

Florence (en italien Firenze) est une ville d'Italie, capitale de la Toscane et chef-lieu de province (417 386 habitants, les Florentins). De nos jours, Florence est connue pour ses monuments historiques de la Renaissance.
Renaissance

Histoire

Florence a été fondée pendant l'époque romaine, en 59 av. J.-C., près du fleuve Arno. Elle n'a été qu'une simple bourgade jusqu'au , début de son essor économique et artistique qui dura jusqu'au . La ville a été dominée par différents clans qui se sont disputé le pouvoir. En 1434, ce sont les Médicis qui deviennent maîtres de la ville. En 1569, Florence devient la capitale du grand-duché de Toscane. La ville garde de cette époque glorieuse de nombreux monuments, dont l'église San Miniato al Monte (1018), l'église Santa Maria Novella, l'église Santa Croce, le Dôme (il Duomo, dont la coupole est réalisée par l'architecte Brunelleschi), abritant des œuvres de Giotto, Donatello ou encore Michel-Ange. Florence connut ensuite une période de lent déclin, jusqu'en 1865, date à laquelle elle devient capitale du royaume d'Italie, jusqu'en 1870, date à laquelle Rome est rattachée au royaume et en devient la capitale. Entre le 7 et 10 novembre 2002, la ville accueille le premier Forum social européen (FSE). Forum social européen

Quelques dates


- 1059 : Consécration du Baptistère de Florence.
- 1232 : Construction de Santa Croce, église des Franciscains, à Florence.
- 1294 : Début de la construction de la cathédrale de Florence.

Trecento


- 1330 : Andrea Pisano sculpte la porte de bronze doré du Baptistère de Florence.
- 1337 : Décès à Florence du peintre et architecte italien Giotto.
- 1370 : Le jeu de cartes arrive d'Orient en Europe par Florence.
- 1378 : Une révolte de travailleurs réussit à Florence et entraîne la création d'une corporation des ouvriers du textile.
- 1386 : Naissance à Florence du sculpteur italien Donato di Niccolo di Betto Bardi dit Donatello, mort en 1466
- 1395 : Naissance à Florence du peintre italien Guido dit Pietro dit Fra Angelico, mort en 1455

Quattrocento


- 1403 : Le sculpteur italien Lorenzo Ghiberti commence à travailler sur les portes de bronze du Baptistère de Florence.
- 1406 : La cité-État de Pise est vaincue par Florence.
- 1421 : Le premier brevet connu est délivré à Florence.
- 1429 : À Florence, activité de l'atelier de Luca della Robbia (sculpteur et céramiste).
- 1434 : Cosme de Médicis devient le maître de Florence.
- 1436 : Brunelleschi termine la coupole du Dôme de Florence.
- 1440 : À Florence, Donatello fond le bronze David.
- 1441 : Une bibliothèque publique est ouverte à Florence.
- 1445 : Naissance à Florence du peintre italien Sandro Filipepi dit Sandro Botticelli, mort en 1510
- 1452 : Naissance à Vinci, non loin de Florence, du peintre, sculpteur, architecte, ingénieur et écrivain italien Léonard de Vinci, mort en 1519
- 1458 : La construction du Palais Pitti commence à Florence. Palais Pitti]
- 1466 : Décès à Florence du sculpteur italien Donato di Niccolo di Betto Bardi, dit Donatello.
- 1469 : Début du principat de Laurent le Magnifique (Lorenzo Medici) à Florence, qui dure jusqu'en 1492
- 1472 : Naissance à Florence du peintre italien Bartolomeo della Porta dit Fra Bartolomeo, mort en 1517
- 1475 : Décès à Florence du peintre italien Paolo di Dono, dit Paolo Uccello.
- 1485 : Le peintre florentin Sandro Botticelli peint à Florence la Naissance de Vénus.
- 1494 : Naissance du peintre italien Francesco d'Ubertino dit Le Bachiacca à Florence. Succès d'un soulèvement populaire contre les Médicis à Florence. Charles VIII, roi de France envahit l'Italie et entre à Florence, les guerres d'Italie commencent.

Cinquecento


- 1503 : Naissance à Florence du peintre italien Agnolo di Cosimo dit Bronzino, mort en 1572
- 1510 : Décès à Florence du peintre italien Sandro Filipepi dit Botticelli.
- 1512 : Les Habsbourg réinstallent les Médicis à la tête de Florence.
- 1517 : Décès à Florence du peintre italien Bartolomeo della Porta dit Fra Bartolomeo.
- 1560 : La construction du Palais des Offices commence à Florence.
- 1572 : Décès à Florence du peintre italien Agnolo di Cosimo dit Bronzino.
- 1582 : L'Academia della Crusca, première académie de langue italienne est fondée à Florence.
- 1597 : Création à Florence de Dafne de Jacopo Peri, considéré comme le premier opéra de l'histoire dont la musique a été perdue.

Ottocento


- 1826 : Naissance à Florence de Carlo Lorenzini dit Carlo Collodi, l'auteur de Pinocchio.
- 1890 : Décès à Florence de Carlo Collodi. 1890

Art dans la ville

L'article anglais indique qu'il est considéré que des mille plus grands artistes européens du second millénaire, 350 ont vécu ou travaillé à Florence.
Voir l'article dédié art de Florence

Blasonnement

art de Florence] Le lys rouge, distinct du modèle des rois français, symbolise la cité de Florence. Il est nommé Fleur de lys florencée et est semblable à l'héraldique de Lille. Ce symbole figure sur sa monnaie au temps de la Cité-État : le florin, et lui donne son surnom littéraire: la cité au lys rouge.

Jumelage

Florence est jumelée avec Kyoto et Fès. Florence est aussi jumelée avec Reims depuis le 5 mai 1956 - Un timbre poste avec cachet « premier jour » a été réalisé pour ce jumelage. Il représente l'ange du sourire de la cathédrale rémoise et « Allegoria degli Uflizi de Boticelli »

Liens Externes


- [http://www.compart-multimedia.com/virtuale/us/florence/florence_italy.htm Florence: Virtual travel in the city of Renaissance] (English/Italian)
- [http://wikitravel.org/fr/Florence Florence, sur Wikitravel]
- [http://www.aboutflorence.com/florence/ À propos de Florence: guide non-commercial de Florence]
- [http://www.istitutofrance.it Site de l'Institut Français de Florence] Catégorie:Ancienne préfecture Catégorie:Capitale européenne de la culture Catégorie:Patrimoine mondial en Italie Catégorie:Toscane Catégorie:Ville d'Italie catégorie:Ancienne capitale de pays Catégorie:Pinocchio ja:フィレンツェ ko:피렌체

1557

Catégorie:1557
| |
Années 1530 | Années 1540 | Années 1550 | Années 1560 | Années 1570
1552 | 1553 | 1554 | 1555 | 1556 | 1557 | 1558 | 1559 | 1560 | 1561 | 1562
---- Cette page concerne l'année 1557 du calendrier julien.

Événements


- Au Mexique, découverte du procédé de l'amalgame pour l'extraction de l'argent.
- Création du patriarcat serbe de Pec.
- Début du règne de Sébastien Ier, roi du Portugal (fin en 1578).
- Le Portugal s'empare de la presqu'île de Macao en Chine.
- Le signe égal (=) est utilisé pour la première fois.
- 10 août : Bataille de Saint-Quentin

Naissances en 1557


- naissance de Jean de Sponde à Mauléon

Décès en 1557


- Décès du peintre italien Francesco d'Ubertino dit Le Bachiacca.
- Décès de l'explorateur français Jacques Cartier ko:1557년 simple:1557

Catégorie:Naissance en 1494



Catégorie:Décès en 1557



Catégorie:Peintre italien

Italien Catégorie:Artiste italien Catégorie:Personnalité italienne ko:분류:이탈리아의 화가

Catégorie:Peintre en P

P Dans ces sous-catégories alphabétiques, et contrairement à l'usage, les peintres sont classés suivant l'initiale de leur prénom pour faciliter leur recherche dans la liste.

A faire


- Giovanni di Palolo (1420-1482)
- Giovanni Pannini (1699-1765)
- Richard Parkes Bonington (1802-1828)
- Michele Rocca, dit Parmigianino le Jeune (1666-1750)
- Giuseppe Passeri (1654-1714)
- Pierre Patel (1604-1676)
- Joachim Patenier (1480-1524)
- Gianantonio Pellegrini (1675-1741)
- Gian-Francesco Penni (1488-1528)
- Luca Penni (1500-1556)
- François Perrier (1590-1650)
- Jean-Baptiste Perronneau (1715-1783)
- Baldasare Peruzzi (1481-1536)
- Francesco di Stefano Pesellino (1422-1457)
- Antoine Pesne (1683-1757)
- Giuseppe Antonio Petrini (1677-1755)
- Kouzma Petrov-Vodkin (1878-1939)
- Giambattista Piazzetta (1682-1754)
- Delilah Pierce (1904- )
- Simone Pignoni (1611-1698)
- Howardena Pindell (1943-)
- Bernardino di Betto, dit Il Pinturicchio (1454-1513)
- Antonio Puccio di Giovanni di Cerreto, dit Pisanello (1395-1455)
- Giambattista Pittoni (1687-1767)
- Charles Poerson (Le Père) (1609-1667)
- P.H. Polk (1898-1984)
- Paolo Porpora (1617-1673)
- Fairfield Porter (1907-1975)
- Andrea Pozzo (1642-1709)
- Maurice Prendergast (1861-1924)
- Nelson Primus (1843-c.1916)
- Giulio Cesare Procaccini (1574-1625)
- Jan Provost (1465-1529)
- Howard Pyle (1853-1911)

Dingo Baby

Two-month-old Australian baby Azaria Chamberlain disappeared on the night of 17 August 1980 on a camping trip with her family. Her parents, Lindy Chamberlain and Michael Chamberlain, reported that she had been taken from their tent by a dingo, but they were arrested, tried, and convicted of her murder in 1982. The media focus for the trial, which included the first live telecast of Australian court proceedings, was extraordinarily intense and sensational. The Chamberlains made several unsuccessful appeals but not until the chance discovery of a piece of Azaria's clothing in an area full of dingo lairs were they successful. Both were released and subsequently acquitted of murder, and although the case is officially unsolved, their tale of a dingo attack is generally accepted. The story has been made into a movie and there have been numerous books about the case. Outside of Australia, the incident is often referred to as the Dingo Baby case.

Azaria

Azaria Chantel Loren Chamberlain (June 11, 1980 - August 17, 1980) was born at the Mount Isa Maternity Hospital in Australia, daughter of Lindy and Michael Chamberlain. She weighed nearly 3 kg at birth and was 47 cm long.

Disappearance of Azaria

Michael Chamberlain, his wife Lindy and their three children, left Mount Isa, Queensland in August 1980 and drove to Uluru for a camping holiday. They arrived on the evening of Saturday August 16. On the night of August 17 1980. Lindy Chamberlain reported Azaria had been taken from their tent, where she had been sleeping in her bassinette, during the night by a dingo, a type of wild dog. Three hundred people formed a human chain during the night and searched the sand dunes near the camp site. Despite this effort, Azaria Chamberlain was never found. One week later, Victorian tourist Mr Wallace Goodwin, discovered Azaria's heavily blood-stained singlet, jumpsuit and nappy.

Coroner's inquests

The initial Coroner's inquest into the disappearance was opened on December 15, 1980 before Denis Barritt, SM. On February 20, 1981, in the first live telecast of Australian court proceedings, and the first court hearing convened at Uluru, Mr. Barritt reported that the likely cause was a dingo attack. In addition to this finding, Mr. Barritt also concluded that subsequent to the attack, the body was taken from the dingo and disposed of by an unknown method by persons unknown. Police and prosecutors were skeptical that a dingo could be responsible, so they moved for a further inquest. This second investigation, was held in September of the same year. Based on ultraviolet investigations of the jumpsuit that Azaria had been wearing on the night she disappeared by Dr James Cameron of the London Hospital Medical College, the new finding was made that Azaria had been killed with a pair of scissors and held by a small adult hand until she stopped bleeding.

Case against Lindy Chamberlain

The Crown alleged that Lindy Chamberlain had cut Azaria's throat in the front seat of the family car. The key evidence supporting this allegation was the jumpsuit and the finding from the second inquest, as well as a highly contentious forensic report claiming to have found evidence of fetal haemoglobin in blood stains allegedly found in the front seat of the Chamberlains' 1977 Torana hatchback. Fetal haemoglobin is present in infants six months or younger; Azaria Chamberlain was nine weeks old at the time. In defence, eyewitness evidence was presented of dingoes seen in the area on the evening of 17 August 1980. All witnesses claimed to believe the Chamberlains' story. One witness also reported hearing a baby's cry after the time when the prosecution alleged Azaria had been murdered. Evidence was also presented that adult blood also passed the test used for fetal haemoglobin. The defence's case was rejected by the jury and Lindy Chamberlain was convicted of murder on 29 October 1982 and was sentenced to life imprisonment. Michael Chamberlain was found guilty as an accessory and was given an 18-month, suspended sentence.

Appeals

An appeal was made to the High Court in November 1983. Asked to quash the convictions on the ground that the verdicts were unsafe and unsatisfactory, in February 1984 the Court refused the appeal by majority, however, the mixed findings of the judges gave encouragement to Lindy Chamberlain's supporters.

Release and acquittal

The final resolution of the Azaria case was triggered by a chance discovery. In early 1986, English tourist David Brett fell to his death from Uluru during an evening climb. Because of the vast size of the rock and the scrubby nature of the surrounding terrain, it was eight days before Brett's remains were discovered lying below the bluff where he had lost his footing, in an area full of dingo lairs. As police searched the area looking for missing bones that might have been carried off by dingoes, they discovered a small article of clothing. It was quickly identified as the crucial missing piece of evidence from the Chamberlain case -- Azaria's matinee jacket. The NT Chief Minister ordered Lindy's immediate release and the case was reopened. On September 15 1988, the NT Court of Criminal Appeals unanimously overturned all convictions against Lindy Chamberlain and Michael Chamberlain. The acquittal was based on a rejection of the two key points of the prosecution's case -- particularly the alleged fetal haemoglobin evidence -- and of bias and invalid assumptions made during the initial trial. The questionable nature of the forensic evidence in the Chamberlain trial, and the weight given to it, raised profound concerns about the use and accuracy of such procedures, and about expert testimony in criminal cases. The prosecution successfully argued that the pivotal haemoglobin tests indicated the presence of fetal haemoglobin in the Chamberlains' car, and this it was a significant factor in the original conviction. But it was later shown that these tests were highly unreliable, and that similar tests conducted on the substance used to rust-proof the body of the car had yielded virtually identical results. Two years after they were exonerated, the Chamberlains were awarded AU$1.3 million in compensation for wrongful imprisonment.

Media involvement and bias

The Chamberlain trial was the most publicised in Australian history. Given that most of the evidence presented in the case against Lindy Chamberlain was later rejected, the case is now used as an example of how the media and bias can adversely affect a trial. Public and media opinion during the trial had been significantly against the Chamberlains. Much was made of the fact that the Chamberlains were Seventh-day Adventists, that the family took a newborn baby to a remote desert location, and that Mrs Chamberlain showed little emotion during the proceedings. Rumours circulated that Azaria was a name from the Bible meaning sacrifice in the desert (it actually means helped by God), and that Lindy Chamberlain was a witch (based on her tendency to wear black). Another rumour which gained considerable currency in Australia at the time was that the real culprit was the Chamberlain's son, Aidan, and that his parents were covering up for his guilt.

Evil Angels

The story has been written into many different books and accounts. Perhaps the best known is the John Bryson book Evil Angels published in 1985. In 1987 Australian director Fred Schepisi adapted the book into a feature film of the same name (retitled A Cry in the Dark in the United States). It starred Meryl Streep as Lindy Chamberlain and Sam Neill as Michael Chamberlain. There was some criticism at the time of the casting of an American as Mrs. Chamberlain, but most critics were silenced by Streep's excellent performance, and by Lindy herself, who commended the movie for its accuracy and praised Streep highly for her portrayal.

Subsequent events

In 1995, a third inquest into the death by Coroner John Lowndes delivered an open finding, leaving the case officially unsolved. In July 2004, Frank Cole, a Melbourne pensioner, claimed that he had shot a dingo in 1980 and found a baby in its mouth. After interviewing Mr Cole on the matter, police decided not to reopen the case. The Chamberlains' claim that a dingo had taken Azaria was originally greeted with skepticism by many people. Several factors led to this, including a lack of knowledge about dingoes and their behaviour, and the fact that these animals generally live in remote areas and so were rarely seen by most Australians. Combined with the historical human partiality for dogs, this led to a situation where dingoes simply were not perceived as a dangerous species. However, since the Chamberlain case, other proven cases of attacks on humans by dingoes have brought about a dramatic change in public opinion. It is now widely accepted that, as the first inquest concluded, baby Azaria probably was killed by a dingo, and that her body could easily have been removed and presumably eaten by a dingo, leaving little or no trace. Crucial to this change of public opinion was a string of attacks by dingoes on Fraser Island, off the Queensland coast, the last refuge in Australia for pure-breed wild dingoes. In the wake of these attacks, most of which took place in the late 1990s, it emerged that there have been at least 400 documented dingo attacks on Fraser Island alone. Most were against children, but at least two were attacks on adults. Notably, in April 1998, in a scenario strikingly similar to the story told by Lindy Chamberlain, a 13-month old girl was grabbed by a dingo and dragged from a picnic blanket at the Waddy Point camping area. Fortunately, in this case, the child was dropped after her father intervened.

Popular media

Facets of the Chamberlain case have inevitably moved into popular usage, and almost immediately after Azaria's disappearance, morbid jokes about the case began to circulate in Australia and elsewhere. Partly due to the intense publicity, but mostly because of the subsequent movie, the concept of a dingo taking a baby has become a stock pop-culture reference. Most references centre on quotations (or mis-quotations) of the statement Lindy Chamberlain was reported to have made immediately after her daughter's disappearance -- "A dingo took my baby!" -- and from the subsequent quotation of this line in Evil Angels.
- Oz, the werewolf and sometime beau of Willow in the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer is in a band named Dingoes Ate My Baby.
- Elaine, a character in the Seinfeld television show, once said, in a heavy Australian accent, "Maybe the dingo ate your baby." (This occurred in the 27th Seinfeld episode, named "The Stranded".)
- In the September 2000 issue of Maxim magazine, a sidebar entitled "Five Reasons to Hate Australians" lists baby-eating dingoes as #4.
- A mini-tour of Australia in 2001 by rock musician Ben Folds was titled "A dingo took my band", which jokingly referred to Folds' dissolution of his previous group, Ben Folds Five.
- Many references have also been made in The Simpsons. In the episode 'Bart Vs. Australia,' Bart says "Hey, I think I hear a dingo eatin' your baby." In the episode 'Lisa Gets An "A"', Lisa becomes addicted to a game called Dash Dingo (itself a parody of Crash Bandicoot) which makes reference to a dingo devouring a baby.

Current

The cause of Azaria's disappearance (and presumably her death) is still offically unknown, however the Chamberlains have been acquitted of her murder and could not be retried in the event that new evidence is forthcoming. In August 2005, a 25 year old woman named Erin Horsburgh reported to an Alice Springs newspaper and then to police that she believes that she is Azaria Chamberlain, but her claims were rejected by the authorities. She claims she was rescued by a Mutitjulu man and raised by a white family who were members of a religious sect. [http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,16385163-421,00.html] Erin Horsburgh asked for a sample of her DNA to be compared with DNA taken from the dress of Azaria Chamberlain, which Horsburgh was confident would be a match. Police refused to do the required tests, stating that her claims were farcical. Lindy Chamberlain refused to comment on the matter, in spite of Horsburgh's requests to be reunited with her mother. Investigations in Horsburgh's home town uncovered that she had a history of dating much older men, and that she was adopted under strange circumstances. Her adopted parents have encouraged Erin Horsburgh to find the truth as to who her parents were, and stated that they believe that Erin Horsburgh is Azaria Chamberlain. In spite of this, police have refused to conduct an investigation or to compare the DNA samples. Public perception has generally been that this is a hoax, and only the Centralian Advocate newspaper from Alice Springs has conducted an interview with Horsburgh. Horsburgh's theory is 100% consistent with claims made by Australian Aboriginals in Mutitjulu at the time of the alleged offence, claims which were rubbished by popular media in 1980.

See also


- Crime in the Northern Territory

References


- [http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/nt/NTSC/1988/64.html CONVICTIONS OF ALICE LYNNE CHAMBERLAIN AND MICHAEL LEIGH CHAMBERLAIN (1988)]
- [http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/federal_ct/unrep861.html ALICE LYNNE CHAMBERLAIN and MICHAEL LEIGH CHAMBERLAIN And: THE QUEEN (1983)]
- [http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/high_ct/153clr521.html CHAMBERLAIN v. THE QUEEN (No.2) (1984)]
- [http://law.anu.edu.au/highcourt_project/Chamberlain%20Case%20rtf.rtf Chamberlain Case (High Court Project)]
- [http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/SydLRev/1998/16.html Negotiating the Meaning of a Scientific Experiment During a Murder Trial and Some Limits to Legal Deconstruction for the Public Understanding of Law and Science] by Gary Edmund
- [http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/DeakinLRev/2004/13.html A QUESTION OF INNOCENCE: FACILITATING DNA-BASED EXONERATIONS IN AUSTRALIA] by Lynne Weathered
- [http://nsw.royalsoc.org.au/talks_2003/talk_Oct2003.html Azaria's blood - Evaluating Forensic Evidence and the Azaria Chamberlain Case (Abstract)]
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn1303882 Ace lie] / Tony Paynter (1984, ISBN 0949852155)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn306796 Azaria] / Richard Shears (1982, ISBN 0170061469)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn1177672 Azaria: the trial of the century] / Steve Brien (1984, ISBN 0725514094)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn2829771 Azaria! What the jury were not told] / Phil Ward (1984, ISBN 0959113304)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn1941356 Azaria, Wednesday's child] / James Simmonds (1982, ISBN 0959269908)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn1117596 The Azaria Chamberlain case: reflections on Australian identity] / by Paul Reynolds (1989, ISBN 1855070022)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn98440 The Azaria evidence: fact or fiction?] / Veronica M. Flanigan (1984)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn1653873 The Azaria mystery: a reason to kill] / George W. Rollo (198?)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn270265 Azaria newsletter] / Chamberlain Information Service
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn2083977 The Chamberlain case, was justice done?] / Robert Lewis (1990, ISBN 0646030876)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn1574114 Le chien du desert rouge] / John Bryson (1997, ISBN 2742712712)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn91005 The crown versus Chamberlain, 1980-1987] / Ken Crispin (1987, ISBN 0867600888)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn2193925 Dingo innocent: the Azaria Chamberlain mystery] / Buck Richardson (2002, ISBN 0957729006)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn2032887 Evil angels] / John Bryson (2000, ISBN 0733613284)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn2958339 Justice in jeopardy: twelve witnesses speak out] / edited by Guy Boyd (1984, ISBN 0959114203)
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn1527721 The making of a modern myth: the Chamberlain case and the Australian media] (M.A. thesis) / Belinda Wilson
- [http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn99209 New forensic evidence in support of an inquiry into the convictions of M. and L. Chamberlain] / Chamberlain Innocence Committee (1985) Category:1980 Category:Australian law Category:Crime in the Northern Territory Category:Disappeared people Category:History of the Northern Territory Category:Unsolved murders Category:Pop culture

online casinos WARSAW HOTELS warsaw map niusy szkoy










































:: RELATED NEWS ::

Liga Profesional de Baloncesto de Venezuela
La liga Profesional de Baloncesto de Venezuela, es la máxima competición de Baloncesto en Venezuela, formada por , Cocodrilos de Caracas, Guaiqueries de Margarita, Trotamundos de Carabobo, Panteras de Miranda, M
Pamela Anderson
Pamela "Pam" Denise Anderson (nacida el 1 de julio de 1967) es una actriz de televisión internacional, una modelo, productora, y un símbolo sexual conocida por su belleza, su figura curvilínea, y sus estilos atrevid
Patada
En violencia, artes marciales y deportes, una patada es un golpe con el pie, la rodilla o la pierna. Como ataque es usado en combate cuerpo a cuerpo. Las patadas son, por lo general, más lentas que los puñetazos aunque más fuerte
Macul (estación)
La estación Macul (L4) forma parte de la Línea 4 del Metro de Santiago en Chile. Se encuentra por viaducto en la autopista Vespucio Sur entre las estaciones Las Torres y Vicuña Mackenna de la misma línea, en el lí
Las Torres (estación)
La estación Las Torres (L4) forma parte de la Línea 4 del Metro de Santiago en Chile. Se encuentra por viaducto en la autopista Vespucio Sur entre las estaciones Quilín y Macul de la misma línea, en el límite de las comunas de
Quilín (estación)
La estación Quilín (L4) forma parte de la Línea 4 del Metro de Santiago en Chile. Se encuentra por viaducto en la autopista Vespucio Sur entre las estaciones Los Presidentes y Las Torres de la misma línea, en el límite
Los Presidentes (estación)
La estación Los Presidentes (L4) forma parte de la Línea 4 del Metro de Santiago en Chile. Se encuentra por viaducto en la autopista Vespucio Sur entre las estaciones Grecia y Quilín de la misma línea, en el límite de las co
Grecia (estación)
La estación Grecia (L4) forma parte de la Línea 4 del Metro de Santiago en Chile. Se encuentra por viaducto en la autopista Vespucio Sur entre las estaciones Los Orientales y Los Presidentes de la misma línea, en el
All Rights Reserved 2005 wikimiki.org