jueves, 27 de mayo de 2010

Angelina Jolie & Brad Pitt

Before marriage: Brad wanted for a long time that the ceremony takes place in the city devastated by Hucarán, while Angelina wanted a small, intimate ceremony in France.
Brad has managed to convince his sensual couple which gives an idea of how permeable and is absolutely bound to her now husband, the Hollywood super mom, Angelina Jolie.
It is expected that in a few hours later the couple and their four children returned to Texas, where Brad is currently filming Tree of Life (Tree of Life).
This is the second step of the wedding aisle for Brad, after finish his five-year marriage to Jennifer Aniston shortly after meeting Angelina on the scene of the movie Mr and Mrs Smith (2005). One Angelina has been married twice, divorced actor in 1999 Jonny Lee Miller and Billy Bob Thornton in 2003 after three years of marriage for everyone.

How Brad and Angelina meet:
Becoming friends while working on the movie, Mr. & Mrs. Smith, Brad and Angelina denied having a romantic involvement while he was married to Jennifer Aniston.
Their first public outing together was at the opening of the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Kentucky on November 19, 2005.

Education and Occupations:
Brad attended the University of Missouri, majoring in journalism with a focus on advertising. He left college before graduating, and became a successful actor.
Angelina trained at the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute and majored in film at New York University. She is a professional model and a successful, award winning actress.

jueves, 29 de abril de 2010

jueves, 11 de marzo de 2010

PICTURES ABOUT ROMEO AND JULIET


SUMMARY

The story takes place in Verona, home to two families who are rivals, the Montagues and the Capulets. Romeo, sole heir of the Montagues, enters without being invited to a masked ball of the Capulets, where he meets Juliet, the daughter of the Capulets, two fall in love at first sight. Knowing that his parents never allow their marriage, they marry in secret, with the help of Friar Laurence. The day of the ceremony, Tybalt insults Romeo, despite that the latter refuses to fight. But Mercutio, the best friend of the young Montagues, engaged in a death duel with Tybalt. Romeo tries to separate them and take the opportunity to mortally wound Tybalt Mercutio. Romeo, Tybalt and then challenged to come to your friend killing his adversary. The Prince of Verona, outraged by the events, condemns Romeo to exile or death. Romeo is desperate, because they will be separated from Juliet, but advises him escape Friar Laurence to Mantua, to be published until his marriage to Juliet and meets her. Romeo flees to Mantua after a last interview with Juliet. Count Paris, a relative of the prince, called Juliet's hand and he is granted. Juliet refuses and calls for help to Friar Laurence, who advises him to accept the marriage and gives him a little free with an elixir that will plunge into a cataleptic state, similar to death. Tells you take it the night before the wedding and agrees to be with her when I wake up in the crypt of his family, together with Romeo, after two young men escape. Friar Laurence sends a messenger to Romeo (Friar John) to come by Juliet at the moment of awakening. But the messenger is not Romeo, since it alerted by his servant (Balthasar) that Juliet is dead, comes immediately to Verona. Romeo arrives at the Capulet crypt meeting with Paris, which was to lay flowers to his bride. The Earl was indignant at seeing Romeo, both are beaten, won the young. Romeo approaches Juliet, kissing her one last time and takes poison and died at the feet of his beloved. At that moment arrives Friar Laurence, who is frightened to see the bodies of Paris and Romeo. Juliet awakens and tries to convince the priest to flee with him, but she refuses to see her husband dead. Friar Laurence and Juliet will be about Romeo, kisses and knife wounds with her husband, embracing his beloved dying. The guards learn to Friar Laurence and Balthasar. Friar Laurence reveals the truth to the Prince of Verona, the Montagues and the Capulets. With the death of Romeo and Juliet, seal peace between two rival families.

THE CROSS!


jueves, 18 de febrero de 2010

THE VIDEO ABOUT CALLEJEROS!

The video about callejeros:

The video about callejeros also is very interesting and very happy because makes a lot of grace because it explains that some children are hiding from their parents to read, buy books on the sly ...

THE VIDEO ABOUT ¡PAD.

The video about ¡PAD:

The positives things: The video about ¡PAD is very interesting because talking about the one special thing, is an impressive thing, I hadn’t ever seen a device that made so many functions and which could do so much. Has a many applications, It has internet, you can make movies, record them and watch them on PAD.

The negative things: Is a bit expensive and is worth approximately 400 euros, on the other hand, is a little big, but can do many things, that's good.

jueves, 11 de febrero de 2010

TUDOR LONDON


Tudor London can be described as a prosperous, bustling city during the Tudor dynasty. In fact, the population increased from 75,000 inhabitants with Henry VII to 200,000 at the end of the 16th century.
The Tudor monarchs had a royal residence in London called Whitehall Palace and another in the countryside,called Hampton court , after Cardinal Wolsey gave it to Henry VIII.These Tudor kings and queens used what are now famous parks , such as Hyde Park or St. James's Park , as Royal Hunting forests.
Not many Tudor buildings survive today, mostly because of The Great Fire , which happened in 1666. Besides, , the 13 religious houses in London were __ converted for private use or pulled down for building materials____ after the Dissolution of the monasteries, which was Henry VIII's most decisive step against the power of the church in 1538. First the small, less powerful houses had their property confiscated and their buildings blighted (made unsuitable for use). They were followed the next year by the large houses.
Philosophical concepts of the power of the king over church may have played a part in Henry's decision to suppress the monasteries, but so did greed. The monasteries were rich, and a lot of that wealth found its way directly or indirectly to the royal treasury. Some of the monastery buildings were sold to wealthy gentry for use as country estates. Many others became sources of cheap building materials for local inhabitants. One of the results of the Dissolution of the Monasteries is that those who bought the old monastic lands were inclined to support Henry in his break with Rome, purely from self interest.
Apart from that, the theatres were banned from the city by the city authorities or guilds because plays wasted workmen's time ( so it wasn't for religious objection to the play's contents ). Then, they were built in the Southwark, where now a reconstruction of the Globe can be visited to learn about Tudor theatre.
At that time, London's financial rival was the city of Amsterdam, and to be able to compete with it , an international exchange was created in 1566.
(It was founded by the mercer Thomas Gresham in 1566 to enable London to compete for financial power with Amsterdam. This became the Royal Exchange in 1560, and is now housed in a massive Victorian building beside the Bank of England Museum in Mansion House Square.)
So, all in all, and because of many other events and facts, we can say that both London and England were powerful.

jueves, 21 de enero de 2010

Henry and more women's!

HENRY VIII


Henry VIII (28 June 1491 – 28 January 1547) was King of England from 21 April 1509 until his death. He was also Lord of Ireland (later King of Ireland) and claimant to the Kingdom of France. Henry was the second monarch of the House of Tudor, succeeding his father, Henry VII.

Henry VIII was a significant figure in the history of the English monarchy. Although in the great part of his reign he brutally suppressed the influence of the Protestant Reformation in England,[1][2] a movement having some roots with John Wycliffe in the 14th century, he is more popularly known for his role in the separation of the Church of England from the Roman Catholic Church. Henry's struggles with Rome ultimately led to the separation of the Church of England from papal authority, the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and establishing himself as the Supreme Head of the Church of England. Although some[who?] claim that Henry became a Protestant on his death-bed, he remained an advocate for traditional Catholic ceremony and doctrine throughout his life, even after his excommunication from the Roman Catholic Church following the annulment of his marriage to first wife Catherine of Aragon and the marriage to his second wife, Anne Boleyn.[1][3] Royal support for the English Reformation began with his heirs, the devout Edward VI and the renowned Elizabeth I, whilst daughter Mary I temporarily reinstated papal authority over England. Henry also oversaw the legal union of England and Wales with the Laws in Wales Acts 1535–1542. He is also noted for his six wives, two of whom were beheaded.

Henry VIII

HENRY VIII

The information about Henry VIII!

NAME:Henry VIII of England

BORN:28 June 1491(1491-06-28)
Greenwich Palace, Greenwich

PARENTS:Father Henry VII of England
Mother Elizabeth of York

RELIGION :Christian (Anglican,
previously Roman Catholic)

DIED :28 January 1547 (aged 55)
Palace of Whitehall, London

REIGNED :21 April 1509 – 28 January 1547 (&0000000000000037.00000037 years, &0000000000000282.000000282 days)

jueves, 7 de enero de 2010

Catalan Pyrenees

TRAVEL!

Hi! My name is Eva Garcia and I speak the section about travels around the world in the magazine "to the parrot".

There are many kinds of trips: more lakes, shorter to the north, located south ...
but all or most of the trip is memorable and repeatable.
Trips this winter season of 2009/10 are:
- In the Pyrenees: skiing.
- In Brazil, where many people have taken the grapes in new year with sunny and high temperatures.
- There are also the typical cities where people go.


Some photos of trips this winter are: