Skip to content
🎉 your ETH🥳

❤️ Menuthiocrioceras 🐏

"Menuthiocrioceras is an ammonite genus from the Early Cretaceous belonging to the Ancyloceratoidea. Fossils belonging to this genus were found in Madagascar and Indonesia.Klein, J. et al., 2007 FOSSILIUM CATALOGUS I:ANIMALIA Pars 144, Lower Cretaceous Ammonites III Bochianitoidea, Protancyloceratoidea, Ancyloceratoidea, Ptychoceratoidea. Species Species within the genus Menuthiocrioceras include: *M. ampakabense Collignon, 1962 *M. aontzyense Collignon, 1962 *M. besairiei Collignon, 1949 *M. colcanapi Collignon, 1962 *M. compressum Skwarko & Thieuloy, 1989 *M. hourcqui Collignon, 1949 *M. irianense Skwarko & Thieuloy, 1989 *M. kuntzi Collignon, 1962 *M. lenoblei Collignon, 1949 *M. mahafalense Collignon, 1962 *M. sarkari Collignon, 1962 *M. sornayi Collignon, 1962 References Ammonitida genera Crioceratitidae Early Cretaceous ammonites Ammonites of Africa Ammonites of Asia "

❤️ Patricia Craig (writer) 🐏

"Patricia Craig (born 1952) is a writer, anthologist and literary critic from Northern Ireland, living in Antrim, County Antrim. Personal life She was born in Belfast to Nora (née Brady) and Andy Craig and attended St Dominic's Grammar School for Girls before studying at the Belfast College of Art and then at the Central School of Arts and Crafts, London (Diploma in Art & Design, Hons.). She returned to Northern Ireland in 1999. She is married to the Welsh artist Jeffrey Morgan. Career She has written memoirs, edited several anthologies and written articles for newspapers. In London she began to collaborate with Mary Cadogan, editing several books on children’s literature. Their first book, You’re a Brick Angela!, became a classic. On her return to Northern Ireland she began to write books with an Irish theme. One of the first was a biography of Brian Moore which was described by the critic Seamus Deane as 'a crisp and intelligent account of a man and a writer for whom Craig's clean and incisive approach seems perfectly appropriate'. Perhaps her most popular book was the memoir Asking for Trouble (1987) which details her schooldays, culminating in her expulsion from school. Awards She was Honorary Lecturer at Queen's University Belfast where she was appointed to the Board of the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry. Publications * You're a Brick Angela!: The Girls' Story 1839–1985 (1976) * Women and Children First: The Fiction of Two World Wars (1978) * The Lady Investigates: Women Detectives and Spies in Fiction (1986) * The Oxford Book of English Detective Stories (1990) * The Rattle of The North: An Anthology of Ulster Prose (1992) * The Penguin Book of British Comic Stories (1992) * The Oxford Book of Modern Women's Stories (1994) * The Oxford Book of Schooldays (1995) * The Oxford Book of Travel Stories (1996) * The Oxford Book of Ireland (1998) * Twelve Irish Ghost Stories (1998) * The Belfast Anthology (1999) * The Oxford Book of Detective Stories (2000) * Brian Moore: A Biography (2002) * Asking for Trouble (2008) * A Twisted Root – Ancestral Entanglements in Ireland (2012) * Bookworm, A Memoir of Childhood Reading (2015) References External links * Culture Northern Ireland page on Patricia Craig 1952 births Living people 20th-century biographers 20th-century Irish women writers 20th-century writers from Northern Ireland 21st-century biographers 21st-century Irish women writers 21st-century memoirists 21st-century writers from Northern Ireland Alumni of the Central School of Art and Design Irish literary critics Irish memoirists People associated with Queen's University Belfast People educated at St Dominic's Grammar School for Girls Women anthologists Women biographers Women memoirists Women writers from Northern Ireland Writers from Belfast "

❤️ Church of San Cipriano, Toledo 🐏

"San Cipriano, Toledo The Church of San Cipriano is a church located in Toledo, Castilla-La Mancha, Spain. The medieval building was rebuilt in the 17th century apart from the tower. History In 1125 (40 years after the Reconquista) it was cited as a parish following the Latin Rite (rather than the Mozarabic one). It is thought that the building could have originally been a mosque, based upon its layout and a preceding courtyard, which was later used as a cemetery. One of the first churches in Toledo, it retains a tower of Umayyad architecture. It has a square base and a masonry body a pointed round arch on each side of the tower, framed with a Moorish panel, and brickwork for the corners and rows. When the church was rebuilt the free-standing tower was incorporated in the building. Between 1612 and 1613, the church was rebuilt by Juan Bautista Monegro, based upon the design by Juan de Orduña and at the expense of Don Carlos Venero y Leyba, canon of Toledo. The original building, in bad disrepair, was razed, except for the medieval tower, which was not attached to the church building. The new building is larger, with a longer main chapel, the addition of two sacristy rooms. The city gave Don Carlos Venero an alley that was attached to the main chapel. Two chapels were opened at the beginning of the nave. The one on the side of the epistle has a private sacristy. In 1662, a room dedicated to Virgin of Hope of Macarena was built off the main chapel. It had retablos, ornaments and rent for its chaplains. References External links Roman Catholic churches in Toledo, Spain 1125 establishments in Europe "

Released under the MIT License.

has loaded