Appearance
🎉 your ETH🥳
"The Bolesław Śmiały coal mine is a large mine in the south of Poland in Łaziska Górne, Silesian Voivodeship, 172 km south-west of the capital, Warsaw. Bolesław Śmiały represents one of the largest coal reserve in Poland having estimated reserves of 50 million tonnes of coal. The annual coal production is around 2.13 million tonnes. References External links * Official site Coal mines in Poland Mikołów County "
"John Roberts is an American actor, voice actor, comedian, writer, and singer who voices Linda Belcher on the animated sitcom Bob's Burgers.FOX Broadcasting Company – Bob's Burgers TV Show – Bob's Burgers TV Series – Bob's Burgers Episode Guide Career Roberts currently voices Linda, the doting matriarch of the Belcher family, in the Fox animated primetime comedy Bob's Burgers. He has said in interviews that he based the voice of Linda on that of his own mother, Marge. He has appeared several times on NBC's Late Night with Jimmy Fallon and Watch What Happens: Live, has co-written a pilot for MTV with Bob Odenkirk and performed in two national tours for Margaret Cho as well as her Showtime special. Roberts first gained attention as one of the standout performer/writers on the YouTube follow up "Jackie & Debra" which won The Comedy Smalls award in London. He has over 20 million hits on YouTube and has made videos with the likes of Debbie Harry and David Cross. He performs several times a year at NYC's Joe's Pub and has signed a publishing deal with French Kiss Records. On May 17, 2019, Roberts released the song "Looking". The freelance writer Randall Radic wrote that the music video "combines Roberts' love for '80s dance pop music with fluorescent lights, beau coup neon, mannequins, a vintage phone, and a studded leather jacket". Personal life Roberts is gay. Filmography * Good Day New York * It's on with Alexa Chung * Late Night with Jimmy Fallon * Eugene! * Bob's Burgers (voice) * Abby Hatcher, Fuzzly Catcher (voice) * Archer (guest voice) * Gravity Falls (guest voice) * The Awesomes (guest voice) * The Simpsons (guest voice) References External links * John Roberts at the Internet Movie Database Living people American male television actors American people of Italian descent Gay actors LGBT comedians People from Brooklyn American male voice actors LGBT entertainers from the United States LGBT people from New York (state) Male actors from New York City Year of birth missing (living people) "
"A Russian Orthodox icon of St. Chariton Saint Chariton the Confessor (Greek: Αγιος Χαρίτων; mid-3rd century, Iconium, Asia Minor - ca. 350, Judaean desert) is a Christian saint. His remembrance day is September 28.Sunday, September 28, 2003 , St. Katherine the Great-Martyr Orthodox Mission Life =Sources= We know about his vita from the 6th-century "Life of Chariton", written by an anonymous monk, which holds elements supported by modern archaeological excavations. =Early life= Chariton was a native of Iconium in the Byzantine province of Lycaonia. Under the reign of Emperor Aurelian (270-275) he was tortured and came close to become a martyr during a persecution against Christians. Released from prison after Aurelian's death, he regretted not having died as a martyr. =Pharan near Jerusalem= After his release in 275, during a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and other holy places, Chariton was abducted by bandits and brought to a cave in the Wadi Qelt(Pharan Valley). Tradition states that his abductors died by drinking wine that was poisoned by a snake. Chariton decided to remain a hermit in the cave after this miraculous death of his abductors. There he built a church and established a monastery,Encyclopaedia Judaica, Thomson Gale (2007): Dok the first one of the lavra type. =Douka near Jericho= Later he moved to the Mount of Temptation near Jericho, where he established the lavra of Douka on the ruins of the Hasmonean and Herodian Dok Fortress. =Souka (Old Lavra at Wadi Khureitun/Tekoa)= Remains of Souka, Palestine After that he moved on to establish a third monastery in Wadi Khureitun, named the Souka and later known as the Old Lavra. In all three locations his fame let Christians flock to learn from him, disturbing his solitude, which was the reason for him repeatedly moving on. At Souka he eventually relocated to a cave on a cliff near the centre of the lavra, known as the "Hanging Cave of Chariton" and whose remains have been discovered by Israeli archaeologist Yizhar Hirschfeld. Legacy The importance of Chariton lays mainly in the fact that he established by his own example the rules for monastic life in the Judaean desert, in the context of lavra-type monasteries.Butler, Richard Urban. "Laura". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 9. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. Via www.newadvent.org. Accessed 2 Jul. 2019 These rules became the main traits of monastic rule everywhere, based on asceticism and solitude: he lived in silence, only ate certain types of food and only after sundown, performed manual work, spent the night in an alternation of sleep and psalmody, prayed at fixed hours, stayed in his cell, and controlled his thoughts. According to tradition, he was the one to compile the "Office of the Monastic Tonsure". See also *Anthony the Great (c. 251 – 356), contemporary monk who established Christian monasticism in the Egyptian desert *Desert Fathers and Desert Mothers, early Christian hermits, ascetics, and monks who lived mainly in the Scetes desert of Egypt beginning around the third century AD *Euthymius the Great (377–473), founder of monasteries in Palestine and saint *Hilarion (271-371), anchorite and saint considered by some to be the founder of Palestinian monasticism *Pachomius the Great (c. 292–348), Egyptian saint generally recognized as the founder of Christian cenobitic monasticism *Paul of Thebes (c. 226/7-c. 341), known as "Paul, the First Hermit", who preceded both Anthony and Chariton *Sabbas the Sanctified (439–532), monk and saint, founded several monasteries in Palestine External links * Russian Orthodox Ecclesiastical Mission in Jerusalem: "Skete of Saint Chariton - Fara", about the rebuilt monastic site in Pharan Valley, its history and rediscovery Bibliography * Leah Di Segni: The Life of Chariton, in: Ascetic Behavior in Greco-Roman Antiquity: A Sourcebook (Studies in Antiquity and Christianity), Vincent L. Wimbush, Minneapolis 1990, , p. 393–421. * Shehadeh, Raja: Palestinian Walks, pp. 136–7. Profile Books (2008), References 4th-century Christian saints 3rd-century births 4th-century deaths "