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  • October 9, 2018 - Jerusalem, Israel - A 2,000 year old stone column drum, Second Temple Period (First Century CE), around the time of Herod the Great's reign, unearthed earlier in 2018 in excavations underway near Binyanei HaUma, Jerusalem's International Convention Center, bears an engraved Aramic inscription reading “Hananiah son of Dudolos from Jerusalem”. Archaeologists share their excitement during a joint press conference of the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Israel Museum stressing this is the first and only Second Temple era artifact which displays the full spelling of Jerusalem, written in Hebrew letters, 'Yerushalayim', as it is spelled today. The archaeological context of the inscription does not allow determination who Hananiah son of Dudolos was, but it is likely that he was an artist potter, the son of an artist potter, who adopted a name from the Greek mythological realm, following Daedalus, the infamous artist. (Credit Image: © Nir Alon/ZUMA Wire)
    20181009_zap_a126_001.jpg
  • May 5, 2017 - Krakow, Poland - 'UA von' (UA for Ukraine, Ukraine Out) a racist wall inscription against Ukrainians seen inside an underground passageway, in Czerwony Pradnik area of Krakow, on May 6, 2017. (Credit Image: © Artur Widak/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170505_zaa_n230_268.jpg
  • September 30, 2018 - Warsaw, Poland - Abortion means Life banner during Pro Choice March in Warsaw on September 30, 2018. (Credit Image: © Maciej Luczniewski/NurPhoto/ZUMA Press)
    20180930_zaa_n230_715.jpg
  • December 18, 2018 - Warsaw, Poland - Euro Cent coin seen in Warsaw on December 18, 2018. (Credit Image: © Maciej Luczniewski/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20181218_zaa_n230_133.jpg
  • April 29, 2017 - Warsaw, Poland - ''No to Nationalism'' banner during blockade of ONR (National Radical Camp) march in Warsaw on April 29, 2017. (Credit Image: © Maciej Luczniewski/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170429_zaa_n230_128.jpg
  • May 4, 2017 - The artist Eugenio Merino wanted to respect scrupulously the height of 1.64 meters that Picasso had, shaped his head with all the photos of the artist he had and accompanied the body of a plate in Carrara marble with the inscription ''Here rests Pablo Picasso' (Credit Image: © Fotos Lorenzo Carnero via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170504_zap_c161_001.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - Berlin, Germany - About 150 people rally in the Berlin government district against the development of the employment retirement legislation. The Protesters call for a stop of the conversion of a self-funded, private direct insurance to a company pension. Two coffins with the inscription 'stock protection' and 'trust protection' are placed in front of the German Bundestag. (Credit Image: © Jan Scheunert via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zap_s172_008.jpg
  • November 10, 2018 - Tambov, Tambov region, Russia - School classroom in the 12th Lyceum of the city of Tambov (Russia). In the foreground - a balloon with the inscription (Russian) - Back to school (Credit Image: © Demian Stringer/ZUMA Wire)
    20181110_zap_s171_010.jpg
  • August 16, 2017 - West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S. - A monument ''In memory of our Confederate Soldiers'' stands in Woodlawn Cemetary in West Palm Beach Wednesday. The monument is under debate. The monument was erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1941, according to the inscription. (Credit Image: © Lannis Waters/The Palm Beach Post via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170816_zaf_p77_026.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - Berlin, Berlin, Germany - About 150 people rally in the Berlin government district against the development of the employment retirement legislation. The Protesters call for a stop of the conversion of a self-funded, private direct insurance to a company pension. Two coffins with the inscription 'stock protection' and 'trust protection' are placed in front of the German Bundestag. German: Etwa 150 Menschen demonstrieren im Berliner Regierungsviertel gegen die Entwicklung des Betriebsrentenstärkungsgesetzes. Die Organisatoren fordern ein Stopp der Umwandlung einer selbstfinanzierten, privaten Direktversicherung zu einer betrieblichen Altersvorsorge. Zwei Särge mit der Aufschrift 'Bestandsschutz' und 'Vertrauensschutz' werden vor dem Reichstagsgebäude aufgestellt. (Credit Image: © Jan Scheunert via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zap_s172_004.jpg
  • August 16, 2017 - West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S. - A monument ''In memory of our Confederate Soldiers'' stands in Woodlawn Cemetary in West Palm Beach Wednesday. The monument is under debate. The monument was erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1941, according to the inscription. (Credit Image: © Lannis Waters/The Palm Beach Post via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170816_zaf_p77_027.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - Berlin, Berlin, Germany - About 150 people rally in the Berlin government district against the development of the employment retirement legislation. The Protesters call for a stop of the conversion of a self-funded, private direct insurance to a company pension. Two coffins with the inscription 'stock protection' and 'trust protection' are placed in front of the German Bundestag. German: Etwa 150 Menschen demonstrieren im Berliner Regierungsviertel gegen die Entwicklung des Betriebsrentenstärkungsgesetzes. Die Organisatoren fordern ein Stopp der Umwandlung einer selbstfinanzierten, privaten Direktversicherung zu einer betrieblichen Altersvorsorge. Zwei Särge mit der Aufschrift 'Bestandsschutz' und 'Vertrauensschutz' werden vor dem Reichstagsgebäude aufgestellt. (Credit Image: © Jan Scheunert via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zap_s172_011.jpg
  • August 16, 2017 - West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S. - A monument 'In memory of our Confederate Soldiers' stands in Woodlawn Cemetery. The monument was erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1941, according to the inscription. (Credit Image: © Lannis Waters/The Palm Beach Post via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170816_zaf_p77_025.jpg
  • April 25, 2017 - Russia - The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) posted an indecent photo of Russian singer Lolita Milyavskaya with partially exposed breast on its official Twitter account, adding the inscription 'Good Luck!' in Ukrainian language. Earlier, on April 23, 2017, Lolita Milyavskaya was taken off the train by Ukrainian border guards, when she was on her way to visit a sick daughter in Kiev, because Ukrainian authorities banned her from entering Ukraine for a visit to Crimea in 2015. Russian singer promised to file a lawsuit against the Ukrainian authorities in the European court of human rights. The published photo caused fierce controversy in the comments. Photo from twitter.com/ServiceSsu (Credit Image: © Russian Look via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170425_zaf_l75_001.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_039.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_030.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_035.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_033.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_032.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_028.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_027.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_026.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_025.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_024.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_023.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. Mummie of brother Silvestro of Gubbio (16 oct. 1599) the oldest of the catacombs. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_022.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_038.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_037.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_034.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_031.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_029.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. In the center the mummified body of Antonio Prestigiacomo ( d.1844) one of the best preserved. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_021.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - Berlin, Berlin, Germany - About 150 people rally in the Berlin government district against the development of the employment retirement legislation. The Protesters call for a stop of the conversion of a self-funded, private direct insurance to a company pension. Two coffins with the inscription 'stock protection' and 'trust protection' are placed in front of the German Bundestag. German: Etwa 150 Menschen demonstrieren im Berliner Regierungsviertel gegen die Entwicklung des Betriebsrentenstärkungsgesetzes. Die Organisatoren fordern ein Stopp der Umwandlung einer selbstfinanzierten, privaten Direktversicherung zu einer betrieblichen Altersvorsorge. Zwei Särge mit der Aufschrift 'Bestandsschutz' und 'Vertrauensschutz' werden vor dem Reichstagsgebäude aufgestellt. (Credit Image: © Jan Scheunert via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zap_s172_001.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The mummified body of Antonio Prestigiacomo ( d.1844) one of the best preserved. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_040.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
    682093_036.jpg
  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo , Sicily, Italy. January 2019. One of the last to be buried there before it closed in 1920 was Rosalia Lombardo, the child whose body has remained remarkably intact due to a process only recently discovered.<br />
The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB FOR FRANCE - A monk in the Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, Italy on January 2019. The catacombs contain about 8000 corpses and 1252 mummies. Palermo's Capuchin monastery outgrew its original cemetery in the 16th century and monks began to excavate crypts below it. In 1599 they mummified one of their number, recently dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The cemetery was first reserved for ecclesiastical workers, then accepted deceased from all walks of life, and experienced its greatest popularity during the 19th century. An inscription hanging from the neck or pinned to the chest, indicates the name, birth and death dates of the deceased.The cemetary was officially closed by civil order in 1880. But the last burials are from the 1920s. The cemetary has now become a kind of museum, filled with the forgotten dead, who are watched over by a group of Capuchin monks. Sicily will reveal over time a real research laboratory on mummification. It is spreading throughout the island and there is not an important village in sight that does not display the bodies of their priests, monks or citizens in the crypt of their church. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • July 21, 2017 - Dachau, bavaria, germany - (photo: Sachelle Babbar) The head of the SPD and Kanzlerkandidat (candidate for the Chancellorship of Germany) visited the Dachau concentration camp grounds in order to pay respects on behalf of his SPD party to the victims of National Sozialism.  Schulz then presented a memorial plaque (followed by a moment of silence) with inscriptions honoring the victims and those who defend democracy. At the end of the tour, a wreath was laid down at the International Memorial by Schulz, Markus Rinderspacher, Uli Grötsch, and Michael Schrodi. Other speakers included Dr. Gabrielle Hammermann of the Dachau Memorial..The Dachau Concentration Camp Memorial Grounds lie approximately 20km north of Munich.  The camp eventually came a “model”, which other camps were designed after.  It was in operation from March 1933- April 1945 and 31,951 were reported as killed there.  Dachau recently received international attention when the iconic “Arbeit macht Frei” gate was stolen in 2014, then recovered in Norway in 2016, and returned to the grounds in Feb. 2017. (Credit Image: © Sachelle Babbar via ZUMA Wire)
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  • October 8, 2017 - Brazil - Sao Paulo, SP - 08.10.2017: 14 AYRTON SENNA RACING DAY EM SP - The 14th edition of the Ayrton Senna Racing Day Marathon took place this Sunday (08). It has been promoted by the Ayrton Senna Institute since 2004 and is one of the most traditional in the Brazilian calendar. This is a relay race where teams have to cover a distance of 42.2 km inside the Interlagos circuit. The proof has social character and reverts its inscriptions to the Ayrton Senna Institute. This year marks the 30th anniversary of Ayrton Senna&#39;s first win in Monaco. (Credit Image: © Fotoarena via ZUMA Press)
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  • EXCLUSIVE: HE is one of history’s most notorious outlaws. A serial murderer and robber whose rampage with his lover accomplice was made into Hollywood hit Bonnie and Clyde. But Clyde Barrow had a softer more creative side – as this stunning snakehead ring he gave Bonnie Parker reveals. It has surfaced for the first time since the deadly duo went on a robbing and killing spree that made them America’s most hunted criminals. Incredibly, it has been tucked out of sight from the world for decades – hidden in an attic belonging to the family of a celebrated Texas sheriff who ambushed the pair in 1933. Lawman Richard ‘Smoot’ Schmid (correct) found the ring in Bonnie and Clyde’s bullet-riddled Ford Model B after they managed to escape. Experts say it is the nearest thing to a wedding band that existed between the notorious outlaws, who died together in another ambush six months later. It was given to Bonnie by Clyde after he had been languishing in a Texas jail and was pining for the married waitress he met in 1930 when she was 19. It made $25,000 at auction in Boston, Massachusetts, yesterday along with other fascinating items of America's outlaw history including Al Capone's diamond watch, which made $84,375 (including buyer's premium) and handwritten music and lyrics by the gangster, which sold for $84,375. Meyer Lansky's watch and gold razor and a jail letter from 'Telfon Don' John Gotti were also sold. (more copy available on request). 21 Jun 2017 Pictured: Letter from Clyde, written by Bonnie, to ex-gang member. Photo credit: RR Auction/Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • EXCLUSIVE: HE is one of history’s most notorious outlaws. A serial murderer and robber whose rampage with his lover accomplice was made into Hollywood hit Bonnie and Clyde. But Clyde Barrow had a softer more creative side – as this stunning snakehead ring he gave Bonnie Parker reveals. It has surfaced for the first time since the deadly duo went on a robbing and killing spree that made them America’s most hunted criminals. Incredibly, it has been tucked out of sight from the world for decades – hidden in an attic belonging to the family of a celebrated Texas sheriff who ambushed the pair in 1933. Lawman Richard ‘Smoot’ Schmid (correct) found the ring in Bonnie and Clyde’s bullet-riddled Ford Model B after they managed to escape. Experts say it is the nearest thing to a wedding band that existed between the notorious outlaws, who died together in another ambush six months later. It was given to Bonnie by Clyde after he had been languishing in a Texas jail and was pining for the married waitress he met in 1930 when she was 19. It made $25,000 at auction in Boston, Massachusetts, yesterday along with other fascinating items of America's outlaw history including Al Capone's diamond watch, which made $84,375 (including buyer's premium) and handwritten music and lyrics by the gangster, which sold for $84,375. Meyer Lansky's watch and gold razor and a jail letter from 'Telfon Don' John Gotti were also sold. (more copy available on request). 21 Jun 2017 Pictured: Certificate of authenticity for Meyer Lansky's gold razor. Photo credit: RR Auction/Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA43535_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: HE is one of history’s most notorious outlaws. A serial murderer and robber whose rampage with his lover accomplice was made into Hollywood hit Bonnie and Clyde. But Clyde Barrow had a softer more creative side – as this stunning snakehead ring he gave Bonnie Parker reveals. It has surfaced for the first time since the deadly duo went on a robbing and killing spree that made them America’s most hunted criminals. Incredibly, it has been tucked out of sight from the world for decades – hidden in an attic belonging to the family of a celebrated Texas sheriff who ambushed the pair in 1933. Lawman Richard ‘Smoot’ Schmid (correct) found the ring in Bonnie and Clyde’s bullet-riddled Ford Model B after they managed to escape. Experts say it is the nearest thing to a wedding band that existed between the notorious outlaws, who died together in another ambush six months later. It was given to Bonnie by Clyde after he had been languishing in a Texas jail and was pining for the married waitress he met in 1930 when she was 19. It made $25,000 at auction in Boston, Massachusetts, yesterday along with other fascinating items of America's outlaw history including Al Capone's diamond watch, which made $84,375 (including buyer's premium) and handwritten music and lyrics by the gangster, which sold for $84,375. Meyer Lansky's watch and gold razor and a jail letter from 'Telfon Don' John Gotti were also sold. (more copy available on request). 21 Jun 2017 Pictured: Meyer Lansky's gold watch. Photo credit: RR Auction/Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA43535_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: HE is one of history’s most notorious outlaws. A serial murderer and robber whose rampage with his lover accomplice was made into Hollywood hit Bonnie and Clyde. But Clyde Barrow had a softer more creative side – as this stunning snakehead ring he gave Bonnie Parker reveals. It has surfaced for the first time since the deadly duo went on a robbing and killing spree that made them America’s most hunted criminals. Incredibly, it has been tucked out of sight from the world for decades – hidden in an attic belonging to the family of a celebrated Texas sheriff who ambushed the pair in 1933. Lawman Richard ‘Smoot’ Schmid (correct) found the ring in Bonnie and Clyde’s bullet-riddled Ford Model B after they managed to escape. Experts say it is the nearest thing to a wedding band that existed between the notorious outlaws, who died together in another ambush six months later. It was given to Bonnie by Clyde after he had been languishing in a Texas jail and was pining for the married waitress he met in 1930 when she was 19. It made $25,000 at auction in Boston, Massachusetts, yesterday along with other fascinating items of America's outlaw history including Al Capone's diamond watch, which made $84,375 (including buyer's premium) and handwritten music and lyrics by the gangster, which sold for $84,375. Meyer Lansky's watch and gold razor and a jail letter from 'Telfon Don' John Gotti were also sold. (more copy available on request). 21 Jun 2017 Pictured: James 'Whitey' Bulger's sunglasses. Photo credit: RR Auction/Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • EXCLUSIVE: HE is one of history’s most notorious outlaws. A serial murderer and robber whose rampage with his lover accomplice was made into Hollywood hit Bonnie and Clyde. But Clyde Barrow had a softer more creative side – as this stunning snakehead ring he gave Bonnie Parker reveals. It has surfaced for the first time since the deadly duo went on a robbing and killing spree that made them America’s most hunted criminals. Incredibly, it has been tucked out of sight from the world for decades – hidden in an attic belonging to the family of a celebrated Texas sheriff who ambushed the pair in 1933. Lawman Richard ‘Smoot’ Schmid (correct) found the ring in Bonnie and Clyde’s bullet-riddled Ford Model B after they managed to escape. Experts say it is the nearest thing to a wedding band that existed between the notorious outlaws, who died together in another ambush six months later. It was given to Bonnie by Clyde after he had been languishing in a Texas jail and was pining for the married waitress he met in 1930 when she was 19. It made $25,000 at auction in Boston, Massachusetts, yesterday along with other fascinating items of America's outlaw history including Al Capone's diamond watch, which made $84,375 (including buyer's premium) and handwritten music and lyrics by the gangster, which sold for $84,375. Meyer Lansky's watch and gold razor and a jail letter from 'Telfon Don' John Gotti were also sold. (more copy available on request). 21 Jun 2017 Pictured: Meyer Lansky's coat. Photo credit: RR Auction/Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA43535_030.jpg