La mujer que reinó después de muerta: Inés de Castro. En: https://t.co/yHVD4Bc8Mk pic.twitter.com/s2yMfCxAiX #Historia #Curiosidades— Toda una amalgama (@Todaunaamalgama) 31 janeiro 2016
Inês de Castro: The Queen Who Was Crowned After Death http://t.co/pGZ5Lj49CY pic.twitter.com/6ECJgbY3Rv
— Queen (@claudiacukrov) 11 setembro 2015
7 de janeiro, morre Inês de Castro, a paixão de D. Pedro - https://t.co/wSTKEDcYy0 pic.twitter.com/xbITWGFwsA— PT Jornal (@ptjornal) 7 janeiro 2016
Karl Briullov (1799-1852) Russian— marisabel loyo (@marisabeloyo) 28 julho 2015
'The Death of Ines de Castro' 1834 #art pic.twitter.com/q8woN7EHvq
#taldíacomohoy (1355) era asesinada Inés de Castro, reina de Portugal a título póstumo https://t.co/raMJQQFmrC pic.twitter.com/YZT3BrtlAf— Biblioteca Nacional (@BNE_biblioteca) 7 janeiro 2016
Luís de Camões (c. 1524 - 1580) is considered Portugal's greatest poet.
— Bibliophilia (@Libroantiguo) 23 agosto 2015
📷Mosteiro dos Jerónimos, Belém, by Albert. pic.twitter.com/qDPSABMlwH
Diário de Lisboa: túmulo de Camões no impressionante Mosteiro dos Jerônimos. pic.twitter.com/8Anif24a9Q
— caio gottlieb (@caiogottlieb) 23 março 2013
Portugal - 1924 4th Centenary of the Birth of Luis de Camoes - Poet. MLH. Lot 5 http://t.co/Kdsqxyj9gf pic.twitter.com/YuKEtxdIV5— extremely stunning o (@riestrasileno) 19 abril 2015
No acervo do Real Gabinete Português de Leitura, há a primeira edição de Os Lusíadas, de Luís de Camões, de 1572. pic.twitter.com/WborS73RSl— BRASIL EM FOTOS (@brasil_fotos) 30 junho 2015
In Coimbra, 'the bridge that never meets' symbolizes a dark, tale of love and revenge.https://t.co/6RGV3fGdXR pic.twitter.com/vqAkMrfIAU
— Balmond Studio (@BalmondStudio) 14 fevereiro 2016
Mistérios da História XXV: D. Inês de Castro e as suas pedras de sangue http://t.co/cUE84vHLCy #BlastingNews pic.twitter.com/X4Xj6ykDwv— BlastingNewsPortugal (@BlastingNewsPT) 13 agosto 2015
Dom Pedro and Doña Ines de Castro, a love story. Monastery of Alcobaça #Portugal https://t.co/ZSi81iqYWD pic.twitter.com/ZhREcPaK1x— Guisante Verde (@ElGuisanteVerde) 2 fevereiro 2016
2015 PORTUGAL-Alcobaça City - TOMBS OF KING PETER I and INES DE CASTRO https://t.co/pxc4XMLCp9 pic.twitter.com/68XjYaibpL— highly delightful de (@garedcobo) 28 dezembro 2015
Una historia de amor de leyenda fue la de Inés de Castro y el rey Pedro I de Portugal https://t.co/onqpXV7rNv pic.twitter.com/9IpEW10LnK
— Montserrat Gutiérrez (@montgutz) 14 fevereiro 2016
The poignant tombs of Pedro I of Portugal and Inês de Castro in Alcobaça Monastery, Portugal @visitportugal pic.twitter.com/Z8smUKSqW2— Elizabeth Evenden (@codexhistoria) 9 junho 2015
La mujer que reinó después de muerta: Inés de Castro. https://t.co/yHVD4BtJDS pic.twitter.com/qwpRbRZCWU— Toda una amalgama (@Todaunaamalgama) 17 dezembro 2015
Great @IMPOSE review of first David Vassalotti single 'Ines de Castro' - https://t.co/DPuF3YFner #brokenrope pic.twitter.com/PVbnZOhaBE— Wharf Cat Records (@WharfCatRecords) 14 janeiro 2016
New LP by David Vassalotti out on 2/12! 'Ines de Castro' on @stereogum now - https://t.co/X5VIXnJQvb @wmerchandise pic.twitter.com/CpoTSrPWuX— Wharf Cat Records (@WharfCatRecords) 12 janeiro 2016
@pitchfork reviews 'Ines de Castro' by David Vassalotti. Broken Rope is out on 2/12 - https://t.co/endzBgmdQd pic.twitter.com/KvTuRcyqpe— Wharf Cat Records (@WharfCatRecords) 21 janeiro 2016
Merchandise’s David Vassalotti digs deep into Portuguese folklore on ‘Ines De Castro’ https://t.co/3dSaxFR91G pic.twitter.com/LwKV6kSMgU— NME (@NME) 14 janeiro 2016
David Vassalotti speaks with Tim Scott about Broken Rope & much more on @NoiseyMusic - https://t.co/GE6XUGmVKz pic.twitter.com/6aqUFPbIwz— Wharf Cat Records (@WharfCatRecords) 1 fevereiro 2016
— wMerchandise (@wmerchandise) 11 outubro 2015
Ezra Pound photographed as a young man in 1913 by Alvin Langdon Coburn pic.twitter.com/Kiug64a1c6— Old Pics Archive (@oldpicsarchive) 6 novembro 2015
Ezra Pound by E.O. Hoppé, 1918. Writers (29 photos) https://t.co/kqZ11lMsfX pic.twitter.com/DDvBbZSfGR— Old Pics Archive (@oldpicsarchive) 2 fevereiro 2016
Ezra Pound 💕 pic.twitter.com/UGaWwb3SMg— Kerrie O' Brien (@kerriepoetry) 6 novembro 2015
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário