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Metodika Nezakonchennie Risunki Tihomirovoj
вторник 30 октября admin 55
Ectoparasites Figure 2. Figure 2: Sarcoptes mites Case history and photos. PATIENT: Sunny, a male rat born November 1, 1996, owned by RMCA member, Lisa Westplate. Clinical Signs First visit: February 2, 1997. Sunny is a nice rat, very alert, eats and drinks normally; only his ears seem to be a bit irregular. There are many little, papillome.
From Germany to U.S.A. Array af 10mr a manual pdf. About this Item: Moskva, Izobrazitel'noe Iskusstvo,, 1982. 328 S./pp., zahlreiche teils farbige Abbildungen/numerous partially coloured illustrations on, Text und Bildunterschriften in Russisch und Englisch/text and captions in Russian and English, Originalpappband (publisher's cardboard covers), Namenseintrag auf Vorsatz/owner's name on fly-leave, sonst gutes Exemplar (otherwise fine), (Akvareli i risunki russkikh i sovetskikh khudozhnikov).
Sprache: russisch englisch. Seller Inventory # 3012BB 3.
A favorite of three Russian empresses, Pauzie is renowned for making the grand Imperial crown for the coronation of Catherine the Great in 1762. The same crown, which was used for all subsequent Russian monarchs, has two hemispheres that symbolize the union of East and West. It is decorated with 4,936 Indian diamonds with a combined weight of 2,858 carats, as well as with 75 pearls and a large spinel. Despite this, it is not that heavy, at just under 2 kilos, and took only two months to manufacture. Pauzie was a master gemcutter. His skills were particularly strong when it came to diamonds, which was something highly treasured by his powerful patronesses - Empress Anna, Empress Elizabeth, and Catherine the Great. During their reign the royal court literally glittered with diamonds.
Pauzie wrote in his memoirs that 'the ladies-in-waiting wear incredible amounts of diamonds,' and that 'even in their private lives they never go anywhere without first decorating themselves with jewels.' Legend has it that Swiss-born Pauzier and his father came to St. Petersburg on foot thanks to an invitation from a relative who was a surgeon with the court of Peter the Great. The father passed away shortly afterward, however, and the boy was taken as an apprentice by the French diamond-cutting master, Benedict Gravero. By the age of 21 Pauzie already had a diamond-cutting business of his own, and this workshop went on to serve Russia's royal court and aristocracy for a quarter of a century.
Apart from diamond-studded snuffboxes, clasps, brooches, state awards, and pins for court ladies' headdresses, Pauzie manufactured less expensive decorations for those of more modest means. Such `gems' would actually be made of cut glass of various colors, but they were so masterfully done that nobody at court noticed the difference. The Bolins are one of the oldest jewelry dynasties, founded in St. Petersburg by Andrey Rempler in 1796. A native of Saxony, Rempler became court jeweler to two Russian emperors, Paul I and Alexander I, and his business was continued by sons-in-law, Ernst Jan of Germany and Karl Eduard Bolin of Sweden. To this day the company bears the name of the latter.