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03:33 Minutos
from 2010s Grinderman 2
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08:25 Minutos
This video is a bit different from the rest. You will take a trip around the beauty of the palaces and castles, and accompanied with this selection of Royal Music. Castles: Chenonceaux, Fontainebleau, Beynac, Chambord, Chaumont, Lednice, Neuschwanstein, Windsor, Kilkenny, Bodiam, DUsse, Palaces: Solitude, Hubertusburg, Sanssouci, Würzburg, Bellevue, Hampton Court, Linderhof, Louvre, Luxembourg, Trivandrum, Belvedere, Longchamp, Versailles, Regaleira, Charlottenburg, Crystal Palace, Schwarzenberg, Buckingham, Real Palace, Royal Palace of La Granja de San Ildefonso. Theyre not in order of appearence.
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06:02 Minutos
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03:22 Minutos
Large family home for sale in the hamlet of La Concepciion in the Almanzora Valley, Almeria. Large private pool and mature gardens with great views. 2 bedrooms with en suite bathrooms and a further full bathroom. Electric gate and walled garden.
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03:49 Minutos
Grinderman performs Palaces Of Montezuma out of their brand new album Grinderman 2. Live @ Later with Jools Holland, 24.09.2010 NickCave.it
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02:33 Minutos
Music video by Lamb of God performing As the Palaces Burn. (C) 2004 Prosthetic Records
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10:01 Minutos
The year 1509 saw the accession to the throne of Henry VIII, a man who would change the face of Britain and the religious and political map of Europe forever. Henry was the first monarch to title himself Majesty - and his reign was nothing if not majestic. Over the next 38 years he would embark on a campaign of courtly magnificence, splendour and pleasure the like of which had never been seen before. By the end of his reign, Henry owned 55 royal properties - more than any other English monarch ever had before or would again. His passion for palace-building was legendary, and fundamentally changed the way monarchs were expected to live. Building these palaces was like embarking on a Tudor Grand Designs. The changing political aspirations of the Tudors were played out in the buildings they designed, and Henry VIIIs palaces were a bold statement: he was physically sweeping away the old medieval kingdom and laying the foundations for the Britain we know today. At the heart of this story are five very important and very special buildings. But these palaces arent simply a lesson in architectural history. They are the key to understanding the inner workings of one of the most powerful men this country has ever seen. Henrys palaces are a self-portrait in bricks and mortar. From his first, Beaulieu in Essex, to sprawling Whitehall Palace in London, and the pocket-sized Nonsuch Palace in Surrey, we can see how Henry changed as a person. These buildings tell us how the sporty ...
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03:04 Minutos
Towns of the Almanzora Valley, Almeria, Spain
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04:23 Minutos
Buckingham Palace Road, SW1A 1AA Official residence of Queen Elizabeth II. Englands most famous royal palace, and the official residence of Queen Elizabeth II, opens the doors of its State Rooms to the public every summer. Originally acquired by King George III for his wife Queen Charlotte, Buckingham Palace was increasingly known as the Queens House and 14 of George IIIs children were born there. On his accession to the throne, George IV decided to convert the house into a palace and employed John Nash to help him extend the building. Queen Victoria was the first sovereign to live in Buckingham Palace (from 1837). The State Rooms are now still used by the Royal Family to receive and entertain guests on State and ceremonial occasions. Visitors can admire some of the more unusual gifts received by the current Queen, including drawings by Salvador Dali, an embroidered silk scarf from Nelson Mandela and a grove of maple trees. Decorated in lavish fashion, the rooms include paintings by Rembrandt, Rubens, Canaletto, Vermeer and Poussin, sculpture by Canova, exquisite examples of Sevres porcelain, and some of the finest English and French furniture in the world. The Ball Supper Room, the setting for a host of sparkling events in the history of the palace, 29 acre gardens and annual exhibitions are all also available to visitors. Did you know? Queen Victoria ordered the removal of Marble Arch from the palace to its present position near Hyde Park in order to make way for ...
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03:26 Minutos
An allegorical short film/music video for Shabazz Palaces shot in Watts, Los Angeles, directed by Kahlil Joseph, Photographed by Matt Lloyd. Featuring a cameo of Dante (Ernest Wadell) from "The Wire" in homage to Charles Burnetts 1977 classic film "Killer of Sheep".
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