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Herşey Dahil Sadece 350 Tl'ye Web Site Sahibi Ol
Hızlı ve kolay bir şekilde sende web site sahibi olmak istiyorsan tek yapman gereken sitenin aşağısında bulunan iletişim formu üzerinden gerekli bilgileri girmen. Hepsi bu kadar.
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Web Siteye Reklam Ver
Sende web sitemize reklam vermek veya ilan vermek istiyorsan. Tek yapman gereken sitenin en altında bulunan yere iletişim bilgilerini girmen yeterli olacaktır. Ekip arkadaşlarımız siziznle iletişime gececektir.
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Web Sitemizin Yazarı Editörü OL
Sende kalemine güveniyorsan web sitemizde bir şeyler paylaşmak yazmak istiyorsan siteinin en aşağısında bulunan iletişim formunu kullanarak bizimle iletişime gecebilirisni
Youtube Para Kazanma Ülke Ayarlaması Yapmak 1. Adım
By bayram cigerli at 12:57
Bilişim, Online Para Kazanma, Para Kazanma, Son Makaleler, Teknoloji, Yazılarım, YouTube, YouTube Ayarları, YouTube Eğitimleri, Youtube ile Para Kazanma, YouTube Para Kazanma
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Anasayfa > Site Arşivi > Youtube > YouTube Para Kazanma Ayarları >
Youtube Para Kazanma Ülke Ayarlaması Yapmak 1. Adım
Neden Ülke Ayarlaması Yapmalıyım? Türkiyeyi Seçmeli miyim? Hangi Ülkeyi Seçmeliyim?
*Çünkü YouTube'daki para kazanma özelliği bizim ülkede aktif değil. Siz ülke olarak Türkiyeyi seçerseniz para kazanamazsınız. Bunun içindir ki bizler. Youtube Ülke Ayarlaması yaparken Türkiye'yi seçmiyoruz. *Peki YouTube Ülke ayarlaması yaparken hangi ülkeleri seçmeliyiz? Hangi ülkede Youtube'un Para Kazanma özelliği var? Hangi ülkede Youtube Para Kazanma Özelliği yok? arkadaşlar bu tur sorularla hiç kafanızı yormanıza gerek yok. *Şöyle düşünün Youtube bir Amerikan şirketi o halde en iyi sececeğimiz ülke Amerika olmalıdır. Çünkü diğer ülkelerde Youtube'ın para kazanma ayarları askıya alınabilme ihtimali yani öyle bir olasılık olsa bile Amerikada öyle birşeyin olması çok ama çok zor. *Bu yüzden biz ülke seçimimizi Amerika olarak yapacağız.Nasıl YouTube Ülke Ayarlamasını Yapacağım? Resimli
1-Youtube giriş yap.2-Aşağıdaki Tıklayın Linkine Tıklayın
TIKLAYIN
Yukarıdaki link sizi doğruca yapmanız gereken sayfaya sizi götürecektir.
3-Şu ayarlamaları yapın. Aşama aşama resimli olarak anlattım. Resimleri büyütmek için üzerine tıklamanız yeterli olacaktır.
*Birinci Resim: Linke tıkladığınızda böyle bir pencere açılacak.
*İkinci Resim: Ülke alanı büyük bir ihtimalle böyle görünecektir. Siz Burayı değiştireceksiniz.
*Ucuncu Resim: Amerikayı seçtikten sonra Sayfaının en altında KAYDET butonu var oraya tıkla
Özetlersek
*Youtube Para Kazanma özelliğinden yararlanmak istiyorsak Türkiyeyi seçmeyeceğiz.Bunun yerine Amerikayı seçersek bizim için daha iyi olur.*YouTube Para Kazanma Ülke Ayarlaması Yapmak 1.Adım kısaca bundan ibaret.
*Linke tıklayın sırayla resimdeki aşamaları takip edin ve Kaydet tuşana basın.
YouTube Para Kazanma Ülke Ayarlaması Yapmak Videolu Anlatım
*Şuanda video hazırlık aşamasındada en kısa zamanda yayınlanacaktır.YouTube Para Kazanma Ülke Ayarlaması Yapmak Kategoriler
Bilişim, Online Para Kazanma, Para Kazanma, Son Makaleler, Teknoloji, Yazılarım, YouTube, YouTube Ayarları, YouTube Eğitimleri, Youtube ile Para Kazanma, YouTube Para Kazanma,Youtube Para Kazanma Ülke Ayarlaması Yapmak Açıklama
*YouTube Para Kazanmak için Ülke ayarları nasıl yapılmakta. Hangi ülke seçilmeli. Neden Türkiye'yi seçmiyoruz. YouTube Para Kazanma Ülke Ayarlaması Nasıl YapılmaktaYoutube Para Kazanma Ülke Ayarlaması Yapmak Url Kısmı
youtube-para-kazanma-ulke-ayarlamaYouTube Para Kazanma Ülke Ayarlaması Yapmak Eğitim Seti
YouTube Para Kazanma Eğitim Setine Geri DönA Study of Bahrain in Old Maps
One of the many ways we can perceive and analyse the past is through depictions of contemporary geography onto maps. Cartography (the study of maps) has long helped historians understand and appreciate how peoples and empires perceived themselves in their time. And, more often than not, they were the centre of their own universes.
Historically & up to the 18th century, Bahrain referred to the eastern shores of Arabia, an area that currently encompasses Kuwait, eastern Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and parts of northern Oman. The German map, made by Jacques-Nicolas Bellin, below from 1745 lays testimony to this.
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| Note the Bahrayn region of the eastern Arabian coastline (Jacques-Nicolas Bellin, 1745) |
Other interesting maps of Bahrain throughout the ages that I could find and appreciate are the following. All of these have been found, scanned and uploaded by the Qatar Digital Library (which is doing an incredible job at documenting and preserving primary source historical documents of the Persian Gulf)
Trigonometrical Map of the Island of Bahrain, 1828.
This splendid map was produced by James Horsburgh, Hydrographer to the East India Company in 1828. This map's title features in a decorative cartouche with a view of ‘A Mosque on Bahrein. From a rough sketch by Dr. A. Mackell’, with the mosque in question being the Khamis Mosque (the oldest mosque in the country, dating back to the 7th century AD). Other prominent locations mentioned include the ‘Portuguese lighthouse, harbour and fort’, west of Manamah.
The engraver’s details inserted below a compass rose orienting north at the right centre of the map. Nautical chart of the western coast of the Persian Gulf showing the Island of Bahrein compiled from the surveys carried out by the Bombay Marine’s officers between 1820 and 1829.
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| Originally posted in the Qatar Digital Library |
Imperial Airways Flight Path of Bahrain, 1937.
This map was made in 1936 and edited in 1937, published by the UK Admiralty. Imperial Airways (the predecessor of British Airways) planned to introduce flying boat services to the region, including Bahrain. This map was utilised as a means of assessing the various seaborne approaches to Bahrain Harbour and Khor Kaliya [Khawr al Qulay‘ah]. The map shows Bahrain island and the surrounding sea. It includes soundings in fathoms with supplementary depth contours, and highlights features to aid the navigator. The map also outlines Manama and Muharraq and details buildings (prominent buildings being labelled).
Manuscript additions to the map have been included. Red additions outline the proposed alighting area, the proposed location of moorings, and a proposed location for a passenger shelter. It also includes the location of the pre-existing Royal Air Force (RAF) pier. Navigation beacons have been highlighted in orange. The Imperial Airways Landing Ground has been highlighted using pencil.
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| Originally published on the Qatar Digital Library |
Map of Muharraq and the New Airport, 1937
This map was drawn up in 1937 when the British Political Residency in Bahrain intended on establishing a civilian aircraft landing strip for Imperial Airways (in addition to the sea landings that were to be conducted).. This map shows Muharraq Island, and the causeway linking Muharraq to Manama. Also shown are principal roads, tracks, buildings (including the Political Agency in Manana), islands, and the location of several underwater freshwater springs. A rectangle on Muharraq Island indicates the area specified for the landing ground, which would later become the current Bahrain International Airport.
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| What I specifically like about this map is that it shows the original villages of Muharraq island including Arad, Hidd, Samaheej, Dair, Galali and Busaiteen on their own and isolated (which is very different to what we currently see them as). First posted on the Qatar Digital Library |
Bahrain Saudi Maritime Border, 1939
Dated 29th May 1939 and drawn up with regards to Saudi claim to certain islands, this detailed sketch map was prepared by the Bahrain Petroleum Company from Admiralty charts. It shows Bahrain, the Saudi Arabian and Qatari coasts and the waters to the north, with shoals and reefs mapped in detail. New information obtained during a reconnaissance survey between 25th and 27th May 1939 were added in red ink including the proposed boundaries line to determine territorial waters of Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.
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| Originally posted in the Qatar Digital Library |
Artesian Water Supply in Bahrain, 1948
This is fairly straightforward. In 1948, at the request of the Government of Bahrain at the time, a map was drawn up by the Bahrain Petroleum Company showing the national distribution of artesian water wells in Bahrain. Artesian water wells are basically a well that doesn't require a pump to bring water to the surface; this occurs when there is enough positive pressure in the aquifer itself. This pressure forces the water to the surface without any sort of assistance. Famous examples of artesian wells in Bahrain include the Adhari spring, Ain Abu Zaydan, Ain Um Sujur, Ain Barbar. However, due to overutilisation of the aquifer and rapid urbanisation, many of these springs have ceased running since the 1980s. This paper by Mohammed Al-Ansari on Bahrain's water demand and subsequent management provides a good overview of the current situation and likely hurdles to be faced in the future.
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| Originally posted in the Qatar Digital Library. |
This is light hearted compared to the other ones. On the occasion of King Edward VIII's birthday in June 1939, the British political residency of Bahrain (headed by Kennard Foulkes) sent Buckingham Palace a greetings card from Bahrain. If you look past the imperialism, it's a pretty cute card. Designed by Ashraf Brothers (a well known local business), the card features important sites in Bahrain including the Shaikh's Hunting Lodge, Oil Wells, the Portuguese Fort, and Water Wells.
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| Originally posted here |
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| A British map of Bahrain from the 1930s. |
Belalı Topraklar Badlands
Belalı Topraklar bir western! Ama alışıldık western kalıplarından bir hayli farklı. Kapataki güzel kızımızın dedesi Hernan okkült bilimlere meraklı bir İspanyol Asilzadesi olarak Conquistadorlar'ın fetihlerinde onlara eşlik eder. Ama o altın peşinde değildir. O kızılderililerin manevi ilimlerinin peşindedir. İyi bir insan ve iyi bir okkültist tolarak onların güvenini kazanarak onların ilimlerine vakıf olur. Hatta kızılderili büyücülerinden biri, bir Anasazi şamanı ona kabilesinin gizemli sembollerini ona verir. Bunlar bir ayı maskesi ve bir ayı pençesidir. Zaten kapaktaki güzel hanımefendiyi bu olya dahil eden de bu nesneler olacaktır.
Güzel kızımızın adı Perla. Perla ilk sayıda Kalamiti Ceyn gibi görünür. Ağzında sigarası ve kendisine işinde ki, o buna proje diyor, yardım etmesi için biri yarı kızılderili bir melez, Çokceset ve bir silah kullanma ustası batıl inançlı zenci Sam ile sıradışı bir grubun lideri olarak görüyoruz ve bir limanda Avrupa'dan gelen birini bekler halde görüyoruz. Bu belalı hatun ağzı bozuk bir batı kadın silahşorü gibi görünse de aslında bir İspanyol asilzadesinin kızıdır ve ilk sayıda anlamsak da büyük bir sırrı vardır.
Hikayeyi fazla açık etmiyorum ki meraklılar alıp okusunlar. . İyi okumalar.
Belalı Topraklar Tanıtım Sayısı
shopier.com/675978
The David Graves House
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| The David Graves House |
One such house can be found on Carillon Drive in Brandywine Springs Manor, off of Faulkland Road across from Brandywine Springs Park. This is the David Graves House, and it and its surrounding property have stories that trace back to the earliest days of Mill Creek Hundred, with some interesting personalities along the way. The field stone house that stands today certainly dates back to at least the mid-1800's, and there's reason to believe that part of it may be much older than that. Thanks in large part to the tireless work of Walt Chiquoine, the history of the ownership of the property is pretty well-understood. It certainly sits in an interesting corner of MCH.
The first European settler on what would become the Graves farm was a Scots-Irish immigrant named Bryan McDonald. In 1689, he was given a warrant for 239 acres by William Penn, followed in 1703 by two more for 154 and 200 acres. All three properties were surveyed in 1705 and a patent issued in 1706 for a total of 593 acres. As the figure below shows, the tracts were centered around what's now the Faulkland Road/Newport Gap Pike intersection. As you can also see, the site of the Graves House is located in McDonald's original 1689 parcel. Considering that the house sits along a ridge of high ground overlooking the surrounding area, there's good reason to think that McDonald's original homestead site may have been very close to the current house.
| The original properties of Bryan McDonald, Sr. |
In McDonald's 1707 will, his land was split in two, with the northern part going to son Bryan, Junior. By the 1730's and 1740's, however, many of the McDonalds were leaving the area. Around 1746, Bryan McDonald, Jr. sold 286 acres to Jeremiah Wollaston. Wollaston would later split his land, first selling the northern 147 acres to George Robinson in 1757. This is the tract that would later include the Henry Clark Woolen Mill and Sunnybrook Cottage, as well as the Emily Bissell Hospital.
In 1761, Wollaston sold the southern 147 acres to a man whose family would be prominent in the area for several generations -- Ephraim Yarnall. Yarnall greatly expanded his holdings in 1783, when he purchased an additional 256 acres to the south of his original 147. His lands now extended south to Hyde Run, and down to today's Sherwood Park (the 200 acre tract warranted to McDonald in 1703, in the diagram above). Yarnall subsequently sold the southern-most portion of his land, but at the time of his death in 1793 he owned about 227 acres. His property was divided between his sons Nathan and Holton, and his widow Sarah (whose land later went to son Ephraim). Holton's tract later included the Conestoga Wheel (Yarnall) Tavern, as well as Brandywine Springs.
| The divided property of Ephraim Yarnall, 1793 |
Nathan Yarnall was given a tract on the north side of Faulkland Road, more or less between what would later be the Fell property and Newport Gap Pike. He held the property until 1817, when he sold it to Robert Pierson. There must have been some intermediate swapping/selling of land, because the lot that Pierson bought measured just over 63 acres, being a trapezoidal tract keeping the same northern and eastern boundaries, having the turnpike as its western edge, and a line on the south about even with Bristol Drive, the middle street in Brandywine Springs Manor. Pierson (or Pearson) also purchased another nine acres between this tract and Faulkland Road from Ephraim Yarnall in 1831. (Ephraim had gotten it from Holton's estate.)
There were a couple of transactions between Pierson and a Wilmington butcher and land dealer named Joseph Gould in 1836, but I think this may have just been a mortgage sort of situation. The next transfer of the property is a little unclear. It looks like Robert and his wife Jemima Pearson continued to live on the farm until Robert's death. I've seen this listed as being in 1852, but I think it was actually closer to 1840. It seems very likely that sometime between 1840 and 1849, Jemima Pearson sold the property to the next owner, David Graves. Graves was definitely in place by 1849, as he's shown on the Rea and Price map from that year.
David and Mary (Lindsey) Graves were married in 1833, and would eventually have six children in their Brandywine Springs-area home -- five daughters and one son (poor William was the youngest). And speaking of the home, it's probably time we talked about it. David Graves' large, field stone house is still standing, tucked in near the back of Brandywine Springs Manor. It's currently under new and very caring ownership. Like many of these old houses seem to be, it's comprised of several different sections, presumably built at different times. As of now, who built what sections is open for debate.
The house sits on a high ground within Bryan McDonald's original tract. I don't know that any part of the current house is that old, but the original McDonald homestead could have been in the same area. I don't think it's out of the question that the oldest part of the house could date to the Yarnall ownership, or even back to Jeremiah Wollaston. The main sections of the home look very much like the style of the 1810-1840 period, when field stone houses began to replace the older log and frame structures. This would seem to place its construction around the time of Robert Pierson, but for now this is all speculation.
David Graves lived the rest of his life in his beautiful stone home, farming and raising his family. He had a few interesting episodes, like the burglary in 1877 and the remarkable cow the next year. In 1876 he lost a close race for MCH Inspector. Of his children, Anna, Margaret, and William died young and/or unmarried. Sarah married Bennett Klair, while Mary married Joseph W. Derickson (the son of Aquilla Derickson). Eldest daughter Elizabeth married William H. Cornbrooks in 1856, and had four children before passing away at the young age of 27, in 1865. William remarried (to another Elizabeth...must have been his "thing") and as of the 1870 Census, had the oldest two children with him, at his home in Wilmington. However, youngest son David A. Cornbrooks lived at Brandywine Springs with his grandparents. It's not surprising, then, to learn that David Graves bequeathed his home to his namesake grandson after his death in 1885.
David A. Cornbrooks was married in 1886 to Mary Emma Derickson, the daughter of William Derickson. (William first owned the Thomas Justis House on Milltown Road, then inherited his family's farm on McKennans Church Road.) Cornbrooks seems to have been a pretty interesting guy. He was active in the Stanton Methodist Church, the Prohibition Party, and was a commissioner of the #33 Brandywine Springs School District. He fought at one point against the Brandywine Sanatorium's building of a sewer system because he claimed it emptied into Hyde Run, from which his cows drank. But on the other hand, another article specifically mentions him by name as carrying mail to the hospital during a snowstorm.
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| Likely the David A. Cornbrooks family in front of their house, c.1899 |
David and Emma raised three daughters in their Brandywine Springs home -- Helen, Clara, and Lillian. Emma passed away in 1927, while David lived until 1942. At the time of his death, Clara was married, Lillian was divorced, and Helen was unmarried and residing with her father. The property was likely passed down to all three girls, but Helen may have stayed at the house a while longer. I've found record of the three selling off land along Newport Gap Pike in 1943, but not the house. I only have access to land records up until the early 1950's, so my hunch is that they sold it off after that point.
It's unclear to me if there were any intermediate owners, but the next ones I know of may help to explain why this particular house is still standing, and in such good shape. At some point the house was bought by Taleasin Hadyn Davies, Jr. and his wife Marie. Taleasin's father was a prominent area doctor and former superintendent of the Ferris Industrial School. That, however, was not the couple's only source of wealth. Mrs. Davies was the former Marie Delphine duPont, daughter of Francis I. duPont, and the great-great granddaughter of the company founder Eleuthere Irenee duPont. She grew up at the duPont estate known as Upper Louviers, or Black Gates.
Taleasin passed away in 1967, by which time the couple resided at the house, now on Carillon Drive. Marie survived until 2009, passing at the age of 92. Her obituary seems to imply that she still owned the house at the time of her death. It has since seen two owners, and I can personally attest is wonderful shape. Whether the house is 160, 190, or closer to 250 years old, it's a fabulous piece of early American architecture and a direct link the early days of Mill Creek Hundred.
DESPITE DROUGHT, NO DOMESTIC WATER CUTS FOR THIS YEAR
From Cyprus Mail - article by George Psyllides 30 May 2018
No water cuts to domestic users are likely this year or next but water for irrigation purposes will be reduced by around 30 per cent during the summer months as Cyprus faces a protracted drought, Agriculture Minister Costas Kades said on Wednesday.
With water supply in the reservoirs dwindling and no sight of an end to the drought, the cabinet on Wednesday decided to draft a strategic framework on water policy expected to be ready in about three months.
Speaking after the meeting, Kades said there were no immediate plans to cut water to households but farmers will see a 30 per cent reduction in water for irrigation purposes.
“There is no such question,” the minister said of household cuts. “The scenarios we took into account concern uninterrupted supply for this year and the next.”
After processing all the available data from the water development department in relation to the water supply in the reservoirs, and after considering the scenario of the drought continuing through the next year, and consultations with farming unions, the ministry tabled a proposal on Wednesday to reduce supply to all districts by 30 per cent. Kades said.
The cuts will kick in on July 1.
Kades said the authorities were also cutting supply to seasonal cultivations and greenhouses.
The cabinet also approved a proposal to draft a comprehensive water management strategy to ensure adequacy.
Cyprus’ water problem will also be discussed at EU level in mid-June.
The ministry was also looking to increase the capacity of existing desalination units.




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