Since we knew we were going to go light with Shiny Brites on the tree, I made sure we have a good dose in the kitchen!
We also decided the kitchen window shelves would be the perfect place for our vintage candle collection!
They are just so cute!
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.
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.
Sende kalemine güveniyorsan web sitemizde bir şeyler paylaşmak yazmak istiyorsan siteinin en aşağısında bulunan iletişim formunu kullanarak bizimle iletişime gecebilirisni
Since we knew we were going to go light with Shiny Brites on the tree, I made sure we have a good dose in the kitchen!
We also decided the kitchen window shelves would be the perfect place for our vintage candle collection!
They are just so cute!
The civil marriage of Prince Philippos of Greece and Denmark and Nina Flohr was celebrated on Saturday, 12 December, at St. Moritz, Switzerland. Among those present at the ceremony were the groom’s father King Constantine II of the Hellenes and the bride's father Thomas Flohr. The king acted as the witness for his son; Mr Flohr acted as the witness for his daughter.
The Greek Royal Family issued the following statement:
The private ceremony of the civil wedding of Prince Philippos with Nina-Nastassja Flohr took place on Saturday, December 12, 2020, at 11:00 a.m. in St. Moritz.
Witnesses at the ceremony were King Constantine and Mr. Thomas Flohr, observing all the health instructions of the Swiss state. The immediate family congratulated the newlyweds immediately after the ceremony.
More details about the upcoming religious wedding will be given in due course.
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| Photograph taken on the occasion of the baptism of Prince Philippos. |
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| King Juan Carlos of Spain holds his nephew and godson Prince Philippos of Greece while Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, looks on. |
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| The Princess of Wales with her godson Philippos. |
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| Philippos with his family after his graduation from Georgetown University. |
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| The Royal Greek Brothers (l to r): Nikolaos, Pavlos, and Philippos |
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| Nina Flohr with her father Thomas. |
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| Nina Flohr with her mother Katharina. |
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| Newly engaged: Prince Philippos of Greece and Nina Flohr Photograph (c) Prince Nikolaos of Greece |
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| The 2020 Christmas card of H.I.H. Grand Duke George Mikhailovich of Russia. Courtesy of the Chancellery of the Russian Imperial House. |
The Chancellery of the Russian Imperial House was kind enough to send us the Christmas card for His Imperial Highness Grand Duke George Mikhailovich of Russia. Like many royal Christmas cards, this one from the Romanov heir delivers its wishes in several languages: Russian, English, French, and Spanish. The monogram of the grand duke is displayed above the picture.
This year, Grand Duke George will be celebrating the holidays in Moscow, where he moved earlier in 2020. Through the Russian Imperial Foundation and with a desire to assist those in the greatest need during the current coronavirus pandemic (as well as victims of other natural disasters), the grand duke has actively raised funds for food-banks and health clinics in Russia, for a hospital in Italy, and for those affected by a terrible earthquake in Albania. To learn more about the Russian Imperial Foundation, please visit its website.
Matthew Happold, Université du Luxembourg, has posted Magna Carta Past and Present: A Speech given to the Oxford University Society of Luxembourg, 10 September 2015:
--Dan ErnstA speech given to the Oxford University Society of Luxembourg to celebrate the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta. Looking at Magna Carta - how it came about, what it was, what it achieved, and what it came to represent - it argues that the myth of Magna Carta has been much more powerful than the reality. It concludes that invocations of Magna Carta can be double-edged. One the one hand, they extol the rule of law, but on the other they eulogize English exceptionalism. So it is no surprise that the British Government has seen no contradiction in celebrating 800 years of Magna Carta whilst exploring the possibility of denouncing the European Convention on Human Rights in favour of a British Bill of rights and responsibilities.
LC
At the end of January 1905, Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia granted a rare interview to a foreign reporter about the situation in Russia. The uncle of Tsar Nicholas II, fifty-seven year-old Grand Duke Vladimir, the Military Governor of Saint Petersburg, spoke candidly about the events of 22 January 1905 (O.S. 9 January), which have become known to history as "Bloody Sunday." It was noted that Grand Duke Vladimir "is big-framed and dark-visaged, has iron grey hair, and resembles more his brother, Emperor Alexander III, than his nephew, Emperor Nicholas II. Although his face and frame show marks of recent illness, the nervous energy he displays gives the impression of a man of force and action." The interview took place at the residence of the grand duke in Saint Petersburg.
Grand Duke Vladimir: "You must remember I am a grand duke and subject of the Emperor. As such I am extremely loyal to him and I am Russian from the crown of my head to the tip of my toes. What information can I give you?"
Correspondent: "The newspapers abroad have made many statements regarding the events of January 22."
Grand Duke Vladimir: "I know; I have read accounts in the foreign press. I have stood aghast at the frightful stories of the butchery of innocent people which they have printed. I know they say well-intentioned patriots with a priest at their head, coming peacefully to place their grievances before His Majesty were ruthlessly shot down in the streets, but we know that behind this peaceful procession was an anarchistic and socialistic plot of which the overwhelming majority of the workmen were merely innocent tools. We know from examination of the dead and those arrested that some alleged priests were actually revolutionary agitators and students in disguise.
We had to save the city from a mob. Unfortunately to do so innocent and guilty suffered alike. But suppose 140,000 men had reached the gates of the Winter Palace; they would have sacked it as the mob sacked Versailles. From the palace they would have gone elsewhere and the whole city would have been delivered over to anarchy, riot, bloodshed, and flames. Our duty was the duty of every government. The same situation has confronted cities in other countries.
Why, because this occurred in Russia, should the whole world point the finger of scorn upon us? In the midst of our difficulties why should we be turned upon? Why should America, especially, misinterpret and think ill of us? We have always been friends - friends of a century, friends when American needed friends. I remember when America was our great friend. Why has all this changed? What has Russia done to deserve it? What has Russia done to America?
Why should the foreign press, especially that of Great Britain, not hesitate before any calumny? No invention seems too horrible for them to print. They do not explain that on Saturday every available wall in Saint Petersburg was placarded with warnings to the people not to assemble. No; they tell that thousands of innocent people were killed and other thousands wounded and paint the streets as running red with blood. They even say the dead were pushed under the ice of the Neva at night. It is infamous.
They say nothing of isolated officers set upon by mobs in the streets and hammered into insensibility or of policemen killed or wounded.
As a matter of fact, complete returns show that exactly 126 are dead. Several hundred were wounded. I cannot give the precise figure of the wounded, but you shall have an opportunity to see the full reports."
Correspondent: "They say that Gorky will be hanged."
Grand Duke Vladimir: "Nonsense."
Correspondent: "It is asserted that some of the troops refused to obey commands."
Grand Duke Vladimir: "There is no question of the loyalty of the troops. They did their duty. They were ready, as I am ready, to die in the streets for the Emperor. A soldier was asked by one workman why he fired, the questioner saying to him, 'You will be a workman soon.' 'Perhaps,' he replied, 'then you may be a soldier and know what it is to obey your oath to do your duty to your Emperor.'"
Correspondent: "Might I ask Your Imperial Highness's view of the present situation?"
Grand Duke Vladimir: "With this unhappy war upon our shoulders we are passing through a crisis. I will not attempt to conceal it - it cannot be concealed - but, with the help of God, we will emerge from it as we have emerged from other troubles in the past. In the interior there are many elements of discord, but the situation is not so bad as it is painted. The disorders at Warsaw, Kiev, and elsewhere are largely industrial, produced by trade depression and consequent lack of employment on account of the war. They are not revolutionary at base.
People speak of a constitution. A constitution would mean the end of Russia, as the state would be gone, anarchy would supervene, and when it ended the empire would be disintegrated. Finland, Poland, and perhaps other frontier provinces would have broken away. Russia is not ripe for a constitution. Go out among the peasants, who compose the vast bulk of the Empire's population, and try to explain to them government by suffrage. The peasant knows nothing of government. He does not even know what the word means. He knows his Emperor. For him, the Emperor is everything. Give the peasant a vote, and all would be anarchy. Still, there is necessity for reforms, and they will be granted by the autocracy."
Correspondent: "Maintaining the principle of autocracy, then, the people will have an opportunity to be heard in the government?"
Grand Duke Vladimir: "Yes. They can, and I am sure they will be given a voice. Of that I am certain. They will be given the means of presenting their needs and grievances to the Sovereign."
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About two weeks after Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich gave this interview, his younger brother Grand Duke Serge Alexandrovich was assassinated in Moscow on 17 February 1905.
James E. Pfander, Northwestern University School of Law, has posted Zones of Discretion at Common Law:
Scott Keller argues in an important forthcoming article that the common law recognized forms of qualified immunity. This reply suggests that Keller’s authorities comprise a body of administrative law, rather than a body of qualified immunity law. Many of the doctrines Keller identifies operate much the way Chief Justice Marshall’s account of judicial review operated in Marbury v. Madison. Marshall acknowledged that matters lawfully assigned to the discretion of the executive branch were beyond the scope of judicial review. But where an official’s lawful discretion ended, and legal boundaries were transgressed, the common law was available (indeed obliged according to Marshall) to supply a remedy. In much of what Keller points to, common law courts were acknowledging that executive officials enjoyed zones of lawful discretion. But the common law did not confer immunity when those boundaries were transgressed.--Dan Ernst

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| Archduke Georg and Archduchess Eilika of Austria at the wedding of Crown Prince Leka of Albania. |
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| Count György Károlyi, current Hungarian Ambassador to Paris. |
In June 2020, the Duke and Duchess of Parma were photographed with their three children on the beach of Scheveningen by Jeroen van der Meyde. Prince Carlos and Princess Annemarie, who celebrated their tenth wedding anniversary this year, are shown with their daughters, Princess Luisa and Princess Cecilia, and their son, Prince Carlos. The duke and duchess will be using one of the images from the photoshoot for their Christmas card.