![]() About me
Current projectsI am a member of many projects, but currently focusing most of my efforts on:
In the works
FavoritesArticlesDacian bracelets • Dacian Draco • Bastarnae • Castra • Roman Dacia • Costoboci • Timișoara Fortress Images
PersonalitiesAngelo Mai • Basil II • Belisarius • Burebista • Decebalus • Hadrian • Hannibal • Herodotus • Johann Joachim Winckelmann • Julian the Apostate • Julius Caesar • Justinian I • Marcus Aurelius • Marcus Furius Camillus • Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi • Thucydides QuotesA picture is worth a thousand words Trivia
Picture of the dayCommons picture of the day ![]() The Jewish Cemetery is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Dutch landscape painter Jacob van Ruisdael. Painted in 1654 or 1655, it is an allegorical landscape painting suggesting ideas of hope and death, while also being based on Beth Haim, a cemetery located on Amsterdam's southern outskirts, at the town of Ouderkerk aan de Amstel. Beth Haim is a resting place for some prominent figures among Amsterdam's large Jewish Portuguese community in the 17th century. Ruisdael presents the cemetery as a landscape variant of a vanitas painting, employing deserted tombs, ravaged churches, stormy clouds, dead trees, changing skies, and flowing water to symbolize death and the transience of all earthly things. The known provenance for the painting dates back only to 1739 and its original owner is not documented; since 1926, it has been owned by the Detroit Institute of Arts.Painting credit: Jacob van Ruisdael
On this day
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Files by User:Codrinb.
|
Categories:
- Wikipedia Did you know contributors
- Wikipedians in the Welcoming Committee
- Wikipedians in the Counter-Vandalism Unit
- Wikipedians who use AutoWikiBrowser
- Inclusionist Wikipedians
- Incrementalist Wikipedians
- Wikipedians who contribute to the Romanian Wikipedia
- Male Wikipedians
- Romanian Wikipedians
- Wikipedians in Romania
- Wikipedians in the European Union
- American Wikipedians
- Wikipedians in Massachusetts
- User ro-N
- User en-4
- User fr-2
- User de-2
- User it-1
- User es-1
- User pt-1
- User ca-1
- User an
- User an-1
- User rup
- User rup-1
- User gsw
- User gsw-1
- User la-1
- User Grek-4
- User Cyrl-3
- Translators ro-en
- Proofreaders ro-en
- Wikipedians interested in ancient history
- Wikipedians interested in Dacia
- Wikipedians interested in ancient Rome
- Wikipedians interested in ancient Greece
- Wikipedians interested in ancient warfare
- Wikipedians interested in European history
- Wikipedians interested in maps
- Wikipedians interested in FCSB
- Wikipedians interested in Decebalus
- WikiProject Archaeology participants
- WikiProject Film participants
- Romanian cinema task force participants
- WikiProject European history participants
- WikiProject Historic sites participants
- WikiProject History participants
- Wikipedians interested in history
- WikiProject Languages participants
- WikiProject Linguistics participants
- Wikipedians interested in linguistics
- Etymology Task Force participants
- WikiProject Moldova participants
- Wikipedians interested in Moldova
- WikiProject Museums participants
- Wikipedians interested in numismatics
- WikiProject Romania participants
- Wikipedians interested in Romania
- WikiProject Switzerland participants
- Wikipedians interested in Switzerland
- Wiki Loves Monuments 2011 participants
- WikiProject Writing systems participants
- Wikipedians who contribute to Wikimedia Commons