Tumgik
#bbotw
memoircomics · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Take it and go
This is my new comic series: Meth of the Wild
15K notes · View notes
djgojabean-blog · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
This week on Black Business of the Week...We introduce to you Phatt Toons Graphic Designs. Are you looking for Flyers, Logos, or life like Cartoon graphics? Well Phatt Toons Graphics are the ones to see. For additional information you can email [email protected] and don't forget to check them out on Instagram @PHATTTOONS With #PHATTTOONS anyTOON is possible. #BlackBusinessOfTheWeek #BBOTW #PHATTTOONS #3Ts #FleetDJs (at Jersey City, New Jersey) https://www.instagram.com/p/CGQKejYlfD8/?igshid=12o5lg64q8lti
0 notes
princericosuave · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Looks like i have bad bitches of the week with @salmahayek & @penelopecruzoficial for the first week of October #badbitchesoftheweek #BBOTW #salmahayek #penelopecruz #Actresses #MovieScene #CowGirls #Latinas #Sexy #Beautiful #gorgeous #WomenCrushes
1 note · View note
arabipress · 3 years
Text
لن يتم ترشيد دعم الدواء قبل وضع خطة متكاملة مع المعنيين - مرصد العربي برس
عقد وزير الصحة العامة في حكومة تصريف الأعمال الدكتور حمد حسن إجتماعا، في الوزارة، مع نقيب الصيادلة الدكتور غسان الأمين في حضور أعضاء مجلس النقابة ورئيسة دائرة التفتيش الصيدلي في وزارة الصحة العامة الدكتورة كوليت رعيدي. وتم تقييم ما تم إحرازه على صعيد الحد من أزمة فقدان الدواء في السوق وما حققه قرار وزير الصحة … https://s.alarabi.press/BbOTW
0 notes
bewitchedreader · 7 years
Text
Book Boyfriend of the Week
Check out this week's #BookBoyfiendoftheWeek #BBOTW #Romance
Book Boyfriend of the Week is a new meme I’m going to be posting on Sundays. Each week I will dedicate a new post to a swoony book boyfriend that I think you should all know about. I will share the reasons why I think he is book boyfriend material, pictures of how I imagined him why reading, his best quotes, and maybe a few extra surprises! If you have read about the current Book Boyfriend of the…
View On WordPress
0 notes
ashleyresch · 7 years
Text
Tweeted
BBOTW: Holly Barker!
— Boss Babe Movement (@bossbabemove) April 3, 2017
0 notes
thefourofhearts · 8 years
Text
Margaret of Anjou, Queen of England, “She-Wolf of France.”
B. 1430 (Lorraine) - D. 1482 (Anjou) Queen Consort of England, 1445-1461, 1470-71. (My friends and I share amongst ourselves/our friends write ups on Bad Bitches -- this is the one I did for last week!) Our Bad Bitch for this week is Margaret, nee Marguerite, of Anjou, who is an impressive figure in both English history and Shakespearian literature. At age 15, she married the 24-year-old King Henry VI of England and was crowned Queen of England at Westminster Abbey. Even in her teens, she was described as not only beautiful, but also “already a woman: passionate and proud and strong willed.” This was an important marriage because England and France had been embroiled in the Hundred Years War since 1337. Very broadly, the Hundred Years War was a generations-long, start-and-stop series of battles and wars over control of the Kingdom of France. (The same war in which Joan of Arc saved the French from defeat at Orleans in 1429.) Anyway, since Margaret’s uncle was the King of France, her marriage to Henry in 1445 helped to settle some of their political issues. Problem, tho: As part of the marriage treaty, Henry agreed to give back to the French crown some French lands England had conquered back in the day. That was nooooot a popular concession. News of the lost French territories hastened England’s descent towards civil war, which had been brewing for a while. Henry wasn’t The Best King to start with, and as he hit his late 20s, his mental faculties began to break down. Some of the dukes, particularly Gloucester and York, began to get antsy, showing signs that they had interests beyond duty and loyalty to their King. Before the collapse of Henry’s first reign, Margaret founded Queens’ College at Cambridge (yes, THAT Queens’ College) and gave birth to her only child, Edward, Prince of Wales. She was a politically-active Queen who supported her husband and son's interests above all else, and brought her into conflict with Richard, Duke of York, a close relative of Henry, and who had been next in line to throne until Prince Edward’s birth. When Henry had a complete mental breakdown in early 1454, York was named Lord Protector of the Realm and excluded Margaret from all government. Everything went sideways on Christmas Day 1454, when Henry regained his faculties and expected to return to governing in his own right. However, York had made a powerful friend in the Earl of Warwick, and now York claimed that he had a better line of descent from Edward III, which would make him the proper King instead of Henry. Henry, of course, disagreed. Yes, friends, we have just fallen into the War of the Roses. The name for the conflict arose long after the battles all completed, but in short: the Yorkists have been associated with white roses and the Lancasters (Henry’s house) with red roses. Warwick and York headquartered themselves in the East and South; Margaret and Henry in the North and West. Given Henry’s mental decline, Margaret swiftly took over as the head of the Lancastrian faction, rallying support and leading armies to battle herself. She was as ruthless as she was determined. For example, Henry had promised certain prisoners of war leniency and amnesty after a battle, but Margaret ignored his promises and ordered their execution, which was promptly carried out. I could go into the back and forth politics of the Wars of the Roses, but I’ll hold back and just focus on Margaret. When her husband was captured, deposed, and placed under house arrest for nine years, Margaret didn’t simply give up. She and her son, Edward, continued to curry support for her husband in Scotland, Wales, and France. When Warwick fell out of favor with the Yorkists, Margaret put her enmity for him aside and agreed to marry Edward to his daughter, Anne Neville, in return for his promise to return to England and return Henry to the throne. Warwick followed through in 1470, returning Henry to power; Margaret was Queen once more, but she would never be reunited with Henry. In a quick succession of months, Warwick ticked off the wrong people, those wrong people threw their support behind the Yorkists, and Margaret and Edward landed on English shores only to stare down a freshly-provisioned Yorkist army. Edward was killed in battle in May 1471; Henry died only a few days later. Historians largely agree that he was assassinated by the Yorkists. And just like that, Margaret was a hostile former queen in a country that had no interest in keeping or pensioning her. She returned home to France, but she was now only a distant cousin of the new King of France, not a cherished niece. She lived less than ten years and died in poverty in 1482. She’s buried at the Cathedral of Angers. The variety of opinion towards Margaret’s legacy cannot be overstated. Historians debate whether her stalwart partisanship for her husband and against those who challenged him was a virtue or a vice. On the one hand, her ties to the Lancastrian family were marital, not blood (save for her son), but she fought tooth and nail to support Lancastrian legitimacy and power, despite all of the pushback she faced for being a woman. On the other, had Margaret been more welcoming to Gloucester, Warwick, and York, and attempted to negotiate with them instead of exclude them, a more peaceful alternative to the War of the Roses might have resulted. Shakespeare wrote her as a political villain who was not to be taken lightly. In “Henry VI: Part III” Shakespeare’s Richard III describes Margaret with disdain: "She-wolf of France, but worse than wolves of France... Women are soft, mild, pitiful, and flexible; Thou stern, obdurate, flinty, rough, remorseless." One should note that Margaret boasted other Bad Bitches as close relations who may have encouraged Bad Bitchery from Margaret’s youth. Margaret’s mother, Isabella, was the Duchess of Lorraine in her own right and Queen Consort of Naples, and Isabella herself led an army to rescue Margaret’s dad when he was captured and imprisoned. Margaret’s paternal grandmother, Yolande, was known as the “Queen of Four Kingdoms,” due her ties to the thrones of Aragon, Sicily, Jerusalem, and Cyprus. Post Script: Margaret’s efforts weren’t wholly in vain, because the Lancasters did win the War of the Roses in the end. Does the name “Tudor” ring a bell? After Edward died, the next Lancaster heir was the young Henry Tudor, the son of Margaret Beaufort, a daughter of House Lancaster. He defeated Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field, married Elizabeth of York to gain Yorkist support, became Henry VII, and merged the Red Rose of Lancaster and the White Rose of Tudor to make the red and white Tudor Rose.
3 notes · View notes
memoircomics · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I have nothing to say to u,,,,,,
947 notes · View notes
princericosuave · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
My first bad bitch of the week for September goes to muva @amberrose #badbitchoftheweek #BBOTW #amberrose #Muva #Host #Model #allblackeverything #Sexy #BlueCarpet #VMAs #Beautiful #gorgeous #womancrush
1 note · View note
ashleyresch · 7 years
Text
Tweeted
#BBOTW https://t.co/8fRSTTO76a
— Ashley Resch (@ashresch) April 3, 2017
0 notes