Todays Beanie Of The Day is Glacier the Penguin
Birthday: 5/17/2007
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Not my joke. Saw it on a post about May 15th
Y'know, I'm curious... What was the other birthday that had a terrible announcement?
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Y’all know what day it is
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I need to see what photos are in this issue.
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It was my birthday today-may 15th! :D And to celebrate, I drew this and this year I got my hands on the actual plushie and some books!
He is literally so tiny but I love this dude!!!❤️
(And btw yes those are Bill hats :))
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o wise beanie babie oracle,, does there exist a babie born on may 15th,,
🔮 It is foretold that you shall share a birth with
ZeeZee the Monster! From the Ty Frizzys line
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“And yet, unless my senses deceive me, the old centuries had, and have, powers of their own which mere "modernity" cannot kill.”
Damn that’s a cool line
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Me: listening to the new mcr single while reading Dracula daily during the super blood moon having survived the Friday the 13th
[goth mode activated]
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Saint Sophia of Rome
-is venerated as a Christian martyr. She is identified in hagiographical tradition with the figure of Sophia of Milan, the mother of Saints Faith, Hope and Charity, whose veneration is attested for the 6th century.
However, there are conflicting hagiographical traditions; one tradition makes Sophia herself a martyr under the Diocletian Persecution (303/4). This conflicts with the much more widespread hagiographical tradition placing Sophia, the mother of Faith, Hope and Charity, in the time of Diocletian (early 4th century) and reporting her dying not as a martyr but mourning for her martyred daughters. Her relics are said to have been translated to the convent at Eschau, Alsace in 778, and her cult spread to Germany from there. Acta Sanctorum reports that her feast day of 15 May is attested in German, Belgian and English breviaries of the 16th century.
Roman Catholic hagiography of the early modern period attempted to identify the Saint Sophia venerated in Germany with various records of martyrs named Sophia recorded in the early medieval period, among them a record from the time of Pope Sergius II (9th century) reporting an inscription mentioning a virgin martyr named Sophia at the high altar of the church of San Martino ai Monti. Saxer (2000) suggests that her veneration may indeed have originated in the later 6th century based on such inscriptions of the 4th to 6th centuries.
Based on her feast day on 15 May, she became one of the "Ice Saints", the saints whose feast days are traditionally associated with the last possibility of frost in Central Europe.
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