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"'Divinity'"
497 professional editorial images found
#12012188
3 February 2025
Believers and tourists attend the celebration of Iemanja at Rio Vermelho beach in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, on February 2, 2025. Iemanja is venerated as the queen of the seas and the mother of all Orishas in the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomble and Umbanda. Worshippers bring flowers and other offerings like beverages and perfume to the sea.
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#12012189
3 February 2025
Believers and tourists attend the celebration of Iemanja at Rio Vermelho beach in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, on February 2, 2025. Iemanja is venerated as the queen of the seas and the mother of all Orishas in the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomble and Umbanda. Worshippers bring flowers and other offerings like beverages and perfume to the sea.
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#12012195
3 February 2025
Believers and tourists attend the celebration of Iemanja at Rio Vermelho beach in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, on February 2, 2025. Iemanja is venerated as the queen of the seas and the mother of all Orishas in the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomble and Umbanda. Worshippers bring flowers and other offerings like beverages and perfume to the sea.
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#12012200
3 February 2025
Believers and tourists attend the celebration of Iemanja at Rio Vermelho beach in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, on February 2, 2025. Iemanja is venerated as the queen of the seas and the mother of all Orishas in the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomble and Umbanda. Worshippers bring flowers and other offerings like beverages and perfume to the sea.
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#12012205
3 February 2025
Believers and tourists attend the celebration of Iemanja at Rio Vermelho beach in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, on February 2, 2025. Iemanja is venerated as the queen of the seas and the mother of all Orishas in the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomble and Umbanda. Worshippers bring flowers and other offerings like beverages and perfume to the sea.
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#12012214
3 February 2025
Believers and tourists attend the celebration of Iemanja at Rio Vermelho beach in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, on February 2, 2025. Iemanja is venerated as the queen of the seas and the mother of all Orishas in the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomble and Umbanda. Worshippers bring flowers and other offerings like beverages and perfume to the sea.
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#12012231
3 February 2025
Believers and tourists attend the celebration of Iemanja at Rio Vermelho beach in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, on February 2, 2025. Iemanja is venerated as the queen of the seas and the mother of all Orishas in the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomble and Umbanda. Worshippers bring flowers and other offerings like beverages and perfume to the sea.
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#12012236
3 February 2025
Believers and tourists attend the celebration of Iemanja at Rio Vermelho beach in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, on February 2, 2025. Iemanja is venerated as the queen of the seas and the mother of all Orishas in the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomble and Umbanda. Worshippers bring flowers and other offerings like beverages and perfume to the sea.
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#12012237
3 February 2025
Believers and tourists attend the celebration of Iemanja at Rio Vermelho beach in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, on February 2, 2025. Iemanja is venerated as the queen of the seas and the mother of all Orishas in the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomble and Umbanda. Worshippers bring flowers and other offerings like beverages and perfume to the sea.
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#11578724
16 September 2024
Pre-pubescent Nepali girls pose for a photo as they attend the mass Kumari Pooja organized in Basantapur Durbar Square, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Kathmandu, Nepal. Donned in red robes, similar to the living goddess Kumari, Newa: girls sit in a line to be worshipped turn by turn to ward off bad luck and diseases. The pre-pubescent girls are worshipped annually in the Himalayan nation as earthly incarnations of divine feminine energy, manifestations of the goddess known as ''Taleju Bhawani,'' the Nepalese name for Goddess Durga.
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#11578725
16 September 2024
Pre-pubescent Nepali girls pose for a photo as they attend the mass Kumari Pooja organized in Basantapur Durbar Square, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Kathmandu, Nepal. Donned in red robes, similar to the living goddess Kumari, Newa: girls sit in a line to be worshipped turn by turn to ward off bad luck and diseases. The pre-pubescent girls are worshipped annually in the Himalayan nation as earthly incarnations of divine feminine energy, manifestations of the goddess known as ''Taleju Bhawani,'' the Nepalese name for Goddess Durga.
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#11578744
16 September 2024
Pre-pubescent Nepali girls pose for a photo as they attend the mass Kumari Pooja organized in Basantapur Durbar Square, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Kathmandu, Nepal. Donned in red robes, similar to the living goddess Kumari, Newa: girls sit in a line to be worshipped turn by turn to ward off bad luck and diseases. The pre-pubescent girls are worshipped annually in the Himalayan nation as earthly incarnations of divine feminine energy, manifestations of the goddess known as ''Taleju Bhawani,'' the Nepalese name for Goddess Durga.
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#11201510
1 May 2024
The Laxmi Narayan Mandir is being pictured in Haldwani, Uttarakhand, India, on April 24, 2024.
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#11167985
22 April 2024
The Egyptian Museum of Turin is currently showcasing a new temporary exhibition called ''Towards the New Gallery of Kings.'' The exhibition is displaying statues of gods and pharaohs in its Gallery of Kings. The Academy of Sciences and the Egyptian Museum are collaborating to offer visitors an experience that traces the origins of the museum, which dates back 200 years to when the majestic sculptures of pharaohs and deities first arrived in Turin in 1823, along with thousands of other artifacts from the Drovetti collection. These artifacts were housed in the building that still accommodates the two institutions and led to the creation of the first Egyptian Museum in the world in 1824. The installation is recreating the original arrangement of the statues in the courtyards of the temples of ancient Egypt, where divinities and pharaohs maintained a bond with their followers while expressing their authority. Visitors are currently able to appreciate details of the artifacts that were previously difficult to see in the old arrangement, such as the hieroglyphic inscriptions on the throne of the statue of Thutmose I, or details of the headdress of the pharaoh Horemheb. The proximity to the statues is allowing visitors to appreciate them better, without diminishing their grandeur.
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#11167986
22 April 2024
The Egyptian Museum of Turin is currently showcasing a new temporary exhibition called ''Towards the New Gallery of Kings.'' The exhibition is displaying statues of gods and pharaohs in its Gallery of Kings. The Academy of Sciences and the Egyptian Museum are collaborating to offer visitors an experience that traces the origins of the museum, which dates back 200 years to when the majestic sculptures of pharaohs and deities first arrived in Turin in 1823, along with thousands of other artifacts from the Drovetti collection. These artifacts were housed in the building that still accommodates the two institutions and led to the creation of the first Egyptian Museum in the world in 1824. The installation is recreating the original arrangement of the statues in the courtyards of the temples of ancient Egypt, where divinities and pharaohs maintained a bond with their followers while expressing their authority. Visitors are currently able to appreciate details of the artifacts that were previously difficult to see in the old arrangement, such as the hieroglyphic inscriptions on the throne of the statue of Thutmose I, or details of the headdress of the pharaoh Horemheb. The proximity to the statues is allowing visitors to appreciate them better, without diminishing their grandeur.
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#11167987
22 April 2024
The Egyptian Museum of Turin is currently showcasing a new temporary exhibition called ''Towards the New Gallery of Kings.'' The exhibition is displaying statues of gods and pharaohs in its Gallery of Kings. The Academy of Sciences and the Egyptian Museum are collaborating to offer visitors an experience that traces the origins of the museum, which dates back 200 years to when the majestic sculptures of pharaohs and deities first arrived in Turin in 1823, along with thousands of other artifacts from the Drovetti collection. These artifacts were housed in the building that still accommodates the two institutions and led to the creation of the first Egyptian Museum in the world in 1824. The installation is recreating the original arrangement of the statues in the courtyards of the temples of ancient Egypt, where divinities and pharaohs maintained a bond with their followers while expressing their authority. Visitors are currently able to appreciate details of the artifacts that were previously difficult to see in the old arrangement, such as the hieroglyphic inscriptions on the throne of the statue of Thutmose I, or details of the headdress of the pharaoh Horemheb. The proximity to the statues is allowing visitors to appreciate them better, without diminishing their grandeur.
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