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Charites



 
 
In Greek mythology
Greek mythology

Greek mythology is the body of myths and legends belonging to the Ancient Greece concerning their List of Greek mythological figures#Immortals and Greek hero cult, Cosmology#Metaphysical cosmology, and the origins and significance of their own cult and ritual practices....
, a Charis is one of several Charites (????te?; Greek
Ancient Greek

Ancient Greek is the historical stage in the development of the Greek language spanning across the Archaic Greece , Classical Greece , and Hellenistic civilization periods of ancient Greece and the classical antiquity....
: "Graces"), goddesses of charm, beauty, nature, human creativity and fertility. They ordinarily numbered three, from youngest to oldest: Aglaea
Aglaea

Aglaea or Agla?a is the name of five figures in Greek mythology....
 ("Beauty"), Euphrosyne
Euphrosyne (mythology)

In Greek mythology, Euphrosyne was one of the Charites, known in English language also as the "Three Graces". Her best remembered representation in English is in John Milton poem of the active, joyful life, "L'Allegro"....
 ("Mirth"), and Thalia
Thalia

Thalia can refer to four distinct entities in Greek mythology, two of whom were daughters of Zeus, and a third of whom bore him sons. The name Thalia, or Thaleia is spelled T??e?a in Greek and derives from the same stem as ????e?? "to bloom"....
 ("Good Cheer"). In Roman mythology
Roman mythology

Roman mythology, or more appropriately, Latin mythology, refers to the mythology beliefs of the Italic people inhabiting the region of Latium and its main city, Rome....
 they were known as the Gratiae, the "Graces."

The Charites were usually considered the daughters of Zeus
Zeus

Zeus in Greek mythology is the king of the gods, the ruler of Mount Olympus and the god of the sky father and List of thunder gods. His symbols are the thunderbolt, eagle, bull , and oak....
 and Eurynome
Eurynome

In Greek mythology, there were many women with the name Eur?nom?, with the possible significance "far-wandering" .#The Eurynome , or daughter of Oceanus....
, though they were also said to be daughters of Dionysus
Dionysus

In classical mythology, Dionysus or Dionysos , is the God of wine, the inspirer of ritual madness and ecstasy, and a major figure of Greek mythology, and one of the twelve Olympians, among whom Greek mythology treated Dionysus as a late arrival....
 and Aphrodite
Aphrodite

Aphrodite is the classical Greek mythology goddess of love, sex, and beauty. According to Greek oral poet Hesiod, she was born when Uranus was castrated by his son Cronus....
 or of Helios
Helios

Helios is the god of sun.In Greek mythology the sun was personified as Helios . Homer often calls him simply Titan or Hyperion , while Hesiod and the Homeric Hymn separate him as a son of the Titans Hyperion and Theia or Euryphaessa and brother of the goddesses Selene, the moon, and Eos, the dawn....
 and the naiad
Naiad

In Greek mythology, the Naiads or Naiades were a type of nymph who presided over fountains, wells, springs, streams, and brooks.They are distinct from river gods, who embodied rivers, and the very ancient spirits that inhabited the still waters of marshes, ponds and lagoon-lakes, such as pre-Mycenaean Lerna in the Argolid....
 Aegle
Aegle

Aegle is the name of several different figures in Greek mythology:*Aegle, the most beautiful of the Naiads, daughter of Zeus and Neaera,, by whom Helios begot the Charites....
.






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In Greek mythology
Greek mythology

Greek mythology is the body of myths and legends belonging to the Ancient Greece concerning their List of Greek mythological figures#Immortals and Greek hero cult, Cosmology#Metaphysical cosmology, and the origins and significance of their own cult and ritual practices....
, a Charis is one of several Charites (????te?; Greek
Ancient Greek

Ancient Greek is the historical stage in the development of the Greek language spanning across the Archaic Greece , Classical Greece , and Hellenistic civilization periods of ancient Greece and the classical antiquity....
: "Graces"), goddesses of charm, beauty, nature, human creativity and fertility. They ordinarily numbered three, from youngest to oldest: Aglaea
Aglaea

Aglaea or Agla?a is the name of five figures in Greek mythology....
 ("Beauty"), Euphrosyne
Euphrosyne (mythology)

In Greek mythology, Euphrosyne was one of the Charites, known in English language also as the "Three Graces". Her best remembered representation in English is in John Milton poem of the active, joyful life, "L'Allegro"....
 ("Mirth"), and Thalia
Thalia

Thalia can refer to four distinct entities in Greek mythology, two of whom were daughters of Zeus, and a third of whom bore him sons. The name Thalia, or Thaleia is spelled T??e?a in Greek and derives from the same stem as ????e?? "to bloom"....
 ("Good Cheer"). In Roman mythology
Roman mythology

Roman mythology, or more appropriately, Latin mythology, refers to the mythology beliefs of the Italic people inhabiting the region of Latium and its main city, Rome....
 they were known as the Gratiae, the "Graces."

The Charites were usually considered the daughters of Zeus
Zeus

Zeus in Greek mythology is the king of the gods, the ruler of Mount Olympus and the god of the sky father and List of thunder gods. His symbols are the thunderbolt, eagle, bull , and oak....
 and Eurynome
Eurynome

In Greek mythology, there were many women with the name Eur?nom?, with the possible significance "far-wandering" .#The Eurynome , or daughter of Oceanus....
, though they were also said to be daughters of Dionysus
Dionysus

In classical mythology, Dionysus or Dionysos , is the God of wine, the inspirer of ritual madness and ecstasy, and a major figure of Greek mythology, and one of the twelve Olympians, among whom Greek mythology treated Dionysus as a late arrival....
 and Aphrodite
Aphrodite

Aphrodite is the classical Greek mythology goddess of love, sex, and beauty. According to Greek oral poet Hesiod, she was born when Uranus was castrated by his son Cronus....
 or of Helios
Helios

Helios is the god of sun.In Greek mythology the sun was personified as Helios . Homer often calls him simply Titan or Hyperion , while Hesiod and the Homeric Hymn separate him as a son of the Titans Hyperion and Theia or Euryphaessa and brother of the goddesses Selene, the moon, and Eos, the dawn....
 and the naiad
Naiad

In Greek mythology, the Naiads or Naiades were a type of nymph who presided over fountains, wells, springs, streams, and brooks.They are distinct from river gods, who embodied rivers, and the very ancient spirits that inhabited the still waters of marshes, ponds and lagoon-lakes, such as pre-Mycenaean Lerna in the Argolid....
 Aegle
Aegle

Aegle is the name of several different figures in Greek mythology:*Aegle, the most beautiful of the Naiads, daughter of Zeus and Neaera,, by whom Helios begot the Charites....
. Homer
Homer

Homer is traditionally held to be the author of the ancient Greek language epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey, as well as of the Homeric Hymns....
 wrote that they were part of the retinue
Retinue

A retinue is a body of persons "retained" in the service of a nobility or royal family personage, a suite of "retainers."...
 of Aphrodite. The Charites were also associated with the underworld
Hades

Hades refers both to the ancient Greek underworld, the abode of Hades, and to the god of the underworld. Hades in Homer referred just to the god; the genitive case , Haidou, was an elision to denote locality: "[the house/dominion] of Hades"....
 and the Eleusinian Mysteries
Eleusinian Mysteries

The Eleusinian Mysteries were initiation ceremony held every year for the Cult of Demeter and Persephone based at Eleusis in ancient Greece. Of all the mysteries celebrated in ancient times, these were held to be the ones of greatest importance....
.

The river Cephissus
Cephissus (Boeotia)

The northern Cephissus river or Cephisus rises at Lilaea in Phocis and flows by Delphi through Boeotia and eventually issues into Lake Copais which is therefore also called the Cephisian Lake....
 near Delphi
Delphi

Delphi is an archaeology site and a modern town in Greece on the south-western spur of Mount Parnassus in the valley of Phocis. Delphi was the site of the Pythia, the most important oracle in the classical Greek world, when it was a major site for the worship of the god Apollo after he slew the Python , a deity who lived there and protecte...
 was sacred to them.

Regional differences

Canova Three Graces 0 Degree View
Although the Graces usually numbered three, according to the Sparta
Sparta

Sparta was a city-state in ancient Greece, situated on the Eurotas River in the southern part of the Peloponnese. From circa 650 BC it rose to become the dominant military power in the region and as such was recognized as the overall leader of the combined Greek forces during the Greco-Persian Wars....
ns, Cleta, not Thalia, was the third, and other Graces are sometimes mentioned, including Auxo, Charis, Hegemone
Hegemone

Hegemone was a Greek goddess of plants, specifically making them bloom and bear fruit as they were supposed to. Her name means "mastery".According to Pausanias , Hegemone was a name given by the Athens to one of the Charites....
, Phaenna, and Pasithea
Pasithea

In Greek mythology, Pasithea or Pasithee is the youngest of the Charites, and goddess of hallucination or hallucinatory drugs, her name meaning "acquired sight" ....
.

Pausanias
Pausanias (geographer)

Pausanias was a Roman Greece traveller and geographer of the 2nd century AD, who lived in the times of Hadrian, Antoninus Pius and Marcus Aurelius....
 interrupts his Description of Greece (book 9.xxxv.1 - 7) to expand upon the various conceptions of the Graces that had developed in different parts of mainland Greece and Ionia
Ionia

Ionia is an ancient region of central coastal Anatolia in present-day Turkey, the region nearest Izmir, which was historically Smyrna. It consisted of the northernmost territories of the Ionian League of Hellenes settlements....
:

"The Boeotia
Boeotia

Boeotia, Beotia, or B?otia , formerly Cadmeis, was a region of ancient Greece, north of the eastern part of the Gulf of Corinth. It was bounded on the south by Megaris and the Kithairon mountain range that forms a natural barrier with Attica, on the north by Opuntian Locris and the Euripus Strait at the Gulf of Euboea, and on the...
ns say that Eteocles
Eteocles

In Greek mythology, Eteocles was a king of Thebes , the son of Oedipus and either Jocasta or Euryganeia. The name is from earlier *Etewoklewes , meaning "truly glorious"....
 was the first man to sacrifice to the Graces. Moreover, they are aware that he established three
3 (number)

----3 is a number, Numeral system, and glyph. It is the natural number following 2 and preceding 4 ....
 as the number of the Graces, but they have no tradition of the names he gave them. The Lacedaemonians, however, say that the Graces are two, and that they were instituted by Lacedaemon, son of Taygete
Taygete

In Greek mythology, Taygete was a nymph, one of the Pleiades according to Apollodorus and a companion of Artemis, in her archaic role as potnia theron, "Mistress of the animals." Taygetus in Laconia, dedicated to the Goddess, was her haunt....
, who gave them the names of Cleta and Phaenna. These are appropriate names for Graces, as are those given by the Athenians, who from of old have worshipped two Graces, Auxo and Hegemone
Hegemone

Hegemone was a Greek goddess of plants, specifically making them bloom and bear fruit as they were supposed to. Her name means "mastery".According to Pausanias , Hegemone was a name given by the Athens to one of the Charites....
... It was from Eteocles
Eteocles

In Greek mythology, Eteocles was a king of Thebes , the son of Oedipus and either Jocasta or Euryganeia. The name is from earlier *Etewoklewes , meaning "truly glorious"....
 of Orchomenus
Orchomenus

Orchomenus is a name attributed to the following:...
 that we learned the custom of praying to three Graces. And Angelion and Tectaus, sons of Dionysus, who made the image of Apollo
Apollo

In Greek mythology and Roman mythology, Apollo , is one of the most important and many-sided of the Twelve Olympians. The ideal of the kouros , Apollo has been variously recognized as a god of light and the sun; truth and prophecy; archery; medicine and healing; music, poetry, and the arts; and more....
 for the Delia
Delia

The delia was an item of male apparel worn over the zupan by szlachta of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. It was usually of wool, cotton, or velvet, finished with fur....
ns, set three Graces in his hand. Again, at Athens, before the entrance to the Acropolis
Acropolis

Acropolis literally means city on the edge . For purposes of defense, early settlers naturally chose elevated ground, frequently a hill with precipitous sides....
, the Graces are three in number; by their side are celebrated mysteries which must not be divulged to the many. Pamphos (??µf?? or ??µf??) was the first we know of to sing about the Graces, but his poetry contains no information either as to their number or about their names. Homer
Homer

Homer is traditionally held to be the author of the ancient Greek language epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey, as well as of the Homeric Hymns....
 (he too refers to the Graces ) makes one the wife of Hephaestus
Hephaestus

Hephaestus was a Greek god whose Roman equivalent was Vulcan . He was the god of technology, blacksmiths, craftsmen, artisans, sculpture, metals, metallurgy, Fire and volcanoes....
, giving her the name of Grace. He also says that Sleep was a lover of Pasithea, and in the speech of Sleep there is this verse:--


Verily that he would give me one of the younger Graces.

"Hence some have suspected that Homer knew of older Graces as well. Hesiod
Hesiod

Hesiod was a Greek language oral poet, his date is uncertain but leading scholars agree that Hesiod lived in the latter half of the Eighth-century BCE....
 in the Theogony
Theogony

The Theogony is a poem by Hesiod describing the origins and genealogy of the polytheism of the ancient Greeks, composed circa 700 BC....
 (though the authorship is doubtful, this poem is good evidence ) says that the Graces are daughters of Zeus and Eurynome, giving them the names of Euphrosyne, Aglaia and Thalia. The poem of Onomacritus agrees with this account. Antimachus, while giving neither the number of the Graces nor their names, says that they are daughters of Aegle and the Sun. The elegiac poet Hermesianax disagrees with his predecessors in that he makes Persuasion also one of the Graces."


In art

Muses
On the representation of the Graces, Pausanias wrote,

"Who it was who first represented the Graces naked, whether in sculpture or in painting, I could not discover. During the earlier period, certainly, sculptors and painters alike represented them draped. At Smyrna
Smyrna

Smyrna is an ancient city in Izmir in Turkey. Located at a central and strategic point on the Aegean Sea coast of Anatolia and aided by its advantageous port conditions, its ease of defence and its good inland connections, Smyrna rose to prominence before the Classical Era....
, for instance, in the sanctuary of the Nemeses
Nemesis (mythology)

Nemesis , also called Rhamnousia/Rhamnusia , at her sanctuary at Rhamnous, north of Marathon, Greece, in Greek mythology was the spirit of divine punitive justice against those who succumb to hubris, vengeful fate personified as a remorseless goddess....
, above the images have been dedicated Graces of gold, the work of Bupalus; and in the Music Hall in the same city there is a portrait of a Grace, painted by Apelles
Apelles

Apelles of Kos was a renowned Painting of ancient Greece. Pliny the Elder, to whom we owe much of our knowledge of this artist rated him superior to preceding and subsequent artists....
. At Pergamus
Pergamon

Pergamon or Pergamum was an ancient Ancient Greece city in modern-day Turkey, in Mysia, north-western Anatolia, 16 miles from the Aegean Sea, located on a promontory on the north side of the river Caicus , that became the capital of the Kingdom of Pergamon during the Hellenistic Greece, under the Attalid dynasty, 281–133 BC....
 likewise, in the chamber of Attalus
Attalus I

Attalus I , surnamed Soter ruled Pergamon, a Ionian Greek polis , first as dynast, later as king, from 241 BC to 197 BC. He was the second cousin and the adoptive son of Eumenes I, whom he succeeded, and was the first of the Attalid dynasty to assume the title of king in 238 BC....
, are other images of Graces made by Bupalus; and near what is called the Pythium there is a portrait of Graces, painted by Pythagoras the Parian. Socrates too, son of Sophroniscus, made images of Graces for the Athenians, which are before the entrance to the Acropolis. Also, Socrates was know to have destroyed his own work as he progressed deeper into his life of philosophy and search of the conscious due to his iconoclastic attitude towards art and the like. All these are alike draped; but later artists, I do not know the reason, have changed the way of portraying them. Certainly to-day sculptors and painters represent Graces naked."


Threegraces
Raffael 010
In Renaissance
Renaissance

The Renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned roughly the 14th to the 17th century, beginning in Italy in the late Middle Ages and later spreading to the rest of Europe....
 times, the Roman statue group of the three graces in the Piccolomini
Piccolomini

Piccolomini is the name of an Italy noble family, which was prominent in Siena from the beginning of the 13th century onwards. In 1220, Engelberto d'Ugo Piccolomini received the fief of Montertari in Val d'Orcia from the emperor Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor as a reward for services rendered....
 library in Duomo di Siena
Duomo di Siena

The Cathedral of Siena , dedicated from its earliest days as a Roman Catholic Marian church and now to Santa Maria Assunta , is a medieval church in Siena, central Italy....
 inspired most themes. The Charites are depicted together with several other mythological figures in Sandro Botticelli
Sandro Botticelli

Alessandro di Mariano di Vanni Filipepi, better known as Sandro Botticelli or Il Botticello was an Italy Painting of the Florentine school during the Early Renaissance ....
's painting Primavera (above right). Raphael
Raphael

Raphael Sanzio, usually known by his first name alone was an Italy Painting and architect of the High Renaissance, celebrated for the perfection and grace of his paintings and drawings....
 also pictured them in a painting
Three Graces (Raphael)

The Three Graces is a small picture by the Italy High Renaissance painter Raphael. It is housed in the Mus?e Cond?, Chantilly, Oise, France....
 now housed in Chantilly
Chantilly, Oise

Chantilly is a Communes of France in the Oise Departments of France in northern France.It is in the aire urbaine of Paris 38.4km. north-northeast from the Kilometre Zero....
 in France
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
. Among other artistic depictions, they are the subject of famous sculptures by Antonio Canova
The Three Graces

Antonio Canova?s statue The Three Graces is a Neoclassicism sculpture, in marble, of the mythological three charites, daughters of Zeus ? identified on some engravings of the statue as, from left to right, Euphrosyne , Aglaea and Thalia - who were said to represent beauty, charm and joy....
 and Bertel Thorvaldsen
Bertel Thorvaldsen

Bertel Thorvaldsen was a Denmark/Icelandic sculpture....
.

A group of three trees in the Calaveras Big Trees State Park
Calaveras Big Trees State Park

Calaveras Big Trees State Park, located 4 miles northeast of Arnold, California in the middle altitudes of the Sierra Nevada in Calaveras County, California, became a state park in 1931 to preserve the North Calaveras Grove of Giant Sequoias....
 are named "The Three Graces" after the Charites.

List of artwork with images resembling encircled graces
  • Anonymous
  • Ambrogio Lorenzetti
    Ambrogio Lorenzetti

    Ambrogio Lorenzetti was an Italy painter of the Sienese school. He was active between approximately from 1317 to 1348. His elder brother was the painter Pietro Lorenzetti....
     (1348-50) Allegory of Good Government
  • Anonymous
  • Cosimo Tura
    Cosimo Tura

    Cosimo Tura , also known as Il Cosm? or Cosm? Tura, was an Italy early-Renaissance painter and considered one of the founders of the School of Ferrara ....
     (1476-84) detail of Allegory of April
  • Sandro Botticelli
    Sandro Botticelli

    Alessandro di Mariano di Vanni Filipepi, better known as Sandro Botticelli or Il Botticello was an Italy Painting of the Florentine school during the Early Renaissance ....
     (1482); detail of Primavera;
  • Giulio di Antonio Bonasone
  • Germain Pilon
    Germain Pilon

    Germain Pilon was one of the most important sculpture of the French Renaissance. Trained by his father and Pierre Bontemps, Pilon was an expert with marble, bronze, wood and terra cotta; from about 1555 he was providing models for Parisian goldsmiths....
  • Antonio da Correggio
    Antonio da Correggio

    Antonio Allegri da Correggio was the foremost painter of the Parma school of the Italy Renaissance, who was responsible for some of the most vigorous and sensuous works of the 16th century....
     (1518);
  • Raphael Sanzio
  • Jacopo Pontormo (1535)
  • Hans Baldung Grien (1540)
  • Jacob Matham
    Jacob Matham

    Jacob Matham of Haarlem was a famous engraver and pen-technical drawing. He was the stepson and pupil of painter and draftsman Hendrik Goltzius, and brother-in-law to engraver Simon van Poelenburgh, having married his sister, Marijtgen....
  • Agostino Carracci
    Agostino Carracci

    Agostino Carracci was an Italy Painting and printmaker. He was the brother of the more famous Annibale Carracci and cousin of Lodovico Carracci....
     
  • Jacques Blanchard
    Jacques Blanchard

    Jacques Blanchard , also known as Jacques Blanchart, was a French baroque painter who was born in Paris. He was raised and taught by his uncle, the painter Nicolas Bollery ....
     (1631-33) Man surprising Sleeping Venus and Graces
  • Francesco Bartolozzi
    Francesco Bartolozzi

    Francesco Bartolozzi was an Italy engraver, whose most productive period was spent in London.He was born in Florence. He was originally destined to follow the profession of his father, a gold- and silver-smith, but he manifested so much skill and taste in designing that he was placed under the supervision of two Florentine artists, inc...
  • Peter Paul Rubens
    Peter Paul Rubens

    Peter Paul Rubens was a prolific seventeenth-century Flemish Baroque painter, and a proponent of an exuberant Baroque style that emphasized movement, color, and sensuality....
     
  • Paul Cézanne
    Paul Cézanne

    Paul C?zanne was a French artist and Post-Impressionist Painting whose work laid the foundations of the transition from the 19th century conception of artistic endeavour to a new and radically different world of art in the 20th century....
  • Antonio Canova
    Antonio Canova

    Antonio Canova was a Republic of Venice sculpture who became famous for his marble sculptures that delicately rendered nudity flesh. The epitome of the neoclassicism style, his work marked a return to Classicism refinement after the theatrical excesses of Baroque sculpture....
     (1799) The Three Graces
  • Ludwig Von Hofmann
  • Laura Knight
    Laura Knight

    Dame Laura Knight, Order of the British Empire was an England Impressionism painter. Famous for capturing the world of London's theatre district, ballet and the circus, she was a member of the Newlyn School of art and was the first woman artist to be made a Dame of the British Empire....
  • Joel-Peter Witkin
    Joel-Peter Witkin

    Joel-Peter Witkin is an American photographer who lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico.Witkin was born to a Jewish father and Roman Catholic mother....
  • Maurice Raphael Drouart
  • Arthur Frank Mathews
    Arthur Frank Mathews

    Arthur F. Mathews was an American Tonalist painter who was one of the founders of the American Arts and Crafts Movement. Trained as an architect and artist, he had a significant effect on the evolution of Californian art in the late 19th and early 20th centuries....
  • Jean Arp
    Jean Arp

    Jean Arp / Hans Arp was a German-French sculptor, painter, poet and abstract artist in other media such as torn and pasted paper.Arp was born in Strasbourg....
     (September 16, 1886 – June 7, 1966) The Three Graces (1961)
  • Kehinde Wiley
    Kehinde Wiley

    Kehinde Wiley is a New York based Painting who is known for his paintings of contemporary urban African American men in poses taken from the annals of art history....
     Three Graces
  • Jean-Baptiste van Loo
    Jean-Baptiste van Loo

    Jean-Baptiste van Loo was a France subject and portrait painter....
     (1684-1745) at the Château de Chenonceau
    Château de Chenonceau

    The Ch?teau de Chenonceau is a castle near the small village of Chenonceaux, in the Indre-et-Loire d?partement in France of the Loire Valley in France....


See also

  • Charisma
    Charisma

    The word charisma refers to a rare trait found in certain human personalities usually including extreme charm and a 'magnetic' quality of personality and/or appearance along with innate and powerfully sophisticated personal communicability and persuasiveness....
  • Charis
    Charis (name)

    Charis or Haris is derived from Greek language ????? meaning grace, kindness.Charis To say that grace is simply "a gift" is to fall woefully short of exhausting its meaning....
  • Aglaea
    Aglaea

    Aglaea or Agla?a is the name of five figures in Greek mythology....
  • Euphrosyne
    Euphrosyne (mythology)

    In Greek mythology, Euphrosyne was one of the Charites, known in English language also as the "Three Graces". Her best remembered representation in English is in John Milton poem of the active, joyful life, "L'Allegro"....
  • Thalia
    Thalia

    Thalia can refer to four distinct entities in Greek mythology, two of whom were daughters of Zeus, and a third of whom bore him sons. The name Thalia, or Thaleia is spelled T??e?a in Greek and derives from the same stem as ????e?? "to bloom"....
  • Three of Cups (Tarot)
    Three of Cups

    Three of Cups is the third Minor Arcana tarot card on the suit of Cups. In some decks the suit is named Chalices instead. This card is used in Tarot card games as well as in Tarot reading....
  • Grâces
    Grâces

    Gr?ces is a Communes of France in the C?tes-d'Armor Departments of France in Bretagne in northwestern France....