When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: cults 3d printed necklace bust images of female women with beads

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cults (3D printing marketplace) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cults_(3D_printing...

    Cults was founded in 2014 and is the first fully independent 3D printing marketplace. [1]In 2015, La Poste established a partnership with Cults and 3D Slash to develop impression3d.laposte.fr, a digital manufacturing service, allowing users to have objects printed and shipped to them on demand.

  3. Amy Carlson (religious leader) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amy_Carlson_(religious_leader)

    Amy Carlson (November 30, 1975 – c. April 16, 2021), also known by her followers as Mother God, was an American cult leader and the co-founder of the new religious movement Love Has Won. [1] Carlson and her followers believed that she was God, a 19-billion-year-old being, and a reincarnation of Jesus Christ , and that she could heal people of ...

  4. Toplessness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toplessness

    Two Tahitian Women (1899) by Paul Gauguin. The word "topless" usually refers to a woman whose breasts, including her areolas and nipples, are exposed to public view. It can describe a woman who appears, poses, or performs with her breasts exposed, such as a "topless model" or "topless dancer", or to an activity undertaken while not wearing a top, such as "topless sunbathing".

  5. Category:Cult images - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Cult_images

    Articles relating to cult images, human-made objects that are venerated or worshipped for the deities, persons, spirits or daemons which they embody or represent. Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.

  6. Governmental lists of cults and sects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Governmental_lists_of...

    Furthermore, on 27 May 2005, the 1995 list of cults of the French report was officially cancelled and invalidated by Jean-Pierre Raffarin's circulaire. [20] [21] In France, Antoinism was classified as a cult in the 1995 parliamentary reports which considered it one of the oldest healer groups. [22]

  7. Cult image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cult_image

    Some cult images were easy to see, and were major tourist attractions. The image normally took the form of a statue of the deity, typically roughly life-size, but in some cases many times life-size, in marble or bronze, or in the specially prestigious form of a Chryselephantine statue using ivory plaques for the visible parts of the body and ...

  8. Skoptsy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skoptsy

    The Skoptsy [1] (Russian: скопцы, IPA: [skɐpˈtsɨ]; sg. скопец "eunuch") were a cult [2] within the larger Spiritual Christianity movement in the Russian Empire. They were best known for practising emasculation of men, the mastectomy and female genital mutilation of women in accordance with their teachings against sexual lust . [ 3 ]

  9. Torc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torc

    It is thought by some authors that the torc was mostly an ornament for women until the late 3rd century BC, when it became an attribute of warriors. [14] However, there is evidence for male wear in the early period; in a rich double burial of the Hallstatt period at Hochmichele, the man wears an iron torc and the female a necklace with beads. [15]