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  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Lotus Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, New South Wales, Australia ..Asia, from Iran to Japan, and south to northeren Australia. Long grown for culinary use as the leaf stalks, rootstock and seeds are edible, the dried sead heads are also used in floral art. ..The Lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, is one of the most beautiful flowers in the world and is revered in the East where it is a symbol of (among other things)  fertility, nobility, holiness and purity. Due to its display of all stages of growth simultaneously: bud, flower and seedpod - the lotus is also a symbol of the past, present and future or the individuals progress from the lowest to the highest state of consciousness. Lotus flowers are an oddity in the plant world as they can generate their own heat. they are able to maintain a temperature of 30°C though the surrounding temperature may be much lower.
    Lotus-Pond-Flower-Botanical-Gardens-...jpg
  • The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle..The Circus, was designed by the architect John Wood the Elder, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design...Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. The circus consists of 3 storey townhouses and mansard. 3 or 4 windows. Divided into 3 blocks, all of the same size but each with a different number of houses. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The masonry between columns is not curved but this is not apparent.  The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 unique pictorial emblems in the metopes, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials...The Circus is constructed from Bath Stone is a Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate its warm, honey colouring gives the  circus and much of Bath its distinctive appearance.
    The_Circus_Bath_England-06.jpg
  • The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle..The Circus, was designed by the architect John Wood the Elder, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design...Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. The circus consists of 3 storey townhouses and mansard. 3 or 4 windows. Divided into 3 blocks, all of the same size but each with a different number of houses. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The masonry between columns is not curved but this is not apparent.  The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 unique pictorial emblems in the metopes, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials...The Circus is constructed from Bath Stone is a Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate its warm, honey colouring gives the  circus and much of Bath its distinctive appearance.
    The_Circus_Bath_England-10.jpg
  • The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle..The Circus, was designed by the architect John Wood the Elder, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design...Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. The circus consists of 3 storey townhouses and mansard. 3 or 4 windows. Divided into 3 blocks, all of the same size but each with a different number of houses. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The masonry between columns is not curved but this is not apparent.  The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 unique pictorial emblems in the metopes, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials...The Circus is constructed from Bath Stone is a Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate its warm, honey colouring gives the  circus and much of Bath its distinctive appearance.
    The_Circus_Bath_England-09.jpg
  • The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle..The Circus, was designed by the architect John Wood the Elder, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design...Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. The circus consists of 3 storey townhouses and mansard. 3 or 4 windows. Divided into 3 blocks, all of the same size but each with a different number of houses. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The masonry between columns is not curved but this is not apparent.  The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 unique pictorial emblems in the metopes, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials...The Circus is constructed from Bath Stone is a Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate its warm, honey colouring gives the  circus and much of Bath its distinctive appearance.
    The_Circus_Bath_England-08.jpg
  • The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle..The Circus, was designed by the architect John Wood the Elder, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design...Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. The circus consists of 3 storey townhouses and mansard. 3 or 4 windows. Divided into 3 blocks, all of the same size but each with a different number of houses. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The masonry between columns is not curved but this is not apparent.  The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 unique pictorial emblems in the metopes, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials...The Circus is constructed from Bath Stone is a Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate its warm, honey colouring gives the  circus and much of Bath its distinctive appearance.
    The_Circus_Bath_England-07.jpg
  • The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle..The Circus, was designed by the architect John Wood the Elder, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design...Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. The circus consists of 3 storey townhouses and mansard. 3 or 4 windows. Divided into 3 blocks, all of the same size but each with a different number of houses. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The masonry between columns is not curved but this is not apparent.  The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 unique pictorial emblems in the metopes, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials...The Circus is constructed from Bath Stone is a Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate its warm, honey colouring gives the  circus and much of Bath its distinctive appearance.
    The_Circus_Bath_England-05.jpg
  • The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle..The Circus, was designed by the architect John Wood the Elder, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design...Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. The circus consists of 3 storey townhouses and mansard. 3 or 4 windows. Divided into 3 blocks, all of the same size but each with a different number of houses. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The masonry between columns is not curved but this is not apparent.  The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 unique pictorial emblems in the metopes, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials...The Circus is constructed from Bath Stone is a Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate its warm, honey colouring gives the  circus and much of Bath its distinctive appearance.
    The_Circus_Bath_England-04.jpg
  • The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle..The Circus, was designed by the architect John Wood the Elder, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design...Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. The circus consists of 3 storey townhouses and mansard. 3 or 4 windows. Divided into 3 blocks, all of the same size but each with a different number of houses. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The masonry between columns is not curved but this is not apparent.  The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 unique pictorial emblems in the metopes, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials...The Circus is constructed from Bath Stone is a Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate its warm, honey colouring gives the  circus and much of Bath its distinctive appearance.
    The_Circus_Bath_England-01.jpg
  • The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle..The Circus, was designed by the architect John Wood the Elder, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design...Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. The circus consists of 3 storey townhouses and mansard. 3 or 4 windows. Divided into 3 blocks, all of the same size but each with a different number of houses. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The masonry between columns is not curved but this is not apparent.  The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 unique pictorial emblems in the metopes, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials...The Circus is constructed from Bath Stone is a Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate its warm, honey colouring gives the  circus and much of Bath its distinctive appearance.
    The_Circus_Bath_England-03.jpg
  • The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle..The Circus, was designed by the architect John Wood the Elder, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design...Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. The circus consists of 3 storey townhouses and mansard. 3 or 4 windows. Divided into 3 blocks, all of the same size but each with a different number of houses. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The masonry between columns is not curved but this is not apparent.  The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 unique pictorial emblems in the metopes, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials...The Circus is constructed from Bath Stone is a Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate its warm, honey colouring gives the  circus and much of Bath its distinctive appearance.
    The_Circus_Bath_England-02.jpg
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