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  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensJ.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensL.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensK.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensH.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensG.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensF.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensE.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensD.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensC.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensB.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensA.jpg
  • Changing the Guard (often incorrectly referred to as the Changing of the Guard), refers to a formal ceremony in which sentries providing ceremonial guard duties at important institutions are relieved by a new batch of sentries. The ceremonies are often elaborate and precisely choreographed. In the state capital, Athens, members of the elite Evzones light infantry unit, provide a 24-hour honor guard, with an hourly guard change, at the Presidential Mansion and at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, off Syntagma Square at the foot of the Hellenic Parliament. The Changing the Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in particular has become a tourist attraction, with many people marvelling at the guards, who stand motionless for two 20-minute intervals, during their 1 hour shifts. Greek soldiers called "Evzons" or 'Tsoliades' in their traditional pleated skirt uniform and shoes with toes tipped by a red or black ball called a 'foonda' are who guard the tomb. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920changing the guard athensI.jpg
  • The Rt. Hon. Tony Blair MP, as Leader of the Opposition, stares in deep thought whilst on a train en-route to an evening Labour Party rally in Nottingham, 2 years before his victory in the 1997 General Election that eventually made him British Prime Minister. Blair is with an unknown Downing Street assistant and is has been reading the London Evening Standard newspaper in the First Class carriage at a time when fellow-passengers take little notice of the future controversial world statesman. Then, he could travel in relative obscurity, without large security details. Blair is wearing a blue shirt with a sober, patterned tie and his hair is still dark without the greyness that would appear rapidly when the pressures of office prematurely aged him. It is dark outside and we see no detail through the window of the vast Victorian mainline station outside.
    RB-0165.jpg
  • A makeshift warning sign made from plywood is roughly painted with letters declaring 'oil on beach.' It hangs on some silver railings on an unknown beach in England. The sand is strewn with sharp stones and litter and coloured (colored) a dirty brown stain high up on the shore line and more worrying, a little more distant, a father cuddles his baby child on a towel surrounded by possessions such as a cool box and the seaside toys of a happy family holiday (vacation). We look down on to this scene in disbelief that a parent lies down on such polluted terrain when health and safety considerations might have closed the entire esplanade.
    RB-0112.jpg
  • Graffiti wall art in Dalston, Hackney, London, United Kingdom. The picture is of a small gremlin or monster holding two spray paint cans.  The street art has been signed Unknown which is the artist’s tag name.
    13-London-Grafitti-6431_1.jpg
  • Fish in the gin clear water of the lakes in Plitvice National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080523_unknown_croatia_0033_1.jpg
  • Early morning mist over mountains in The Velebit National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080522_unknown_croatia_0023_1.jpg
  • Waterfalls in The famous Plitvice National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080524_unknown_croatia_0039_1.jpg
  • Zavratnica Bay north of Karlobag
    20080525_unknown_croatia_0044_1.jpg
  • Zavratnica Bay north of Karlobag, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080525_unknown_croatia_0043_1.jpg
  • Zavratnica Bay north of Karlobag, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080525_unknown_croatia_0042_1.jpg
  • Waterfalls in The famous Plitvice National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080523_unknown_croatia_0027_1.jpg
  • Waterfalls in The famous Plitvice National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080523_unknown_croatia_0028_1.jpg
  • River Gacka and fishing punt, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080523_unknown_croatia_0025_1.jpg
  • Waterfalls in The famous Plitvice National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080523_unknown_croatia_0026_1.jpg
  • A dramatic gorge on the River Zrmanja, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080521_unknown_croatia_0020_1.jpg
  • A dramatic gorge on the River Zrmanja, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080521_unknown_croatia_0021_1.jpg
  • A view from The Paklenica National Park at Starigrad
    20080521_unknown_croatia_0014_1.jpg
  • People walking along the front at Zadar to enjoy the sea breeze, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism
    20080520_unknown_croatia_0005_1.jpg
  • People walking along the front at Zadar to enjoy the sea breeze, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism
    20080520_unknown_croatia_0008_1.jpg
  • The Adriatic sea on a breezy day near Zadar. Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism
    20080520_unknown_croatia_0001_1.jpg
  • Donkey grazing on a hillside overlooking Obrovac, Croatia.
    20080520_unknown_croatia_0004_1.jpg
  • Waterfalls in The famous Plitvice National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080524_unknown_croatia_0040_1.jpg
  • Waterfalls in The famous Plitvice National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080523_unknown_croatia_0036_1.jpg
  • Asian tourists taking photographs in Plitvice National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080524_unknown_croatia_0037_1.jpg
  • The River Gacka a limestone stream with abundant aquatic life, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080523_unknown_croatia_0024_1.jpg
  • Hikers walking through a gorge in Paklenica National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080521_unknown_croatia_0016_1.jpg
  • A girl climbing a rock face in Paklenica National Park, Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080521_unknown_croatia_0015_1.jpg
  • A waterfall on The River Zrmanja one of several Limestone Rivers in Northern Croatia. Part of a story on Croatia's hidden landscape and undiscovered tourism.
    20080521_unknown_croatia_0012_1.jpg
  • Chats Palace, Homerton. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys08.jpg
  • Crowd listening to music in Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys02.jpg
  • Tankus the Henge playing in Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys01.jpg
  • Guarded by police officers is the address in Peckford Place, on the Angell estate in south London, identified as the location where - including another location(s) - three woman were held captive for a 30 year period by two others, said to be in bad conditions. A 30-year-old British woman, a 57-year-old Irish woman and a 69-year-old Malaysian woman are deeply traumatised and in the protection of the 'Freedom Charity' whom they first contacted about their enslavement. The couple accused of their captivity have been bailed.
    slavery_house26-24-11-2013_1.jpg
  • Guarded by police officers is the address in Peckford Place, on the Angell estate in south London, identified as the location where - including another location(s) - three woman were held captive for a 30 year period by two others, said to be in bad conditions. A 30-year-old British woman, a 57-year-old Irish woman and a 69-year-old Malaysian woman are deeply traumatised and in the protection of the 'Freedom Charity' whom they first contacted about their enslavement. The couple accused of their captivity have been bailed.
    slavery_house26-24-11-2013_1_1.jpg
  • A couple wearing Anonymous masks pose for their own selfie photo. Holding up a smartphone to take the picture, the person on the right touches the keypad to trigger the device. They both look young, possibly tourists but we don't see their faces or expressions as they stand on the south bank of the river Thames in central LOndon.
    anonymous_selfie02-03-02-2014.jpg
  • Guarded by police officers is the address in Peckford Place, on the Angell estate in south London, identified as the location where - including another location(s) - three woman were held captive for a 30 year period by two others, said to be in bad conditions. A 30-year-old British woman, a 57-year-old Irish woman and a 69-year-old Malaysian woman are deeply traumatised and in the protection of the 'Freedom Charity' whom they first contacted about their enslavement. The couple accused of their captivity have been bailed.
    slavery_house14-24-11-2013_1.jpg
  • Schloss (Castle) Vaduz perches high on the slopes above Vaduz, the capital of the tiny landlocked Principality of Liechtenstein. Prince Hans-Adam II is the current resident of the Schloss. The mountain peaks in the background have snow on their jagged edges but the castle itself is free of snow and rests on the slope on a cold but fresh day. Sunlight shines on the side of the old castle walls making this a fairy tale scene of another era of history. The Liechtenstein dynasty dates a royal lineage going back to 1140 under various lines of the Hapsburgs dynasty. Liechtenstein is bordered by the Alpine countries of Austria and Switzerland and is a winter sports resort, though best known as a tax haven, attracting companies worldwide to register their assets in secrecy.
    RB-0010.jpg
  • John Langhan, Ally Caplain and Dakota Jim in the churchyard of Stoke Newington Old Church. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys29.jpg
  • Mojo Hand on the lineup at Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys26.jpg
  • Mojo Hand playing at Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys23.jpg
  • Brooke Sharkey playing in St Pancras Old Church, Euston.  At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys11.jpg
  • Guarded by police officers is the address in Peckford Place, on the Angell estate in south London, identified as the location where - including another location(s) - three woman were held captive for a 30 year period by two others, said to be in bad conditions. A 30-year-old British woman, a 57-year-old Irish woman and a 69-year-old Malaysian woman are deeply traumatised and in the protection of the 'Freedom Charity' whom they first contacted about their enslavement. The couple accused of their captivity have been bailed.
    slavery_house20-24-11-2013_1.jpg
  • Guarded by police officers is the address in Peckford Place, on the Angell estate in south London, identified as the location where - including another location(s) - three woman were held captive for a 30 year period by two others, said to be in bad conditions. A 30-year-old British woman, a 57-year-old Irish woman and a 69-year-old Malaysian woman are deeply traumatised and in the protection of the 'Freedom Charity' whom they first contacted about their enslavement. The couple accused of their captivity have been bailed.
    slavery_house19-24-11-2013_1.jpg
  • Guarded by police officers is the address in Peckford Place, on the Angell estate in south London, identified as the location where - including another location(s) - three woman were held captive for a 30 year period by two others, said to be in bad conditions. A 30-year-old British woman, a 57-year-old Irish woman and a 69-year-old Malaysian woman are deeply traumatised and in the protection of the 'Freedom Charity' whom they first contacted about their enslavement. The couple accused of their captivity have been bailed.
    slavery_house16-24-11-2013_1.jpg
  • Guarded by police officers is the address in Peckford Place, on the Angell estate in south London, identified as the location where - including another location(s) - three woman were held captive for a 30 year period by two others, said to be in bad conditions. A 30-year-old British woman, a 57-year-old Irish woman and a 69-year-old Malaysian woman are deeply traumatised and in the protection of the 'Freedom Charity' whom they first contacted about their enslavement. The couple accused of their captivity have been bailed.
    slavery_house11-24-11-2013_1.jpg
  • Guarded by police officers is the address in Peckford Place, on the Angell estate in south London, identified as the location where - including another location(s) - three woman were held captive for a 30 year period by two others, said to be in bad conditions. A 30-year-old British woman, a 57-year-old Irish woman and a 69-year-old Malaysian woman are deeply traumatised and in the protection of the 'Freedom Charity' whom they first contacted about their enslavement. The couple accused of their captivity have been bailed.
    slavery_house12-24-11-2013_1.jpg
  • After heavy rain and the subsequent flooding, two lone canoeists paddle down the centre of the A27 near Chichester, West Sussex. The Dual carriageway has been completely submerged to approximately 1.5 metres and only the road sign with its directional arrow is visible above the surface which is rippling in a faint breeze. The men in red and yellow kayaks look inexperienced in boating activities and their clothing is not suitable for water sports. Even so, they are speeding down the highway that is otherwise empty of all other vehicles and they have the water and space to themselves without the fear of collision.
    RB-0147.jpg
  • Looking downwards from a high vantage point on a hillside, we see one mountain-biker leading a second cyclist as they traverse across a sunlit mountainside near the hamlet of Masecha in the parish of Triesenberg, Liechtenstein. The late afternoon sun is low across the valley and there is a haze that partly obscures and refracts light over the distant landscape. There is snow on the distant mountain peaks but the countryside has the brown look of a snowless winter. Far off villages and hamlets hug the hillsides and golden light floods the scene. The tiny landlocked Principality of Liechtenstein is bordered by the Alpine countries of Austria and Switzerland and is a winter sports resort, though best known as a tax haven, attracting companies worldwide to register their assets in secrecy.
    RB-0017.jpg
  • Prague citizens peer through peep holes without realising that behind the hoarding is merely a construction site, on 18th March, 2018, in Prague, the Czech Republic.
    prague-111-18-03-2018.jpg
  • Prague citizens peer through peep holes without realising that behind the hoarding is merely a construction site, on 18th March, 2018, in Prague, the Czech Republic.
    prague-109-18-03-2018.jpg
  • A schoolboy of Afro-Caribbean descent stands looking confused on a platform at Victoria mainline station in central London. The young lad looks smart in a new school uniform of cap, blazer, long trousers and polished black shoes. We might guess that it is the start of a new academic year and that he is about to attend a new school for which he needs to take a train on his own. His mother and younger and older sister are also to the far right of the picture so he may go with his elder sibling carrying a multi-coloured umbrella and a bright blue briefcase containing his lunch and a few items needed for lessons. Surrounded by adult commuters, some of who look on with mild amusement, also make await their train from the city out of town. Mostly, people mind their own business and what is a special day for the boy will become a much-travelled route.
    platform_schoolboy09-23-1994.jpg
  • Three days after the terrorist attack in which 7 people died and many others suffered life-changing injuries on London Bridge and Borough Market, the face on a still-missing French citizen Sebastien Belanger appears on a poster at the bus stop near a flower shrine, on 6th June 2017, on London Bridge, in the south London borough of Southwark, England. City commuters now back at work walk respectfully and quietly past the floral memorial at the plinth marking the southern boundary of the City of London, the capitals financial district.
    london_bridge_terrorism-16-06-06-201...jpg
  • Three days after the terrorist attack in which 7 people died and many others suffered life-changing injuries on London Bridge and Borough Market, the face on a still-missing French citizen Sebastien Belanger appears on a poster at the bus stop near a flower shrine, on 6th June 2017, on London Bridge, in the south London borough of Southwark, England. City commuters now back at work walk respectfully and quietly past the floral memorial at the plinth marking the southern boundary of the City of London, the capitals financial district.
    london_bridge_terrorism-16-06-06-201...jpg
  • A female security officer has spotted an abandoned bag with the words 'Giraffe To Go' on the side, inside a lift of Heathrow airport's Terminal 5. The woman talks urgently but calmly using her walkie-talkie. She needs to report it to her controllers as a suspicious package but may turn out to be an innocent lunch bag left by a hurrying and absent-minded passenger, realising their flight is about to close, instead of a bomb left by a malicious terrorist. The lady bends down to give as accurate description as she can before airport police arrive to determine how serious the treat is and possibly order a costly evacuation. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport505-14-07-2009_1.jpg
  • A female security officer has spotted an abandoned bag with the words 'Giraffe To Go' on the side, inside a lift of Heathrow airport's Terminal 5. The woman talks urgently but calmly using her walkie-talkie. She needs to report it to her controllers as a suspicious package but may turn out to be an innocent lunch bag left by a hurrying and absent-minded passenger, realising their flight is about to close, instead of a bomb left by a malicious terrorist. The lady bends down to give as accurate description as she can before airport police arrive to determine how serious the treat is and possibly order a costly evacuation. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport505-14-07-2009_1 1.jpg
  • Twelve days after the devastating fire that killed an unspecified number of people is the torn poster of a 12 year-old girl called Jessica Urbano, missing from Grenfell tower block which remains a crime scene, on 26th June 2017, in the London borough of Kensington & Chelsea, England.
    grenfell_tower-10-26-06-2017.jpg
  • The silhouette of a figure walking through a park, with a foggy residential street in the background. The menacing figure looks ghostly, a menacing and eerie scene that seems to threaten the safety of approaching others. Freezing fog lies in the street in this south London suburb in the depths of mid-winter. We can't see his face or features and his ominous and sinister shape guarantees his anonymity.
    foggy_dusk03-11-12-2013_1.jpg
  • An elderly gentleman looks out from his urban cottage opposite the new Millennium Dome, soon to force him from home. 76 year-old Ronald White stands in the doorway of his home in the short row of Georgian cottages called Ceylon Place that he has lived in for many years. But the construction of the nearby Millennium Dome means that Ronald will have to leave his house and be displaced for the sake of this highly controversial building project, in time for its opening on Millennium night 1999. He looks worried and anxious about his impending move though it is not known if he was ever allowed to move back.
    elderly_resident01-25-03-1998_1.jpg
  • Brooke Sharkey tuning up in the Old Boys Club, Dalston. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys38.jpg
  • Brooke Sharkey and band. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys32.jpg
  • Rob Rider Hill, Graham Farnworth and friends playing in the Vintage Emporium / 14 Bacon St, Brick Lane. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys31.jpg
  • Boxcar Joe Strouser playing harmonica in the Vintage Emporium / 14 Bacon St, Brick Lane. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys30.jpg
  • Garance LouLou playing in Stoke Newington Old Church. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys28.jpg
  • Ewan crowdsurfing in his pants, Stoke Newington Old Church. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys27.jpg
  • Theo Bard, Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys25.jpg
  • Mojo Hand playing at Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys24.jpg
  • Crowd shot, Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys22.jpg
  • The Turbans, Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys21.jpg
  • The Turbans, Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys20.jpg
  • Crowd shot, Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys19.jpg
  • Rebekha Bouche and Mojo Hand playing in Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys18.jpg
  • Rob Rider Hill and Mojo Hand playing in Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys16.jpg
  • Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys17.jpg
  • Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys15.jpg
  • Fred Stitz of Ravorlight playing in Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys14.jpg
  • Ewan and friend, Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys12.jpg
  • Brooke Sharkey playing in St Pancras Old Church, Euston.  At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys10.jpg
  • An elderly gentlemen member of an unknown rowing and sculling club looks at activity at the annual Henley-on-Thames boating festival. The elderly man stands slightly stooped wearing an exclusive blazer with his unknown club’s badge on the breast pocket. He looks the quintessential Englishman, an aristocrat from a well-bred family whose heritage may well be from the highest of English society. This annual festival allows the high-society to watch serious rowing and general clowning around on the rural Thames. In 1829 a boat race challenge was held between teams representing the universities of Oxford and Cambridge. Now held July it is one of the main dates on the sporting calendar and social season for the hoi polloi.
    henley_member01-03-07-1993_1.jpg
  • A father and his daughter watch two Greek soldiers perform the Changing of the Guard in front of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. The marble relief in the background is a copy of an ancient warrior grave stele, depicting a hoplite lying dead on a small slab.
    SFE_120226_016_1.jpg
  • Maen Llia, an ancient standing stone in the Llia valley, Brecon Beacons, Powys, South Wales. The stone is a massive sandstone block which stands 3.7m high. It is roughly diamond-shaped and is partly moss-covered. Its age and original purpose are unknown though it is thought to date from the Bronze Age. It is a popular tourist attraction run by Brecon Beacons National Park.
    Wales-Maen-Llia-Standing-Stone-6200.jpg
  • Maen Llia, an ancient standing stone in the Llia valley, Brecon Beacons, Powys, South Wales. The stone is a massive sandstone block which stands 3.7m high. It is roughly diamond-shaped and is partly moss-covered. Its age and original purpose are unknown though it is thought to date from the Bronze Age. It is a popular tourist attraction run by Brecon Beacons National Park.
    Wales-Maen-Llia-Standing-Stone-6179.jpg
  • Maen Llia, an ancient standing stone in the Llia valley, Brecon Beacons, Powys, South Wales. The stone is a massive sandstone block which stands 3.7m high. It is roughly diamond-shaped and is partly moss-covered. Its age and original purpose are unknown though it is thought to date from the Bronze Age. It is a popular tourist attraction run by Brecon Beacons National Park.
    Wales-Maen-Llia-Standing-Stone-5287.jpg
  • Maen Llia, an ancient standing stone in the Llia valley, Brecon Beacons, Powys, South Wales. The stone is a massive sandstone block which stands 3.7m high. It is roughly diamond-shaped and is partly moss-covered. Its age and original purpose are unknown though it is thought to date from the Bronze Age. It is a popular tourist attraction run by Brecon Beacons National Park.
    Wales-Maen-Llia-Standing-Stone-5269.jpg
  • Maen Llia, an ancient standing stone in the Llia valley, Brecon Beacons, Powys, South Wales. The stone is a massive sandstone block which stands 3.7m high. It is roughly diamond-shaped and is partly moss-covered. Its age and original purpose are unknown though it is thought to date from the Bronze Age. It is a popular tourist attraction run by Brecon Beacons National Park.
    Wales-Maen-Llia-Standing-Stone-5208.jpg
  • Maen Llia, an ancient standing stone in the Llia valley, Brecon Beacons, Powys, South Wales. The stone is a massive sandstone block which stands 3.7m high. It is roughly diamond-shaped and is partly moss-covered. Its age and original purpose are unknown though it is thought to date from the Bronze Age. It is a popular tourist attraction run by Brecon Beacons National Park.
    Wales-Maen-Llia-Standing-Stone-5201.jpg
  • Maen Llia, an ancient standing stone in the Llia valley, Brecon Beacons, Powys, South Wales. The stone is a massive sandstone block which stands 3.7m high. It is roughly diamond-shaped and is partly moss-covered. Its age and original purpose are unknown though it is thought to date from the Bronze Age. It is a popular tourist attraction run by Brecon Beacons National Park.
    Wales-Maen-Llia-Standing-Stone-5198.jpg
  • An elderly gent confined to a wheelchair plays melodies in his violin outside the National Portrait Gallery, near music poster. Sitting in his vehicle with its breaks set on, the man sits playing the sweet melodies that any passer-by chooses in return for a few coins. On the posters attached to the gallery railings are the faces of inventor Sir James Dyson, the singer George Michael and an unknown fellow violinist.
    violin_busker1-03-September-2011_1_1.jpg
  • Shadows of branches from urban tree landscape in central London. In an urban landscape in the capital we see the trunk of the tree of an unknown species, whose branches throw shadows on to the ground and the walls of the National (Art) Gallery in a rear street corner behind Trafalgar Square. Also on the wall is a CCTV camera that is angled downwards to a rear gallery exit.
    urban_tree04-09-04-2015_1.jpg
  • Piles of rubbish bags awaiting collection by council refuse collectors in central London. As a mimic to the retail design in the background, we see the bags as a pile of contained shapes in Long Acre in London's Covent Garden. The refuse of emptied local litter bins by street sweepers, they are destined for recycling or landfill - the waste of modern city and developed western society, happy to offload its waste to unknown places.
    rubbish_bags02-10-12-2014_1.jpg
  • Airline travel poster ad with London Monument landmark background. The famous tower that serves as a memorial to the Great Fire of London in 1666, which is estimated to have destroyed the homes of 70,000 of the City's 80,000 inhabitants. The death toll is unknown but traditionally thought to have been small, as only six verified deaths were recorded. In the foreground is a poster seen through the office's window, showing a woman traveller curled up in a first class airline cabin.
    monument_reflection01-02-01-2015_1.jpg
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