Robot | Path | Permission |
GoogleBot | / | ✔ |
BingBot | / | ✔ |
BaiduSpider | / | ✔ |
YandexBot | / | ✔ |
Title | SATAN in the |
Description | un travail de SATAN IN THE GROIN exhibitionist figures on medival churches TEXT BY ANTHONY WEIR bndictin female exhibitionists male exhibitionists luxury |
Keywords | sheela-na-gig. shela-na-gig, sheilanagig, exhibitionist, sculpture, church sculpture, corbel carvings, obscenae |
WebSite | beyond-the-pale.org.uk |
Host IP | 138.201.67.254 |
Location | Germany |
Site | Rank |
US$1,180,968
Last updated: 2023-05-14 14:44:30
beyond-the-pale.org.uk has Semrush global rank of 8,962,397. beyond-the-pale.org.uk has an estimated worth of US$ 1,180,968, based on its estimated Ads revenue. beyond-the-pale.org.uk receives approximately 136,266 unique visitors each day. Its web server is located in Germany, with IP address 138.201.67.254. According to SiteAdvisor, beyond-the-pale.org.uk is safe to visit. |
Purchase/Sale Value | US$1,180,968 |
Daily Ads Revenue | US$1,091 |
Monthly Ads Revenue | US$32,704 |
Yearly Ads Revenue | US$392,445 |
Daily Unique Visitors | 9,085 |
Note: All traffic and earnings values are estimates. |
Host | Type | TTL | Data |
beyond-the-pale.org.uk. | A | 3600 | IP: 138.201.67.254 |
beyond-the-pale.org.uk. | NS | 14400 | NS Record: ns3.lifetimehost.com. |
beyond-the-pale.org.uk. | NS | 14400 | NS Record: ns2.lifetimehost.com. |
beyond-the-pale.org.uk. | NS | 14400 | NS Record: ns1.lifetimehost.com. |
beyond-the-pale.org.uk. | MX | 3600 | MX Record: 0 beyond-the-pale.org.uk. |
beyond-the-pale.org.uk. | TXT | 14400 | TXT Record: v=spf1 a mx -all |
un travail de SATAN IN THE GROIN exhibitionist figures on medival churches TEXT BY ANTHONY WEIR bndictin female exhibitionists male exhibitionists luxury & lust list of exhibitionists outside ireland list of irish sheela-na-gigs irish phallic pillars site web franais (1) site web franais (2) sommaire en langue franaise THIS SITE HAS NOT BEEN DESIGNED FOR SMARTPHONES and emits no cookies. introduction to the iconographic world of Romanesque sculpture slideshow > I first came across these strange and often crude figures in 1973, while following E.E. Evans’ pioneering Prehistoric and Early Christian Ireland - A Guide (1966). For forty years I researched them in the field, in the bowels of the National Museum of Ireland (where they were hidden out of Christian sight) in museums at Drogheda and Athlone, in storehouses in Cardiff and Limerick, on Irish castles and, most importantly, on churches in England, France, Spain, Italy and Portugal. I am grateful to Julianna Lees ( |
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2021 14:18:40 GMT Server: Apache Last-Modified: Sun, 29 Aug 2021 12:20:10 GMT Accept-Ranges: bytes Content-Length: 10031 Content-Type: text/html |