“Midsummer”的版本间的差异

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The celebration is primarily the Celtic fire festival, midsummer ([http://summerr.co.uk summerr.co.uk]) representing the centre of summer, and also the shortening of the days on his or her gradual march to wintertime. Midsummer is usually celebrated in either the actual 23rd or perhaps 24th involving June, even though longest evening actually drops on the Twenty first of June. The importance of the morning to our forefathers can be monitored back many thousands of decades, and many natural stone circles as well as other ancient monuments are usually aligned on the sunrise in Midsummer's Day. By far the most famous alignment is that from Stonehenge, where the sunshine rises over the heel gemstone, framed with the giant trilithons on Midsummer morning.
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The festival is primarily the Celtic fire festivity, Midsummer ([http://summerr.co.uk summerr.co.uk]) representing the center of summer, and the shortening with the days on their own gradual march to winter months. Midsummer is traditionally celebrated on either the actual 23rd or 24th regarding June, although the longest morning actually falls on the Twenty first of July. The importance of the afternoon to our forefathers can be traced back plenty of years, and many rock circles as well as other ancient monuments are generally aligned to the sunrise about Midsummer's Day. By far the most famous position is that from Stonehenge, where the sunlight rises in the heel stone, framed from the giant trilithons on Midsummer morning.

2013年7月26日 (五) 01:38的版本

The festival is primarily the Celtic fire festivity, Midsummer (summerr.co.uk) representing the center of summer, and the shortening with the days on their own gradual march to winter months. Midsummer is traditionally celebrated on either the actual 23rd or 24th regarding June, although the longest morning actually falls on the Twenty first of July. The importance of the afternoon to our forefathers can be traced back plenty of years, and many rock circles as well as other ancient monuments are generally aligned to the sunrise about Midsummer's Day. By far the most famous position is that from Stonehenge, where the sunlight rises in the heel stone, framed from the giant trilithons on Midsummer morning.