In elephant-crazy Kerala, caparisoned jumbos are an essential part of the processions that accompany every celebration. |
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Again there are at least 15 pictures of caparisoned elephants, horses, infantry and jemadars and the royal couple in action. |
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A band blows solemn notes as two riders on magnificently caparisoned horses trot to the president's box, salute, and trot back to raucous cheers. |
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There is something both innocent and daring about Simone Martini's richly caparisoned horseman in the Palazzo Pubblico. |
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The eye lingers on the fine features of a musician, or the graceful limbs of a dancing girl or the noble prancing of a caparisoned steed. |
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The presiding deity is taken out on a caparisoned elephant accompanied by other pachyderms in full paraphernalia. |
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The visitors will be accorded a traditional welcome, complete with three caparisoned elephants and a panchavadyam performance. |
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Zari parasols, richly caparisoned elephants, glittering gold-embossed palanquins and symbols like Mount Meru and the mighty Garuda became royal symbols of Indonesia. |
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In the dead of night, the caparisoned elephants illuminated by the dancing flames of torches and surrounded by the aroma of burning oil assume an almost ethereal look. |
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On the 10th day, the ruler, in silk and priceless gems, wended his way in procession through the crowded streets on the gorgeously caparisoned elephant. |
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There were gaily caparisoned horses, soldiers on horseback, their armor glinting in the sun, and men with longbows. |
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The houses are as handsomely caparisoned as knights dressed for a tournament. |
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Camels used for war have a 12 movement-point allowance, similar to a caparisoned horse carrying heavily armored characters but inferior to the 15 MP allowance of light cavalry. |
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It needn't be caparisoned with foam or gold leaf, nor lauded by Michelin. |
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This is a typical example of an equestrian seal depicting a mounted horseman in full harness galloping on a caparisoned horse while holding his sword high and carrying a triangular shaped shield charged with a cross. |
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Artists in Peru and Bolivia invented a whole new choir of harquebusier or military angels, gloriously caparisoned and seemingly hunting for sport. |
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First of the host A youthful chieftain, clad in pelt of pard, Whose mounture is a striped horse of the wilds Caparisoned in gold, rides nobly forth. |
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