Émile Reutlinger
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Émile Reutlinger
Émile Reutlinger (born Emil August Reutlinger, August 27, 1825 – August 9, 1907) was a German-born French photographer. He was the younger brother of and the father of Léopold-Émile Reutlinger. Biography Emil August Reutlinger was born on August 27, 1825, in Karlsruhe, then a part of the Grand Duchy of Baden in the German Confederation. He was born into a family of German Jews. In 1848, he emigrated to the United States, possibly residing in Memphis, Tennessee. By 1860, he was in Peru, where in Lima, he married Amelia Ellen Horn, a German Protestant, four months following the birth of their first son, Leopold. Emil would father three other children, of which, two died during infancy. During his time in Peru, he owned a number of properties in Callao, however, they were destroyed in a severe earthquake that likely occurred in 1868. What exactly he did for a living there is mysterious: contemporary records describe him as an "artist." In 1870, Émile and his family ...
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Karlsruhe
Karlsruhe ( , , ; South Franconian: ''Kallsruh'') is the third-largest city of the German state (''Land'') of Baden-Württemberg after its capital of Stuttgart and Mannheim, and the 22nd-largest city in the nation, with 308,436 inhabitants. It is also a former capital of Baden, a historic region named after Hohenbaden Castle in the city of Baden-Baden. Located on the right bank of the Rhine near the French border, between the Mannheim/ Ludwigshafen conurbation to the north and Strasbourg/Kehl to the south, Karlsruhe is Germany's legal center, being home to the Federal Constitutional Court (''Bundesverfassungsgericht''), the Federal Court of Justice (''Bundesgerichtshof'') and the Public Prosecutor General of the Federal Court of Justice (''Generalbundesanwalt beim Bundesgerichtshof''). Karlsruhe was the capital of the Margraviate of Baden-Durlach (Durlach: 1565–1718; Karlsruhe: 1718–1771), the Margraviate of Baden (1771–1803), the Electorate of Baden (1803–1806), th ...
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Topless Dancers
Toplessness refers to the state in which a woman's breasts, including her areolas and nipples, are exposed, especially in a public place or in a visual medium. The male equivalent is barechestedness, also commonly called shirtlessness. Exposed breasts were and are normal in many indigenous societies. However, western countries have social norms around female modesty, often enforced by legal statutes, that require women to cover their breasts in public. In many jurisdictions, women who expose their breasts can be prosecuted for indecent exposure, although public breastfeeding is often exempted from public indecency laws. Social norms around toplessness vary by context and location. Throughout history, women's breasts have been featured in art and visual media, from painting and sculpture to film and photography, and such representations are generally defended on the grounds of artistic merit. Toplessness may also be deemed acceptable on educational, medical, or polit ...
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