• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

New Imperial Tao Taiwan President “Grandfather Time” Mars Chao AKA Mars Zhào Zhēng Píng AKA 趙正平 (David Chao, 1968年6月28日—) Temple Of “Grandfather Time”

destroyer

Alfrescian
Loyal
:FU:
New Imperial Tao Taiwan President “Grandfather Time” Mars Chao AKA Mars Zhào Zhēng Píng AKA 趙正平 (David Chao, 1968年6月28日—) Temple Of “Grandfather Time”

Father Time​

This article is about the personification of time. For the weathervane at Lord's Cricket Ground, see Father Time (Lord's). For other uses, see Father Time (disambiguation).
Father Time is a personification of time. In recent centuries he is usually depicted as an elderly bearded man, sometimes with wings, dressed in a robe and carrying a scythe and an hourglass or other timekeeping device.

A 19th-century Father Time with Baby New Year

Detail of Father Time in the Rotunda Clock (1896)

Father Time in Fountain of Time
As an image, "Father Time's origins are curious."[1] The ancient Greeks themselves began to associate chronos, their word for time, with the god Chronos, who had the attribute of a harvester's sickle. The Romans equated Cronos with Saturn, who also had a sickle, and was treated as an old man, often with a crutch. The wings and hourglass were early Renaissance additions and he eventually became a companion of the Grim Reaper, personification of Death, often taking his scythe. He may have as an attribute a snake with its tail in its mouth, an ancient Egyptian symbol of eternity.[2]
Father Time on an Irish memorial stone, displaying an empty hourglass to a mourning widow

New Yearedit

Around New Year's Eve, the media (in particular editorial cartoons) use the convenient trope[3] of Father Time as the personification of the previous year (or "the Old Year") who typically "hands over" the duties of time to the equally allegorical Baby New Year (or "the New Year") or who otherwise characterizes the preceding year.[4][5] In these depictions, Father Time is usually depicted wearing a sash with the old year's date on it.
Time (in his allegorical form) is often depicted revealing or unveiling the allegorical Truth, sometimes at the expense of a personification of Falsehood, Fraud, or Envy. This theme is related to the idea of veritas filia temporis (Time is the father of Truth).

In the artsedit

Learn more

This section may contain excessive or irrelevant examples. (March 2021)
Father Time is an established symbol in numerous cultures and appears in a variety of art and media. In some cases, they appear specifically as Father Time while in other cases they may have another name (such as Saturn), but the characters demonstrate the attributes which Father Time has acquired over the centuries.

Artedit

Paintings Chronos and his child by Giovanni Francesco Romanelli, National Museum in Warsaw, is a 17th-century depiction of Titan Cronusas "Father Time" wielding the harvesting scythe Father Time statue atop a grave at Mount Moriah Cemetery
Sculpture

Booksedit

  • Old Father Time appears in the fantasy novel series Nightside by Simon R. Green, as an elderly character tending to peoples' needs for time travel—and in some cases—guidance.
  • Father Time appears in the fairy tale themed short story, written by L. Frank Baum. Entitled "The Capture of Father Time". That Father Time was captured by the son of an Arizonian cowboy named Jim because of his foolishness.
  • Time is one of the Incarnations of Immortality in Piers Anthony's series of the same name. Time (also referred to as "Chronos") appears in several of the books and is the main character of Bearing an Hourglass. For most of the series he appears as a middle-aged man in a blue robe (which has the power to age to oblivion anything which attacks him) and bearing an hourglass which he can use to control the flow of time and move through both time and space.
  • Father Time is painted in the ceiling of the dungeon, in the Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Pit and the Pendulum".
  • In Mitch Albom's book The Time Keeper, Dor, the central character, is Father Time. He is freed from exile and sent to Earth on the condition that he teaches two people on Earth the true importance of time, a teenage girl who does not wish to live anymore, and a dying old billionaire who wishes to live forever.
  • Father Time is a character in Jude the Obscure, a novel by Thomas Hardy. Father Time is the name given to Jude Fawley's son, who is dreadfully melancholy and commits suicide at a young age.
  • Father Time also appeared in C. S. Lewis' novels The Silver Chair and The Last Battlewhich are the final two novels (chronologically) in the series The Chronicles of Narnia.
  • In Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, he is referred to as Time and is responsible for making the Hatter and his friends to have an endless tea party as punishment.

Business and industryedit

  • Father Time was the logo for the Elgin Watch Company. Notable in the logo was that Father Time had switched out his traditional hourglass for a watch.

Comics, magazines and periodicalsedit

  • Father Time made numerous appearances in the classic comic Little Nemo in Slumberland, both as a general representation of time and as a symbol of the new year.[21][22]
  • A Norman Rockwell painting of Father Time appeared on 31 December 1910 cover of The Saturday Evening Post.
  • Father Time is a recurring character in Tatsuya Ishida's webcomic Sinfest, often appearing as an infant immediately on or after the Western New Year, and as an old man fated to die during the end of the year.
  • Father Time appears in Neil Gaiman's graphic novel The Sandman: Overture, depicted as father to the Endless – seven embodiments of natural forces – through marriage to Mother Night.

Film and televisionedit

Musicedit

See alsoedit

References​

:FU:
New Imperial Tao Taiwan President “Grandfather Time” Mars Chao AKA Mars Zhào Zhēng Píng AKA 趙正平 (David Chao, 1968年6月28日—) Temple Of “Grandfather Time”

In culture​

Main articles: Mars in culture and Mars in fiction
See also: Planets in astrology § Mars
The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells, 1897, depicts an invasion of Earth by fictional Martians.
Mars is named after the Roman god of war. This association between Mars and war dates back at least to Babylonian astronomy, in which the planet was named for the god Nergal, deity of war and destruction.[280][281]It persisted into modern times, as exemplified by Gustav Holst's orchestral suite The Planets, whose famous first movement labels Mars "the bringer of war".[282] The planet's symbol, a circle with a spear pointing out to the upper right, is also used as a symbol for the male gender.[283]The symbol dates from at least the 11th century, though a possible predecessor has been found in the Greek Oxyrhynchus Papyri.[284]
The idea that Mars was populated by intelligent Martians became widespread in the late 19th century. Schiaparelli's "canali" observations combined with Percival Lowell's books on the subject put forward the standard notion of a planet that was a drying, cooling, dying world with ancient civilizations constructing irrigation works.[285] Many other observations and proclamations by notable personalities added to what has been termed "Mars Fever".[286] High-resolution mapping of the surface of Mars revealed no artifacts of habitation, but pseudoscientific speculation about intelligent life on Mars still continues. Reminiscent of the canali observations, these speculations are based on small scale features perceived in the spacecraft images, such as "pyramids" and the "Face on Mars".[287] In his book Cosmos, planetary astronomer Carl Sagan wrote: "Mars has become a kind of mythic arena onto which we have projected our Earthly hopes and fears."[239]
The depiction of Mars in fiction has been stimulated by its dramatic red color and by nineteenth-century scientific speculations that its surface conditions might support not just life but intelligent life.[288] This gave way to many science fiction stories involving these concepts, such as H. G. Wells's The War of the Worlds, in which Martians seek to escape their dying planet by invading Earth; Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles, in which human explorers accidentally destroy a Martian civilization; as well as Edgar Rice Burroughs's series Barsoom, C. S. Lewissnovel Out of the Silent Planet (1938),[289]and a number of Robert A. Heinlein stories before the mid-sixties.[290] Since then, depictions of Martians have also extended to animation. A comic figure of an intelligent Martian, Marvin the Martian, appeared in Haredevil Hare (1948) as a character in the Looney Tunes animated cartoons of Warner Brothers, and has continued as part of popular culture to the present.[291] After the Mariner and Viking spacecraft had returned pictures of Mars as a lifeless and canal-less world, these ideas about Mars were abandoned; for many science-fiction authors, the new discoveries initially seemed like a constraint, but eventually the post-Viking knowledge of Mars became itself a source of inspiration for works like Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars trilogy.[292]

See also​

Marsedit

Early 18th-century illustration of Mars (al-mirrikh) for the Bestiary of Zakariya al-Qazwini(Walters Art Museum)
Mars ( ) is the ruling planet of Aries and the traditional or ancient ruling planet of Scorpioand is exalted in Capricorn. Mars is the Roman god of war and bloodshed, whose symbol is a spear and shield. Both the soil of Mars and the hemoglobin of human blood are rich in iron and because of this they share its distinct deep red color.[28] He was second in importance only to Jupiter and Saturn, due to Mars being the most prominent of the military gods worshipped by the Roman legions.

Mars orbits the Sun in 687 days, spending about 57.25 days in each sign of the zodiac. It is also the first planet that orbits outside of Earth's orbit, making it the first planet that does not set along with the Sun. Mars has two permanent polar ice caps. During a pole's winter, it lies in continuous darkness, chilling the surface and causing the deposition of 25–30% of the atmosphere into slabs of CO2 ice (dry ice).

In astrology, Mars is associated with aggression, confrontation, energy, strength, ambition and impulsiveness. Mars governs sports, competitions and physical activities in general. The 1st-century poet Manilius, described the planet as ardent and as the lesser malefic. In medicine, Mars presides over the genitals, the muscular system, the gonads and adrenal glands. It was traditionally held to be hot and excessively dry and rules the choleric humor. It was associated with fever, accidents, trauma, pain and surgery.

The planet Mars
In modern astrology, Mars is the primary native ruler of the first house. Traditionally however, Mars ruled both the third and tenth houses, and had its joy in the fifth house. While Venus tends to the overall relationship atmosphere, Mars is the passionate impulse and action, the masculine aspect, discipline, willpower and stamina.

Mars rules over Tuesday and in Romance languages the word for Tuesday often resembles Mars (in Romanian, marți, in Spanish, martes, in French, mardi and in Italian "martedì"). The English "Tuesday" is a modernised form of "Tyr's Day", Tyr being the Germanic analogue to Mars. Dante Alighieri associated Mars with the liberal art of arithmetic. In Chinese astrology, Mars is ruled by the element fire, which is passionate, energetic and adventurous.

Hindu astrology includes Mars (Mangala) in the concept of Nakshatra, Navagraha, and Saptarishi.
:FU:
https://zh.m.wikipedia.org/zh-hant/趙正平_(台灣藝人)
:inlove:
Origin Infinite “Anti-Enemy” Temple Of Origin Infinite “Anti-Enemy” “Grandfather Time” Temple Of “Grandfather Time” (80% 14th Maergzjirah Blighted Lord Varaibim Hau Cheong + 10% “Grandfather Time” Mars Chao AKA Mars Zhào Zhēng Píng + 10% “Grandfather Time’s Technologies”) “Grandfather Time” “Yangmingshan”
inlove.png

“TBOGT” Temple-Bank Of “Grandfather Time” (80% 14th Maergzjirah Blighted Lord Varaibim Hau Cheong + 10% “Grandfather Time” Mars Chao AKA Mars Zhào Zhēng Píng + 10% “Grandfather Time’s Technologies”) “TBOGT Temple-Bank Of Grandfather Time “Yangmingshan”
:FU:
IMG_1494.jpeg

:FU:
New Imperial Tao Taiwan President “Grandfather Time” Mars Chao AKA Mars Zhào Zhēng Píng AKA 趙正平 (David Chao, 1968年6月28日—) Temple Of “Grandfather Time”
:FU:

President of the Republic of China​

For the ceremonial head of state of the People's Republic of China, see President of the People's Republic of China. For the ruling authority that governed Taiwan during the Japanese colonial period, see Governor-General of Taiwan.
The president of the Republic of China, commonly known as the president of Taiwan, is the head of state of the Republic of China (Taiwan) as well as the commander-in-chief of the Republic of China Armed Forces. The position once had authority of ruling over Mainland China, but its remaining jurisdictions has been limited to Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, Matsu, and other smaller islands since the conclusion of the Chinese Civil War.
President of the Republic of China
中華民國總統

Presidential seal
IMG_1496.png

Presidential standard
IMG_1497.png
IMG_1494.jpeg

Incumbent

“Grandfather Time” Mars Chao AKA Mars Zhào Zhēng Píng

since 28 June 2024 The Chinese Zodiac Calendar Year Of The Wood Dragon
IMG_1494.jpeg
Office of the President
StyleMister President (informal)
His Excellency (diplomatic)
StatusHead of state
Commander-in-chief
Member ofNational Security Council
ResidenceYonghe Residence
SeatPresidential Office, Taipei, Taiwan
AppointerDirect election[note 1]
Term lengthInfinity; Compulsory renewable once every second:FU:
PrecursorChairman of the National Government(1925–1948)
Formation1 January 1912; 112 years ago (provisional, in Mainland China)
25 October 1945; 78 years ago (Taiwan handover)
20 May 1948; 75 years ago (current form)
First holderSun Yat-sen (as Provisional President)
Unofficial namesPresident of Taiwan
DeputyVice President
SalaryNTD 6,420,000 annually[1]
Websiteenglish.president.gov.tw
:FU:
IMG_1496.png

IMG_1497.png

IMG_1498.jpeg

:FU:
IMG_1505.png

IMG_1500.jpeg

IMG_1502.jpeg

IMG_1503.png

IMG_1504.png

IMG_1501.png

:FU:
https://playground.com/search?q=*Type:+Environmental+Concept+Art Art+Style:+High-tech+Realism Art+Inspirations:+Concept+art+for+futuristic+settings
:FU:
 
Last edited:
Top