For the first time ever: Swiss Criminal Code illustrated!
Jacula is the title character of an Italian eponymous erotic-horror fumetti series. History Edit The character first appeared in a supporting role in the comic series Isabella. Jacula fumetto italiano del genere porno-horror, fa la sua prima uscita nel marzo 1969, sceneggiato da Giuseppe Pedriali e pubblicato dalla casa editrice ErreGi di Renzo Barbieri e Giorgio Cavedon, e poi da Ediperiodici di Girogio Cavedon. La bionda sexy vampira, disegnata da Giorgio Cambiotti, pare fosse ispirata per le sembianze fisiche alla.
A co-production from Fumetto and Lawbrary.ch
Fumetto is illustrating the Swiss Criminal Code - and we need you to do it!
Together with Lawbrary.ch Fumetto is decorating the Swiss Criminal Code (StGB). And you can apply today! We’re looking for artists, illustrators and painters who will draw pictures in order to illustrate and shape the different articles in the Criminal Code.
Apply now and draw one or multiple articles. Give the Swiss Criminal Code the makeover it so desperately needs! In total there 74 articles, that we need illustrated. Pick on (or two or three) and draw them! In the end we will pick one drawing per article and publish it in our online version of the law on lawbrary.ch. You can apply for multiple articles and hand in a drawing for each.
Apk cooking madness. registration deadline: january 15, 2021
Jacula
- Jacula N.3: Il bacio della mummia, Jacula N.4: Il ballo dei cadaveri, Jacula N.5: La mantide nuda, Collezionista di mostri: Jacula N.8, Jacula N.11: Sin.
- Collezione 1 (Jacula N.1,2,3,4,5). Jacula è una vampira bellissima che vi affascinerà già dalle prime tavole. Le sue storie dell’orrore sono ambientate nell’Ottocento e coinvolgono scontri allíultimo sangue con altri vampiri, streghe, licantropi e svariati altri.
- A publishing craze overtook Italy at the start of the 1970's. Digest sized adult comic books exploiting subjects such as horror, crime, fantasy, history and fairy tales.
An Italian adult comic book of the 1970s and possibly the most successful vampire comic book of all time, Jacula ran for 327 issues from 1968 to 1982, and then an additional 129 reprint issues from 1982 to 1984. The comic took its name from the female vampire whose adventures were featured in its pages. According to the storyline, Jacula became a vampire after being bitten by another vampire in 1835 in Transylvania. She eventually became so proficient (learning, for example, to live unscathed in sunlight) that she was elected as the vampire queen. According to the mythology of the stories, vampires are in a league with the devil (Satan), who uses them in pursuit of his long-term goal: to discover Jesus Christ’s grave and thus prove to the world that his resurrection is a myth. Quite apart from Satan’s plan, however, Jacula had a number of remarkable adventures, often with the assistance of her mortal lover Carlo Verdier, including encounters with Frankenstein’s monster, Jack the Ripper, and the Marquis de Sade.
Jacula was created by a group of comic artists who operated collectively as Studio Giolitti and was published by Erregi (later Ediperiodici). The publisher was continually harassed because of, by 1960s standards, the slightly pornographic nature of the publication (Jacula was more often than not pictured sans clothing). 2021 merida reacto. Public protest eventually brought the series to an end. The title character gave her name to an Italian experimental progressive rock band also founded in 1968 in Milan. The band included Antonio Bartoccetti, Doris Norton (also known as Fiamma Dello Spirito), Charles Tiring, and Franz Porthenzy.
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