CRI

CRI may refer to:

Business

  • CRI Middleware, a Japanese software developer
  • Carbon Recycling International, an Icelandic renewable methanol company
  • Composers Recordings, Inc., a defunct American record label
  • Computer Resources International, a Danish aerospace company
  • Organizations

  • Canadian Rivers Institute
  • Cancer Research Institute
  • Centro de Relaciones Internacionales, a research institute and school belonging to Mexico's Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
  • Charlotte Research Institute
  • China Radio International
  • Christian Research Institute
  • Community Rowing, Inc.
  • CRI (charity), Crime Reduction Initiatives, a British voluntary sector organisation
  • Crown Research Institute (New Zealand)
  • Chulabhorn Research Institute (Thailand)
  • Croce Rossa Italiana, the Italian Red Cross
  • Science, medicine or technology

  • Catecholamine reuptake inhibitor
  • Chronic kidney disease, which is closely associated with chronic renal insufficiency (CRI)
  • Color rendering index
  • Color reversal internegative
  • Crop rotation index
  • Bunești, Brașov

    Buneşti (German: Bodendorf; Hungarian: Szászbuda) is a commune in Braşov County, Romania. It is composed of five villages: Buneşti, Criţ, Meşendorf, Roadeş and Viscri. Each of these has a fortified church.

    Villages

    Viscri

    Viscri's population is of Roma majority, with a few Romanians, and about 20 Germans. It lies northwest of Rupea and can be reached through Dacia on a 7 km unpaved road. The village is best known for the highly fortified Viscri fortified church, originally built around 1100. It is part of the villages with fortified churches in Transylvania, designated in 1993 as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. The first documentation of Viscri is a record of church taxes dated around 1400, in which the village is referred to as being part of the Rupea parish. Its inhabitants consisted of 51 farmers, 1 school master, 3 shepherds and 2 paupers.

    The origins of the fortified church date from 1100 when the Székelys built a small church with a single hall and semicircular apse. Around 1185 the church was taken over by Saxon colonists, and the Székelys were forced to settle further north. In the 14th century the eastern part of the church was rebuilt and in 1525, the first fortifications with towers were added. In the 18th century the church was surrounded by a second defense wall. After 1743 a covered corridor for the storage of corn was built. A century later, two chambers in the defense corridor of the bastion were turned into school rooms. The classic 19th-century altar has as centerpiece "the Blessing of the Children" by the painter J. Paukratz from Rupea. The font was made from a capital of the 13th-century church. To this day, the church is surrounded by a cemetery with gravestones dating back to the "Bijelo Brdo culture".

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Maggots

    by: GWAR

    Vile forms of Necros lie rotting my mind
    Feasting like maggots - maggots in flesh
    So left your ruined cortex behind
    Now the maggot knows glee as it nibbles on your spine!
    [Chorus:]
    Maggots! Maggots!
    Maggots are falling like rain!
    Putrid pus-pools vomit blubonic plague
    The bowels of the beast reek of puke
    How to describe such vileness on the page
    World maggot waits for the end of the age!
    [Chorus]
    Beneath a sky of maggots I walked
    Until those maggots began to fall
    I gaped at God to receive my gift
    Bathed in maggots till the planet shit
    [Repeat chorus a lot]




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