Complete History of Afghanistan, About Afghanistan,


Afghanistan's history, internal political development, foreign relations, and very existence as an independent state have largely been determined by its geographic location at the crossroads of Central, West, and South Asia. Over the centuries, waves of migrating peoples passed through the region described by historian Arnold Toynbee as a "roundabout of the ancient world"--leaving behind a mosaic of ethnic and linguistic groups. The outline of the Afghanistan History In modern times, as well as in antiquity, will focus on vast armies of the world passing through Afghanistan, temporarily establishing local control.

50,000 BC - 20,000 BC Stone Age
· Archaeologists have identified evidence of stone age technology in Aq Kupruk (balkh), and Hazar Sum.
· Plant remains at the foothill of the Hindu Kush mountains indicate, that North Afghanistan was one of the earliest places to domestic plants and animals.

3000 BC - 2000 BC Bronze Age
· It has been indicated the Bronze have been invented in ancient Afghanistan around this time.
· Urbanization and trade grows, making it an important point between Mesopotamian and other civilizations to emerge as the present day’s “Crossroads of Asia”.
· First true urban centers rise in two main sites in Afghanistan--Mundigak, and Deh Morasi Ghundai.
· Mundigak (near modern day Kandahar)--had an economic base of wheat, barley, sheep and goats. Also, evidence indicates that Mudigak could have been a provincial capital of the Indus valley civilization.
· Ancient Afghanistan--crossroads between Mesopotamia, and other Civilizations.

2000 BC - 1500 BC Aryan Tribes in Aryana Emperor Yama (Ancient Afghanistan)
· The City of Kabul is thought to have been established during this time.
· Rig Veda may have been created in Afghanistan around this time.
· Evidence of early nomadic iron age in Aq Kapruk IV.

728 BC - 550 BC Medes Empire
· Deioces, 728BC - 675BC
· Phraortes (Kashtariti), 675BC - 653BC
· Cyaxares, 625BC - 585BC
· Astyages, 585BC - 550BC



628 BC - Zoroaster introduces a new religion in its capital Bactria (Balkh) in N. Afghanistan.---(Zoroastrianism--Monotheistic religion)

6 BC- 330 BC Achaemenids Empire
· Teispes
· Cyrus I
· Cambyses I (Kambiz) 600 B.C
· Cyrus the Great, Start of Achaemenid Empire, 559BC - 530BC
· Kambiz II, 530BC - 522BC
· Darius I the Great, 522BC - 486BC
· Xerxes I(Khashyar), 486BC - 465BC
· Artaxerxes I , 465BC - 425BC
· Xerxes II, 425BC - 424BC (45 days)
· Darius II, 423BC - 404BC
· Artaxerxes II, 404BC - 359BC
· Artaxerxes III, 359BC - 339BC
· Arses, 338BC - 336BC
· Darius III, 336BC - 330BC
· Dariusthe Great expands the Achaemenid empire to its peak, when it takes most of Afghanistan., including Aria (Herat), Bactriana(Balk, and present-day Mazar-i-Shariff), Margiana (Merv), Gandhara (Kabul, Jalalabad and Peshawar), Sattagydia (Ghazni to the Indus river), Arachosia (Kandahar, and Quetta), and Drangiana (Sistan).
· The Persianempire was plagued by constant bitter and bloody tribal revolts from Afghans living in Arachosia (Kandahar, and Quetta)

329 BC - 326 BC Hellenistic period
· Alexander the Great conquering Persia, Afghanistan. 330BC - 323BC
· Alexander conquers Afghanistan, but fails to really subdue its people, but unrest and bloody revolts become the regime’s hallmarks.
· Philip III(Arrhidaeus), 323BC - 317BC
· Alexander IV,317BC - 312BC

323 BC - After Alexander's death the region at first was part of the Seleucid Empire. In the north, Bactria became independent, and the south was acquired by the Maurya dynasty.
· Bactria expanded southward but fell (mid-2d cent. B.C.) to the Parthians and rebellious tribes (notably the Saka).
· Buddhismwas introduced from the east by the Yüechi, who founded the Kushan dynasty (early 2d cent. B.C.). Their capital was Peshawar.
· The city, once called Purushapura, was the capital of the ancient Greco-Buddhist center of Gandhara.
· The Kushans declined (3d cent. A.D.) and were supplanted by the Sassanids, the Ephthalites, and the Turkish Tu-Kuie.

312 BC - 260 BC Seleucids Empire
· Seleucus I, 312BC - 281BC
· Antiochus I Soter, 281BC - 261BC
· Seleucus, 280BC - 267BC

256 BC - 130 BC - Graeco-Bactrian state established in northern Afghanistan Arsacids Empire and Parthian Empire
· Arsaces, 238BC - 217BC (or 211BC?)
· Artabanus(Ardawan) or Arsaces II, 211BC - 191BC
· Priapatius I, 191BC - 176BC
· Phraates I, 176BC - 171BC
· Phil-Hellenistic period
· Mithradates I, 171BC - 138BC
· Phraates II, 138BC - 128BC
· Artabanus I, 128BC - 123BC
· Mithradates II(the Great), 123BC - 87BC
· Gotarzes, 90BC - 80BC
· Orodes I, 80BC - 77BC
· Sanatruces, 77BC - 70BC
· Phraates III, 70BC - 57BC
· Mithradtes III, 57BC - 55BC
· Orodes II, 57BC - 37BC
· Phraates IV, 37BC - 2BC
· Phraates V, 2BC - AD 4
· Orodes III, AD 4 - AD 7
· Vonones, AD 7 - AD 11
· Anti-Hellenistic Period
· Artabanus II, 12 - 38
· Gotarzes II, 38 - 51
· Vardanes I, 39 - 45
· Vonones II, 51
· Vologases I, 51 - 78
· Vardanes II, 55 - 58
· Vologases II, 77 - 80
· Artabanus III, 80 - 81
· Pacorus, 78 – 105

120 Kushan Empire, under King Kanishka
· Graeco-Buddhist Gandharan culture reaches its height.
· Under the Kushan King, Kanishka, Buddha was first given a human face and the world's largest Buddhas (175 feet and 120 feet tall) were carved into the cliff at Bamiyan. But many gods and goddesses from Greek, Persian, Central Asian and Hindu cultures were also worshipped.

225 - 650 Sassanians
· Ardashir I, 224 - 241
· Shapur I, 241 - 272
· Hormizd I, 272 - 273
· Bahram I, 273 - 276
· Bahram II, 276 - 293
· Bahram III, 293
· Narses, 293 - 302
· Hormizd II, 302 - 309
· Shapur II, 309 - 379
· Ardashir II, 379 - 383
· Shapur III, 383 - 388
· Bahram IV, 388 - 399
· Yazdegerd I, 399 - 420
· Bahram V Gur, 420 - 438
· Yazdegerd II, 438 - 457
· Hormizd III, 457 - 459
· Piruz, 457 - 484
· Balash, 484 - 488
· Kavadh (Qobad) I, 488 - 496
· Tamasb, 496 - 499
· Kavadh I, 499 - 531
· Khosrow I (Anushirvan), 531 - 579
· Hormizd IV, 579 - 590
· Khosrow IIParviz, 590
· Bahram VI, 590 - 591
· Khosrow II Parviz, 591 - 628
· Bestam (in Media), 591 - 596
· Kavadh (Qobad) II Shiruye (Siroes), 628 - 630
· Ardashir III, 628 - 630
· Shahrbaraz, 630
· Purandokht, 629 - 631
· Azarmedukht, 631 - 632
· Hormizd V, 631 - 632
· Khosrow III, 632 - 633
· Yazdegird III, 632 – 651

400 Invasion of the White Huns. They destroy the Buddhist culture, and leave most of the country in ruins

425 - 550 Independent Yaftalee rule in Afghanistan .Yaftalee Dynasty -Established in northern Hindu Kush region of Takhar, this dynasty gains control over the majority of present day Afghanistan by 425.

530 Persians reassert control over all of what is now Afghanistan.

531 - 579 Khosrow I (Khosrow Anüshirvan), king of Persia

590 - 628 Khosrow II (Khosrow Parviz), king of Persia of the Sassanid, or Sassanian, dynasty

652 Arabs introduce Islam that was to influence the course of Afghanistan’s history

650 - 661 Arabs - Orthodox Caliphates
· Uthman (Osman), 650 - 656
· Ali, 656 – 661

661 - 750 Arabs - Umayyad Caliphate
· Mu'awiya I, 661 - 680
· Yazid I, 680 - 683
· Mu'awiya II, 683 - 684
· Marwan I, 684 - 685
· Abd-al-Malik, 685 - 705
· Al-Walid I, 705 - 715
· Suleyman, 715 - 717
· Umar II, 717 - 720
· Yazid II, 720 - 724
· Hisham, 724 - 743
· Al-Walid II, 743 - 744
· Yazid III, 744
· Ibrahim, 744
· Marwan II, 744 – 750

750 - 821 Arabs - Abbasid Caliphate
· Abu al-Abbas al-Saffah, 750 - 754
· Al-Mansur, 754 - 775
· Al-Mahdi, 775 - 785
· Al-Hadi, 785 - 786
· Harun al-Rashid, 786 - 809
· Al-Amin, 809 - 813
· Al-Mamun, 813 – 833

860 - 960 Samanid (Turkestan)
· Nasr I, 864 - 892
· Ismail, 892 - 907
· Ahmad, 907 - 914
· Nasr II, 914 - 942
· Nuh I, 942 - 954
· Abd al-Malik I, 954 - 961
· Mansur I, 961 – 976

962 - 1030 Ghaznavid Dynasty - (Khurasan)
· Mahmud, 970 - 1030 The Islamic era begins with Mohammed Ghazni and Afghanistan becomes the centre of Islamic power and civilisation. Several short-lived Muslim dynasties were founded, the most powerful of them having its capital at Ghazna (see Ghazni). Mahmud of Ghazna, who conquered the lands from Khorasanin Iran to the Punjab in India early in the 11th cent., was the greatest of Afghanistan's rulers
· Masoud I, 1030 – 1040


1140 - 1215 Ghorid leaders from central Afghanistan capture and burn Ghazni, then move on to conquer India.
· Ghurid Empire Shansabani Dynasty (Afghanistan)
· Izz Al-Din Husayn I, 1117 - 1146
· Sayf al_Din Suri, 1146 - 1149
· Baha al-Din Sam I, 1149
· Ala al-Din Husayn II, 1149 - 1161
· Say al-Din Muhammad I, 1161 - 1163
· Ghiyath al_Din Muhammad II, 1163 - 1203
· Mu'izz al-Din Muhammad III, 1203 - 1206
· Ghiyath al-Din Mahmud, 1206 - 1210
· Baha al-Din Sam II, 1210
· Ala al-Din Atsiz, 1210 - 1214
· Ala al-Din Muhammad IV, 1215 – 1215

1219 - 1221 Mongol Invasion of Afghanistan by Genghis Khan Empire
Khans (Mongol)
· Hülagü Khan, 1256 - 1265
· Abagha, 1265 - 1282
· Tegüder, 1282 - 1284
· Arghun, 1284 - 1291
· Gaykhatu, 1291 - 1295
· Baydu, 1295
· Mahmud Ghazan, 1295 - 1304
· Uljaytü, 1304 - 1316
· Abu Said, 1317 - 1335
· Arpa, 1335 - 1336
· Musa, 1336 - 1337
· Muhammad, 1336 - 1338
· Sati Beg, 1338 - 1339
· Jahan Temür, 1339 - 1340
· Sulayman, 1339 – 1343

1273 Marco Polo crosses Afghanistan on his voyage from Italy to China to discover the “Silk Route”. Revolts and battles between smaller kingdoms mark the next two centurie


1370 - 1404 Timurids and Turkmen Empire
Timurids
· Timur, 1393 - 1405
· Miranshah (Western Persia), 1405 - 1408
· Khalil (Western Persia 1409 - 1411), 1405 - 1409
· Shah Rokh Shah, 1409 - 1447
· Ulugh Beg, 1447 - 1449
· Soltan Abu Said, 1451 – 1469

1414 - 1421 The Sayyids
· Khizr Khan (1414-1421)

1451 Lodi dynasty An Afghan by the named Buhlul Khan invades Delhi, and seizes the throne.
· 1451-1489: Buhlul Khan Lodi
· 1489-1517: Sikandar Lodi
· 1517-1526: Ibrahim

1504-1519 Moghul dynasty Babur shah, takes control of Kabul, Babar begins to take control of Afghanistan. Babur, a descendant of Timur , used Kabul as the base for his conquest of India and the establishment of the Mughal empire in the 16th cent.

1520-1579 Bayazid Roshan (Afghan intellectual) revolts against the power of the Moghul government. Roshan was killed in a battle with the Moghuls in 1579--but his struggle for independence continued.

1613-1689 Khushhal Khan Khattak (Afghan warrior-poet) initiates a national uprising against the foreign Moghul government.

1708 Mir Wais Neka (forerunner of Afghan independence) makes Kandahar independent of Safavid Persia that had ruled it since 1622. Mir Wais, considered by some to be the father of Afghan independence, takes over Kandahar. His son, Mir Mahmud, invades Persia and liberates Herat.
· 1715-- Mir Wais dies peacefully, and lies in a mausoleum outside of Kandahar.
· 1722-- Mir Wais' son, Mir Mahmud, invades Persia and occupies Isfahan. At the same time, the Durranis revolt, and terminate the Persian occupation of Herat. The Durranis revolt to throw out Persians from Herat.
· 1725 (April 25)--Mir Mahmud is mysteriously killed after going mad. Afghans start to lose control of Persia.

1736 Persian King Nadir Shah occupies the south-west and later Kandahar; assassinated in 1747.
· the Persian Nadir Shah extended his rule to N of the Hindu Kush. After his death (1747) his lieutenant, Ahmad Shah, an Afghan tribal leader, established a united state covering most of present-day Afghanistan. His dynasty, the Durrani, gave the Afghans the name (Durrani) that they themselves frequently use.
· 1747 Nadir Shah is assassinated, and the Afghans rise once again. Afghans, under the leadership of Ahmad Shah Abdali retake Kandahar, and establish modern Afghanistan.

1747 - 1773 Ahmad Shah Durrani, also known as Ahmad Shah Abdali and (Ahmad Shah Baba) is the founder of today's Afghanistan. Pir Sabir Shah, the spiritual guide of the time, showered his praise for the young Ahmad Shah by declaring him Dar-e-Durran (pearl of the pearls) not because that he was a military giant but for his humanity a definite quality of a statesman. The start of the Durrani's Empire.

1773 - 1793 Timur Shah
· Relocated the capital of Afghanistan from Kandahar to Kabul.

1793 - 1800 Zaman Shah
· He began to remove prominent Muhammadzai leaders from positions of power and replacing them with men of his own lineage, the Sadozai. This upset the delicate balance of Durrani tribal politics that Ahmad Shah had established and may have prompted Painda Khan and other Durrani chiefs to plot against the shah. Painda Khan and the chiefs of the Nurzai and the Alizai Durrani clans were executed, as was the chief of the Qizilbash clan. Painda Khan's son fled to Iran and pledged the substantial support of his Muhammadzai followers to a rival claimant to the throne, Zeman's older brother, Mahmood Shah. The clans who's chiefs Zeman had executed joined forces with the rebels, and they took Kandahar without bloodshed.

1800 - 1803 Shah Mahmood
· King of Afghanistan (1800 - 03; second time 1810 - 26)

1803 - 1810 Shah Shujah
· King of Afghanistan (1803 -10; second time 1839 - 42) whose alliance with the British led to his death.

1810 - 1826 Shah Mahmood and his brother Zaman Shah struggle for the throne.
· 1819-1826 Shaw Mahmood but the reign of the Sadozai line ended in 1818, and no predominant ruler emerged until Dost Muhammad became emir in 1826.

1826 - 1839 Dost Mohammad Khan takes Kabul, and establishes control. During his rule the status of Afghanistan became an international problem, as Britain and Russia contested for influence in central Asia. Aiming to control access to the northern approaches to India, the British tried to replace Dost Muhammad with a former emir, subordinate to them. This policy caused the first Afghan War (1838–42) between the British and the Afghans. Dost Muhammad was at first deposed but, after an Afghan revolt in Kabul, was restored. In 1857, Dost Muhammad signed an alliance with the British. He died in 1863 and was succeeded, after family fighting, by his third son, Sher Ali.
· King of Afghanistan (1826 - 39; second time 1843 - 63)
· 1832--1833 Persia moves into Khurasan (province), and threatens Herat. Afghans defend Herat successfully.
· 1834-- (May) Afghans lose Peshawar to the Sikhs; later they crushed the Sikhs under the leadership of Akbar Khan who defeated the Sikhs near Jamrud, and killed the great Sikh general Hari Singh. However, they failed to retake Peshawar due to disunity and bad judgment on the part of Dost Mohammad Khan.
· 1836 Dost Mohammad Khan is proclaimed as Amir al-mu' minin (commander of the faithful). He was well on the road toward reunifying the whole of Afghanistan when the British, in collaboration with an ex-king (Shah Shuja), invade Afghanistan to curtail the growing Russian and Persian influence.

1839 - 1842 Shah Shuja is installed as a "puppet king" by the British .
First Anglo-Afghan War
· After some resistance, Amir Dost Mohammad Khan surrenders to the British and is deported to India. (1839-1842)
· April 1842--Shah Shuja killed by Afghans.
· 1842-1844 Akbar Khan (Afghan hero) is victorious against the British. The ferocity was such that the 16,500- B British garrison with 12,000 support staff and dependents were wiped out. Only one survived, of mixed British-Indian garrison, reaches the fort in Jalalabad, on a stumbling pony.
· Mohammad Akbar Khan was a major player in the defeat of the British army in the first Anglo-Afghan War (1839-1842). He outsmarted and killed Sir William MacNaughten, a top British official who highly advocated the invasion and subjugation of Afghanistan by the British army. Mohammad Akbar was very ambitous and wanted to regain all the land that was lost by the Afghans, and rebuild another great empire, similar to Ahmad Shah Abdali's. However, his father, Dost Mohammad Khan, who wanted to work with the British, feared his son's rise to power. Many believed that Amir Dost Mohammad poisoned his own son at the age of 29. Mohammad Akbar Khan is highly revered by Afghans today, and is seen as a major historical hero. A residential area of Kabul is named after him.
· By 1843 the nation declares independence, Dost Khan returns to occupy the throne.
· In 1844, Akbar Khan dies.

1843 - 1863 Dost Mohammad Khan comes back and occupies the royal throne. After the annihilation of British troops, Afghanistan once again becomes independent.
· 1859-- British take Baluchistan, and Afghanistan becomes completely landlocked.


1863 - 1866 Sher Ali Dost Mohammad Khan's son succeeds to the throne.
· King of Afghanistan (1863 - 66; second time 1868 - 79)
· (1865)--Russia takes Bukhara, Tashkent, and Samerkand.

1866 - 1867 Mohamad Afzal
· Mohammad Afzal occupies Kabul and proclaims himself Amir.
· October, 1867--Mohammad Afzal dies.


1867 - 1868 Mohammad Azam
· Mohammad Azam succeeds to the throne
· 1868--Mohammad Azam flees to Persia


1868 - 1879 Sher Ali reasserts control
· 1873 Russia establishes a fixed boundary with Afghanistan and promises to respect its territorial integrity.
· 1878-British launch their second war. For the second time, the Afghans’ spirited resistance forces them to withdraw. Sher Ali dies. Mohammad Yaqub Khan takes over but concedes to the British such key territories as Khyber and Pischin. The Afghans will never get back these regions.

1879 - Amir Muhammad Yaqub Khan takes over until October 1879.
· Amir Muhammad Yaqub Khan gives up the following Afghan territories to the British: Kurram, Khyber, Michni, Pishin, and Sibi. Afghans lose these territories permanently.
· Kabul occupied by British forces

1880 - 1901 Abdur Rahman takes throne of Afghanistan. He was, however, recognized by the British as emir in 1880, and he supported British interests against Russia..
· Battle of Maiwand
· July 1880, Afghan woman named Malalai carries the Afghan flag forward after the soldiers carrying the flag were killed by the British. She becomes a hero for her show of courage and valour.
· The British, shortly after the accession of the new Amir, withdraw from Afghanistan, although they retain the right to handle Afghanistan's foreign relations.
· Abdur Rahman establishes fixed borders and he loses a lot of Afghan land.
· Nuristan converted to Islam.
· 1885- Russian forces seize the Panjdeh Oasis, a piece of Afghan territory north of the Oxus River. Afghans tried to retake it, but was finally forced to allow the Russians to keep Panjdeh, and the Russians promised to honor Afghan territorial integrity in the future.
· 1893- The Durand line fixes borders of Afghanistan with British India, splitting Afghan tribal areas, leaving half of Afghans in what is now Pakistan.
· 1895 Afghanistan's northern border is fixed and guaranteed by Russia
· 1901-- Abdur Rahman dies, his son Habibullah succeeds him.









1907- 1919 Habibullah Khan’s regime.Russia and Great Britain sign the convention of St. Petersburg, Agreement reached between British and Russian governments over the territorial integrity of Afghanistan

1919 - 1929 Amanullah Khan (The reform King)
· 1921--Third Anglo-Afghan war.

1929 - 1930 Habibullah Kalakani (Bachae Saqaw)

1930 - 1933 Nadir Khan takes the throne; his tribal army loots government buildings and houses of wealthy citizens because the treasury was empty. Habibullah Kalakani, along with his supporters, and a few supporters of Amanullah Khan are killed by Nadir Khan. Now Nadir Khan establishes full control.
· 1933-- Nadir Khan was assassinated by a High School student whos father served Amanullah Khan and was killed by Nadir Khan.
· Zahir Shaw, at the age of 19 inherits the throne, even though he did not want to take the throne. He rules until 1973. Zahir Shah's uncles serve as prime ministers and advisors until 1953.
· Mahmud Tarzi dies in Turkey at the age of 68 with a heart full of sorrow and despair toward his country.

1940 - 1973 Zahir Shah proclaims Afghanistan as neutral during WW2
· 1949-- Afghanistan's Parliament denounces the Durand Treaty and refuses to recognize theDurand line as a legal boundary between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Pashtuns in Pashtunistan (Occupied Afghan Land) proclaim an independent Pashtunistan, but their proclamation goes unacknowledged by the world community.
· 1973-- July 17th: Zahir Shah is in Europe, when his government is overthrown in a military coup headed by Daoud Khan his cousin.

1973 - 1978 Daoud Khan abolishes the monarchy, declares himself President. The Republic of Afghanistan is established.
· 1978-- Bloody Communist coup: Daoud is killed

1978 - 1979 Taraki is named President,
· June--Afghan guerrilla (Mujahideen) movement is born.
· 1979--Taraki is killed

1979 - Hafizullah Amin takes the Presidency.
· Mass killings of Afghans
· US ambassador killed
· 1979 --Amin is executed

1979 - 1986 Babrak Karmal replaceing Amin
· 1979 Soviet Union (Russia) invade in December.
· Babrak Karmal is replaced by Dr. Najibullah.

1986 - 1992 Dr. Najibullah replaceing Karmal
· 1987-- Najibullah proposes ceasefire, but the Mujahideen refuse to deal with a "puppet government".
· 1988--1989 Peace accords signed in Geneva. Soviet Union defeated by Afghanistan, total withdrawal by the Soviets occurred on Feb. 15, 1989.
· The Geneva Accords and Their Aftermath

1992 April 15 The Mujahideen take Kabul and liberate Afghanistan, Najibullah is protected by UN.
· The Mujahideen form Islamic State--Islamic Jihad Council--elections.
· Professor Burhannudin Rabbani takes power.
· Through 1993, Hekmatyar's Hezb-i-Islami forces, allied with the Shi'a Hezb-i-Wahdat militia, clashed intermittently with Rabbani and Masood's Jamiat forces. Dostam switched sides, precipitating largescale fighting in Kabul and in Northern provinces.
· 1994-The Talibanmilitia are born, and advance rapidly against the Islamic government. Dostum and Hekmatyar continued to clash against Rabbani and Masood's government, and as a result Kabul is reduced to rubble.

1996 - 2001 Mullah Omar Taliban militia force President Rabbani and his government out of Kabul. After the capture of Kabul, the Taliban executed Najibullah.


2001 - Hamid Karzai

Tattoos Picture Page 1 Tattoos Picture Page 2 Tattoos Picture Page 3 Tattoos Picture Page 4 Tattoos Picture Page 5 Tattoos Picture Page 6 Tattoos Picture Page 7 Tattoos Picture Page 8 Tattoos Picture Page 9 Tattoos Picture Page 10 Tattoos Picture Page 11 Tattoos Picture Page 12 Tattoos Picture Page 13 Tattoos Picture Page 14 Tattoos Picture Page 15 Tattoos Picture Page 16 Tattoos Picture Page 17 Tattoos Picture Page 18 Tattoos Picture Page 19 Tattoos Picture Page 20 Tattoos Picture Page 21 Tattoos Picture Page 22 Tattoos Picture Page 23 Tattoos Picture Page 24 Tattoos Picture Page 25 Tattoos Picture Page 26 Tattoos Picture Page 27 Tattoos Picture Page 28 Tattoos Picture Page 29 Tattoos Picture Page 30 Tattoos Picture Page 31 Tattoos Picture Page 32 Tattoos Picture Page 33 Tattoos Picture Page 34 Tattoos Picture Page 35 Tattoos Picture Page 36 Tattoos Picture Page 37 Tattoos Picture Page 38 Tattoos Picture Page 39 Tattoos Picture Page 40 Tattoos Picture Page 41 Tattoos Picture Page 42 Tattoos Picture Page 43 Tattoos Picture Page 44 Tattoos Picture Page 45 Tattoos Picture Page 46 Tattoos Picture Page 47 Tattoos Picture Page 48 Tattoos Picture Page 49 Tattoos Picture Page 50 Tattoos Picture Page 51 Tattoos Picture Page 52 Tattoos Picture Page 53 Tattoos Picture Page 54 Tattoos Picture Page 55 Tattoos Picture Page 56 Tattoos Picture Page 57 Tattoos Picture Page 58 Tattoos Picture Page 59 Tattoos Picture Page 60 Tattoos Picture Page 61 Tattoos Picture Page 62 Tattoos Picture Page 63 Tattoos Picture Page 64 Tattoos Picture Page 65 Tattoos Picture Page 66 Tattoos Picture Page 67 Tattoos Picture Page 68 Tattoos Picture Page 69 Tattoos Picture Page 70 Tattoos Picture Page 71 Tattoos Picture Page 72 Tattoos Picture Page 73 Tattoos Picture Page 74 Tattoos Picture Page 75 Tattoos Picture Page 76 Tattoos Picture Page 77 Tattoos Picture Page 78 Tattoos Picture Page 79 Tattoos Picture Page 80 Tattoos Picture Page 81 Tattoos Picture Page 82 Tattoos Picture Page 83 Tattoos Picture Page 84 Tattoos Picture Page 85 Tattoos Picture Page 86 Tattoos Picture Page 87 Tattoos Picture Page 88 Tattoos Picture Page 89 Tattoos Picture Page 90 Tattoos Picture Page 91 Tattoos Picture Page 92 Tattoos Picture Page 93 Tattoos Picture Page 94 Tattoos Picture Page 95 Tattoos Picture Page 96 Tattoos Picture Page 97 Tattoos Picture Page 98 Tattoos Picture Page 99 Tattoos Picture Page 100 Tattoos Picture Page 101 Tattoos Picture Page 102 Tattoos Picture Page 103 Tattoos Picture Page 104 Tattoos Picture Page 105 Tattoos Picture Page 106 Tattoos Picture Page 107 Tattoos Picture Page 108 Tattoos Picture Page 109 Tattoos Picture Page 110 Tattoos Picture Page 111 Tattoos Picture Page 112 Tattoos Picture Page 113 Tattoos Picture Page 114 Tattoos Picture Page 115 Tattoos Picture Page 116 Tattoos Picture Page 117 Tattoos Picture Page 118 Tattoos Picture Page 119 Tattoos Picture Page 120 Luxury Villa and Home Page 1 Luxury Villa and Home Page 2 Luxury Villa and Home Page 3 Luxury Villa and Home Page 4 Luxury Villa and Home Page 5 Luxury Villa and Home Page 6 Luxury Villa and Home Page 7 Luxury Villa and Home Page 8 Luxury Villa and Home Page 9 Luxury Villa and Home Page 10 Luxury Villa and Home Page 11 Luxury Villa and Home Page 12 Luxury Villa and Home Page 13 Luxury Villa and Home Page 14 Luxury Villa and Home Page 15 Luxury Villa and Home Page 16 Luxury Villa and Home Page 17 Luxury Villa and Home Page 18 Luxury Villa and Home Page 19 Luxury Villa and Home Page 20 Luxury Villa and Home Page 21 Luxury Villa and Home Page 22 Luxury Villa and Home Page 23 Luxury Villa and Home Page 24 Luxury Villa and Home Page 25 Luxury Villa and Home Page 26 Luxury Villa and Home Page 27 Luxury Villa and Home Page 28 Luxury Villa and Home Page 29 Luxury Villa and Home Page 30 Luxury Villa and Home Page 31 Luxury Villa and Home Page 32 Luxury Villa and Home Page 33 Luxury Villa and Home Page 34 Luxury Villa and Home Page 35 Luxury Villa and Home Page 36 Luxury Villa and Home Page 37 Luxury Villa and Home Page 38 Luxury Villa and Home Page 39 Luxury Villa and Home Page 40 Luxury Villa and Home Page 41 Luxury Villa and Home Page 42 Luxury Villa and Home Page 43 Luxury Villa and Home Page 44 Luxury Villa and Home Page 45 Luxury Villa and Home Page 46 Luxury Villa and Home Page 47 Luxury Villa and Home Page 48 Luxury Villa and Home Page 49 Luxury Villa and Home Page 50 Luxury Villa and Home Page 51 Luxury Villa and Home Page 52 Luxury Villa and Home Page 53 Luxury Villa and Home Page 54 Luxury Villa and Home Page 55 Luxury Villa and Home Page 56 Luxury Villa and Home Page 57 Luxury Villa and Home Page 58 Luxury Villa and Home Page 59 Luxury Villa and Home Page 60 Luxury Villa and Home Page 61 Luxury Villa and Home Page 62 Luxury Villa and Home Page 63 Luxury Villa and Home Page 64 Luxury Villa and Home Page 65 Luxury Villa and Home Page 66 Luxury Villa and Home Page 67 Luxury Villa and Home Page 68 Luxury Villa and Home Page 69 Luxury Villa and Home Page 70 Luxury Villa and Home Page 71 Luxury Villa and Home Page 72 Luxury Villa and Home Page 73 Luxury Villa and Home Page 74 Luxury Villa and Home Page 75 Luxury Villa and Home Page 76 Luxury Villa and Home Page 77 Luxury Villa and Home Page 78 Luxury Villa and Home Page 79 Luxury Villa and Home Page 80 Luxury Villa and Home Page 81 Luxury Villa and Home Page 82 Luxury Villa and Home Page 83 Luxury Villa and Home Page 84 Luxury Villa and Home Page 85 Luxury Villa and Home Page 86 Luxury Villa and Home Page 87 Luxury Villa and Home Page 88 Luxury Villa and Home Page 89 Luxury Villa and Home Page 90 Luxury Villa and Home Page 91 Luxury Villa and Home Page 92 Luxury Villa and Home Page 93 Luxury Villa and Home Page 94 Luxury Villa and Home Page 95 Luxury Villa and Home Page 96 Luxury Villa and Home Page 97 Luxury Villa and Home Page 98 Luxury Villa and Home Page 99 Famous People Page 1 Famous People Page 2 Famous People Page 3 Famous People Page 4 Famous People Page 5 Famous People Page 6 Famous People Page 7 Famous People Page 8 Famous People Page 9 Famous People Page 10 Famous People Page 11 Famous People Page 12 Famous People Page 13 Famous People Page 14 Famous People Page 15 Famous People Page 16 Famous People Page 17 Famous People Page 18 Famous People Page 19 Famous People Page 20 Famous People Page 21 Famous People Page 22 Famous People Page 23 Famous People Page 24 Famous People Page 25 Famous People Page 26 Famous People Page 27 Famous People Page 28 Famous People Page 29 Famous People Page 30 Famous People Page 31 Famous People Page 32 Famous People Page 33 Famous People Page 34 Famous People Page 35 Famous People Page 36 Famous People Page 37 Famous People Page 38 Famous People Page 39 Famous People Page 40 Famous People Page 41 Famous People Page 42 Famous People Page 43 Famous People Page 44 Famous People Page 45 Famous People Page 46 Famous People Page 47 Famous People Page 48 Famous People Page 49 Famous People Page 50 Famous People Page 51 Famous People Page 52 Famous People Page 53 Famous People Page 54 Famous People Page 55 Famous People Page 56 Famous People Page 57 Famous People Page 58 Famous People Page 59 Famous People Page 60 Famous People Page 61 Famous People Page 62 Famous People Page 63 Famous People Page 64 Famous People Page 65 Famous People Page 66 Famous People Page 67 Famous People Page 68 Famous People Page 69 Famous People Page 70 Famous People Page 71 Famous People Page 72 Famous People Page 73 Famous People Page 74 Famous People Page 75 Famous People Page 76 Famous People Page 77 Famous People Page 78 Famous People Page 79 Famous People Page 80 Famous People Page 81 Famous People Page 82 Famous People Page 83 Famous People Page 84 Famous People Page 85 Famous People Page 86 Famous People Page 87 Famous People Page 88 Famous People Page 89 Famous People Page 90 Famous People Page 91 Famous People Page 92 Famous People Page 93 Famous People Page 94 Famous People Page 95 Famous People Page 96 Famous People Page 97 Famous People Page 98 Famous People Page 99 Famous People Page 100 Famous People Page 101 Famous People Page 102 Famous People Page 103 Famous People Page 104 Famous People Page 105 Famous People Page 106 Famous People Page 107 Famous People Page 108 Famous People Page 109 Famous People Page 110 Famous People Page 111 Famous People Page 112 Famous People Page 113 Famous People Page 114 Famous People Page 115 Famous People Page 116 Famous People Page 117 Famous People Page 118 Famous People Page 119 Famous People Page 120