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by Photo Researchers
$54.00
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Product Details
You'll never run out of power again! If the battery on your smartphone or tablet is running low... no problem. Just plug your device into the USB port on the top of this portable battery charger, and then continue to use your device while it gets recharged.
With a recharge capacity of 5200 mAh, this charger will give you 1.5 full recharges of your smartphone or recharge your tablet to 50% capacity.
When the battery charger runs out of power, just plug it into the wall using the supplied cable (included), and it will recharge itself for your next use.
Design Details
Captioned After binding King Edmund to an oak tree, Viking archers let fly their arrows, piercing the defeated English Monarch with their shafts... more
Dimensions
1.80" W x 3.875" H x 0.90" D
Ships Within
1 - 2 business days
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Captioned "After binding King Edmund to an oak tree, Viking archers let fly their arrows, piercing the defeated English Monarch with their shafts until he resembled, as a church chronicler later wrote a sea 'urchin whose skin is closely set with quills'." Illuminated manuscript, "Life of Edmund", unknown artist, circa 1130. Edmund the Martyr (841 - November 20, 869) was king of East Anglia, an independent Anglo-Saxon kingdom that comprised what are now the English counties of Norfolk and Suffolk, from about 855 until his death. Almost nothing is known of Edmund. He is thought to be of East Anglian origin and was first mentioned in an annal of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, written some years after his death. The kingdom of East Anglia was devastated by the Vikings, who destroyed any contemporary evidence of his reign. In 869, the Great Heathen Army advanced on East Anglia and killed Edmund. He may have been slain by the Danes in battle, but by tradition he met his death at an unidentified...
$54.00
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