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DUK10097474_029
FEATURE - Impressionen von der Great Yorkshire Landwirtschafts-Show
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andrew McCaren/LNP/REX/Shutterstock (9746664i)
Isabelle Mason & Ronan Carter wearing fashions from 1838 created to celebrate the160th Great Yorkshire Show which starts tomorrow. The outfits where created by Harrogate college student Joanna Rishworth.
160th Great Yorkshire Show photocall, Harrogate, UK - 09 Jul 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_6315025_WPN
India Female detectives
Taralika Lahiri, 48, and Sukripi Khanna, 22, in a market in New Delhi, India, Friday, April 11, 2008. Indian women take up snooping as a career - women detectives flourish as spouses fret about infidelity and parents seek reassurance that the suitable boy they've found for their daughter isn't an unemployed, alcoholic bum: As liberal ideas on relationships and sex take root in India, men and women are increasingly resorting to detective agencies to check if their spouses are being unfaithful. There are more than 200 detective agencies in Delhi alone. Apart from suspicious wives and husbands, ordinary families also use detective agencies when they are arranging marriages to check that the prospective bridegroom is telling the truth about his job, income, education etc.
But a new aspect of this whole phenomenon is the number of women detectives. They're hired because they are less likely to arouse suspicion. In a demure sari, they look like the neighbourhood auntie who can get maids, drivers and cooks to spill out sordid details more easily than men. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
DUKAS/WPN -
DUKAS_6315024_WPN
India Female detectives
Taralika Lahiri, 48, and Sukripi Khanna, 22, in the office in New Delhi, India, Friday, April 11, 2008. Indian women take up snooping as a career - women detectives flourish as spouses fret about infidelity and parents seek reassurance that the suitable boy they've found for their daughter isn't an unemployed, alcoholic bum: As liberal ideas on relationships and sex take root in India, men and women are increasingly resorting to detective agencies to check if their spouses are being unfaithful. There are more than 200 detective agencies in Delhi alone. Apart from suspicious wives and husbands, ordinary families also use detective agencies when they are arranging marriages to check that the prospective bridegroom is telling the truth about his job, income, education etc.
But a new aspect of this whole phenomenon is the number of women detectives. They're hired because they are less likely to arouse suspicion. In a demure sari, they look like the neighbourhood auntie who can get maids, drivers and cooks to spill out sordid details more easily than men. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
DUKAS/WPN -
DUKAS_6314980_WPN
India Female detectives
Taralika Lahiri, 48, and Sukripi Khanna, 22, in the office in New Delhi, India, Friday, April 11, 2008. Indian women take up snooping as a career - women detectives flourish as spouses fret about infidelity and parents seek reassurance that the suitable boy they've found for their daughter isn't an unemployed, alcoholic bum: As liberal ideas on relationships and sex take root in India, men and women are increasingly resorting to detective agencies to check if their spouses are being unfaithful. There are more than 200 detective agencies in Delhi alone. Apart from suspicious wives and husbands, ordinary families also use detective agencies when they are arranging marriages to check that the prospective bridegroom is telling the truth about his job, income, education etc.
But a new aspect of this whole phenomenon is the number of women detectives. They're hired because they are less likely to arouse suspicion. In a demure sari, they look like the neighbourhood auntie who can get maids, drivers and cooks to spill out sordid details more easily than men. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
DUKAS/WPN -
DUKAS_6314923_WPN
India Female detectives
Taralika Lahiri, 48, runs the detective agency she has been in this buisnes for 20 years in New Delhi, India, Friday, April 11, 2008. Indian women take up snooping as a career - women detectives flourish as spouses fret about infidelity and parents seek reassurance that the suitable boy they've found for their daughter isn't an unemployed, alcoholic bum: As liberal ideas on relationships and sex take root in India, men and women are increasingly resorting to detective agencies to check if their spouses are being unfaithful. There are more than 200 detective agencies in Delhi alone. Apart from suspicious wives and husbands, ordinary families also use detective agencies when they are arranging marriages to check that the prospective bridegroom is telling the truth about his job, income, education etc.
But a new aspect of this whole phenomenon is the number of women detectives. They're hired because they are less likely to arouse suspicion. In a demure sari, they look like the neighbourhood auntie who can get maids, drivers and cooks to spill out sordid details more easily than men. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
DUKAS/WPN -
DUKAS_6314898_WPN
India Female detectives
Taralika Lahiri, 48, and Sukripi Khanna, 22, in their car in New Delhi, India, Friday, April 11, 2008. Indian women take up snooping as a career - women detectives flourish as spouses fret about infidelity and parents seek reassurance that the suitable boy they've found for their daughter isn't an unemployed, alcoholic bum: As liberal ideas on relationships and sex take root in India, men and women are increasingly resorting to detective agencies to check if their spouses are being unfaithful. There are more than 200 detective agencies in Delhi alone. Apart from suspicious wives and husbands, ordinary families also use detective agencies when they are arranging marriages to check that the prospective bridegroom is telling the truth about his job, income, education etc.
But a new aspect of this whole phenomenon is the number of women detectives. They're hired because they are less likely to arouse suspicion. In a demure sari, they look like the neighbourhood auntie who can get maids, drivers and cooks to spill out sordid details more easily than men. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
DUKAS/WPN -
DUKAS_6314884_WPN
India Female detectives
Taralika Lahiri, 48, outside her office in New Delhi, India, Friday, April 11, 2008. Indian women take up snooping as a career - women detectives flourish as spouses fret about infidelity and parents seek reassurance that the suitable boy they've found for their daughter isn't an unemployed, alcoholic bum: As liberal ideas on relationships and sex take root in India, men and women are increasingly resorting to detective agencies to check if their spouses are being unfaithful. There are more than 200 detective agencies in Delhi alone. Apart from suspicious wives and husbands, ordinary families also use detective agencies when they are arranging marriages to check that the prospective bridegroom is telling the truth about his job, income, education etc.
But a new aspect of this whole phenomenon is the number of women detectives. They're hired because they are less likely to arouse suspicion. In a demure sari, they look like the neighbourhood auntie who can get maids, drivers and cooks to spill out sordid details more easily than men. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
DUKAS/WPN -
DUKAS_6314798_WPN
India Female detectives
Taralika Lahiri, 48, and Sukripi Khanna, 22, in a market in New Delhi, India, Friday, April 11, 2008. Indian women take up snooping as a career - women detectives flourish as spouses fret about infidelity and parents seek reassurance that the suitable boy they've found for their daughter isn't an unemployed, alcoholic bum: As liberal ideas on relationships and sex take root in India, men and women are increasingly resorting to detective agencies to check if their spouses are being unfaithful. There are more than 200 detective agencies in Delhi alone. Apart from suspicious wives and husbands, ordinary families also use detective agencies when they are arranging marriages to check that the prospective bridegroom is telling the truth about his job, income, education etc.
But a new aspect of this whole phenomenon is the number of women detectives. They're hired because they are less likely to arouse suspicion. In a demure sari, they look like the neighbourhood auntie who can get maids, drivers and cooks to spill out sordid details more easily than men. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
DUKAS/WPN -
DUKAS_6314785_WPN
India Female detectives
Taralika Lahiri, 48, in a coffeshop in New Delhi, India, Friday, April 11, 2008. Indian women take up snooping as a career - women detectives flourish as spouses fret about infidelity and parents seek reassurance that the suitable boy they've found for their daughter isn't an unemployed, alcoholic bum: As liberal ideas on relationships and sex take root in India, men and women are increasingly resorting to detective agencies to check if their spouses are being unfaithful. There are more than 200 detective agencies in Delhi alone. Apart from suspicious wives and husbands, ordinary families also use detective agencies when they are arranging marriages to check that the prospective bridegroom is telling the truth about his job, income, education etc.
But a new aspect of this whole phenomenon is the number of women detectives. They're hired because they are less likely to arouse suspicion. In a demure sari, they look like the neighbourhood auntie who can get maids, drivers and cooks to spill out sordid details more easily than men. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
DUKAS/WPN -
DUKAS_6314779_WPN
India Female detectives
Taralika Lahiri, 48, outside her office in New Delhi, India, Friday, April 11, 2008. Indian women take up snooping as a career - women detectives flourish as spouses fret about infidelity and parents seek reassurance that the suitable boy they've found for their daughter isn't an unemployed, alcoholic bum: As liberal ideas on relationships and sex take root in India, men and women are increasingly resorting to detective agencies to check if their spouses are being unfaithful. There are more than 200 detective agencies in Delhi alone. Apart from suspicious wives and husbands, ordinary families also use detective agencies when they are arranging marriages to check that the prospective bridegroom is telling the truth about his job, income, education etc.
But a new aspect of this whole phenomenon is the number of women detectives. They're hired because they are less likely to arouse suspicion. In a demure sari, they look like the neighbourhood auntie who can get maids, drivers and cooks to spill out sordid details more easily than men. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
DUKAS/WPN -
DUKAS_6314778_WPN
India Female detectives
Taralika Lahiri, 48, has run a detective agency for 20 years in New Delhi, India, Friday, April 11, 2008. Indian women take up snooping as a career - women detectives flourish as spouses fret about infidelity and parents seek reassurance that the suitable boy they've found for their daughter isn't an unemployed, alcoholic bum: As liberal ideas on relationships and sex take root in India, men and women are increasingly resorting to detective agencies to check if their spouses are being unfaithful. There are more than 200 detective agencies in Delhi alone. Apart from suspicious wives and husbands, ordinary families also use detective agencies when they are arranging marriages to check that the prospective bridegroom is telling the truth about his job, income, education etc.
But a new aspect of this whole phenomenon is the number of women detectives. They're hired because they are less likely to arouse suspicion. In a demure sari, they look like the neighbourhood auntie who can get maids, drivers and cooks to spill out sordid details more easily than men. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
DUKAS/WPN -
DUK10002106_030
PEOPLE: Queen Elizabeth II. 'überholt' ihre Ur-Urgroßmutter Victoria
Mandatory Credit: Photo by History Archive/REX Shutterstock (2546337a)
Queen Victoria (1819-1901) queen of United Kingdom 1837, Empress of India 1876, crowned 1838. Victoria on throne in coronation robes wearing crown and holding sceptre. Oleograph
History
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10002106_023
PEOPLE: Queen Elizabeth II. 'überholt' ihre Ur-Urgroßmutter Victoria
Mandatory Credit: Photo by History Archive/REX Shutterstock (2547709a)
Victoria (1819-1901) Queen of Great Britain and Ireland from 1838. Victoria c1838. Engraving.
History
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas