Elastic space
Stormy Evening.
Red-Blazed Trail
Parque del Oeste, Madrid
Bureau de Poste
Everyone needs satellite
Knowlton Church
Knowlton Church sunset
Blushing Beauty
Leaves Are Beautiful Too.
Embroiderer
My local park and a trumpet vine that needs a bit…
Little Eurasian Coot Chicks
Phonsavan landscape
Callanish Stones, HFF
HFF everyone!
Beware of the trains
My Shadow.
Harvest
Craters Restaurant
Gladiolus in Decline
Hydrangea 'Annabelle'
Under attack from the Lily beetle (Lilioceris lili…
Floral Faces.
Just Paddling.
Into the Sun
turk's cap lily
farm environment (pip)
Las Agujas del Cancho Gordo.
Result of drunk driver
In Between The Trees.
a bumblebee and the foxgloves
The barge and the crane
Stairway to the Rapids
HFF number 2.
At length did cross an albatross, HFF
Red and Green
Water damage (HFF).
High Above Rotorua.
Indian Garden.
Bridge building
View Of The Waikato River
View
Anthony Cole House
Sharing.
Location
See also...
" Hola España... Spain ... Espagne ... Spanien ...Spagna ... "
" Hola España... Spain ... Espagne ... Spanien ...Spagna ... "
Spain, sólo lugares, o costumbres, por favor.........
Spain, sólo lugares, o costumbres, por favor.........
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207 visits
Templo de Debod.
Right in the heart of Madrid is this (very late dynasty) Ptolomean / Meroen Egyptian temple, built in 220 BC. A gift from Gamel Abdel Nasser, President of Egypt, to the Spanish nation in 1970 as a thank you for the help of Spanish archaeologists in the dismantling and rebuilding elsewhere of ancient sites. These would otherwise have become engulfed by the rising waters caused by the contruction of the Aswan Dam. This temple was one of those saved from the inundation.
I went inside the main building today. A far cry from my previous visit some years ago when I was crushed between hordes of visitors and I couldn't study a thing from the artefacts and certainly couldn't get to read any notes. Thanks to Covid-19, entrance was restricted to three visitors at a time and I was able to read the notes by the exhibits and generally learn a few things, which was impossible before.
It's an ill wind ...
I went inside the main building today. A far cry from my previous visit some years ago when I was crushed between hordes of visitors and I couldn't study a thing from the artefacts and certainly couldn't get to read any notes. Thanks to Covid-19, entrance was restricted to three visitors at a time and I was able to read the notes by the exhibits and generally learn a few things, which was impossible before.
It's an ill wind ...
@ngélique ❤️, Ernest CH, Jean-luc Drouin, Gracie and 23 other people have particularly liked this photo
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