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Sunset in the olive grove.
Umbrian country house.
Set free.
20.05.21 Krähe 1
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Le Mont Blanc
Bon Dimanche.
Duo
Greece - Ancient Corinth, Temple of Apollo
Reds.
Couchant Agave..!
Barclays Center 7 June 2020
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Piemont Tour 2019 Hospiz Grosser Sankt Bernhard…
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Illusion d'optique
Terrain glissant
Beauté sauvage 3 .
HFF et Bonne fin de semaine.
grün, blau und rot
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Verwunschen...
Durchblick mit Raps
Amira et Younes.
Lighthouse on Stilts
couchant porsay 7
Seuls la Nuit.
Blue
Sunday roses.
Soft nylon-bristled brush
Dark pink peony.
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Nederland - Staverden
Moineau -
HFF. et bon Week-end
Bonne et agréable fin de semaine.
Kintyre Landscape, HFF
Pirates of Cambeltown Loch.
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Greece - Ancient Corinth
(Ancient) Corinth was first inhabited in the Neolithic period (5000-3000 BC). The peak period of the town
started in the 8th century BC. Representative of its wealth is the Temple of Apollo, built in 550 BC. The city was situated Isthmus of Corinth, which connects the Peloponnese with central Greece and which also separates the Saronic and Corinthian Gulfs from each other. Its position gave Corinth great strategic and commercial importance in ancient times. It therefore developed into a healthy commercial, political and industrial city state.
The Romans destroyed Ancient Corinth in 146 BC, but it was later restored by Julius Caesar. The city was re-inhabited in 44 B.C. and gradually developed again.The centre of the Roman city was organized to the south of the temple of Apollo and included shops, small shrines, fountains, baths and other public buildings.
The invasion of the Herulians in the year of 267, initiated the decline of the city, though it remained inhabited for many centuries through successive invasions and destructions, until it was liberated from the Turks in 1822.
First excavations were conducted in 1892.The systematic excavations of the area started 1896 and are still continuing today. They have brought to light the agora, temples, fountains, shops, porticoes, baths and various other monuments. The finds are exhibited in the Archaeological Museum (PiP5) inside the archaeological site of Ancient Corinth.
started in the 8th century BC. Representative of its wealth is the Temple of Apollo, built in 550 BC. The city was situated Isthmus of Corinth, which connects the Peloponnese with central Greece and which also separates the Saronic and Corinthian Gulfs from each other. Its position gave Corinth great strategic and commercial importance in ancient times. It therefore developed into a healthy commercial, political and industrial city state.
The Romans destroyed Ancient Corinth in 146 BC, but it was later restored by Julius Caesar. The city was re-inhabited in 44 B.C. and gradually developed again.The centre of the Roman city was organized to the south of the temple of Apollo and included shops, small shrines, fountains, baths and other public buildings.
The invasion of the Herulians in the year of 267, initiated the decline of the city, though it remained inhabited for many centuries through successive invasions and destructions, until it was liberated from the Turks in 1822.
First excavations were conducted in 1892.The systematic excavations of the area started 1896 and are still continuing today. They have brought to light the agora, temples, fountains, shops, porticoes, baths and various other monuments. The finds are exhibited in the Archaeological Museum (PiP5) inside the archaeological site of Ancient Corinth.
Günter Klaus, , Champland, Gudrun and 101 other people have particularly liked this photo
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HFF and wish you a good and safe weekend.
Danke für die Informationen – und ein schönes Wochenende wünsche ich dir!
HFF and a good weekend.
HFF and have a nice week-end !
HFF, have a great weekend. Herb
HFF.et bon week-end.
Bon week-end, Jaap ! HFF !
HFF
Jaap van 't Veen club has replied to Joe, Son of the Rock clubThank you for posting
www.ipernity.com/group/magicalsunlight
happy weekend...
Stay healthy ❤️
A very nice picture, and it is amazing to see what their city must have looked like!
Best Wishes, a nice weekend, and stay safe!!
Peter
Beautiful vestiges demonstrating the refinement of the art - Roman I presume - of the time.
Jaap van 't Veen club has replied to Eric Desjours clubmerci Jaap pour le partage .
This is a lovely image.....
I hope you have a safe and interesting weekend
A belated HFF. Stay safe and enjoy your weekend, Doug
P.S I would have loved if the PIP are also free standing images, where one can see more details
Viele Grüsse
Walter
I hope you're having an enjoyable weekend.
HFF and have a good weekend Jaap!
Stay safe and healthy!
Best wishes
Füsun
Thanks for interesting info.
All the best
Fabio
Jaap van 't Veen club has replied to Sarah P. clubSplendid images of this mythical place
It is always a pleasure to see it again, Jaap
Autant les photos, inserts compris, que la note.
Vais voir le détail lentement.
Merci Jaap.
bonne journée JAAP♫
ciao, Silvy
Jaap van 't Veen club has replied to Denis Croissant club.........wünsche noch einen schönen Nachmittag,ganz liebe Grüße Güni:))
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