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Воскресенье, 14 Октября 2018 г. 21:59
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360° panorama by Ackermann Ralf. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Goetz von Berlichingen was born in 1480 in Jagsthausen. He came from an old Swabian noble family and enjoyed a chivalrous education. He led a wild life and numerous feuds against religious princes, merchants, and cities. During a war in 1504, he lost his right hand, and a blacksmith from Nuremberg created for him an iron prosthesis whose mechanics are still fascinating. The original can be visited in the museum of the castle.
Воскресенье, 14 Октября 2018 г. 19:00
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360° panorama by Mykhailo Yanytskyi. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Меморіал пам'яті жертв німецької окупації 1941—1944 років (відомий як «Скорботна мати», «Стіна смерті», «Стіна плачу», Меморіал жертв фашизму) — місце страти німецькими окупантами членів Українського національно-визвольного руху та цивільного населення у Дрогобичі на вулиці Ковальській, 6, під час німецької окупації Західної України з 1941 до 1944 років.
360° panorama by Carlos Martin. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The Punta de Teno is the westernmost point of Tenerife. It is one of the most beautiful spots on the island with magnificent views of the Teno cliffs and a wild volcanic rocky coastline
360° panorama by Ackermann Ralf. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Jagsthausen Castle, later also called Goetzenburg, is one of the tribal seats of the Lords of Berlichingen. Surrounded by a ditch, the complex has a considerable amount of buildings from the 15th and 16th centuries. The castle consists of a palace with a knight's hall, a women's shelter with a bower, a keep and a service-building with large corner towers. In the museum next to weapons the original Iron Hands of the Goetz von Berlichingen are shown.
360° panorama by Zoran Strajin. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The Western Wall in the midst of the Old City in Jerusalem is the section of the Western supporting wall of the Temple Mount which has remained intact since the destruction of the Second Jerusalem Temple (70 C.E.). It became the most sacred spot in Jewish religious.
360° panorama by Zoran Strajin. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The City of David is an Israeli settlement and the archaeological site which is speculated to compose the original urban core of ancient Jerusalem. First suggested in 1920, the name was used officially from the 1970s, following the capture of East Jerusalem by Israel, but today the name is questioned in the archaeological academic community. In 1997 management of the park was taken over by Ir David Foundation. Although it is located within the Jerusalem Municipality, it is considered a settlement, having been built on land in the West Bank that was occupied by and annexed to Israel following the 1967 Six-Day War and 1980 Jerusalem Law. The international community regards Israeli settlements illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this. It is best known for its Iron Age structures attributed to Judean kings, and it also contains older Canaanite infrastructure dated to the Middle Bronze Age. The site is now located under the Arab neighborhood of Wadi Hilweh, and extends down from the southern city walls of Jerusalem's Old City. The remains at the site include several water tunnels, one of which was built by King Hezekiah and still carries water, several pools including the Pool of Siloam known from the Old and New Testaments, and here or at the adjacent Ophel scholars expect to find, or claim to have found, the remains of the Acra, a fortress built by Antiochus Epiphanes to subdue those Jerusalemites who were opposed to Hellenisation. City of David archaeologist Eilat Mazar believes that a so-called Large Stone Structure she has discovered at the upper area of the site and tentatively dated to the tenth to ninth century BC, may be the palace of King David. Not far from that excavation area a number of bullae (seal impressions) were unearthed, bearing the names of Yehucal son of Shelemiah and Gedaliah son of Pashhur, two officials mentioned in the Book of Jeremiah. The area is one of the most intensively excavated sites in the Holy Land. When the city was defending itself from the approaching Assyrian army in the 8th century bce, King Hezekiah decided to protect the water by diverting its flow deep into the city with an impressive tunnel system. "Hezekiah also plugged the upper watercourse of the Gihon waters and brought it straight down to the west side of the City of David. And Hezekiah prospered in all his works." (Chronicles II, 32:30) This engineering feat was accomplished by digging a 1,750-foot (533 meter) tunnel into the mountain. An ancient stone carving found near the entrance describes this incredible operation. Today, trekking through Hezekiah’s Tunnel in knee-high water is a highlight for visitors to Jerusalem.
360° panorama by Zoran Strajin. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The Pool of Siloam was a rock-cut pool on the southern slope of the City of David, the original site of Jerusalem, located outside the walls of the Old City to the southeast. The pool was fed by the waters of the Gihon Spring, carried there by two aqueducts. The pool was destroyed and covered after the First Jewish–Roman War in the year 70. Dating was indicated by a number of coins discovered on the stones of the patio near the pool to the north, all from the days of the Great Revolt. The latest coin is dated with "4 years to the day of the Great Revolt", meaning the year 69. In the years following the destruction, winter rains washed alluvium from the hills down to the valley and down the slopes of Mount Zion to the west of the pool; the pool was filled with silt layers (up to 4 m in some places) until it was covered completely.