AmazingEagle
kiwifarms.net
- Registrado
- 17 de Jul, 2020
Two female IDF soldiers at Bootcamp, 1954.
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If I'm not mistaken, it was built as a secret retreat for the Ummayad caliph, hence why it's so remote.Here's Qusayr Amra. Its a small castle in the Jordanian desert built in the early 8th century during the Umayyad Caliphate. It has some quite exceptional art inside thats quite unusual in Islamic art.
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It's known not for elaborate geometric designs or calligraphy but portraits, frescos and murals.
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What I think is so cool about the paintings is how utterly Greek they look despite being made by Arabs over a hundred years after the invasion . They look like something inside a medieval Greek church; I'm half expecting the Theokotos to pop up.
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Okay, maybe's its not exactly like a church. The caliph liked big tiddy women.
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Unfortunately, it seems like even 8th century Arabs had to deal with furries.
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The centerpiece of the castle is what's known as the "Portrait of the Six Kings", which depicts six rival kings of the caliph in supplication.
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A reproduction from 1907. They are from left to right: The Byzantine Emperor, King Roderic of Visigoth Spain, Shah Kisra of Sassanid Persia, Negus Armah (the Emperor of Ethiopia), and two mystery kings. Possible identities might include the Emperor of China, a Hindu raja, or even a Turkish khan
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True. I remember reading that traditional music from the Middle East is heavily influenced by that of the Byzantines.If I'm not mistaken, it was built as a secret retreat for the Ummayad caliph, hence why it's so remote.
As for the artwork, it's probably because they hired native Cjristian artists and artisans, since most of those lands were probably majority Christian at that time. If anything, the major drive for conversion of lands in the Caliphate only started with the Abbasids in the 9th Century.
Would've been better if they flushed his ashes down the toilet.
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Protestors being pepper-sprayed by officer John Pike during the UC Davis Protests.