Showing posts with label Travel (Not Synth Related). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel (Not Synth Related). Show all posts

Wednesday, 14 January 2015

Kumbhalgarh Fort - Rajasthan - India

Kumbhalgarh Fort is located 64 kms from Udaipur in Rajasmand district.
This is the approach by road. I was struck with its beauty. Reminds me of some of the castles I've seen in Bavaria & Spain.


The Fort was built by Maharana Rana Kumbha in the 15th century (1443 A.D completion).
The fortifications of the fort extend 36 kilometers making it the the second longest wall in the world, the first being ''the Great Wall of China''.

It's one of the few forts in history that was never conquered by direct assault and fell only once, due to a shortage of drinking water. This helped the combined armies of the Mughal Emperor Akbar of  Delhi,, Raja Man Singh of Amber, the Sultan of Gujarat, and Raja Udai Singh of Mewar to breach its defences.



This is the main entrance - called the Ram Pol.



A view of the castle from the ramparts. I would have loved to walk the entire 36kms, but that would have taken 2 days. One day I'll return for this.

The walls are broad enough to ride eight horses side by side.... 15 feet thick in some places. And there are 360 temples inside the fort complex.


The wall stretches across the Aravali Mountains.


Views from the summit of the fortress.
Badal Mahal (the Palace of Clouds)

Some of the temples inside the fortress complex date from the 3rd century BC:
300 are Jain Temples. The rest are Hindu.

Jain Temple Complex
Ganesh Temple, Kumbhalgarh Fort

Neelkanth Mahadev (Shiva) temple
I was struck by how much this looks like a Greek Temple. Alexander the Great never conquered India but his armies did reach the borders of Rajasthan in 327BC.

Quote from Wikipedia :
According to Plutarch, at the time of Alexander's Battle of the Hydaspes River, the size of the Magadha's (he was a Indian King) army further east numbered 200,000 infantry, 80,000 cavalry, 8,000 chariots, and 6,000 war elephants, which was discouraging for Alexander's men and stayed their further progress into India:
--Plutarch, Parallel Lives, "Life of Alexander"

Exhausted and frightened by the prospect of facing another giant Indian army at the Ganges River, his army mutinied at the Hyphasis (modern Beas), refusing to march further East. Alexander, after the meeting with his officer Coenus, was convinced that it was better to return.


Friday, 19 December 2014

The Church of the Nativity - Bethlehem

In keeping with the Christmas theme, I thought I'd upload some pics of the Church of the Nativity in
Bethlehem. (PALESTINE)
The site of the Church of the Nativity is a World Heritage Site, and was the first to be listed under the name of the State of Palestine.

The site is also on UNESCO's List of World Heritage Sites in Dange


It's one of the world's oldest surviving churches and marks the spot most Christians believe to be that of Christ's birth. Jesus was most likely born in a cave (known as the Grotto)... or in a house attached to a cave that would have been used for stabling and storage - thus the manger.

 This is part of the cave under the church foundations.


 Underground chapels

 
In 327 AD, Constantine and his mother St. Helena commissioned a church to be built over the cave. This first basilica, dedicated on May 31, 339, had an octagonal floor plan.

The roof looks like it's rotting & threatening the whole building. There are holes in the timbers above allowing water to drip down upon the precious paintings and mosaics below.


The actual problem isn't a lack of restoration money. It seems to be jealousy over who is responsible for the Church's maintenance. Three Christian denominations (Greek  Orthodox, Armenian Orthodox and the Franciscan order of the Roman Catholic Church) are fighting for control and neither seem to be able to agree.
Portions of the floor mosaic still survive from this period. These are 1700 years old. How any of this has survived is beyond belief. It's a miracle that the church has survived at all.
It's seen invasions, fires & earthquakes. In 2002 armed Palestinians hid in the church from Israeli forces.




 These columns are a wonder. Each carved from a single piece of red limestone. They stand tall and have watched over the church's survival.




St. Jerome lived and worked in Bethlehem from 384 AD, and he was buried in a cave beneath the Church of the Nativity.


The Constantinian church was destroyed by fire during the Samaritan Revolts in the sixth century AD
So the Emperor Justinian rebuilt it in 530 AD. This much larger church is what we see today.
Justinian was a Byzantine (Eastern Roman Empire) Emperor. His capital, Constantinople is today's Istanbul. During his reign Constantine tried to revive Rome's greatness and recapture the lost Western half.

He never succeeded. The Eastern half became the Byzantine Empire. The west developed into what we now know as Western Europe.

The Persians spared it during their invasion in 614 AD because, according to legend, they
were impressed by a representation of the Magi — fellow Persians — that decorated the building.

The Crusaders took Jerusalem on 6 June 1009. Baldwin I and II were crowned there. Baldwin I was crowned the first King of Jerusalem on the 24th December 1100.

Much of the current external appearance is Crusader. Much restoration work was accomplished between 1165 & 1169.
The Crusaders were defeated by Saladin (Salah al-Din Yusuf ibn Ayyub) in 1187 at Hattin in Galilee.
This led to a Muslim occupation of Bethlehem. Most of the Christian community had to leave. They only returned in 1192..... The Muslim powers allowed this after payment of a stiff tax. Thus, the history of Bethlehem swayed this way and that over the coming centuries. Armies came and went. It always however remained a important place of pilgrimage.

Between the years 1219-1220, it was visited by none other than Francis of Assisi. He arrived in the port of Acre which was still in the hands of the Crusaders. He went to Egypt to the court of the Sultan Malek al-Kamil. It is reported that the Sultan was so struck by the personality of the saint that he granted him a safe-conduct for his journey to Palestine.

This church looks more like a fortress than a place of worship.

The four-foot-high "Door of Humility,"

This is the main entrance to The Church of the Nativity. It was once much larger & grander.

Over the centuries it's size has shrunk for defensive reasons. No longer can horses (& I guess armies)
be ridden into the church. Even a Emperor will have to dismount and stoop his head if he wishes to go inside.

There used to be a pointed arch over the doorway.

Light in the Grotto is supplied by 53 lamps, 19 of which belong to the Latins.



The entrance to the crypt & grotto below

  Star of Bethlehem and Altar

The Roman Catholics have control over this section of the church. 

Also called the Grotto of the manger, the silver star marks the spot where Christ is said to have been born. 

To illustrate the competition between the warring churches its recorded that of the 15 lamps that hang above the star, 6 are Greeks, 5 belong to the Armenians and 4 to the Latins.



Dove of Peace

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Friday, 12 December 2014

Bethlehem - The Palestinian Territory - West Bank

The city of Bethlehem is located in Palestinian territory - in the West Bank.
It's a easy 30 min bus ride from Jerusalem.



Even if you don't have one religious bone in your body it's still worth seeing.
Dating back to about 1350-1330 BCE --- apparently King David was crowned King there.



Of course it's most famous claim to fame is as the birthplace of Jesus. The city has a Muslim majority but is also inhabited by one of the oldest Christian communities in the world.


Manger Square, Bethlehem

Today it's in a poor state of disrepair. The economy is centred mainly around tourism,
the peak of which is during the Christmas season when Christians make pilgrimage to the Church of the Nativity. This has been going on for over 2000 years.


 Romans, Byzantines, Crusaders, Muslims, ......... this city has seen a lot. If only the walls could talk.




The streets of Bethlehem, Christmas Eve 2013






















For more travel links click here:
http://djjondent.blogspot.com.au/2015/03/travel-postcards-index-my-travel.html