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Forum Messages Posted by Roswitha

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Thread: Caracalla Baths, Ankara

2451.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 30 Jan 2008 Wed 02:21 pm

Greek & Roman heritage in Turkey

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dM6xvRo4Lxk

http://romeartlover.tripod.com/Pergamo.html
http://romeartlover.tripod.com/Pergamo2.html

THE GLORY OF PERGAMUM
http://rubens.anu.edu.au/raider4/turkey/turkeybook/splendid3.html


THE ROMANS IN TURKEY
http://www.turkeytravelplanner.com/details/History/Romans.html



Thread: Caracalla Baths, Ankara

2452.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 30 Jan 2008 Wed 11:36 am

Here you get a true insight of the Caracalla Baths in Rome, Italy
http://www.italyguides.it/us/roma/baths_of_caracalla/baths_of_caracalla3.htm



Thread: Caracalla Baths, Ankara

2453.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 30 Jan 2008 Wed 11:16 am

is one of the archeological sites of Ankara. Caracalla Baths, Ankara is situated about 300m or 330yds north of Ulus Meydani in Çankiri Caddesi which is at the southern side in Ankara. Here are the remains of the Roman baths constructed by the emperor Caracalla between 212 and 217 BC.

Caracalla Baths, Ankara was possibly dedicated to Aesculapius who is the god of health who was burnt down in the 10th century. They originally included more than a few changing rooms and at least ten rooms containing baths with water at different temperatures. These would have arrayed from a frigidarium that is cold, to a piscina that is a swimming pool, tepidarium that is lukewarm and caldarium that is hot. In front of the comparatively well conserved lower floor of the baths with its enclosed passageways and heating system, can be seen the palaestra, where the people having bath did their exercises. Fragments of columns and capitals as well as some interesting Byzantine gravestones were also on display.

Sardes:
http://www.trekearth.com/gallery/Middle_East/Turkey/Aegean/Manisa/Salihli_Sart/photo601811.htm



Thread: Turkish Army

2454.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 30 Jan 2008 Wed 11:04 am

Movie: Death in Gaza (2004)
James Miller goes to the Palestine territory to film the children of the Intifada and is killed by Israeli firepower. His murder is a stunning coda to a filmed account of how war corrupts the innocence of children. Miller begins the film acquainting us with the geography of Palestine, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip. We meet, get up close and personal, with the battle hardened "martyrs" of the Hamas jihad. Hidden by masks they seduce the children, so needy for heroes and mentors, with speeches of death and destruction. Blow yourself up and go to paradise. We meet the children, feckless, disingenuous children learning to kill, feeling the heft of a gun, basking in the praise of the masked warriors. There are the girls, praying for the destruction of Israel, eager to emulate their male counterparts. The children seduce us with their wide-eyed appeal, their ability to absorb the most horrible blows as their homes are destroyed. One child points to his uncle's car which has been tossed into the limbs of a tree by an Israeli bulldozer that's just leveled his home. The children watch all this, relate the stories of the martyrs, and seem with their open faces and fetching smiles and flashing dark eyes not to have a clue that they're living in a hell. They express the earnest belief that all will be well once the Israelis are (1) killed and (2)removed from the area between the Mediteranean and the Sea of Galilee. The innocence and naiveté are beguiling, disturbing, sad. At the last Miller meets his brutal, surprising death in the murky dusk, in the rubble of the streets of this hopeless settlement. There seems no way out. Violence begets violence. The righteous shriek their slogans. Human life is disposable. This brilliant film solves nothing. Don't believe me? Read the viewers' comments on the Message Boards. Read the insults, the disparaging remarks, the certitude of bigots and believers. James Miller. R.I.P. All the innocent children of Gaza.

"Turtles Can Fly" is the third feature from internationally acclaimed Iranian filmmaker Bahman Ghobadi ("A Time For Drunken Horses"). Written, directed and produced by Ghobadi, the film features of cast of local non-actor children. "Turtles Can Fly" is set in Ghobadi’s native Kurdistan on the eve of the American invasion of Iraq. Thirteen-year-old Soran (Soran Ebrahim) is known as “Satellite,” for his installation of dishes and antennae for local villages looking for news of Saddam. He is the dynamic leader of the children, organizing the dangerous but necessary sweeping and clearing of the minefields. He then arranges trade-ins for the unexploded mines. The industrious Satellite falls for an unlikely orphan (Avaz Latif), a sad-faced girl traveling with her brother Henkov (Hirsh Feyssal), who appears to have the gift of clairvoyance. The siblings are care-taking a three-year-old, whose connection to the pair is discovered as harsh truths are unveiled. The devastation to this land and its inhabitants is revealed in the matter-of-fact perspective of the children and is equally displayed with every poignant detail of its unbearable nature. The exquisitely haunting mountains play backdrop to violence and tragedy, but at the same time the heart and humor of the children is an undeniable force. "Turtles Can Fly" won the Golden Shell at San Sebastian and the Silver Bear at Chicago and is the Iranian entry to the Academy for 2004 Foreign Film consideration.



Thread: Turkish Army

2455.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 30 Jan 2008 Wed 03:16 am

Amos Gitai: Territories (Field Diary / Arena of Murder
Acclaimed Israeli director Amos Gitai's often controversial films include documentaries and fictional works that examine the endless cycle of violence in the Middle East. This collection of films highlights Gitai's acute sense of social conscience as he explores the fragile coexistence of a group of Arabs and Israelis; the history of a single house as a microcosm for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; and the Israeli occupation of the West Bank.


Amos Gitai is one of the most gifted documentarians as well as fictional filmmakers. Here he portrays the hearts and minds of Palestinians and Israelis of all ages, genders, and class, to remarkable effect. A constantly compelling and well-edited film;one of the most important films about the Middle East in recent years.



A MOVIE WITH INSIGHTS



Thread: Music for late hours

2456.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 30 Jan 2008 Wed 02:28 am

HE IS GREAT!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqyLcsGqW4s



Thread: Music for late hours

2457.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 30 Jan 2008 Wed 02:25 am

HE IS MY FAVORITE, REMEMBER WHEN I POSTED THIS??
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqyLcsGqW4s



Thread: JEWISH FASHION

2458.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 30 Jan 2008 Wed 12:24 am

Absolutely fantastic link, Alameda, thanks so very much for sharing!



Thread: Erdogan: Lifting headscarf ban aims to end injustices against girls at universities

2459.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 30 Jan 2008 Wed 12:18 am

Thanks for welcoming me back!



Thread: Ancient city from Byzantine period discovered in Turkey

2460.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 30 Jan 2008 Wed 12:16 am

Archaeologists have discovered remnants of an ancient city from the Byzantine period during surface excavations carried out in the Anatolian city of Corum in Turkey.

According to a report from the Corum - Dogan News Agency, the location of the ancient city Avkat has been determined to be within the borders of the Beyozu village in the Mecitozu district.

The discovery of this ancient city was made by a team of 32 scientists from the United States, Britain, Italy and Switzerland and led by the Byzantine Empire expert, Professor John Haldon, who carried out a three-week survey in August 2007 in Beyozu to determine its location.

According to Mehmet Demir, an official from the Ankara Ethnography Museum, the exact location was also noted by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism.

"Excavation works will start this year," said Demir. "Excavations for Byzantine settlements will continue in coming years," he added.

The results of the survey are to be presented in a symposium to be held in May. (ANI)



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