January 12, 2013

0464 TAIWAN - Here is Taiwan


Usually I write much or very much about the postcard that I share with you. This time I don't have much to say, especially because I talked about Taiwan when I presented a map of the island of Formosa from 1856. I would only add that I believe it will not be long until People's Republic of China and the Republic of China (Taiwan) will give up their reciprocal territorial claims, become obsolete, and they will see each of his way.

0128, 0462 RUSSIA (Moscow) - Saint Basil's Cathedral - part of Kremlin and Red Square, Moscow (UNESCO WHS)

0128 Saint Basil's Cathedral in nowadays

Posted on 20.02.2012, 12.01.2013
Followed the example of Vasili III, his father, Ivan IV, the first Tsar of Russia, known to posterity as Ivan the Terrible, has built several churches with oriental features after the conquest of Kazan (1552), most famously being Saint Basil's Cathedral on Red Square in Moscow (in the pictures). Erected between 1555 and 1561, the Cathedral of the Protection of Most Holy Theotokos on the Moat marks the geometric centre of the city and the hub of its growth since the 14th century. It was the tallest building in Moscow until the completion of the Ivan the Great Bell Tower in 1600.

0462 Saint Basil's Cathedral in 1890

The original building, known as Trinity Church, contained 8 side churches arranged around the 9th, central church of Intercession; the 10th church was erected in 1588 over the grave of venerated local saint Basil Fool for Christ. After every victory of the Russo-Kazan War, Ivan IV erected a wooden church next to the walls of Trinity Church, so at the end of his Astrakhan campaign it was shrouded within a cluster of 7 churches. In 1554 he ordered also the construction of the Church of Intercession on the same site, and one year later began the construction of a new stone cathedral on the site.

0132 & 0461 PORTUGAL (Lisbon) - Cultural Landscape of Sintra (UNESCO WHS)


Posted on 26.02.2012 and completed on 12.01.2013
In this palace spent her last night before leaving the country in exile the last Queen consort of Portugal, Queen Amélia, princess of Orléans by birth, wife of King Carlos I since 1886 until his assassination in 1908, and mother of Manuel II, last king of Portugal. In passing be said, the sorrows didn't spared the daughter of  Prince Philippe, Count of Paris, and of Princess Marie Isabelle of Orléans (in her full name Maria Isabel Francisca de Asis Antonia Luisa Fernanda Cristina Amelia Felipa Adelaide Josefa Elena Enriqueta Carolina Justina R de Orléans y Borbón). One child died at birth in 1887 (Maria Anna), the eldest son (Luís Filipe) was assassinated in 1908, when it wasn't yet 21 years old, together with his father, and the last child, Manuel II (in his full name Manuel Maria Filipe Carlos Amélio Luís Miguel Rafael Gabriel Gonzaga Francisco de Assis Eugénio de Bragança Orleães Sabóia e Saxe-Coburgo-Gotha), was forced to abdicate in 1910 and died in 1932 in bizarre circumstances, with 19 years before she did.

January 11, 2013

0460 BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA - The map of the country


According to the Dayton accord (signed in Paris on 14 December 1995), which put an end to the war in Bosnia, one of the armed conflicts in the former Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, in the borders that appear in this map, is formed from two entities: Republika Srpska (49% of the total area) and the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (51% of the total area). In 2000 was created also, in the north of the country, the Brčko District (officially belonging to both entities, but being governed by neither), which separating in two sides (or connects the two parts of) Republika Srpska (depending on how you look at it).

January 10, 2013

0459 GREECE - An Orthodox Christian priest riding on a donkey


Today, Greece is the only country in the world where an Eastern Orthodox Church is clearly recognized as a state religion, being appreciating, in general, that the identity of modern Greek nation is ethnoreligious. Given that the Greece was an early center of Christianity, and the Byzantine Empire was the result of the synthesis between Hellenistic culture, Christianity and the Roman state structure, no wonder that often is put the equal sign between "Greek" and "Christian Orthodox". So this picture with a priest riding on a donkey is representative for Greece, at least for the rural areas.

0234, 0458 FRANCE (Île-de-France) - Eiffel Tower - part of Paris, Banks of the Seine (UNESCO WHS)

0234 Eiffel Tower (1)

The Eiffel Tower (La Tour Eiffel) was built in 1889 as the entrance arch to the 1889 World's Fair, on the  Champ de Mars in Paris, and it has become both a global cultural icon of France and one of the most recognizable structures in the world. It's named after the engineer Gustave Eiffel, whose company designed and built the tower, which has 320m and was the tallest man-made structure in the world for 41 years. Is know very well all these things. Is less known that it would have to recover the cost of construction in 20 years, and after this it had to be dismantled. But the cost was recovered in a year, and the tower wasn't removed even today.

0458 Eiffel Tower (2)
If it wasn't dismantled, instead was sold in 1925 by Victor Lustig, a con artist born in Hostinné, today a town in Czech Republic. How did this? Very simple. Lustig invited six scrap metal dealers to a meeting at the one of the most prestigious hotels of the Paris, to discuss a possible business deal. There, Lustig introduced himself as the deputy director-general of the Ministry of Posts and Telegraphs, and told the group that the upkeep on the Eiffel Tower wanted to sell it for scrap. Finally he collected the money (plus a large bribe) from one dealer, Andre Poisson, who wanted to enter in the inner circles of the Parisian business community. After that, the con took a train for Vienna with a suitcase full of cash. A month later, Lustig returned to Paris and tried to sell the Tower once more, but this time hasn't succeeded.

0309, 0457 UNITED STATES (California) - Yosemite National Park (UNESCO WHS)

0309 King Arthur Tree in Yosemite National Park

Like Sequoia National Park and Kings Canyon National Park, the Yosemite Valley, part of the park with the same name, famous for its glacially carved domes, are embraced by the Sierra Nevada (Spanish for "snow-covered mountain range"), which runs 640 km north-to-south, between the California Central Valley and the Basin and Range Province. Yosemite National Park is recognized for its spectacular granite cliffs, waterfalls (Yosemite Falls is the highest in North America), clear streams, glaciers, Giant Sequoia groves, and biological diversity.

0457 Yosemite Valley in 1944

"It is by far the grandest of all the special temples of Nature I was ever permitted to enter", wrote John Muir, "one of the patron saints of twentieth-century American environmental activity", with more then a century ago. As is written on the first postcard, "the California Tree [now called King Arthur]  is located in the Mariposa Grove, about a hundred yards beyond the Grizzly Giant, The tunnel was cut through in 1895 to serve as a substitute when heavy snows made the Wawona Tree inaccessible."

0288, 0456 BELARUS (Grodno) - Mir Castle Complex (UNESCO WHS)

0288 Mir Castle Complex (1)

"This is a fertile region in the geographical centre of Europe, at the crossroads of the most important trade routes, and at the same time at the epicentre of crucial European and global military conflicts between neighbouring powers with different religious and cultural traditions", write on the official UNESCO site, in the description of Mir Castle Complex, included in the list of World Heritage Sites in 2000. A phrase which states, concise and exact, the causes of the turbulent history of the castle in the image, situated 90km south-west of Minsk, in the urban settlement with the same name, which has now only 2,500 inhabitants.

0456 Mir Castle Complex (2)

Built as a fortress at the end of the 15th century, by the order of prince Yuri Ilyinich, in Gothic style, the castle became in 1569 the property of the powerful Radziwill family, which held it until 1813. It was besieged in 1655, 1706, 1794, and 1812, being several times destroyed and pillaged, but each time reconstructed and extended, first in the Renaissance and then in the Baroque style. As says Oleg Trusov, "earth walls were made around the castle with bastions at the corners; a water moat surround them. To the north of the walls an Italian garden was laid, to the south - an artificial lake."

January 9, 2013

0455 MOROCCO - A knife sharpener


Eid al-Adha, that means the Feast of the Sacrifice, named also in Yemen, Syria, and North Africa (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, and Egypt) Eid al-Kabir (the Greater Eid) is an important religious holiday celebrated by Muslims to honour the willingness of the prophet Ibrahim (Abraham) to sacrifice his first-born son Ismail (Ishmael) as an act of submission to God's command, before God intervened to provide Abraham with a lamb to sacrifice instead. This happening is narrated also in the Bible in the same way.

January 8, 2013

0316, 0452 & 0453 CHILE - Pablo Neruda


I read the first poem by Pablo Neruda in 1986, in an anthology called Poetry and Humanity, which includes all the 20 poets who had received until then the Golden Wreath, the great award of the Struga Poetry Evenings, an international festival which takes place since 1966 in this little town located on the lakeside Ohrid, then in Yugoslavia, now in Macedonia. Honestly, I bought the volume for the poem of Nichita Stănescu, my illustrious concitadin, but I noted Pablo Neruda and Eugenio Montale even after first reading. And I noticed also a sad coincidence: both Pablo Neruda and Nichita Stănescu died one year after receiving the prize from Struga, at an interval of a decade, in 1972, respectively 1982.


On his real name Neftalí Ricardo Reyes Basoalto, Chilean poet who chose his pen name after Czech poet Jan Neruda had a very hectic life, occuping during his lifetime many diplomatic positions in Asia, Europe and Latin America, and being married three times. Acquiring the communist beliefs during the Spanish Civil War (at that time he was consul in Madrid), he served a stint as a senator for the Chilean Communist Party, but also lived many years in exile.


Although widely recognized as a great poet by his peers, he was often criticized for his admiration for Lenin, Stalin and Castro (In 1953 he was awarded the Stalin Peace Prize) and his political involvement too pronounced. Thus Gabriel García Márquez called him "the greatest poet of the 20th century in any language", but Jorge Luis Borges stated "I don't admire him as a man, I think of him as a very mean man", and Octavio Paz commented that he "became more and more Stalinist".

January 7, 2013

0062, 0451 ANDORRA - Romanesque churches of Andorra (UNESCO WHS - Tentative List)

0062 Sant Miquel d'Engolasters Church

It is known, the buffer zones located between the great powers were constantly exposed to invasions and excesses of all kinds. Principality of Andorra is a rare and happy exception, its borders remaining virtually unchanged since 1278, when the conflict between Count of Foix and the Bishop of La Seu d'Urgell was resolved by the signing of a paréage, which provided that its sovereignty will be shared between these two. The period which preceded this agreement (between 9th and 13th centuries) was one intense from political point of view, but also artistic. Among the major achievements of this period are several Romanesque churches, eight of them being included on the Tentative List of UNESCO WHS.

0451  Sant Joan de Caselles Church

Sant Miquel d'Engolasters Church, built before the 12th century in a strategic spot with a fabulous panoramic view out over the capital Andorra la Vella, the church invites visitors to head to Engolasters Lake or the valley of Madriu-Perafita-Claror, a UNESCO WHS since 2004. The rectangular design houses a nave, a semi-circular apse, a gable roof, a belfry and a later arcade porch. The building is characterised by the disproportion between the nave and the 17m high belfry. The top floor of the belfry preserves one of the few Romanesque sculptural pieces in Andorra - carved heads in the centre of the double window arches - and the interior houses reproductions of the Romanesque mural paintings by the master artist of Santa Coloma (12th century), now held by the National Art Museum of Catalonia.

0450 FRANCE (Occitania) - The Yellow Train / Le Chemin de fer de Cerdagne (UNESCO WHS - Tentative List))




The Ligne de Cerdagne, often called the Yellow Train (in French: Train Jaune, in Catalan: Tren Groc), after its yellow and red colours, derived from the Catalan flag, is a metre gauge railway that runs from Villefranche-de-Conflent through to Mont-Louis, in Roussillon (French Catalonia). This spectacular feat of civil engineering was started in 1903 and the section to Mont-Louis was completed in 1910, followed by an extension to Latour-de-Carol in 1927. It's 63km long and climbs to 1,593m at Bolquère-Eyne, the highest railway station in France, then drops down to a high Pyrenean valley, to its terminus at Latour de Carol, near the Spanish town of Puigcerda.

January 6, 2013

0449 INDONESIA (Sulawesi) - Tana Toraja Traditional Settlement (UNESCO WHS - Tentative List)


As the name implies, Tana Toraja Regency (Land of the Toraja) is a regency (kabupaten) of South Sulawesi in which live the Toraja ethnic group people (people of the uplands), renowned for their elaborate funeral rites, burial sites carved into rocky cliffs, massive peaked-roof traditional houses known as tongkonan, and colorful wood carvings. According to the Torajan myth, the first tongkonan house was built in heaven by Puang Matua, the Creator. When the first Torajan ancestor descended to earth, he imitated the heavenly house and held a big ceremony. An alternative legend, describes the Toraja arriving from the north by boats, but caught in a fierce storm, their boats were so badly damaged that they used them as roofs for their new houses.

0448 HUNGARY (Budapest) - The Fishermen's Bastion - part of Budapest, including the Banks of the Danube, the Buda Castle Quarter and Andrássy Avenue (UNESCO WHS)

0448 The Fishermen's Bastion in Budapest

Located in Budapest, on the Castle hill, behind the sanctuary of the Matthias Church, on the Buda bank of the Danube, the Fishermen's Bastion (Halászbástya) is a terrace which offers a splendid view of the Danube and Pest. It was named after the guild of fishermen, which lived nearby in Watertown (Vízívaros), at the foot of the hill, and was responsible for defending this stretch of the city walls in the Middle Ages. An old fish market also sat at this location during medieval times.

January 5, 2013

0447 TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO (Trinidad) - President's House


Located next to the Botanical Gardens in Port of Spain, the President's House was built between 1873 and 1876 and was used as the residence of the Governor of Trinidad and Tobago until 1958, when it became the residence of the Governor-General of the West Indies Federation. In 1962, when Trinidad and Tobago attained independence, the house became a museum and Art Gallery, and then once again the residence of the Governors-General. In 1976, after the proclamation of the republic, the building was designated the residence of the President.

January 4, 2013

0446 NETHERLANDS (Netherlands / Flevoland) - Schokland and Surroundings (UNESCO WHS)


The former island Schokland, in Zuiderzee, in the northwest of the Netherlands, is a symbol of the traditional Dutch struggle against the water. Traces of this battle can be seen everywhere on and around the island. This area has alternated between being sea and dry land, peninsula and island, peat and polder. The former island, which lost this status in 1942, still stands out as an elongated gently sloping back against the flat surrounding landscape of the Northeast polder.

0445 CZECH REPUBLIC (Central Bohemia) - Veltrusy mansion


Located near the banks of the Vltava River, at about 20 km North of Prague, Veltrusy mansion (Zámek Veltrusy) is a baroque chateau initially built in 1716 by architect František Maxmilián Kaňka for Václav Antonín Chotek, count of Chotkov and Vojnín, then governor of Bohemia, and extended in 1764 by architect Giovanni Battista Alliprandi on orders of count Rudolf Chotek of Chotkov and Vojnín. Further extensions and the annexes of the mansion were constructed in 1804.

January 3, 2013

0444 JAPAN - Yabusame

 

A mounted archer is a cavalryman armed with a bow, able to shoot while riding from horseback. This technique was developed by the natives of large grassland areas, for hunting, but also for war. Mounted archery was a defining characteristic of the Eurasian nomads during antiquity and the medieval period, but the practice also spread to Europe and to East Asia. It developed separately among the peoples of the South American pampas and the North American prairies.