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Paestum, Italy: Ancient Greek Temples
More info about travel to Italy: Paestum, just south of Italy's Amalfi Coast, was founded by Greeks in the sixth century B.C. Visitors to Paestum can see the remains of three impressive temples: the Temple of Ceres, the Temple of Hera, and the Temple of Neptune.
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Visit Estonia - What You Should Know Before You Visit Estonia
Read the Blog to Learn More about Estonia:
Estonia, the Baltic Gem is a great little country to visit with beautiful lakes, islands and shoreline, not to mention some wonderful historic cities like Tallinn, the Capital or Tartu the university town or Parnu. This videos gives you an idea of some of the things you should know before you visit Estonia.
Filmed in Tallinn, Estonia
Copyright Mark Wolters 2017
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PERFECT DAY IN SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA
How to spend a perfect day in Santa Monica, California. Food, fun and cocktails in LA's most stylish neighborhood.
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Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Case Romane del Celio
Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Case Romane del Celio
Case Romane del Celio is a Roman underground site where you can see 2nd and 3rd century Roman houses in which Christians worshipped, and several well-preserved frescoes. It is located under the church of Saints Giovanni and Paolo. It is probably easiest to get to by walking northeast (past the short edge of the Circus Maximus) from the Circo Massimo metro stop until you see a small pink building on the right, diagonally across the intersection once you've reached the end of that short edge of the Circus Maximus. By the way, this is a good opportunity to see the Circus Maximus, the Frangipane Tower and the Piazza di Porta Capena. Anyhow, once you see that small pink building at the east corner of Via di San Gregorio and Vid dei Cerchi, walk on the tiny Salita di San Gregorio which winds behind that building and takes a curve to the right, becoming Clivo di Scauro. After that curve, the second building on your left is the Basilica of Saints Giovanni and Paolo; look for the marked doorway which I recall being a few steps below street level. Alternately, you can walk across Via di San Gregorio from the entrance/exit of the Palatine Hill and walk up a short but steep embankment to get to Viale di Parco del Celio, which you should cross and continue on a few steps to that curve in Clivo di Scauro.
John and Paul (not the Apostles, and not the Beatles, but the guys the church was named after) lived in what are now the underground houses, which had been combined into an elegant pagan house during the 3rd century before they lived there. They were officers at the court of emperor Constantine (312 - 337 AD) who made Christianity legal in Rome. 24 years later, emperor Julian the Apostate (361 -363 AD) attempted to revert Rome back to paganism, and had John and Paul beheaded on the night of January 26th-27th, 361 AD after they refused to serve in a military campaign. They were buried on the site of their houses (which was illegal since this was within the city walls). A church was built over the houses in the 4th century shortly after their deaths, and remains of it can be seen in the present church which was built during the Middle Ages. The houses and their rich decorations were discovered under the church in 1887.
According to reviews, a residence from the 2nd century AD, a single home of a wealthy family, and a 3rd-century-AD apartment building for artisans are all preserved in this site, but I must admit that the signage is poor enough (or my addled brain is old enough) that I had no idea when I visited the site that this was the case. But the well-preserved frescoes are easy to see, even if they're not identified at the site, and they made the trip worthwhile. Those frescoes range from the 3rd to the 12th centuries. The most famous one is the 5th photo below, which is about 9 feet tall by 15 feet wide, and probably dates to the mid to late 3rd century AD. The subject of the painting might be Proserpina returning from the Underworld at the beginning of Spring, resting on a small island with her mother Ceres and her brother Bacchus. Or it might be Venus in her role as protectress of sailors.
There is also a small museum (antiquarium) which houses many artifacts found during the excavation. If you get the idea that I think the site needs to be improved, explaining what you're looking at better, you're absolutely right. I think it's inexcusable to not use the money this site is collecting from all its tourists to invest in a few signs that explain what people are seeing. In 10 languages. It's practically free, for cryin' out loud. Get with it. Owners, go look at the underground at the nearly-free San Nicola in Carcere where the signs are not superb, but at least there's something.
( Rome - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Rome . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Rome - Italy
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Places to see in ( Arezzo - Italy ) Casa di Giorgio Vasari
Places to see in ( Arezzo - Italy ) Casa di Giorgio Vasari
La Casa Vasari is a palace Arezzo located in Via XX Settembre 55. It was the family residence of the painter, architect and art historian Giorgio Vasari and preserves valuable frescoed rooms. The artist bought this house around 1540 and, busy between Florence, Rome and his travels, he lived there for short periods, but intervening directly in both the works of completion and decoration, including the scattered nucleus of furniture. He had also designed a façade, which was never built.
An example of the best preserved in the region of an artist's house and mansion of Mannerist style, it was the property of Vasari's heirs until their extinction, in 1687 , when it passed to the Fraternity of the Laity. Sold to a private family, the Brozzi family, in 1897, passed to the Paglizzi family and finally it was bought by the State in 1911 , which made it a museum open to the public. It is also home to the Vasari Archive.
You reach the main floor through a staircase surmounted by the bust of Giorgio Vasari of an unknown five-seventeenth-century Tuscan. The first room you meet is that of the Camino, frescoed by Vasari in 1548 with the Envy of Envy and Fortune by Virtue in the ceiling and on the walls allegorical figures, landscapes and stories of the painters of antiquity. On the right is the chapel, with a Madonna di Fra Paolino and a rare original 16th century majolica floor.
The corridor of Ceres, or of the Dragons, shows some paintings of late Mannerism, including a Circumcision attributed to Mirabello Cavalori and the Death of Adonis by Jacopo Zucchi . On the left is the Bridal Chamber with a ceiling decorated by a fresco by Vasari di Abraham among the allegorical figures of Peace , Concordia , Virtue and Modesty . Among the paintings, the Alms of Saint Nicholas of Giovanni Stradano , the Christ brought to the tomb of the young Vasari and, of the same, a Judas. The corridor leads to the former kitchen, frescoed by Raimondo Zaballi in 1827 and decorated with portraits of the 16th century, especially from Tuscany. The House of Apollo was frescoed by the landlord with Apollo and the nine Muses and the Allegory of conjugal love , where is the portrait of his wife, Nicolosa Bacci. Among the paintings shown here are the St. Francis of Alessandro Allori , the mirror container with Prudence , attributed to the same, the Casa del Sole del Poppi , the San Girolamo and the Fortuna by Jacopo Ligozzi .
In the Chamber of Fame Vasari painted the Fama on the ceiling and on the pediments and the lunettes (very repainted) the four Arts , his self-portrait and portraits of the Arezzo artists or the territory of Arezzo: Lazzaro Vasari , Luca Signorelli , Spinello Aretino , Bartolomeo della Gatta , Michelangelo and Andrea del Sarto . The Crucifixion is by Giovanni Stradano (1581), the glazed polychrome terracotta with Galba by Andrea Sansovino , the table of Charity by Carlo Portelli. A small adjoining room contains the wooden model of the Loggia del Vasari , built in Arezzo, the Madonna with the Child, Sant'Elisabetta and San Giovannino of Santi di Tito and three sections of the predella by Maso da San Friano .
( Arezzo - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Arezzo . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Arezzo - Italy
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Places to see in ( Caserta - Italy ) Reggia di Caserta
Places to see in ( Caserta - Italy ) Reggia di Caserta
The Royal Palace of Caserta is a former royal residence in Caserta, southern Italy, constructed for the Bourbon kings of Naples. It is one of the largest palaces erected in Europe during the 18th century. In 1997, the palace was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site; its nomination described it as the swan song of the spectacular art of the Baroque, from which it adopted all the features needed to create the illusions of multidirectional space. In terms of volume, the Royal Palace of Caserta is the largest royal residence in the world with over 2 million m³ and covering an area of about 235,000 m².
The construction of the palace was begun in 1752 for Charles VII of Naples, who worked closely with his architect, Luigi Vanvitelli. When Charles saw Vanvitelli's grandly scaled model for Caserta, it filled him with emotion fit to tear his heart from his breast. In the end, he never slept a night at the Reggia, as he abdicated in 1759 to become King of Spain, and the project was carried to only partial completion for his third son and successor, Ferdinand IV of Naples.
The political and social model for Vanvitelli's palace was Versailles, which, though strikingly different in its variety and disposition, solves similar problems of assembling and providing for king, court and government in a massive building with the social structure of a small city, confronting a baroque view of a highly subordinated nature, la nature forcée. The population of Caserta Vecchia was moved 10 kilometers to provide a work force closer to the palace. A silk manufactory at San Leucio resort was disguised as a pavilion in the immense parkland.
Another of the king's primary objects was to have a magnificent new royal court and administrative center for the kingdom in a location protected from sea attack, and distant from the revolt-prone and congested city of Naples. To provide the king with suitable protection, troop barracks were housed within the palace.
The Royal Palace of Madrid, where Charles had grown up, which had been devised by Filippo Juvarra for Charles' father, Philip V of Spain, and Charlottenburg Palace provided models. A spacious octagonal vestibule seems to have been inspired by Basilica di Santa Maria della Salute in Venice, while the palatine chapel is most often compared to the Royal Chapel at Versailles. Vanvitelli died in 1773: the construction was continued by his son Carlo and then by other architects; but the elder Vanvitelli's original project, which included a vast pair of frontal wings similar to Bernini's wings at St. Peter's, was never finished.
The palace has 5 floors, 1,200 rooms, including two dozen state apartments, a large library, and a theatre modelled after the Teatro San Carlo of Naples. A monumental avenue that would run 20 kilometers between the palace and Naples was planned but never realized. The garden, a typical example of the baroque extension of formal vistas, stretches for 120 ha, partly on hilly terrain. It is also inspired by the park of Versailles. The park starts from the back façade of the palace, flanking a long alley with artificial fountains and cascades. There is a botanical garden, called The English Garden, in the upper part designed in the 1780s by Carlo Vanvitelli and the German-born botanist, nurseryman, plantsman-designer, John Graefer, trained in London and recommended to Sir William Hamilton by Sir Joseph Banks. It is an early Continental example of an English garden in the svelte naturalistic taste of Capability Brown.
The fountains and cascades, each filling a vasca (basin), with architecture and hydraulics by Luigi Vanvitelli at intervals along a wide straight canal that runs to the horizon, rivalled those at Peterhof outside St. Petersburg. These include:
The Fountain of Diana and Actaeon (sculptures by Paolo Persico, Angelo Maria Brunelli, and Tommaso Solari);
The Fountain of Venus and Adonis (1770–80);
The Fountain of the Dolphins (1773–80);
The Fountain of Aeolus;
The Fountain of Ceres.
( Caserta - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Caserta . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Caserta - Italy
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Top 11 Beautiful and Most Dangerous Roads in the World 2016
Video 2016 Top 11 Most beautiful and most dangerous roads in the world.
What’s the scariest road you’ve ever driven down? There are a handful of hair raising roads around the world that strike fear into even the bravest of men. Here is a list of 11 most dangerous roads in the world. These roads have high death rates and are extremely dangerous. The people who live around these areas depend on these roads for their daily transportation; so consider yourself lucky. Although very dangerous, but those roads are very beautiful.
Thank you for watching, more video about Top 10 in this playlist:
Here Top 11 roads:
11. Halsema Highway, Philippines
10. Sichuan-Tibet Highway, China
9. The Stelvio Pass, Italy
8. Los Caracoles Pass, Chile
7. Skippers Canyon Road, New Zealand
6. The Zoji Pass, India
5. Guoliang Tunnel Road, China
4. Karakoram Highway, Pakistan
3. James Dalton Highway, Alaska
2. Jalalabad–Kabul Road, Afghanistan
1. North Yungas Road, Bolivia
Holidays to Mars, Underwater Cities and Three-Day Working Weeks Could be The Norm by 2116
Cities will get busier, meaning buildings will get taller, while underground and underwater buildings will be the norm
Flexible furniture and light-up walls could put pay to decorating the home, while cooks will print food in the kitchen. We could work for three days and attend meetings remotely via holograms to save time every week. In 2116 we may even holiday in 'caravans' that are delivered by drones or take a trip to Martian and lunar colonies. In Blade Runner and Minority Report, cities of the future are shown as threatening and intimidating places, despite the prevalence of incredible technology. But life in 100 years' time could be much more fun, with less time spent at work and holidays spent in drone-delivered 'caravans'. That's according to a report that also speculates we may live in super skyscrapers or in underwater bubbles filled with smart and flexible furniture, as well as enjoying a three-day working week. In Blade Runner and Minority Report, cities of the future are shown as threatening and intimidating places, despite the prevalence of incredible technology. But life in 100 years' time could be much more fun, with less time spent at work and holidays spent in drone-delivered 'caravans'. That's according to a report that also speculates we may live in super skyscrapers or in underwater bubbles filled with smart and flexible furniture, as well as enjoying a three-day working week. Modelled on London, the report's predictions are based on the idea that cities will become even more packed with people as the global population grows, and the environment will change. So architects will have to burrow deeper underground and build increasingly tall structures, to squeeze everyone in. An accompanying illustration shows a futuristic London skyline where high rise apartments dwarf Europe's tallest building – The Shard. The report says that the use of carbon nanotubes and diamond nanothreads will help engineers create towering megastructures far taller than today's skyscrapers, while 25-storey buildings could be hidden underground. Underwater cities are a popular feature in sci-fi films and could not only become a reality by 2116, but be built from water itself, to create breathable atmospheres as well as generating hydrogen fuel in the process. Inside, they could be furnished with 3D printed furniture within smart walls that will space by changing shape to provide extra seats or shelves through a malleable 3D surface. 'LED room surfaces will mean you won't need to re-decorate your home, as walls, floors and ceilings will adapt to suit your mood,' it says. The kitchen will look completely different in a century's time too. Ovens will be replaced by printers, where users can download dishes by famous chefs and print a cordon-bleu banquet at the touch of a button. Other professional expertise will be available in the home, in the form of robotic doctors. Home 'medi-pods' will provide people with a digital diagnosis and supply medicine if needed. 'Our working lives will be transformed with the use of holograms which will allow us to attend meetings virtually, enabling us to interact truly as though in the same room as colleagues without needing to leave the comfort of our homes,' the report says. It predicts we will enjoy working a shorter week, thanks to time saved from not travelling or attending meetings. And when it comes to time off, we could take a road trip in personal flying drones instead of cars, with 'drone mules' strong enough to carry entire homes around the world for holidays – a bit like hi-tech caravans. We could even visit the Moon or Mars, as experts predict Earthlings will have colonised these planets by 2116. As part of the report, commissioned by Samsung's SmartThings, 2,000 British adults were asked which predictions are most likely to happen in the future. The top prediction was virtual work meetings, with almost half of participants predicting we will be able to work anywhere and attend meeting remotely using avatars or holograms. Commercial flights into space and LED walls in houses were voted to be the next most probable innovations. Dr Maggie Aderin-Pocock said: 'Our lives today are almost unrecognisable from those a century ago. The internet has revolutionised the way we communicate, learn and control our lives. 'Over the next century we will witness further seismic shifts in the way we live and interact with our surroundings.'
TRAVEL EUROPE: Favorite & Least Favorite Cities I've Visited!
So I have seen a few places in Europe, in my opinion these are the best and worst... and of course good and bad experiences, or the people I met a long the way has a lot to do with my final opinion of the city!
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