It is breathtaking, seeing this huge facade...'can't resist using my 'human tripod' to take pictures of me ... This is an added list of my favorite museums.
The Ishtar Gate was the eighth gate to the inner city of Babylon. It was constructed in about 575 BC by order of King Nebuchadnezzar II on the north side of the city.
The gate is decorated with dragons, lions and bulls, symbolizing the major gods of Babylon; a transparent back wall lets visitors see how the massive gate was reconstructed from fragments.
Market Gate of Miletus
The Market Gate of Miletus is a large marble monument in the
Pergamon Museum in Berlin, Germany. It was built in Miletus in the 2nd
century AD and destroyed in an earthquake in the 10th or 11th century.
The gate was built in the 2nd century AD, most likely during the reign of Emperor Hadrian about 120 to 130 AD.It replaced an existing Doric propylon and served as the northern entrance to the southern market, or agora, in Miletus, an ancient city in what is now Turkey.The gate underwent restoration in the 3rd century following damage from an earthquake. When Justinian strengthened the defenses of Miletus in 538, the gate was incorporated into the city walls.
In the 10th or 11th century, an earthquake caused the gate to collapse.
Fragments of the structure were scavenged and used in surrounding
buildings, but the majority subsided into the ground.
The Museum of Islamic Art was started in 1904 with a donation of precious carpets by Wilhelm von Bode. Such textiles still make up a major part of the exhibition, with colourful examples from Iran, Asia Minor, Egypt and the Caucuses on view.
I can't resist taking his picture...
Highlights from the collection of 8th – 19th century Islamic art and craft include the 17th century Aleppo Zimmer, a vividly coloured panelled room from a merchant’s house in the Syrian city of Aleppo that is painted with Arabian and Persian verses and sayings and pictures of people, plants, and mythical beings
Visitors are not allowed to get inside...this is housed in a glass room....
NEUES MUSEUM
The Neues Museum houses the archaeological collections of the Egyptian Museum and Papyrus Collection, the Museum of Pre- and Early History, as well as works from the Collection of Classical Antiquities.
Did you post on my wall?? :)
The building was left abandoned for decades, and restoration was only decided upon in 1985. Since 1997, British architect David Chipperfield has been charged with overseeing the renovation of the building as part of a general restoration of the entire Museum Island, which runs until 2015.
The Neues Museum once again houses the archaeological collections of the Egyptian Museum and Papyrus Collection, the Museum of Pre- and Early History, as well as works from the Collection of Classical Antiquities.
These collections really caught my eye...
The most prominent feature of the exhibit, the bust of Egyptian Queen Nefertiti, described as “the world’s most beautiful woman,” is centrally and prominently displayed in the north cupola of the building.
Sorry...cameras are not allowed...so I just got this picture from Wikipedia...I'd say, she is the Mona Lisa of the Middle East...she must have been beautiful in person.
I only saw and read these on books...but now, I have the opportunity to see the papyrus, mummy tombs (once again--the first time was in London), ....................a blessing indeed...
Trying to educate myself through this headset...lol...
Sit...kitty,...sit still......
---- yours truly, Freundschaft Bee........
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