Sew La Ti Embroidery [Search results for Earthquake

  • Back from the dead: Astonishing pictures show how Japan is recovering just three months after tsunami

    Back from the dead: Astonishing pictures show how Japan is recovering just three months after tsunami
    By EMILY ALLEN
    ©The pleasure boat ''Hamayuri'' washed up on the rooftop of an inn by tsunami and a building have so far been removed in the town of Otsuchi, Iwate Prefecture, on April 6, top, and on June 3, bottom.
    Japan's economy shrank 0.9 percent in the first quarter but recovery is expected between July and September
    Just three months ago Japan was plunged into chaos after a cataclysmic earthquake sent a merciless tsunami crashing through towns and cities up and down the east coast.
    The unforgiving tide of water obliterated tens of thousands of buildings, devouring almost anything in its path. Thousands of people died and hundreds of bodies have never been recovered.
    The heart-breaking images of families desperately searching for loved ones amid the rubble of their homes sent shockwaves around the world.
    Now, three months on, these images show the Japanese people remain undaunted by the havoc nature has wreaked on their homeland as step by step they rebuild their nation.
    ©
    A Shinto shrine gate and surroundings in the town of Otsuchi, Iwate Prefecture three days after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami and the same spot on June 3
    But despite their progress, stark reminders of the work left to do means the resilience of this Asian country is still being tested.
    Headway in the clean-up has been made in the town of Otsuchi in Iwate Prefecture where the pleasure boat ''Hamayuri'', which was remarkably washed up on the rooftop of an inn, has been removed, along with a building shattered by the the wall of water.
    Further down is an image of a Shinto shrine gate in the town three days after the March 11 disaster.
    The same spot on June 3 which shows thousands of tonnes of rubbish, which had lay smouldering in an almost post-apolcalyptic landscape, has been cleared, roads re-laid and power lines restored.
    Civilisation appears to have returned in Natori in Miyagi prefecture too. The first image shows a towering wall of ocean crashing through trees devastating homes and businesses lining the coast, tearing down power lines and drowning anything in its path.
    ©A residential area being hit by the tsunami in Natori, Miyagi prefecture, top, and the same area, with only one house remaining on June 3, bottom
    ©A parking lot of a shopping centre filled with houses and debris in Otsuchi town, Iwate prefecture two days after the earthquake hit and the same area picture on June 3
    Astonishingly just one house survived the wave and a lone digger is pictured having cleared away the once thriving community reduced to rubble. Hundreds of cars parked in the foreground remain abandoned and appear to be the only reminder of the devastation.
    Similarly, the striking image of a ship atop tonnes of rubble in the Kesennuma in Miyagi prefecture on March 20 was projected around the world and became a symbol of the disaster.
    The photograph shows grey smoke filled skies above a path of destruction, but three months on, much of the debris has been cleared, power lines restored and hope is on the horizon.
    A car park in a shopping centre, filled with houses and debris in Otsuchi town in Iwate prefecture is also back on its feet and signs of life are returning. Parking spaces are clearly visible where piles of wood, bricks, and vehicles lay strewn just a few weeks ago.
    ©A view of earthquake and tsunami-hit Kesennuma, Miyagi prefecture on March 15, top, and the same area pictured on June 3
    The final image shows local people walking through debris on a street in Kesennuma, Miyagi Prefecture to get water 48 hours after the disaster. The same image on June 3 shows the massive tank which lay in the road has gone and a damaged house on the left side of the street has been cleared and restored.
    The 9.0 magnitude earthquake caused the worst crisis in Japan since the Second World War and left almost 28,000 people dead or missing.
    The clean-up bill is expected to top £184 billion and radiation fears from the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant are still growing after four of the reactors were damaged leading to radiation leaks.
    This week, an earless bunny was born near the reactor in north east Japan raising concerns the radiation could have long-term side effects.
    Following the blast and initial leaks Japanese officials told people living near the plant to stay indoors and turn of air conditioning and also to not drink tap water.
    High levels of radiation are known to cause cancer and other health problems but scientists are not yet clear if the defect in the rabbit is linked to the blast.
    ©Local residents walking through debris on a street in Kesennuma, Miyagi Prefecture, to get water 48 hours after the disaster, top, and the same area on June 3 where a large tank and a damaged house on the left side of the street have been cleared away
    Japan's economy slipped into recession following the devastation and new data shows it shrank 0.9 percent in the first quarter of this financial year but experts say a recovery later this year as industry kicks into action.
    Industrial output rose one per cent in April from a record decline in March.
    Manufacturers are making progress in restoring supply chains and ecnomists are predicting Gross Domestic Project to begin expanding again between July and September.
    ©
    A view of earthquake and tsunami-hit Kesennuma, Miyagi prefecture on March 20, left, and the same area after the building and debris was removed on June 3
    Australian Red Cross - Japan Earthquake and Tsunami devastation

    source: dailymail

    VIA Back from the dead: Astonishing pictures show how Japan is recovering just three months after tsunami

  • An emotional Lady Gaga wipes away tears as she remembers Japanese earthquake victims

    An emotional Lady Gaga wipes away tears as she remembers Japanese earthquake victims
    By GEORGINA LITTLEJOHN
    ©Compassion: Lady Gaga wipes away her tears as she remembers the victims of the Japanese earthquake at a press conference in Tokyo today
    She donated more than £1million out of her own pocket towards relief efforts after the Japanese earthquake and another £500,000 from sales of her charity bracelet.
    So it was no surprise to see the Lady Gaga compassionately shed a tear for the victims of the disaster which devastated the country in March.
    The singer was at a press conference in Tokyo today to promote the MTV Video Music Awards Japan.
    ©Choked up: The tears falling down her face, Gaga struggles to compose herself
    She will be performing at the awards, which take place on Saturday, which have been renamed Video Music Aid Japan and will raise money for the Japanese Red Cross.
    Today Gaga broke down as she spoke about her love for the country.
    She said: 'I am always so inspired when I come to Japan, inspired by the spirit, the passion, the love, the absolutely infectious joy of Tokyo.'
    ©Hello, Tokyo: Gaga arrived at the press conference in her new aquamarine wig and black Aladdin pants
    And she encouraged people from all over the world to visit the country, which has seen a huge plunge in tourism since the disaster, the nation's biggest recorded earthquake struck.
    It created a tsunami that caused widespread destruction and set off a crisis at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant about 140 miles (220 kilometers) north of Tokyo.
    It killed almost 20,000 people, tens of thousands more were left homeless and thousands of others were forced to leave homes near the plant because of the radiation danger.
    ©
    Please visit: Gaga urged tourists to come to Japan declaring it 'beautiful' and 'safe'
    Wearing a long aquamarine wig, she said: 'I can't say enough to people all over the world that the majority of Japan right now, Japan in general, is very safe. It's fine to come here. It's beautiful.
    'The most important thing, and the best thing, we could do for Japan right now is to boost tourism.
    'I would like to use my position here today and all week long to run around Tokyo enjoy the beautiful city and kiss all the beautiful little monsters and scream at the top of my lungs that everyone should come visit this beautiful place.'
    ©Thirsty work: Gaga sipped from a china tea cup which had Japanese characters that read 'Pray For Japan' across it
    ©For luck: The singer kisses an Okiagari-Koboshi, a traditional Japanese doll
    During the press conference, she sipped tea from a china cup that was painted with Japanese characters that read 'We pray for Japan'.
    She was also presented with an 'Okiagari-koboshi' - which means 'getting up little priest' - a Japanese traditional tumble doll that is considered a good-luck charm and a symbol of perseverance and resilience
    GaGa arrived in Tokyo on Tuesday, days in advance of her performance on Saturday's Music Aid Japan benefit concert which will be broadcast live to an estimated 30 million households in Japan, Korea, Singapore and China.
    ©For her Little Monsters: Gaga stopped to sign autographs as she left a restaurant last night...
    ©... and kept her faithful followers happy as she stopped to greet fans at the airport
    Last night she was bombarded by fans as she left Shabuzen, a popular restaurant that specialise in a common Japanese dish called Shabu-shabu, which is a Japanese hot pot, in the trendy night life area of Roppongi, in Tokyo.
    But ever gracious to her 'Little Monsters', she happily stopped and signed autographs for them, just as she did when she arrived at Narita International Airport.
    ©Just put your paws up: Gaga gives her trademark claw-hand sign and then waves to her fans as she heads out of the airport
    Lady Gaga at the MTV Video Music Aid Japan press conference (june 2011)

    source: dailymail

    VIA An emotional Lady Gaga wipes away tears as she remembers Japanese earthquake victims

  • Nepal: Quake deals heavy blow to Nepal's rich cultural heritage

    Nepal: Quake deals heavy blow to Nepal's rich cultural heritage
    Reduced to piles of rubble and splintered wood, Nepal's rich cultural heritage has suffered a devastating blow from a massive earthquake that tore through the country, experts said Sunday.

    Quake deals heavy blow to Nepal's rich cultural heritage
    Nepalese rescue members and onlookers gather at the collapsed Dharahara Tower 
    in Kathmandu on April 25, 2015 [Credit: AFP/Prakash Mathema]

    In the heart of Kathmandu, many of a cluster of temples and statues built between the 12th and 18th centuries by the ancient kings of Nepal have collapsed, killing scores and trapping others underneath.

    The nine-storey Dharahara tower, a major tourist attraction in the city's Durbar square with its spiral staircase of 200 steps, was reduced to just its base when the 7.8-magnitude quake struck at lunchtime on Saturday.

    "I had just bought tickets to climb the tower and was at its base when I felt a sudden shaking," Dharmu Subedi, 36, said from a hospital bed in Kathmandu.

    "Within minutes, the Dharahara had crumbled to the ground with maybe more than 100 people in it," Subedi told AFP.

    Quake deals heavy blow to Nepal's rich cultural heritage
    Durbar Square in Kathmandu, pictured on February 23, 2015 
    [Credit: AFP/Prakash Mathema]

    UNESCO was trying to gather information on the extent of the destruction, including at three palace-filled squares in the cities of Patan and Bhaktapur, both former kingdoms in the Kathmandu Valley, as well as in Kathmandu.

    "We understand the historic Durbar squares of Kathmandu, Patan and Bhaktapur have been badly damaged," Christian Manhart, UNESCO's representative to Nepal, told AFP.

    "Several temples have collapsed. Two temples in Patan have been completely collapsed, and Durbar Square (in Kathmandu) is worse.

    "Right now we are assessing the situation, and collecting information on what the damage is. All UN agencies have received a request from the (Nepalese) government for assistance," he added.

    Quake deals heavy blow to Nepal's rich cultural heritage
    People clear rubble in Kathmandu's Durbar Square on April 25, 2015 
    [Credit: AFP/Prakash Mathema]

    He said it was too early to talk about reconstruction of the monuments and how much assistance UNESCO could provide.

    Manhart said his office was also trying to determine whether another UNESCO World Heritage site, that of Lumbini, the place where Buddha was born more than 2,600 years ago, had also been hit.

    "We haven't received reports of severe damage in Lumbini, but we are still trying to collect information," he said of the site, some 280 kilometres (170 miles) west of Kathmandu.

    'Irreparable loss for Nepal' 

    In Kathmandu, residents were seen clawing through the rubble, using their hands, buckets and shovels to try to find those feared trapped in Durbar Square, which had been crowded on Saturday with local and foreign tourists.

    Quake deals heavy blow to Nepal's rich cultural heritage
    Kathmandu's Durbar Square, a UNESCO World Heritage site, was severely
     damaged by the Nepal earthquake on April 25, 2015
    [Credit: AFP/Prakash Mathema]

    Large piles of bricks, wooden beams and other debris were dotted throughout the historic square, where minutes earlier stood double-roofed temples and other monuments built by the Malla kings.

    The monuments are the "social, religious and urban focal point of the city" which has a rich history of Hindu, Buddhist and Tantrism religion and culture, UNESCO says on its website.

    "Kathmandu with its unique architectural heritage, palaces, temples and courtyards has inspired many writers, artists, and poets, both foreign and Nepalese," it says.

    Expert P.D. Balaji cast doubt on whether the monuments could be completely rebuilt, saying television footage showed extensive damage.

    Quake deals heavy blow to Nepal's rich cultural heritage
    A Nepalese man cries as he walks through the earthquake debris in Bhaktapur, 
    near Kathmandu, Nepal, Sunday, April 26,  [Credit: AP/Niranjan Shrestha]

    "What I can say is that it's an irreparable loss for Nepal and the rest of the world," Balaji, head of the history and archaeology department at the University of Madras, said.

    "Complete restoration is not possible on account of the extensive damage to the historical sites in Nepal."

    According to UNESCO, "two catastrophic earthquakes" in 1833 and 1934 led to some monuments in the Kathmandu Valley being rebuilt.

    Author: Paavan Mathema | Source: AFP [April 27, 2015]

  • Heritage: Cairo’s Blue Mosque opens after 6-year restoration

    Heritage: Cairo’s Blue Mosque opens after 6-year restoration
    The 14th century mosque of the Amir Aqsunqur, better known as the Blue Mosque, has been opened to the public Saturday after the completion of a six-year renovation project.

    Cairo’s Blue Mosque opens after 6-year restoration
    The Blue Mosque in the Bab al-Wazir district of Cairo, built in 1347 
    by Amir Aqsunqur [Credit: Marc Lacoste/WikiCommons]

    The mosque had been closed since 1992 due to damage it had suffered from an earthquake in the same year.

    As part of the Al-Darb al-Ahmar Urban Regeneration Program, the Aga Khan Trust for Culture (AKTC) has commenced the renovation work in 2009.

    The mosque was inaugurated in presence of Antiquities Minister Mamdouh el-Damaty, the Aga Khan, the Chairman of the Aga Khan Development Network, Cairo governor Galal Saeed.

    Cairo’s Blue Mosque opens after 6-year restoration
    The restoration was completed by AKTC as part of the larger Al-Darb al-Ahmar 
    Urban Regeneration Programme. The Mosque had been closed since 1992 
    due to damage suffered from an earthquake [Credit: WMF]

    “The restoration of the Amir Aqsunqur Mosque was executed by a team of 60 to 80 craftsmen and conservators. They had first to remove the temporary supports installed after the 1992 earthquake – and then to implant seismic retrofit measures to protect against future earthquakes. They worked to conserve extensive roofing and facades on the one hand, and delicate marble panels and Iznik ceramic tiles on the other,” said the Aga Khan.

    The blue tiles at the mosque’s interior eastern wall lend this mosque its alternative name, Islamic history professor at Minya University Fathy Khourshid told The Cairo Post Sunday.

    The World Monuments Fund and the Selz Foundation were also key supporters of the restoration of the Amir Aqsunqur Mosque.

    Cairo’s Blue Mosque opens after 6-year restoration
    One of the Aqsunqur Mosque's arcades [Credit: AKTC/Gary Otte]

    “Covering the Qibla wall from the floor to the ceiling, these tiles are in the style of ceramics manufactured in the Turkish town of Iznik which is famous for blue tiles,” said Khourshid.

    Located in Islamic Cairo’s modern district of Al-Darb al-Ahmar between Bab Zuweila and the Citadel of Saladin, “the mosque was a part of a funerary complex, containing the mausoleums of its founder Shams El-Din Aqsunqur, his sons, a number of children of the Mamluk sultan Nasir Mohamed and that of its principal restorer, Ibrahim Agha al-Mustahfizan,” according to Khourshid.

    Author: Rany Mostafa | Source: The Cairo Post [May 03, 2015]

  • Bee Blocks Update

    Bee Blocks Update
    seving
    A little while back there was a huge earthquake in New Zealand, near Christchurch where the wonderful Deb from Works in Progress lives. She has a giving heart and wanted to do something for those that lost everything....she started a earthquake quilts project, and asked for a little help.

    seving
    I was able to make up a few blocks to send to her this week. She specifically requested that they be in blues and reds. I hope that they work out Deb, i enjoyed making them.
    The first two were made from a simple tutorial she provided in case we were stuck and could not think of what to make.

    seving
    These wonky stars were made for Deb from my favorite star tutorial at Silly Boo Dilly blog. They always turn out amazing and i always love them!

    seving
    These last three blocks are for my vintage sheet freedom bee, also started by Deb. I am plugging my way through them so that i can be done in time to have them back to all the other ladies before i have this baby.

    seving

    for Deb

    seving

    for Tracey

    seving

    for Jilly
    Posted by Picasa
  • Nepal: In Nepal, efforts underway to salvage ancient sites damaged by quake

    Nepal: In Nepal, efforts underway to salvage ancient sites damaged by quake
    Swayambhunath — also known as the Monkey Temple, for its holy, furry dwellers that swing from the rosewood trees — is one of the oldest and most sacred Buddhist sites in Nepal's Kathmandu Valley, an important pilgrimage destination for Hindus as well as Buddhists. It was also one of the worst damaged by last month's earthquake.

    In Nepal, efforts underway to salvage ancient sites damaged by quake
    Buddhist monks recover a statue of a Buddhist deity from a monastery 
    at Swayambhunath [Credit: Niranjan Shrestha/AP]

    At the site, Nepali police soldiers shovel broken bricks and sand into garbage baskets. They're much more cautious cleaning up here than at many other devastated places: There's a chance they could still find precious, centuries-old statues and other artifacts in the rubble.

    Volunteers stand precariously atop a two-story-high pile of crumbled bricks, scouring it for relics. A temple nearby, part of the site's hilltop complex, has big cracks and looks like it could topple and crush them at any minute.

    This is dangerous, important work, says Nepal's undersecretary of the Department of Archaeology, Suresh Shrestha, who's peeled off his dust mask and is taking a break in the shade.

    "There are so many artifacts because in Hinduism and Buddhism, there are lots and lots of gods and goddesses," he says.

    Nepal's government says at least 70 ancient, sacred sites in the Kathmandu Valley were severely damaged or destroyed by the earthquake. The area is home to seven UNESCO World Heritage Sites; Swayambhunath is one of them.

    With help from the United Nations, every ancient object that's found intact at the site from now on will be inventoried and stored in a secure place to protect from looters. Archaeologists fear that in the chaos following the quake, some artifacts were lost or stolen.

    In Nepal, efforts underway to salvage ancient sites damaged by quake
    A Buddhist monk picks through a damaged monastery near the 
    Swayambhunath stupa [Credit: Niranjan Shrestha/AP]

    The oldest structure there, a Buddhist monument known as a stupa, dates from the fifth century. "It is intact," says Christian Manhart, UNESCO's country representative for Nepal. "We are lucky."

    Manhart says it's difficult to know at this point how much of the Swayambhunath complex can be restored. But, he says, "I'm rather optimistic. We have all these architectural features like sculptures, carved wooden beams, cornerstones, which can be reused for construction."

    Despite the damage, the most sacred rituals are continuing — including worship five times a day.

    "We have [a] very big problem, but we do not stop the praying," says Ashok Buddhacharya, a priest who says his family roots at the temple extend back to the fifth century. "Ritual praying is continuing."

    Buddhacharya sits on a mat underneath a large, blue tarp. It's where he and his wife and children and other families are cooking and sleeping, since their living quarters here were reduced to rubble.

    "These are historical, more than 1,000 years old, the stupas, the metal things, the statues," he says. "We cannot make a repeat, you see."

    That is, they can't just rebuild them.

    That's why archaeologists feel a sense of urgency, here and at other sites, as they work around the clock to recover what they can.

    Author: Kirk Siegler | Source: NPR [May 03, 2015]

  • Heritage: Egypt approves replica Pharos lighthouse plans

    Heritage: Egypt approves replica Pharos lighthouse plans
    The Lighthouse of Alexandria, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World that was badly damaged by three earthquakes, will be rebuilt nearby its original location.

    Egypt approves replica Pharos lighthouse plans
    The lighthouse is thought to have had three distinct sections, as this 2006 
    computer-generated image shows [Credit: WikiCommons]

    In its meeting last week, “members of the Permanent Committee of the Egyptian Antiquities have approved an old project, submitted previously by the Alexandria governorate, aiming to revive the lighthouse,” Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities SCA Dr. Mostafa Amin told Youm7.

    He explained that members of the committee agreed on reconstructing the Lighthouse on an area of land located a few meters to the southwest of the landmark’s original location. A comprehensive study has been completed and submitted to Alexandria governorate for final approval, he added.

    The Lighthouse, also known as the Pharos, was badly damaged due to a series of earthquakes hit Alexandria and the Mediterranean area between the 3rd and 12th centuries, Greco-Roman archaeology professor Fathy Khourshid told The Cairo Post Tuesday.

    “A severe earthquake in 1303 caused a huge destruction of the monument before the Mamluk Sultan Qaitbay in 1480 reused the monument’s ruins to construct a fortress (currently standing and bearing his name) on the original location of the Pharos northwest of Alexandria,” according to Khourshid.

    Built by the Greek architect Sostratus of Cnidus for the purpose of guiding sailors into the harbor, the tower was completed and inaugurated during the reign of Ptolemy II Philadelphus (285 B.C.-246B.C.), said Khourshid.

    “The original building comprised three stages: a lower square section with a central core, a middle octagonal section and a circular section at its top,” he added.

    Its top used to have a mirror that reflected sunlight during the day while a fire was lit at night in order to guide ships, said Khourshid.

    In 1994, remains of the original building were unearthed on the floor of the sunken part of Alexandria’s eastern harbor.

    With a height estimated at 130 meters, (420 feet) the tower was the tallest manmade structure on Earth for many centuries.

    Author: Rany Mostafa | Source: The Cairo Post [May 06, 2015]

  • Travel: Archaeologist calls for first underwater museum in Egypt

    Travel: Archaeologist calls for first underwater museum in Egypt
    Bassem Ibrahim, head of the museum zones department affiliated to the central department of submerged antiquities, has called for the establishment of the first underwater museum in Alexandria.

    Archaeologist calls for first underwater museum in Egypt
    A diver comes eye-to-eye with a sphinx made out of black granite in the harbour
     of Alexandria. The face of the sphinx is believed to represent Cleopatra's father, 
    Ptolemy XII [Credit: ©Franck Goddio/Hilti Foundation,
     photo: Jerome Delafosse]

    In a cultural event held by Alexandrina Bibliotheca on Monday, Ibrahim said the project will be a culturally entertaining one that will completely change tourism in Egypt.

    “After the Mediterranean Sea submerged ancient Alexandria as result of an earthquake, excavation works have helped to recover thousands of relics that date back to different historic eras like the pharaonic, Ptolemaic, Romanian and Islamic.”

    “Doubles of these relics are still underwater, which led us to think about the first underwater museum in Egypt. According to our designs, it will be a glass one,” he added.

    Among the obstacles that face the project, Ibrahim included “the wide areas of submerged antiquities underwater, the necessity of having a large number of archaeological divers to carry out periodic maintenance. Also, ships and sailing boats will be banned from navigating above the museum area.”

    Mona Mokhtar, a tour guide who holds a master's degree on maritime museums said, “My master's thesis came down to the fact that 65 percent of tourists in the world look for entertainment, while 10 percent search for culture and 25 percent for other reasons, including treatment.”

    “Constructing the first underwater museum in Egypt will be a mix between entertainment and cultural tourism, as it will offer diving and historic information on the story of Egypt's submerged antiquities and the eras they belong to,” Ibrahim said.

    Source: Egypt Independent [May 26, 2015]

  • Java: Centuries-old Sukuh temple undergoing restoration work

    Java: Centuries-old Sukuh temple undergoing restoration work
    The Central Java Cultural Heritage Preservation Center (BPCB) has begun restoring Sukuh temple in Karanganyar regency, Central Java, aiming to prevent existing structural damage in the centuries-old temple from worsening.

    Centuries-old Sukuh temple undergoing restoration work
    Sukuh Temple, Karanganyar [Credit: Stefanus Ajie]

    The pyramid-shaped temple, which was discovered in 1815, has sunk 20 centimeters on the northeastern side over the past few decades. Furthermore, stones are coming apart in extended areas of the southwestern side and on the stairs leading to the temple’s main building.

    BPCB restoration working group chief Sudarno said the extensive damage had put the whole structure of the temple in danger.

    “The current damage is the accumulation of damage [from previous years] and it’s dangerous. That’s why we’ve had to prioritize the restoration of the temple this year,” Sudarno said.

    The restoration work, he went on, had officially begun on June 18 and would last for two years. To carry out the major project, the BPCB is working with a joint team comprising Borobudur temple conservation experts, Yogyakarta-based Gadjah Mada University (UGM) archaeologists and structural engineering experts and geologists from the National Development University (UPN), also in Yogyakarta.

    During the restoration, local authorities will close the temple’s 5,440-square-meter compound to the public for security reasons.

    Located in Sukuh village, around 35 kilometers east of Surakarta, Central Java, Sukuh temple is perched at around 910 meters above sea level on the western slopes of Mount Lawu.

    Archaeologists believe the Javanese-Hindu temple was constructed in the 15th century, probably at the end of the Majapahit Empire era (between 1293 and 1500 CE), thought to be represented in a relief depicting a giant eating a human.

    The restoration of Sukuh will, according to Sudarno, be followed by the dismantling of the temple’s main structure for research purposes. The center of the pyramid remained uncharted territory, he said.

    The earliest book about the temple, Proveener Beschrijpten op Soekoh en Cetho, which was written by Dutch archaeologist Van der Vlis in the mid 19th century, reported that the temple’s center was covered in concrete.

    “So far we can only predict what is inside the central part of the temple, soil or stone,” Sudarno said.

    This year, he added, the restoration work would be focused on dismantling and research, while next year was for reassembling. The estimated Rp 941 million (US$70,500) cost of this year’s restoration work, according to Sudarno, is met by the state budget through the Culture and Elementary and Secondary Education Ministry.

    The head of BPCB’s cultural heritage protection, development and utilization section, Gutomo, said many temples in the region were in need of restoration following a devastating 2006 earthquake that hit Yogyakarta and parts of Central Java. Priority, he went on, was given to temples categorized as part of the national cultural heritage and those in dangerously poor condition.

    Other temples undergoing restoration work this year include Plaosan, Sewu, Bubrah and Lumbung, all of which are located in the same area as Prambanan temple.

    “These four temples are part of the Prambanan temple national heritage,” Gutomo said.

    Author: Kusumasari Ayuningtyas | Source: The Jakarta Post [June 29, 2015]

  • Near East: Byzantine church in Turkey for sale on Internet

    Near East: Byzantine church in Turkey for sale on Internet
    The 700-year-old arched church in the northwestern province of Bursa’s Mudanya district has been put on sale on the Internet for $1 million, news website T24 has reported.

    Byzantine church in Turkey for sale on Internet
    Panagia Pantobasilissa [Credit: ANSA]

    The Internet advert on a real estate website said the church’s relief and restitution were approved by the Bursa Council of Monuments. The 13th century church is filed under the top category “building more than 31 years old.”

    The real estate agent who placed the ad, Nusret Akyüz, responded angrily to phone calls inquiring about the church.

    “We are selling it. We cannot provide information about the owner of the estate. The details are in the ad. Do not make me repeat the same things. You are the 50th person who has called me since yesterday,” said Akyüz.

    A document written by a Dr. J. Covel in 1676 states that the church was dedicated to Panagia Pantobasillissa (The Queen of All - Virgin Mary). The church’s dome and bell tower collapsed during an earthquake in 1855 and was restored in 1883.

    After Greeks who had lived in the area for centuries emigrated to Trilye in the 20th century in the population exchange between Greece and Turkey, the church passed to private ownership.

    This is not the first time news of the sale of historic sites and churches in Turkey has hit headlines.

    Previously, an 18th century Greek church in the Central Anatolian province of Kayseri’s Melikgazi district was put onto the market via the Internet in a similar way.

    In March, a family living in the Cappadocia region of the Central Anatolian province of Nevşehir’s Derinkuyu district put their house on sale, along with a church and underground passage under the house, for 900,000 Turkish Liras.

    Source: Hurriyet Daily News [July 09, 2015]

  • Nepal: Nepal to re-open UNESCO heritage sites to tourists in August

    Nepal: Nepal to re-open UNESCO heritage sites to tourists in August
    Nepal is planning to re-open the historical structures and monuments enlisted by the UNESCO as World Heritage sites to the tourists as well as the general public from August 17 as only 15 per cent of the sites have been damaged in the recent devastating earthquakes.

    Nepal to re-open UNESCO heritage sites to tourists in August
    The iconic Swayambhunath stupa in Kathmandu was relatively lucky in the aftermath 
    of the devastating Nepal earthquake [Credit: Indian Express/
    Abhimanyu Chakravorty]

    The Hanumandhoka Durbar Square, Patan Durbar Square, Bhaktapur Durbar Square, Swayambhunath, Bouddhanath, Pashupatinath, and Changunarayan area are the major sites visited by the tourists. The number of tourists arriving in the country has suddenly decreased in the aftermath of the earthquakes that claimed over 9,000 lives on April 24.

    However, the government has made it clear that only 15 per cent of the world heritage sites were damaged by the earthquakes. The bodies concerned, who visited the sites to check their condition have claimed that they are not completely damaged, an official said.

    The heritage sites are certainly affected by the quake and aftershocks but they are not completely ravaged as reported by a section of media, said Director General of the Department of Archaeology, Bhesh Narayan Dahal. Various government and non-government teams, in coordination with the local people, have been working to remove the rubble of the structures.

    Meanwhile, two aftershocks were felt in Nepal today. A 4.5 magnitude tremor was recorded at 1.37 pm (local time) with epicentre at Sindhupalchowk district. Another 4.1 magnitude tremor was recorded at 2.45 am (local time) with epicentre at Sindhupalchowk district, according to the National Seismological Centre.

    Source: Press Trust of India [June 04, 2015]