I don't know anything about you or you about me but I'm a little bored with the beautiful pictures of famous sites and places around the world. We depend on them so much that when we look at the real world, our perfect impression is completely destroyed. We show you the face of these places directly and they also show the back and dirty part. Where you have a dirty and hidden belly they show what really shouldn't be.
The Taj Mahal has a problem. It is the garbage, the river of Yemen that flows behind the Taj Mahal and is polluted where toxic chemicals hide under the surface, making it the most polluted river in all of India. In fact, recently this whole thing was mysteriously covered with toxic substances. We also went there after seeing a photo of an unknown traveler on social media. We went to see the beauty of the Taj Mahal which was eye-catching. We don't have to worry about waste and toxic water, not even the fact that industrial smoke is yellowing this great Taj Mahal, but it needed to be saved.
It is noteworthy that the Giza Pyramids (the last vestige of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World) are still the most striking features of Cairo's Skyline despite the conquered hordes and the millennial past. In a way we can say that the pharaohs continued to guard their ancient country.
Most people enter Petra by treasure and wonder about the outer part of Pharaoh, as most of us know. But there is another entrance to the rear, the monastery or Al Deer. It is named after a carved cross at the entrance used by Christian monks during the Byzantine period. Fortunately, you can take a special trip there, but you are definitely going to visit this monastery and other secluded places less known than people.
The shield rose in the hills above Los Angeles in 1923 and cost $ 21,000 to advance the formation of the Hollywoodland Real Estate Group. It was" Hollywoodland "until 1949, when the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce signed the a maintenance contract to maintain it and delete the last four letters.In 2005, the original sign was sold by a private owner for $450,000. Around the sign was a protected park formerly owned by Howard Hughes, who planned to build a mansion on the site. It hosted several university banks and a suicide of a blooming starlet, Peg Entwistle.
Wondering why this corner of the Colosseum looks like a huge piece of gray Swiss cheese? This is because the structure was originally built from steel bars to put together bricks and heads of doors and hats to accommodate the various amusements of animals and corals. Over the years, when it was no longer used, Roman citizens stole the steel in it. They also steal bricks to build their houses and the entire outer layer of marble which will give an amphitheater unique from what we used to do today.
The Taj Mahal:
The Taj Mahal has a problem. It is the garbage, the river of Yemen that flows behind the Taj Mahal and is polluted where toxic chemicals hide under the surface, making it the most polluted river in all of India. In fact, recently this whole thing was mysteriously covered with toxic substances. We also went there after seeing a photo of an unknown traveler on social media. We went to see the beauty of the Taj Mahal which was eye-catching. We don't have to worry about waste and toxic water, not even the fact that industrial smoke is yellowing this great Taj Mahal, but it needed to be saved.
Pyramids of Giza:
It is noteworthy that the Giza Pyramids (the last vestige of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World) are still the most striking features of Cairo's Skyline despite the conquered hordes and the millennial past. In a way we can say that the pharaohs continued to guard their ancient country.
Petra:
Most people enter Petra by treasure and wonder about the outer part of Pharaoh, as most of us know. But there is another entrance to the rear, the monastery or Al Deer. It is named after a carved cross at the entrance used by Christian monks during the Byzantine period. Fortunately, you can take a special trip there, but you are definitely going to visit this monastery and other secluded places less known than people.
Hollywood:
The shield rose in the hills above Los Angeles in 1923 and cost $ 21,000 to advance the formation of the Hollywoodland Real Estate Group. It was" Hollywoodland "until 1949, when the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce signed the a maintenance contract to maintain it and delete the last four letters.In 2005, the original sign was sold by a private owner for $450,000. Around the sign was a protected park formerly owned by Howard Hughes, who planned to build a mansion on the site. It hosted several university banks and a suicide of a blooming starlet, Peg Entwistle.
The Colosseum:
Wondering why this corner of the Colosseum looks like a huge piece of gray Swiss cheese? This is because the structure was originally built from steel bars to put together bricks and heads of doors and hats to accommodate the various amusements of animals and corals. Over the years, when it was no longer used, Roman citizens stole the steel in it. They also steal bricks to build their houses and the entire outer layer of marble which will give an amphitheater unique from what we used to do today.
Background image of famous places.
Reviewed by Anonymous
on
May 06, 2020
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