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Underground City Found Underneath Architect Sinan's House
Zaman Online ^
| 04.08.2004 Thursday
| Ersan Temizel
Posted on 04/09/2004 2:18:04 PM PDT by vannrox
click here to read article
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To: RetiredArmy
Those who are ignorant of history are doomed to repeat it.
That's how it affects you now.
41
posted on
04/09/2004 6:23:05 PM PDT
by
Tailback
To: vannrox
Cool, lemme go check under the tiles in my basement.
To: dead
My brother asked him where Ohio was, and he answered knowingly, On the west coast. My brother told him, Yeah, the west coast of Pennsylvania. I see your point, but if you picked picked 10 people out of NYC, I'd be surprised if half did better.
43
posted on
04/09/2004 6:39:33 PM PDT
by
lepton
To: vannrox
Sinan was chief court architect under three sultans: Suleyman the Magnificent (1520-1566), Selim II (1566-1574), and Murad III (1574-1595). He was appointed to this post in 1538 and held it until his death in 1588. During those fifty years, he was responsible for hundreds of buildings commissioned by the imperial family and important viziers. Sinan built from the shores of the Adriatic to the Persian Gulf and from the Crimea to the Hejaz. But more significant than the impressive number of buildings he designed is their remarkable quality. Sinan brought Ottoman classical architecture to its logical conclusion. Under his dynamic direction and through his astonishing output, Ottoman architecture was transformed into a universal style as forceful and as refined as that of the contemporary Renaissance. |
To: Allan
Yes and the Greeks, Armenians, Assyrians stole it from the Hittites.Beat me to it!
Anyway, should we also force the Armenians back to Northern Iran where they belong? This always cracks me up. Because Noah's ark was to be in the mountains of Ararat in ancient Armenia. Yet everybody looks for it in modern Armenia (actually turkey.) It's funny because the Armenians didn't even call it Ararat until the 12th century, when the Bible was translated into Armenian.
45
posted on
04/09/2004 6:46:57 PM PDT
by
D Rider
To: MineralMan
"Why should the poster add something to the story?" Because that is a large part of what Freerepublic is about. When most of us post a story we try to convey as much as we can in the way of background because we know that the majority of the readers are likely to be "in the dark."
46
posted on
04/09/2004 6:50:46 PM PDT
by
editor-surveyor
( . Best policy RE: Environmentalists, - ZERO TOLERANCE !!)
To: blam
ping
47
posted on
04/09/2004 6:59:22 PM PDT
by
Allan
To: LibKill
"In the old world you can't stick a shovel in the ground without hitting an artifact." I think that I can beat that. A few months ago, my cousin who is a foreman in a coal mining operation showed up with a bag of ancient gold coins that were embedded in a seam of anthracite, 4800 feet under the surface!
48
posted on
04/09/2004 7:03:27 PM PDT
by
editor-surveyor
( . Best policy RE: Environmentalists, - ZERO TOLERANCE !!)
To: editor-surveyor
I think that I can beat that. A few months ago, my cousin who is a foreman in a coal mining operation showed up with a bag of ancient gold coins that were embedded in a seam of anthracite, 4800 feet under the surface! Uh-huh.
In Egypt I knocked an over-aggressive beggar on his backside, the furrow his sorry ass plowed exposed the lost library of Alexandria.
This was back in 1980, Ronald Reagan confiscated the library and G. Gordon Liddy will probably be trying to hunt me down for posting this.
49
posted on
04/09/2004 7:11:47 PM PDT
by
LibKill
(Yep, we are cowboys. WYATT EARP cowboys.)
To: editor-surveyor
please tell me, have the ancient gold coins your cousin found been identified? You may find the book 'Earth in Upheaval' by Velikovsky interesting; he discusses the subject how and when coal was formed on page 188.
It's probably out of print.
http://www.knowledge.co.uk/velikovsky/earth.htm I would love to hear more about this find.
To: editor-surveyor; blam; vannrox
I think that I can beat that. A few months ago, my cousin who is a foreman in a coal mining operation showed up with a bag of ancient gold coins that were embedded in a seam of anthracite, 4800 feet under the surface! Where? Any general vicinity? United States? How ancient?
51
posted on
04/10/2004 10:13:30 PM PDT
by
an amused spectator
(FR: Leaving the burning dog poop bag of Truth on the front door step of the liberal media since 1996)
To: an amused spectator
Where: W. Virginia; I don't know exactly where, as I've not been there.
How ancient? How old is the coal that they were embedded in? This is info that may not get back to the crew. Stuff found is property of the owner of the mineral rights, not the person finding it, and if you get caught taking anything away from the mine you get fired. It's not the first time that things have been found, but it may be the first find that has cultural implications (coins = commerce).
52
posted on
04/11/2004 8:52:29 PM PDT
by
editor-surveyor
( . Best policy RE: Environmentalists, - ZERO TOLERANCE !!)
To: blam; vannrox
A bag of ancient gold coins embedded in a seam of anthracite, in West Virginia? Hmmmm.
53
posted on
04/12/2004 5:15:23 AM PDT
by
an amused spectator
(FR: Leaving the burning dog poop bag of Truth on the front door step of the liberal media since 1996)
To: freedumb2003
Nothing dangerous in a simple request for a location, you vacuous hypocrite. This should be back in chat, where people of your ilk waste their time in mutual self-congratulations for being oh-so-clever while pontificating on items of great academic concern -- that is to say with no particular relevance to anything. He obviously spanked you badly in some prior discussion.
To: Ichneumon
He obviously spanked you badly in some prior discussion. Nope. Never encountered his/her before. I dislike vacuous, self-important jerks of no significance on first sight.
55
posted on
04/12/2004 9:06:55 AM PDT
by
freedumb2003
(If your cat has babies in the oven you don't call them biscuits!)
To: vannrox; blam; FairOpinion; StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 24Karet; 3AngelaD; ...
56
posted on
06/15/2006 9:15:51 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
("A father is a man who expects his son to be as good a man as he meant to be." -- Frank A. Clark)
To: SunkenCiv
You dug this one up from under 2 years and 2 months of settled Freeper dust. Go wash your hands now.
To: SunkenCiv
How come we never get pics with these really cool ones?
;-)
58
posted on
06/15/2006 12:23:59 PM PDT
by
RikaStrom
(The number one rule of the Kama Sutra is that you both be on the same page.../Exeter 051705)
To: MineralMan
That Anatolia is in Turkey is about the same level of geographical information as knowing that Ohio or Texas is in the USA. Knowing where Anatolia is about like knowing where Iberia is, or the Balkans.
59
posted on
06/15/2006 1:11:56 PM PDT
by
lepton
("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
To: lepton
60
posted on
06/15/2006 1:15:15 PM PDT
by
lepton
("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
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