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Templo de Apolo en Dídima
Ubicado a 17 km (11 millas) al sur de la antigua ciudad portuaria de Mileto, en la costa oeste de la actual Turquía, el templo de Apolo de Dídima o Didimeo fue el cuarto templo más grande del mundo griego antiguo. Su oráculo, segundo en importancia después del de Delfos, desempeñó un papel fundamental en la vida religiosa y política tanto de Mileto como del amplio mundo mediterráneo. Muchos gobernantes, desde Alejandro Magno (356-323 a.C.) hasta el emperador romano Diocleciano (244-313 d.C.), visitaron o enviaron delegaciones a este oráculo en busca de la guía y el favor de Apolo. El oráculo fue clave en el inicio de la «Gran persecución» de cristianos bajo el mandato de Diocleciano, y más adelante el templo se convirtió en una iglesia durante el siglo V o VI d.C.
Sigue leyendo...
And she hath the grace of a lady and the heart of a maiden.
St. George "the cave churches" par nik kout Via Flickr : Didima, meaning twins, is a small village south of Epidavros, known solely for its two huge caves. Well, they are called caves, but really we talk of huge craters, the largest having a diameter of 150 and a depth of 80 meters. But it’s the small crater that’s most interesting, with its two tiny churches of Byzantine origin, built into the red crater wall, Agios Georgios from the 1200s. You enter the crater through a narrow, whitewashed tunnel, through a hole in the ground, with stairs leading to the crater's interior. The churches are called "Cave Churches of Didima," perhaps it is therefore also the craters often are called caves. Agios Giorgos, the upper church from the 15th century, the other, Metamorfosis, consists basically of a single wall constructed in front of a sort of cave in the crater. This crater is a very special place to visit; you feel somehow that you are in a different, strange world. The small crater is 80 meters in diameter and 30 meters deep. It is uncertain how the craters were formed. A likely explanation is that this was once actual caves, hollowed out by water, but then the caves’ roof became so thin that it cracked and fell into the bottom of the caves.
Metamorphosis (second cave church) par nik kout Via Flickr : Didima, meaning twins, is a small village south of Epidavros, known solely for its two huge caves. Well, they are called caves, but really we talk of huge craters, the largest having a diameter of 150 and a depth of 80 meters. But it’s the small crater that’s most interesting, with its two tiny churches of Byzantine origin, built into the red crater wall, Agios Georgios from the 1200s. You enter the crater through a narrow, whitewashed tunnel, through a hole in the ground, with stairs leading to the crater's interior. The churches are called "Cave Churches of Didima," perhaps it is therefore also the craters often are called caves. Agios Giorgos, the upper church from the 15th century, the other, Metamorfosis, consists basically of a single wall constructed in front of a sort of cave in the crater. This crater is a very special place to visit; you feel somehow that you are in a different, strange world. The small crater is 80 meters in diameter and 30 meters deep. It is uncertain how the craters were formed. A likely explanation is that this was once actual caves, hollowed out by water, but then the caves’ roof became so thin that it cracked and fell into the bottom of the caves.
Metamorphosis (2nd cave church of Didima) par nik kout Via Flickr : Didima, meaning twins, is a small village south of Epidavros, known solely for its two huge caves. Well, they are called caves, but really we talk of huge craters, the largest having a diameter of 150 and a depth of 80 meters. But it’s the small crater that’s most interesting, with its two tiny churches of Byzantine origin, built into the red crater wall, Agios Georgios from the 1200s. You enter the crater through a narrow, whitewashed tunnel, through a hole in the ground, with stairs leading to the crater's interior. The churches are called "Cave Churches of Didima," perhaps it is therefore also the craters often are called caves. Agios Giorgos, the upper church from the 15th century, the other, Metamorfosis, consists basically of a single wall constructed in front of a sort of cave in the crater. This crater is a very special place to visit; you feel somehow that you are in a different, strange world. The small crater is 80 meters in diameter and 30 meters deep. It is uncertain how the craters were formed. A likely explanation is that this was once actual caves, hollowed out by water, but then the caves’ roof became so thin that it cracked and fell into the bottom of the caves.
Wetter by RobertGoppelt