Robert Harding

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857-69586 - Palmyra, Syria - January, 2008: Roman ruins in the desert. Palmyra or Tadmore was a 2nd century AD desert oasis used as a strategic staging post for caravans traveling between the Mediterranean Sea and the east. It was also settled by the Assyrians, and Persians.
857-69576 - Damascus, Syria - January 2008: Umayyad mosque in Damascus has been for 3000 years a place of worship starting with an Aramaens temple to the god Hadad - over the years Jupiter with the Romans, then Christ and lastly in 636 AD Muslims entered Damascus. It houses a shrine of John the Baptist.
1194-4 - SYRIA Maalula, the last remaining village in Syria where Aramaic is still spoken. This is not part of Wadi al-Nasarah, being a 150 kilometers to the south, but is nevertheless interesting as the majority of the population are Christians, who enjoy the Convent and shrine of saint Tecla being in their midst
797-939 - SYRIA Central Hama Wooden norias or waterwheels on the Orontes river and the Al Nuri Mosque dating from 1172 and built of limestone and basalt. Section of wheel in the immediate foreground.
797-938 - SYRIA Central Hama Wooden norias or waterwheels on the Orontes river. Part view of wheel section in the foreground framing the Al-Nuri Mosque dating from 1172 and built of limestone and basalt.
797-937 - SYRIA Central Hama Wooden norias or waterwheels on the Orontes river and the Al-Nuri Mosque dating from 1172 and built of limestone and basalt. Large section of a wheel in the immediate foreground.
797-934 - SYRIA Central Tadmur Monumental arch. High central arch flanked by a lower arch on each side with colonnaded street part seen behind and masonry ruins in the foreground. Palmyra Palmyra