manuel cohen

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Malta

Low angle view of the entrance and wall of the Northern Temple, Ggantija Temples (Giants' Tower), c. 3600-2500 BC, Gozo, Malta, pictured on June 2, 2008, in the morning. The Republic of Malta consists of seven islands in the Mediterranean Sea of which Malta, Gozo and Comino have been inhabited since c.5,200 BC. It has been ruled by Phoenicians (Malat is Punic for safe haven), Greeks, Romans, Fatimids, Sicilians, Knights of St John, French and the British, from whom it became independent in 1964. Nine of Malta's important historical monuments are UNESCO World Heritage Sites, including these Neolithic temples which are probably the site of a fertility cult, and are the earliest of a series of megalithic temples. They are amongst the world's oldest manmade religious structures, although according to legend they were built by a giantess. Picture by Manuel Cohen.

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Filename
Malta08_MC_004.jpg
Copyright
Manuel Cohen
Image Size
4992x3328 / 6.1MB
archaeological archaeology archeological archeology archipelago British color colour Commonwealth of Nations Cut-stone bearing masonry day fertility Ggantija Giant giantess Gozitan Gozo G?awdex historic horizontal image island islands Knights of St John Malta Malte Maltesan Maltese Mediterranean Megalithic Megalithic Temples morning Neolithic no people nobody outdoors outside photo photographic photography Repubblika ta' Malta Republic of Malta South Europe Southern Europe Southern European temple tourist attraction travel Unesco world heritage worship Xaghra
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Malta
Low angle view of the entrance and wall of the Northern Temple, Ggantija Temples (Giants' Tower), c. 3600-2500 BC, Gozo, Malta, pictured on June 2, 2008, in the morning. The Republic of Malta consists of seven islands in the Mediterranean Sea of which Malta, Gozo and Comino have been inhabited since c.5,200 BC. It has been ruled by Phoenicians (Malat is Punic for safe haven), Greeks, Romans, Fatimids, Sicilians, Knights of St John, French and the British, from whom it became independent in 1964. Nine of Malta's important historical monuments are UNESCO World Heritage Sites, including these Neolithic temples which are probably the site of a fertility cult, and are the earliest of a series of megalithic temples. They are amongst the world's oldest manmade religious structures, although according to legend they were built by a giantess. Picture by Manuel Cohen.