manuel cohen

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  • Grasslands and mountains in the Davis Mountains State Park, near Fort Davis in Jeff Davis County, Texas, USA. The park is managed by Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and features equestrian and hiking trails, a scenic drive and an adobe Indian Lodge built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1933. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC253.jpg
  • Rocky hillside in the Davis Mountains State Park, near Fort Davis in Jeff Davis County, Texas, USA. The park is managed by Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and features equestrian and hiking trails, a scenic drive and an adobe Indian Lodge built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1933. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC257.jpg
  • Rocky hillside beside the road in the Davis Mountains State Park, near Fort Davis in Jeff Davis County, Texas, USA. The park is managed by Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and features equestrian and hiking trails, a scenic drive and an adobe Indian Lodge built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1933. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC255.jpg
  • Scenic road in the Davis Mountains State Park, near Fort Davis in Jeff Davis County, Texas, USA. The park is managed by Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and features equestrian and hiking trails, a scenic drive and an adobe Indian Lodge built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1933. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC254.jpg
  • Hillside in the Davis Mountains State Park, near Fort Davis in Jeff Davis County, Texas, USA. The park is managed by Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and features equestrian and hiking trails, a scenic drive and an adobe Indian Lodge built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1933. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC258.jpg
  • Landscape in the Davis Mountains State Park, near Fort Davis in Jeff Davis County, Texas, USA. The park is managed by Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and features equestrian and hiking trails, a scenic drive and an adobe Indian Lodge built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1933. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC256.jpg
  • Oued Marghen river with the Atlas mountains in the distance, Ait Ben Haddou, Ounila Valley, Ouarzazate province, Morocco. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC229.jpg
  • Oued Marghen river with the Atlas mountains in the distance, Ait Ben Haddou, Ounila Valley, Ouarzazate province, Morocco. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC224.jpg
  • Oued Marghen river with the Atlas mountains in the distance, Ait Ben Haddou, Ounila Valley, Ouarzazate province, Morocco. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC188.jpg
  • Ighnda Village with Atlas mountains in the distance, Ounila Valley,  Ouarzazate province, Morocco. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC180.jpg
  • Mountains and valleys in the La Vall de Boi region near Taull, Lleida, Catalonia, Spain. This is a high mountainous area on the edge of the Pyrenees, with 9 early Romanesque churches forming a UNESCO World Heritage Site as the Catalan Romanesque Churches of the Vall de Boi. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_SPAIN_MC049.jpg
  • Mountains and valleys in the La Vall de Boi region near Taull, Lleida, Catalonia, Spain. This is a high mountainous area on the edge of the Pyrenees, with 9 early Romanesque churches forming a UNESCO World Heritage Site as the Catalan Romanesque Churches of the Vall de Boi. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_SPAIN_MC023.jpg
  • Ighnda Village with Atlas mountains in the distance, Ounila Valley,  Ouarzazate province, Morocco. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC288.jpg
  • Skoura with Atlas mountains in the distance, Ouarzazate province, Souss-Massa-Draa, Morocco. Skoura is a fertile oasis lined with immense palm groves. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC284.jpg
  • Panoramic view of the village of Taull against the massive slopes of the Pyrenees mountains, Province of Lleida, Catalonia, Spain. In the distance, at the far end of the village, the campanile of Santa Maria de Taull church is visible. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC009.jpg
  • Rooftops of the medina or old town with mountains in the distance and the minaret of the 18th century Zaouiat Sidi ali Benraisoun or Octagonal Mosque on the right, Tetouan, on the slopes of Jbel Dersa in the Rif Mountains of Northern Morocco. Tetouan was of particular importance in the Islamic period from the 8th century, when it served as the main point of contact between Morocco and Andalusia. After the Reconquest, the town was rebuilt by Andalusian refugees who had been expelled by the Spanish. The medina of Tetouan dates to the 16th century and was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC050.jpg
  • Panoramic view of countryside, Connemara, County Galway, Ireland, in the afternoon, showing a small lake and rocky outcrops in the foreground with distant mountains in the background. The cloudy sky is reflected in the lake. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_IRELAND_10_MC053.jpg
  • Low angle view of Lough Inagh with the Twelve Bens (Na Beanna Beola), in the background and bales of peat in the foreground, Connemara, Ireland, in the afternoon. Lough Inagh, 7 km long and 1 km wide with a number of wooded islands, is a famous fishing lake. The Twelve Bens or Pins is a range of peaked quartzite mountains. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_IRELAND_10_MC010.jpg
  • Panoramic view of the volcanic landscape, Lanzarote, Canary Islands, Spain, pictured on November 24, 2010 at sunset. This view, enhanced by dramatic evening clouds, is from Yaiza village with the Timanfaya mountains silhouetted in the distance. Lanzarote, the Easternmost of the Canary Islands, lies 125km East of the African coast, in the Atlantic Ocean. Like the other islands in this autonomous Spanish archipelago, Lanzarote is originally Volcanic. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LC_LANZAROTE_NOV10_MC023.jpg
  • Low angle view of camel waiting for tourists, Timanfaya National Park, Lanzarote, Canary Islands, Spain, pictured on November 26, 2010 in the afternoon. Timanfaya National Park was founded in 1968. It contains the Montanas del Fuego (Fire Mountains) which were created by more than 100 volcanic eruptions in 1730 and 1736 which devastated the area. Due to the arid climate, and consequent lack of erosion, this area has hardly changed since the last eruptions in 1824. Lanzarote, the Easternmost of the Canary Islands, lies 125km East of the African coast, in the Atlantic Ocean. Like the other islands in this autonomous Spanish archipelago, Lanzarote is originally Volcanic. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LC_LANZAROTE_NOV10_MC001.jpg
  • High angle view of Sant Climent de Taull church at sunrise against the massive slopes of the Pyrenees mountains, Taull, Province of Lleida, Catalonia, Spain. Consecrated by Ramon Guillem, the bishop of Roda in 1123, the church of Sant Climent is the largest; its characteristic Lombard architecture and interior decoration make it the symbol of Catalan Romanesque architecture. Its most imposing feature is its bell tower: it is square in plan and soars from a simulated solid base to six storeys. This is a church with three naves separated by cylindrical columns, topped by three semicircular apses. It is known for its campanile and for its murals, which were removed to the MNAC (National Art Museum of Catalonia, Barcelona) in 1922, to prevent the theft of the murals. The Catalan Romanesque churches of the Vall de Boí were declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in November 2000. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC010.jpg
  • Theatre, 2nd century AD, at Termessos, an ancient Pisidian city in the Taurus mountains, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre is Roman but built in Hellenistic style, seating 4-5,000, with large cavea divided by a diazoma. The site forms part of the Mount Gulluk-Termessos National Park. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_103.jpg
  • Gymnasium, 1st century AD, at Termessos, an ancient Pisidian city in the Taurus mountains, in Antalya, Turkey. The Roman gymnasium is a 2 storey building with an internal courtyard surrounded by vaulted rooms, with niches and Doric details on the exterior. The site forms part of the Mount Gulluk-Termessos National Park. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_089.jpg
  • Theatre, 2nd century AD, at Termessos, an ancient Pisidian city in the Taurus mountains, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre is Roman but built in Hellenistic style, seating 4-5,000, with large cavea divided by a diazoma. The site forms part of the Mount Gulluk-Termessos National Park. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_102.jpg
  • View of the city of Tetouan with mountains in the distance, seen from the Jewish or Castilian cemetery, begun after 1492 when the Jewish community of Tetouan reformed with Jews exiled from Castile, outside the walls of the medina or old town of Tetouan, on the slopes of Jbel Dersa in the Rif Mountains of Northern Morocco. There are 3 cemeteries on this hill; the Muslim cemetery, the Jewish cemetery and the Spanish Catholic or Christian cemetery. Tetouan was of particular importance in the Islamic period from the 8th century, when it served as the main point of contact between Morocco and Andalusia. After the Reconquest, the town was rebuilt by Andalusian refugees who had been expelled by the Spanish. The medina of Tetouan dates to the 16th century and was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC084.jpg
  • Banks of the Ebro river with mountains in the distance, Tarragona, Spain. In this region the river is near the end of its course, passing through gorges and mountainous scenery before flowing out through the Ebro Delta into the Mediterranean Sea. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC413.jpg
  • Buoy on the Ebro river with mountains in the distance, Tarragona, Spain. In this region the river is near the end of its course, passing through gorges and mountainous scenery before flowing out through the Ebro Delta into the Mediterranean Sea. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC331.jpg
  • Banks of the Ebro river with mountains in the distance, Tarragona, Spain. In this region the river is near the end of its course, passing through gorges and mountainous scenery before flowing out through the Ebro Delta into the Mediterranean Sea. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC328.jpg
  • House along the banks of the Ebro river between Mora del Ebre and Miravet with mountains in the distance, Tarragona, Spain. In this region the river is near the end of its course, passing through gorges and mountainous scenery before flowing out through the Ebro Delta into the Mediterranean Sea. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC325.jpg
  • Els Ports National Park, Tarragona, Spain, showing limestone mountains and an agricultural field in the foreground. The Park was founded in 1995 and covers 60,000 hectares of varied landscape around the Els Ports massif south of the river Ebro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC434.jpg
  • Els Ports National Park, Tarragona, Spain, showing limestone mountains and gentler forested slopes in the foreground. The Park was founded in 1995 and covers 60,000 hectares of varied landscape around the Els Ports massif south of the river Ebro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC430.jpg
  • Town of Pinar del Brai with mountains in the distance and olive groves in the foreground, Tarragona, Spain. Here we can see the tower of the parish church of St Lawrence, built in 1770 in the baroque style, and at the bottom left, the modernist Cooperative Winery of Pinell de Brai, built 1918-22 by Cesar Martinall Brunet. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC429.jpg
  • Town of Pinar del Brai with mountains in the distance, Tarragona, Spain. Here we can see the tower of the parish church of St Lawrence, built in 1770 in the baroque style, and at the bottom left, the modernist Cooperative Winery of Pinell de Brai, built 1918-22 by Cesar Martinall Brunet. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC427.jpg
  • Town of Pinar del Brai with mountains in the distance and olive groves in the foreground, Tarragona, Spain. Here we can see the tower of the parish church of St Lawrence, built in 1770 in the baroque style, and at the bottom left, the modernist Cooperative Winery of Pinell de Brai, built 1918-22 by Cesar Martinall Brunet. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC428.jpg
  • Ebro river with mountains on both banks, Tarragona, Spain. In this region the river is near the end of its course, passing through gorges and mountainous scenery before flowing out through the Ebro Delta into the Mediterranean Sea. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC333.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC117.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC146.jpg
  • Els Ports National Park, Tarragona, Spain, showing limestone mountains and gentler forested slopes in the foreground. The Park was founded in 1995 and covers 60,000 hectares of varied landscape around the Els Ports massif south of the river Ebro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC431.jpg
  • Els Ports National Park, Tarragona, Spain, showing limestone mountains and gentler forested slopes in the foreground. The Park was founded in 1995 and covers 60,000 hectares of varied landscape around the Els Ports massif south of the river Ebro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC432.jpg
  • Els Ports National Park, Tarragona, Spain, showing limestone mountains and an agricultural field in the foreground. The Park was founded in 1995 and covers 60,000 hectares of varied landscape around the Els Ports massif south of the river Ebro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC433.jpg
  • Village of Ballestar with mountains behind, La Pobla de Benifassa, Castellon, Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC403.jpg
  • Village of Ballestar with mountains behind, La Pobla de Benifassa, Castellon, Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC402.jpg
  • Els Ports National Park, Tarragona, Spain, showing limestone mountains and an agricultural field in the foreground. The Park was founded in 1995 and covers 60,000 hectares of varied landscape around the Els Ports massif south of the river Ebro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC369.jpg
  • Els Ports National Park, Tarragona, Spain, showing limestone mountains and an agricultural field in the foreground. The Park was founded in 1995 and covers 60,000 hectares of varied landscape around the Els Ports massif south of the river Ebro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC368.jpg
  • Els Ports National Park, Tarragona, Spain, showing limestone mountains and an agricultural field in the foreground. The Park was founded in 1995 and covers 60,000 hectares of varied landscape around the Els Ports massif south of the river Ebro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC367.jpg
  • Olive trees with mountains in background, Terres del Ebre, Tarragona, Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC366.jpg
  • Ceiling of the reception room in carved and painted cedar wood, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC232.jpg
  • Zellige tilework, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. Zellige tiles are terracotta tiles covered with 5 colours of enamel and set into plaster in decorative patterns. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC238.jpg
  • Capital in carved stucco, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC245.jpg
  • Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC250.jpg
  • Minaret of the 19th century Jamaa el Kebir or Great Mosque, with the Rif mountains in the distance, in the medina or old town of Tetouan on the slopes of Jbel Dersa in Northern Morocco. Tetouan was of particular importance in the Islamic period from the 8th century, when it served as the main point of contact between Morocco and Andalusia. After the Reconquest, the town was rebuilt by Andalusian refugees who had been expelled by the Spanish. The medina of Tetouan dates to the 16th century and was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC023.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen and its 15th century Kasbah in the foreground, in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. The Kasbah or fortress served as military camp, seat of power and rulers residence and was used by Ali Ibn Mousa Ibn Rashid in his jihad against the Portuguese. It is surrounded by a wall with 11 defensive towers and a 4-storey watchtower and contains a garden of orange, jasmine and palm trees. It now houses an art gallery and ethnography museum. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC113.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen and its 15th century Kasbah in the foreground, in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. The Kasbah or fortress served as military camp, seat of power and rulers residence and was used by Ali Ibn Mousa Ibn Rashid in his jihad against the Portuguese. It is surrounded by a wall with 11 defensive towers and a 4-storey watchtower and contains a garden of orange, jasmine and palm trees. It now houses an art gallery and ethnography museum. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC114.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen and its 15th century Kasbah in the foreground, in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. The Kasbah or fortress served as military camp, seat of power and rulers residence and was used by Ali Ibn Mousa Ibn Rashid in his jihad against the Portuguese. It is surrounded by a wall with 11 defensive towers and a 4-storey watchtower and contains a garden of orange, jasmine and palm trees. It now houses an art gallery and ethnography museum. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC115.jpg
  • The Grande Mosquee or El Masjid El Aadam with its octagonal minaret, in Chefchaouen in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. The mosque was built adjoining the kasbah by the son of the town's founder, Ali Ben Rashid. It has longitudinal naves, a prayer hall with 4 gates, a terracotta tiled roof and an octagonal minaret typical of the region. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC116.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen and its 15th century Kasbah in the foreground, in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. The Kasbah or fortress served as military camp, seat of power and rulers residence and was used by Ali Ibn Mousa Ibn Rashid in his jihad against the Portuguese. It is surrounded by a wall with 11 defensive towers and a 4-storey watchtower and contains a garden of orange, jasmine and palm trees. It now houses an art gallery and ethnography museum. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC118.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC145.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC147.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen with its 15th century Kasbah and Grande Mosquee, in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. The Kasbah or fortress served as military camp, seat of power and rulers residence and was used by Ali Ibn Mousa Ibn Rashid in his jihad against the Portuguese. It is surrounded by a wall with 11 defensive towers and a 4-storey watchtower and contains a garden of orange, jasmine and palm trees. It now houses an art gallery and ethnography museum. The Grande Mosquee or El Masjid El Aadam was built adjoining the kasbah by the son of the town's founder, Ali Ben Rashid. It has longitudinal naves, a prayer hall with 4 gates and an octagonal minaret typical of the region. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC151.jpg
  • Jemaa Bouzafar, a small 15th century mosque on a hill above the town of Chefchaouen in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC157.jpg
  • Minaret in the medina or old town of Chefchaouen in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC171.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC203.jpg
  • The town of Chefchaouen in the Rif mountains of North West Morocco. Chefchaouen was founded in 1471 by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rashid El Alami to house the muslims expelled from Andalusia. It is famous for its blue painted houses, originated by the Jewish community, and is listed by UNESCO under the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Morocco_MC204.jpg
  • Reception room with carved stucco decoration and zellige tiles, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. Zellige tiles are terracotta tiles covered with 5 colours of enamel and set into plaster in decorative patterns. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC230.jpg
  • Reception room with carved stucco decoration and zellige tiles, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. Zellige tiles are terracotta tiles covered with 5 colours of enamel and set into plaster in decorative patterns. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC231.jpg
  • Carved and painted cedar wood from reception room, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC233.jpg
  • Window of the reception room in carved stucco and cedar wood, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC234.jpg
  • Window of the reception room in carved stucco and cedar wood, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC235.jpg
  • Capital in carved stucco, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC236.jpg
  • Zellige tilework, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. Zellige tiles are terracotta tiles covered with 5 colours of enamel and set into plaster in decorative patterns. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC237.jpg
  • Central hall with carved stucco decoration and zellige tiles, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC239.jpg
  • Capital in carved stucco, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC240.jpg
  • Fabrics decorating the bedroom of the Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC242.jpg
  • Capital in carved stucco, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC241.jpg
  • Capital in carved stucco, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC243.jpg
  • Wall lamp in carved stucco, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC244.jpg
  • Original glass roof, Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC246.jpg
  • Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC247.jpg
  • Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC251.jpg
  • View of Telouet seen from a window of the Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC248.jpg
  • Kasbah of the Glaoua family, Telouet, High Atlas, Morocco. The fortress was begun in the 19th century as the residence Thami el Glaoui, 1879-1956, who was Pasha of Marrakech 1912-56. It sits at 1800m in the Atlas mountains on an ancient caravan route from the Sahara to Marrakech. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC249.jpg
  • CORINTH, GREECE - APRIL 16 : A detail of the Bema, on April 16, 2007 in Corinth, Greece. The Bema, a platform in the Agora, or main square is seen here in the early morning sun with the mountains behind the ruins. Saint Paul was judged here when the Jews accused him of sacrilege in 51 AD. Corinth, founded in Neolithic times, was a major Ancient Greek city, until it was razed by the Romans in 146 BC. Rebuilt a century later it was destroyed by an earthquake in Byzantine times. (Photo by Manuel Cohen)
    DGREECE07_10_102.jpg
  • CORINTH, GREECE - APRIL 16 : A general view of the Temple of Apollo, on April 16, 2007 in Corinth, Greece. Standing prominently on a knoll the Temple of Apollo was built in the 7th century BC in the Doric Order. Seven of its original 38 columns remain standing and are seen here in the early morning light with the mountains in the background. It is one of the oldest temples in Greece. Corinth, founded in Neolithic times, was a major Ancient Greek city, until it was razed by the Romans in 146 BC. Rebuilt a century later it was destroyed by an earthquake in Byzantine times.(Photo by Manuel Cohen)
    DGREECE07_10_095.jpg
  • CORINTH, GREECE - APRIL 16 : A general view of the Temple of Apollo, on April 16, 2007 in Corinth, Greece. Standing prominently on a knoll the Temple of Apollo was built in the 7th century BC in the Doric Order. Seven of its original 38 columns remain standing and are seen here in the early morning light with the mountains in the background. It is one of the oldest temples in Greece. Corinth, founded in Neolithic times, was a major Ancient Greek city, until it was razed by the Romans in 146 BC. Rebuilt a century later it was destroyed by an earthquake in Byzantine times. (Photo by Manuel Cohen)
    DGREECE07_10_094.jpg
  • CORINTH, GREECE - APRIL 16 : A general view of the Lechaion Road, on April 16, 2007 in Corinth, Greece. The marble paved road, seen here in the early morning light with the mountains in the background, linked Corinth to the port of Lechaion and was lined with shops. Corinth, founded in Neolithic times, was a major Ancient Greek city, until it was razed by the Romans in 146 BC. Rebuilt a century later it was destroyed by an earthquake in Byzantine times. (Photo by Manuel Cohen)
    DGREECE07_10_109.jpg
  • CORINTH, GREECE - APRIL 16 : A general view of the Bema, on April 16, 2007 in Corinth, Greece. The Bema, a platform in the Agora, or main square is seen here in the early morning light with the mountains behind the ruins. Saint Paul was judged here when the Jews accused him of sacrilege in 51 AD. Corinth, founded in Neolithic times, was a major Ancient Greek city, until it was razed by the Romans in 146 BC. Rebuilt a century later it was destroyed by an earthquake in Byzantine times. (Photo by Manuel Cohen)
    DGREECE07_10_101.jpg
  • Jardin Mediterraneen du Mas de la Serre, a botanical garden founded 1957 by Professor Georges Petit at Banyuls-sur-Mer, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. The garden was originally the Mediterranean Terrestrial Ecology Center, but reopened to the public in 2010 as a garden showcasing the flora of the Pyrenees-Orientales, from the high mountains to the coast. The garden includes, ponds, greenhouses, terraces, a discovery trail and exhibition spaces. Banyuls-sur-Mer is a small seaside town first settled by the Greeks in 400 BC, on the Vermilion Coast near the Spanish border. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_0553.jpg
  • Jardin Mediterraneen du Mas de la Serre, a botanical garden founded 1957 by Professor Georges Petit at Banyuls-sur-Mer, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. The garden was originally the Mediterranean Terrestrial Ecology Center, but reopened to the public in 2010 as a garden showcasing the flora of the Pyrenees-Orientales, from the high mountains to the coast. The garden includes, ponds, greenhouses, terraces, a discovery trail and exhibition spaces. Banyuls-sur-Mer is a small seaside town first settled by the Greeks in 400 BC, on the Vermilion Coast near the Spanish border. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_0552.jpg
  • Parade ground and Enlisted Men's Barracks, at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The building houses a squad room and an orderly room refurbished as it was in 1884, when it was occupied by Buffalo Soldiers of Troop H, Tenth Cavalry. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC266.jpg
  • Officers' Row, lodging for the army officers (left), and two-storey Officers' quarters, 4 detached buildings, 1 of which has been restored, at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC264.jpg
  • Parade ground and Enlisted Men's Barracks, at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The building houses a squad room and an orderly room refurbished as it was in 1884, when it was occupied by Buffalo Soldiers of Troop H, Tenth Cavalry. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC251.jpg
  • View across the parade ground to the Enlisted Men's barracks, from the Commanding Officer's quarters, on Officers' Row, at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The house was begun in 1867 under Lieutenant Colonel Wesley Meritt, but has been refurbished to the time of Colonel Benjamin Grierson, commander of the black Tenth US Cavalry, and his family, who lived here 1882-85. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC248.jpg
  • Parade ground and Enlisted Men's Barracks, at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The building houses a squad room and an orderly room refurbished as it was in 1884, when it was occupied by Buffalo Soldiers of Troop H, Tenth Cavalry. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC247.jpg
  • Enlisted Men's Barracks, at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The building houses a squad room and an orderly room refurbished as it was in 1884, when it was occupied by Buffalo Soldiers of Troop H, Tenth Cavalry. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC244.jpg
  • Photograph of Lieutenant Henry Ossian Flipper, 1856-1940, served and courtmartialed at Fort Davis, born a slave in Georgia in 1856, the first African-American graduate of the US Military Academy at West Point, special assistant in the 1920s to the Secretary of the Interior, exhibited at the Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC242.jpg
  • Photograph of Lieutenant Henry Ossian Flipper, 1856-1940, served and courtmartialed at Fort Davis, born a slave in Georgia in 1856, the first African-American graduate of the US Military Academy at West Point, special assistant in the 1920s to the Secretary of the Interior, exhibited at the Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC241.jpg
  • Soldiers in the barracks, 1882-84, painting by Clyde Heron, at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC240.jpg
  • Photograph of Jefferson Davis, 1808-89, after whom Fort Davis was named in 1854, Secretary of War under President Franklin Pierce and president of the Confederate States of America during the Civil War, exhibited at the Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC236.jpg
  • Tourists eating lunch at the Poco Mexico restaurant at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC235.jpg
  • Cannon on the parade ground and behind, the Officers' Row, living quarters for the army officers, at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC226.jpg
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