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  • Visitors looking at examples of architecture from classical antiquity at the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0894.jpg
  • The Market Gate of Miletus, Roman, 2nd century AD, at the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0892.jpg
  • Visitors looking at a pair of Neareastern sphinxes in the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0889.jpg
  • The lion frieze from the Processional Way leading to the Ishtar gate from Babylon, 6th century BC, in the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0885.jpg
  • Statue on the corner of the roof of the Neues Museum or New Museum, built 1843-55 in neoclassical style by Friedrich August Stuler and reopened 2009, Museum Island, with the Fernsehturm or Television Tower behind, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the collections of the Egyptian Museum of Berlin and the Ethnological Museum of Berlin. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0775.JPG
  • An angel overseeing arts and industries on the pediment of the Neues Museum or New Museum, built 1843-55 in neoclassical style by Friedrich August Stuler and reopened 2009, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The latin motto translates as 'Only the ignorant hate art'. The museum houses the collections of the Egyptian Museum of Berlin and the Ethnological Museum of Berlin. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0774.jpg
  • Neues Museum or New Museum, built 1843-55 in neoclassical style by Friedrich August Stuler and reopened 2009, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the collections of the Egyptian Museum of Berlin and the Ethnological Museum of Berlin. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0717.jpg
  • Visitors looking at examples of architecture from classical antiquity at the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0893.jpg
  • Visitors in the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0891.jpg
  • Visitors looking at a pair of Neareastern sphinxes in the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0890.jpg
  • Visitors looking at the Persepolis frieze sections from ancient Persia in the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0888.jpg
  • Visitors looking at the Persepolis frieze sections from ancient Persia in the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0887.jpg
  • Model of the Processional Way and the Ishtar gate at Babylon, 6th century BC, in the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0886.jpg
  • Lion's head detail from the lion frieze from the Processional Way of the Ishtar gate at Babylon, 6th century BC, in the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0884.jpg
  • The lion frieze from the Processional Way of the Ishtar gate at Babylon, 6th century BC, in the Pergamon Museum, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited museum in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0883.JPG
  • Lustgarten, and on the right, the Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0978.jpg
  • Letters over the entrance to the Bode Museum, completed 1904 by Ernst von Ihne, housing collections of sculpture, Byzantine art, and coins and medals, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Originally called the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum after Emperor Frederick III, the museum was renamed in honour of its first curator, Wilhelm von Bode, in 1956. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. In the distance is the Fernsehturm or Television Tower. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0782.jpg
  • Statue of a woman carving a bust, allegory of sculpture, on the facade of the Bode Museum, completed 1904 by Ernst von Ihne, housing collections of sculpture, Byzantine art, and coins and medals, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Originally called the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum after Emperor Frederick III, the museum was renamed in honour of its first curator, Wilhelm von Bode, in 1956. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. In the distance is the Fernsehturm or Television Tower. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0781.jpg
  • Corinthian capitals on pillars on the facade of the Bode Museum, completed 1904 by Ernst von Ihne, housing collections of sculpture, Byzantine art, and coins and medals, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Originally called the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum after Emperor Frederick III, the museum was renamed in honour of its first curator, Wilhelm von Bode, in 1956. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. In the distance is the Fernsehturm or Television Tower. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0777.JPG
  • Colonnade and facade of part of the Pergamon Museum, built 1910-30 by Alfred Messel and Ludwig Hoffmann, housing the antiquity collection, Middle East museum, and museum of Islamic art, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0776.jpg
  • The Neues Museum or New Museum, housing the Egyptian Museum of Berlin and the Ethnological Museum of Berlin, originally built 1843-55 by Friedrich August Stuler but rebuilt by David Chipperfield due to heavy bombing in the Second World War and reopened 2009, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0456.jpg
  • The Neues Museum or New Museum, housing the Egyptian Museum of Berlin and the Ethnological Museum of Berlin, originally built 1843-55 by Friedrich August Stuler but rebuilt by David Chipperfield due to heavy bombing in the Second World War and reopened 2009, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0485.jpg
  • Relief of an angel in bronze on the door of the Neues Museum or New Museum, housing the Egyptian Museum of Berlin and the Ethnological Museum of Berlin, originally built 1843-55 by Friedrich August Stuler but rebuilt by David Chipperfield due to heavy bombing in the Second World War and reopened 2009, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0460.jpg
  • "Kämpfende Amazone" (Fighting Amazonian Woman) by August Kiss, 19th century, sculpture of a woman on horseback spearing a lion, outside the Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0417.jpg
  • Steps and colonnade of the Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0415.jpg
  • Colonnade outside the Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0024.jpg
  • Colonnade outside the Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0025.jpg
  • Colonnade and entrance to the Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0026.jpg
  • Pergamon Museum, built 1910-30 by Alfred Messel and Ludwig Hoffmann, under renovation since 2012, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The Pergamon Museum houses the antiquity collection, the Middle East museum, and the museum of Islamic art and is the most visited art museum in Germany. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0028.jpg
  • Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, a museum showcasing historical and contemporary design, part of the Smithsonian Institution, on Museum Mile in Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. The museum was originally founded in 1896 as the Cooper Union Museum for the Arts of Decoration, in the Andrew Carnegie mansion, a Georgian style mansion built 1899-1902. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_022.jpg
  • Statue of a Greek goddess with putti on the facade of the Bode Museum, completed 1904 by Ernst von Ihne, housing collections of sculpture, Byzantine art, and coins and medals, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Originally called the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum after Emperor Frederick III, the museum was renamed in honour of its first curator, Wilhelm von Bode, in 1956. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. In the distance is the Fernsehturm or Television Tower. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0779.jpg
  • Statue of a woman with instruments, allegory of architecture, on the facade of the Bode Museum, completed 1904 by Ernst von Ihne, housing collections of sculpture, Byzantine art, and coins and medals, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Originally called the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum after Emperor Frederick III, the museum was renamed in honour of its first curator, Wilhelm von Bode, in 1956. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. In the distance is the Fernsehturm or Television Tower. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0780.jpg
  • Medusa head on the facade of the Bode Museum, completed 1904 by Ernst von Ihne, housing collections of sculpture, Byzantine art, and coins and medals, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Originally called the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum after Emperor Frederick III, the museum was renamed in honour of its first curator, Wilhelm von Bode, in 1956. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. In the distance is the Fernsehturm or Television Tower. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0778.jpg
  • The Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection, seen from the balcony of the Berliner Dom or Berlin Cathedral, redesigned by Julius Raschdorff and completed 1905 in Neo-Renaissance style after being badly damaged in World War Two, although the original chapel on this site was consecrated in 1454, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0533.jpg
  • Bode Museum, completed 1904 by Ernst von Ihne, housing collections of sculpture, Byzantine art, and coins and medals, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Originally called the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum after Emperor Frederick III, the museum was renamed in honour of its first curator, Wilhelm von Bode, in 1956. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. In the distance is the Fernsehturm or Television Tower. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0345.jpg
  • Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0453.jpg
  • Colonnade of the Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0466.jpg
  • Relief of an angel holding torches in bronze on the door of the Neues Museum or New Museum, housing the Egyptian Museum of Berlin and the Ethnological Museum of Berlin, originally built 1843-55 by Friedrich August Stuler but rebuilt by David Chipperfield due to heavy bombing in the Second World War and reopened 2009, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0459.jpg
  • Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0511.jpg
  • Horse's head from, "Kämpfende Amazone" (Fighting Amazonian Woman) by August Kiss, 19th century, outside the Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0418.jpg
  • Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0416.jpg
  • "Kämpfende Amazone" (Fighting Amazonian Woman) by August Kiss, 19th century, sculpture of a woman on horseback spearing a lion, outside the Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The museum was built 1823-30 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in neoclassical style to house the Prussian royal family's art collection. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0414.jpg
  • Bode Museum, completed 1904 by Ernst von Ihne, housing collections of sculpture, Byzantine art, and coins and medals, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Originally called the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum after Emperor Frederick III, the museum was renamed in honour of its first curator, Wilhelm von Bode, in 1956. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0029.jpg
  • Cau Ferrat Museum, founded 1893 by the Catalan Modernisme artist Santiago Rusinol, 1861-1931, as a house-workshop, and inaugurated as a public museum in 1933 after his death, restored 2010-14, part of the Museum de Sitges, in Sitges, Catalonia, Spain. The museum houses collections of drawings, paintings, sculpture, glassware, ceramics, furniture and ironwork. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_1040.jpg
  • Roman tombstone with carving of a Roman cavalryman triumphing over a naked barbarian, 1st century AD, in the Roman Frontier Gallery at the Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery, Carlisle, Cumbria, England. This type of tombstone probably originated in the Rhineland and arrived in Britan with the invading army. The tombstone was excavated at Corbridge and commemorates Flavinus, who was a trooper with the Ala Petrine, which was later to become the garrison at Stanwix, just North of Carlisle. This is a replica on loan from the Great North Museum, Newcastle upon Tyne, the original being in Hexham Abbey. This gallery houses a permanent exhibition entitled 'The Roman Frontier: stories beyond Hadrian's Wall', with exhibits excavated along the Wall and others on loan from the British Museum. Hadrian's Wall was built 73 miles across Britannia, now England, 122-128 AD, under the reign of Emperor Hadrian, ruled 117-138, to mark the Northern extent of the Roman Empire and guard against barbarian attacks from the Picts to the North. The wall was fortified with milecastles with 2 turrets in between, and a fort about every 5 Roman miles. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_ENGLAND_MC_023.jpg
  • Bode Museum, completed 1904 by Ernst von Ihne, housing collections of sculpture, Byzantine art, and coins and medals, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Originally called the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum after Emperor Frederick III, the museum was renamed in honour of its first curator, Wilhelm von Bode, in 1956. In the distance is the Fernsehturm or TV Tower, built 1965-69 in the former East Berlin. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0030.jpg
  • Cau Ferrat Museum, founded 1893 by the Catalan Modernisme artist Santiago Rusinol, 1861-1931, as a house-workshop, and inaugurated as a public museum in 1933 after his death, restored 2010-14, part of the Museus de Sitges, in Sitges, Catalonia, Spain. The museum houses collections of drawings, paintings, sculpture, glassware, ceramics, furniture and ironwork. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0976.jpg
  • Monumental alabaster fireplace from the Palau de la Generalitat de Catalunya, from the collection of the Museum of Artistic Reproductions, in the Golden Hall, a banqueting hall inaugurated 1915, with Neo-Baroque decor by Joan Marsal and reproductions of furniture and sculptures, in the Palau de Maricel, now the Maricel Museum, reopened in 2015, in Sitges, Catalonia, Spain. The complex was built 1910-18 by Miquel Utrillo for Charles Deering, converted from a hospital to a residence and gallery to house Deering's collection. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0999.jpg
  • Monumental alabaster fireplace from the Palau de la Generalitat de Catalunya, from the collection of the Museum of Artistic Reproductions, in the Golden Hall, a banqueting hall inaugurated 1915, with Neo-Baroque decor by Joan Marsal and reproductions of furniture and sculptures, in the Palau de Maricel, now the Maricel Museum, reopened in 2015, in Sitges, Catalonia, Spain. The complex was built 1910-18 by Miquel Utrillo for Charles Deering, converted from a hospital to a residence and gallery to house Deering's collection. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_1001.jpg
  • Chapel Room, housing a reproduction Baroque altarpiece and the ceramic collection of the Museum of Art Reproductions, with reproductions of Manises, Paterna and Talavera, in the Palau de Maricel, now the Maricel Museum, reopened in 2015, in Sitges, Catalonia, Spain. The complex was built 1910-18 by Miquel Utrillo for Charles Deering, converted from a hospital to a residence and gallery to house Deering's collection. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_1043.jpg
  • Head of Tuthmosis III, 1485-21 BC, 6th pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty of the New Kingdom, in alabaster, found at the mortuary temple of Mentuhotep II at Deir el Bahri, in the Egyptian Museum on Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt. The museum houses collections of ancient Egyptian artefacts, built 1901, designed by Marcel Dourgnon, and inaugurated in 1902. It is the oldest archaeological museum in the Middle East and houses the largest collection of Egyptian antiquities in the world. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_EGYPT_MC_037.JPG
  • Colossus of Ramesses II, 1303–1213 BC, 3rd pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty of the New Kingdom, c. 1279-03 BC in pink granite, from Hermopolis, in the Egyptian Museum on Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt. The statue was usurped by Ramses' son and successor Merenptah, who carved his name on the shoulders, breast, and base. The museum houses collections of ancient Egyptian artefacts, built 1901, designed by Marcel Dourgnon, and inaugurated in 1902. It is the oldest archaeological museum in the Middle East and houses the largest collection of Egyptian antiquities in the world. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_EGYPT_MC_038.jpg
  • Excavations of the tell at Qal'at al Bahrain by PV Glob and G Bibby from the Prehistoric Museum of Moesgard, Denmark, 1954-72, photograph, in the Qal'at Al-Bahrain Site Museum, near Manama in Bahrain. From 1977 the research was continued by the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), alongside archaeologist from Bahrain. The museum was opened in 2008, displaying artefacts of the history and archaeology of the Qal'at al-Bahrain, or Bahrain Fort or Portuguese Fort, built 6th century AD, once the capital of the Dilmun Civilisation. Qal'at al-Bahrain is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_BAHREIN_MC_154.jpg
  • Female figurine (replica), in ivory, found in the Royal Burial Mounds of A'ali, in the Bahrain National Museum, designed by Krohn and Hartvig Rasmussen, inaugurated December 1988 by Amir Shaikh Isa Bin Salman Al-Khalifa, in Manama, Bahrain. The original figurine is in the British Museum in London, and its date is unknown. The museum houses cultural and archaeological collections covering 6000 years of history, with rooms entitled Burial Mounds, Dilmun, Tylos and Islam, Customs and Traditions, Traditional Trades and Crafts, and Documents and Manuscripts. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_BAHREIN_MC_229.jpg
  • Carved stone stela with female figure (detail), late 6th century BC (3rd excavation phase), with an inscription, from the Tofet of Mozia, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC132.jpg
  • Youth of Mozia, or Giovane di Mozia (detail), marble statue, 475-450 BC, height 194cm, excavated in Zone K, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. The statue has traces of polychrome paint and its feet and arms are missing. It was found on Mozia in October 1979 under a heap of earth and rubble, and was made by a Sicilian or Selinuntine workshop. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC129.jpg
  • Carved stone stela with male figure in profile, late 6th century BC (4th excavation phase), dedicated to the Carthaginian god Baal Hammon, with the inscription 'consecrated by YKNSLM son of ABDMLQRT who heard the word', in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC121.jpg
  • Names of victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks inscribed around the South Tower pool of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, designed by Davis Brody Bond, Michael Arad and Peter Walker, on the site of the original Twin Towers World Trade Center buildings which were destroyed in the terrorist attack of 11th September 2001, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. The memorial and museum commemorate the 9/11 attacks, which killed 2,977, and the World Trade Center bombing of 1993, which killed 6. The memorial forms part of the new World Trade Center complex, which includes 5 skyscrapers and the museum. The memorial consists of 2 enormous reflecting pools and waterfalls within the footprint of the Twin Towers, surrounded by trees. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_028.jpg
  • National September 11 Memorial & Museum, designed by Davis Brody Bond, Michael Arad and Peter Walker, on the site of the original Twin Towers World Trade Center buildings which were destroyed in the terrorist attack of 11th September 2001, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. The memorial and museum commemorate the 9/11 attacks, which killed 2,977, and the World Trade Center bombing of 1993, which killed 6. The memorial forms part of the new World Trade Center complex, which includes 5 skyscrapers and the museum. The memorial consists of 2 enormous reflecting pools and waterfalls within the footprint of the Twin Towers, surrounded by trees. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_006.jpg
  • The Judisches Museum Berlin or Jewish Museum Berlin, designed by Daniel Libeskind and opened 2001, Berlin, Germany. The museum displays a permanent collection on German-Jewish history as well as exhibitions. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0837.jpg
  • Statue of a man on horseback spearing a lion, Albert Wolff after a draft by Christian Daniel Rauch, 19th century, outside the Altes Museum or Old Museum, housing the Antique collection of the Berlin State Museums, Museum Island, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. In the background is the Berliner Dom or Berlin Cathedral, completed 1905 in Historicist style. The buildings on Museum Island were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0027.jpg
  • GEORGES LABIT MUSEUM, TOULOUSE, FRANCE - MARCH 03 - EXCLUSIVE : A low angle view of the museum entrance on March 3, 2009 in the Georges Labit Museum, Toulouse, France. Founded by Georges Labit in the 19th century, the museum is housed in a moorish building near the Canal du Midi (French Midi Canal) and preserves the most important collection of Asian Art after the Guimet Museum in Paris. Since 1949, it also preserves an Egyptian mummy arrived in Toulouse in 1849, encased in a sarcophagus labelled "In-Imen" from the 7th or 8th century BC. The mysterious mummy is now the subject of a very rare tissue sampling operation to determine its datation.  (Photo by Manuel Cohen)
    LCMUMMY090001.JPG
  • Battle between captain Marko Ivanovic and the Turkish pirate Hadji Ibrahim in his vessel Tartana, off Patras, Greece, when Ivanovic was intercepted on his trading route from Dobrota to Greece, painting, 1823, by Vincenzo Chilone, 1758-1839, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_031.jpg
  • Battle of the brothers Jozo and Marko Ivanovic from Dobrota against pirates, in the port of Piraeus, Greece, in 1756, painting, by Vincenzo Chilone, 1758-1839, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_032.jpg
  • Portrait of captain Krsto Corko from Perast, painting, late 17th century, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_033.jpg
  • Portrait of Cristo Lombardic, 1822-94, priest  from a maritime family from Herceg Novi who worked in schools and participated in the Herzegovinian uprisings, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_034.jpg
  • Montenegrin folk costumes in the Ethnography section of the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_035.jpg
  • Portrait of admiral Matija Zmajevic, 1680-1735, painting, 1937, by Anastas Boracic, copy of an 18th century portrait, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Peter Andreevich, an emissary of the Russian tsar, who supervised training of Russian boyars at Perast, sent Zmajevic as a skilled seaman to Carlsbad where the tsar was under medical treatment in 1712, to have his knowledge in naval science tested by the tsar himself. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_036.jpg
  • Entrance to the port of Trieste, Italy, painting, 1871, by Vasilije Ivankovic, depicting warships and commercial ships of various steamship companies, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_037.jpg
  • Barque Slavia, 1871-94, and barque Taganrog, 1865-1991, sailboats owned by the Radonicic, Tripkovic and Milosevic ship owning families, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_038.jpg
  • Portrait of captain Krsto J Radonicic, 1774-1849, shipowner who sailed in the Napoleonic wars and owned 2 brigantines 1824-49, and whose family owned 22 sailboats 1814-1914, oval painting, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_039.jpg
  • Portrait of Ivo Radonicic, shipowner and sea captain from Dobrota in Kotor, who sailed the sailboats of Dobrota boat owners; he owned 3 barques and 1 brig from 1850-89, oval painting, 1833, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_040.jpg
  • Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_041.jpg
  • Jenny R, ship, leaving Antwerp in July 1863 under captain Luka Laconic of Lepton, painting, by G Weyts, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_042.jpg
  • Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_043.jpg
  • Captain Marko Martinovic, 1663-1716, teaching navigational skills to young Russian noblemen, the future cadets of tsar Peter the Great, painting, late 18th century, in the Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_044.jpg
  • Museum Maritimum, or Maritime Museum of Montenegro, housed in a baroque palace built for the Grgurina family in the early 18th century, in Kotor, on the Bay of Kotor on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro. The Bay of Kotor area is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MONTENEGRO_MC_048.jpg
  • Golden Hall, a banqueting hall inaugurated 1915, with Neo-Baroque decor by Joan Marsal and reproductions of furniture and sculptures, in the Palau de Maricel, now the Maricel Museum, reopened in 2015, in Sitges, Catalonia, Spain. The monumental alabaster fireplace is from the Palau de la Generalitat de Catalunya, from the collection of the Museum of Artistic Reproductions. The complex was built 1910-18 by Miquel Utrillo for Charles Deering, converted from a hospital to a residence and gallery to house Deering's collection. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_1000.jpg
  • Main hall of the Egyptian Museum on Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, housing collections of ancient Egyptian artefacts, built 1901, designed by Marcel Dourgnon, and inaugurated in 1902. It is the oldest archaeological museum in the Middle East and houses the largest collection of Egyptian antiquities in the world. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_EGYPT_MC_039.jpg
  • Display of models of traditional historic buildings in Muharraq which are being conserved and adapted by architects Studio Anne Holtrop, in the Bahrain National Museum, designed by Krohn and Hartvig Rasmussen, inaugurated December 1988 by Amir Shaikh Isa Bin Salman Al-Khalifa, in Manama, Bahrain. 16 properties along the Pearling Path or Route de le Perle are being restored, including houses, a mosque and a museum. The museum houses cultural and archaeological collections covering 6000 years of history, with rooms entitled Burial Mounds, Dilmun, Tylos and Islam, Customs and Traditions, Traditional Trades and Crafts, and Documents and Manuscripts. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_BAHREIN_MC_203.jpg
  • Sacrifice of a bull, ram and boar by the legion to the Roman gods for their victory, with a musician playing the aulos and a man pouring libation on an altar, detail from the Bridgeness Stone, or Bridgeness Distance Slab, c. 142 AD, a Roman carved stone with inscription recording the section of the Antonine Wall (built across the width of Scotland) built by the Second Augustan Legion, found in 1868 at Bo'Ness, at the Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery, Carlisle, Cumbria, England. This is a copy of the original stone, which is in the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland. Carlisle sits at the Western end of Hadrian's Wall. Hadrian's Wall was built 73 miles across Britannia, now England, 122-128 AD, under the reign of Emperor Hadrian, ruled 117-138, to mark the Northern extent of the Roman Empire and guard against barbarian attacks from the Picts to the North. The wall was fortified with milecastles with 2 turrets in between, and a fort about every 5 Roman miles. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_227.JPG
  • 2 lions attacking a bull, sandstone sculpture, late 6th - 5th century BC, from the North Gate, probably originally positioned above the gates, excavated in 1793, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC135.jpg
  • Carved stone stela with figure, possibly late 6th century BC, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC134.jpg
  • Carved stone stela with a 'bottle form' stylised figure, late 6th century BC (4th excavation phase), dedicated to the Carthaginian god Baal Hammon, with an inscription 'consecrated by HMLKT', in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC133.jpg
  • Carved stone stela with female figure, late 6th century BC (3rd excavation phase), with an inscription, from the Tofet of Mozia, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC131.jpg
  • Carved stone block with a walking bull, 5th century BC, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC130.jpg
  • Carved stone stela with a 'bottle form' stylised figure, possibly late 6th century BC, with a Phoenician Punic inscription, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC127.jpg
  • Youth of Mozia, or Giovane di Mozia, marble statue, 475-450 BC, height 194cm, excavated in Zone K, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. The statue has traces of polychrome paint and its feet and arms are missing. It was found on Mozia in October 1979 under a heap of earth and rubble, and was made by a Sicilian or Selinuntine workshop. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC128.jpg
  • Carved stone stela with female figure, late 6th century BC (3rd excavation phase), in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC126.jpg
  • Carved stone stela with stylised figure, possibly 6th century BC, with an inscription, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC125.jpg
  • Carved stone stela with figure and columns, possibly 6th century BC, with an inscription, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC124.jpg
  • Carved stone stela with 2 figures in profile, 5th - 6th century BC (3rd excavation phase), dedicated to the Carthaginian god Baal Hammon, with the inscription 'Abdmilquart son of SHRR, son of Bal Yasop', in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC123.jpg
  • Smiling terracotta mask with large mouth and wrinkles, late 6th century BC, from the Tofet of Mozia, in the Mozia Museum or Whitaker Museum, in Mozia, a Phoenician island city, Trapani, Sicily, Italy. This type of mask was used to fend off evil spirits, and is usually found next to remains in Punic tombs. Mozia was founded in the 8th century BC by the Phoenicians, and remained an important city and Carthaginian trade outpost, thriving until it was overthrown by the Syracuse Greeks in 397 BC. In 1888 the island was rediscovered by Joseph Whitaker, who, through his Fondazione Giuseppe Whitaker, excavated the site and founded the island's museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC122.jpg
  • Small tiki statuette with long face, in basalt, 18cm tall, acquired by the museum in 1976, from Hokatu, on Ua Huka, from the collection of the Vaipaee Museum on Ua Huka, Marquesaas Islands, in the Musee de Tahiti et des Iles, or Te Fare Manaha, at Punaauia, on the island of Tahiti, in the Windward Islands, Society Islands, French Polynesia. Tikis are protective statues representing Ti’i, a half-human half-god ancestor who is believed to be the first man. The Museum of Tahiti and the Islands was opened in 1974 and displays collections of nature and anthropology, habitations and artefacts, social and religious life and the history of French Polynesia. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_POLYNESIA_MC_271.jpg
  • National September 11 Memorial & Museum, designed by Davis Brody Bond, Michael Arad and Peter Walker, on the site of the original Twin Towers World Trade Center buildings which were destroyed in the terrorist attack of 11th September 2001, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. The memorial and museum commemorate the 9/11 attacks, which killed 2,977, and the World Trade Center bombing of 1993, which killed 6. The memorial forms part of the new World Trade Center complex, which includes 5 skyscrapers and the museum. The memorial consists of 2 enormous reflecting pools and waterfalls within the footprint of the Twin Towers, surrounded by trees. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_049.jpg
  • Reflections on the wall of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, designed by Davis Brody Bond, Michael Arad and Peter Walker, on the site of the original Twin Towers World Trade Center buildings which were destroyed in the terrorist attack of 11th September 2001, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. The memorial and museum commemorate the 9/11 attacks, which killed 2,977, and the World Trade Center bombing of 1993, which killed 6. The memorial forms part of the new World Trade Center complex, which includes 5 skyscrapers and the museum. The memorial consists of 2 enormous reflecting pools and waterfalls within the footprint of the Twin Towers, surrounded by trees. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_027.jpg
  • Names of victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks inscribed around the North Tower pool of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, designed by Davis Brody Bond, Michael Arad and Peter Walker, on the site of the original Twin Towers World Trade Center buildings which were destroyed in the terrorist attack of 11th September 2001, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. The memorial and museum commemorate the 9/11 attacks, which killed 2,977, and the World Trade Center bombing of 1993, which killed 6. The memorial forms part of the new World Trade Center complex, which includes 5 skyscrapers and the museum. The memorial consists of 2 enormous reflecting pools and waterfalls within the footprint of the Twin Towers, surrounded by trees. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_012.jpg
  • Names of victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks inscribed around the North Tower pool of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, designed by Davis Brody Bond, Michael Arad and Peter Walker, on the site of the original Twin Towers World Trade Center buildings which were destroyed in the terrorist attack of 11th September 2001, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. The memorial and museum commemorate the 9/11 attacks, which killed 2,977, and the World Trade Center bombing of 1993, which killed 6. The memorial forms part of the new World Trade Center complex, which includes 5 skyscrapers and the museum. The memorial consists of 2 enormous reflecting pools and waterfalls within the footprint of the Twin Towers, surrounded by trees. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_011.jpg
  • Reflections on the wall of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, designed by Davis Brody Bond, Michael Arad and Peter Walker, on the site of the original Twin Towers World Trade Center buildings which were destroyed in the terrorist attack of 11th September 2001, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. The memorial and museum commemorate the 9/11 attacks, which killed 2,977, and the World Trade Center bombing of 1993, which killed 6. The memorial forms part of the new World Trade Center complex, which includes 5 skyscrapers and the museum. The memorial consists of 2 enormous reflecting pools and waterfalls within the footprint of the Twin Towers, surrounded by trees. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_010.jpg
  • Reflections on the wall of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, designed by Davis Brody Bond, Michael Arad and Peter Walker, on the site of the original Twin Towers World Trade Center buildings which were destroyed in the terrorist attack of 11th September 2001, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. The memorial and museum commemorate the 9/11 attacks, which killed 2,977, and the World Trade Center bombing of 1993, which killed 6. The memorial forms part of the new World Trade Center complex, which includes 5 skyscrapers and the museum. The memorial consists of 2 enormous reflecting pools and waterfalls within the footprint of the Twin Towers, surrounded by trees. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_009.jpg
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