manuel cohen

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  • 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_MC250.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
  • 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_MC215.jpg
  • 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_MC213.jpg
  • 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_MC207.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_MC206.jpg
  • 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_MC205.jpg
  • 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_MC200.jpg
  • Officers' Row, lodging for the army officers, and on the left, the post hospital, restored 1960s - 1990s, 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_MC227.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
  • 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_MC214.jpg
  • Shared lieutenants' living quarters, built 1882 in 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 lodgings were built for a captain but were soon designated a shared quarters. It is refur­bished for a bach­elor lieutenant in the north side and a married lieutenant in the south side. 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_MC212.jpg
  • Shared lieutenants' living quarters, built 1882 in 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 lodgings were built for a captain but were soon designated a shared quarters. It is refur­bished for a bach­elor lieutenant in the north side and a married lieutenant in the south side. 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_MC208.jpg
  • Porch of 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_MC204.jpg
  • Shared lieutenants' living quarters, built 1882 in 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 lodgings were built for a captain but were soon designated a shared quarters. It is refur­bished for a bach­elor lieutenant in the north side and a married lieutenant in the south side. 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_MC202.jpg
  • Special seats on the diazoma and vaulted access passage at the Theatre, originally built in the 2nd century BC and restored under Emperor Tiberius, Kursunlutepe Hill, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. The auditorium or koilon seats 6000 in 38 rows of seats, 23 in the upper section and 14 in the lower, and a diazoma contains seats reserved for prominent and privileged spectators, seen here. A removable awning called a velarium provided the spectators with shade from the sun. There are 9 radial stairways and the upper section is also accessible through vaulted corridors ascended by stairs on each side. Above the top row of seats is a temple dedicated to Dionysus. Patara was a maritime Greek and Roman city on the South West Mediterranean coast of Lycia near modern-day Gelemis. It was said to be founded by Patarus, son of Apollo, and was famous for its temple and oracle of Apollo. It was a leading city of the Lycian League. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC611.jpg
  • Shared lieutenants' living quarters, built 1882 in 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 lodgings were built for a captain but were soon designated a shared quarters. It is refur­bished for a bach­elor lieutenant in the north side and a married lieutenant in the south side. 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_MC225.jpg
  • Porch of 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_MC203.jpg
  • 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_MC201.jpg
  • Open papyrus columns with reliefs and hieroglyph inscriptions, central row in the Great Hypostyle Hall in the Precinct of Amun-Re, at the Karnak Temple Complex, Karnak, Thebes, Luxor, Egypt. The Hypostyle Hall, built by Seti I and Ramesses II, 19th dynasty, contained 134 enormous columns in 16 rows, topped with architraves. The site was developed c. 2055 BC - 100 AD, from the Middle Kingdom to the Ptolemaic Kingdom and most of the buildings date to the New Kingdom, dedicated to the Theban Triad of Amun, Mut and Khonsu. Thebes is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_EGYPT_MC_0531.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Platz der Republik 1, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0679.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0121.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0124.jpg
  • Low angle view of a row of columns from the Temple of Saturn, built around 200 A.D. Dougga, Tunisia, pictured on January 31, 2008, in the morning. Dougga has been occupied since the 2nd Millennium BC, well before the Phoenicians arrived in Tunisia. It was ruled by Carthage from the 4th century BC, then by Numidians, who called it Thugga and finally taken over by the Romans in the 2nd century. Situated in the north of Tunisia, the site became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997. This temple was previously the site of the Punic Temple of Baal. The entrance had four Corinthian columns which remains are still visible. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCTunisia_08_MC_112.jpg
  • Dining room of 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_MC265.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
  • Master bedroom of 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_MC234.JPG
  • Dining room of 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_MC233.jpg
  • Back parlour of 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_MC232.jpg
  • Two-storey Officers' quarters, restored, 1 of 4 detached buildings, with Officers' Row behind, 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_MC221.jpg
  • Meeting rooms seen through the windows of the Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Platz der Republik 1, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0678.jpg
  • Staircase seen through the windows of the Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Platz der Republik 1, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0677.jpg
  • Tourist boat passing the Marie-Elisabeth Luders building, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0240.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0204.jpg
  • Inside the Paul-Lobe-Haus at night, by architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0117.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0118.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0119.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0120.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0122.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0123.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0125.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0127.jpg
  • Row of columns of the quadriportico, planned by Luigi Poletti and concluded by Guglielmo Calderini, Basilica Papale di San Paolo fuori le Mura (Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls), 4th century, totally restored after a great fire in 1823, shrine of Saint Paul, Rome, Italy. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCITALY12_MC338.jpg
  • Row of columns of the quadriportico, planned by Luigi Poletti and concluded by Guglielmo Calderini, Basilica Papale di San Paolo fuori le Mura (Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls), 4th century, totally restored after a great fire in 1823, shrine of Saint Paul, Rome, Italy. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCITALY12_MC337.jpg
  • Oblique view of a row of columns from the Temple of Saturn, built around 200 A.D., with the landscape in the background, in Dougga, Tunisia, pictured on January 31, 2008, in the morning. Dougga has been occupied since the 2nd Millennium BC, well before the Phoenicians arrived in Tunisia. It was ruled by Carthage from the 4th century BC, then by Numidians, who called it Thugga and finally taken over by the Romans in the 2nd century. Situated in the north of Tunisia, the site became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997. This temple was previously the site of the Punic Temple of Baal. The entrance had four Corinthian columns which remains are still visible. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCTunisia_08_MC_115.jpg
  • General view of a row of columns from the Temple of Saturn, built around 200 A.D, in Dougga, Tunisia, pictured on January 31, 2008, in the morning. Dougga has been occupied since the 2nd Millennium BC, well before the Phoenicians arrived in Tunisia. It was ruled by Carthage from the 4th century BC, then by Numidians, who called it Thugga and finally taken over by the Romans in the 2nd century. Situated in the north of Tunisia, the site became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997. This temple was previously the site of the Punic Temple of Baal. The entrance had four Corinthian columns which remains are still visible. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCTunisia_08_MC_114.jpg
  • Low angle view of a row of columns from the Temple of Saturn, built around 200 A.D., in Dougga, Tunisia, pictured on January 31, 2008, in the morning. Dougga has been occupied since the 2nd Millennium BC, well before the Phoenicians arrived in Tunisia. It was ruled by Carthage from the 4th century BC, then by Numidians, who called it Thugga and finally taken over by the Romans in the 2nd century. Situated in the north of Tunisia, the site became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997. This temple was previously the site of the Punic Temple of Baal. The entrance had four Corinthian columns which remains are still visible. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCTunisia_08_MC_113.jpg
  • Boat transporting goods on the river Nile, with sailor steering with stick and others rowing, painted relief of the Expedition to the Land of Punt, on the Punt Portico on the middle terrace of the mortuary temple of Hatshepsut, built 15th century BC, at Deir el-Bahari in the Theban Necropolis, Thebes, Luxor, Egypt. The Egyptians took 5 boats of goods to Punt in Somalia to trade for frankincense trees, gold, ebony, ivory and exotic animals. Queen Hatshepsut was the 5th pharaoh of the 18th dynasty in the New Kingdom. The temple consists of 3 terraces built into the cliffs, with the sanctuary of the barque of Amun-Re, Hathor shrine and Anubis shrine. The Theban Necropolis is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_EGYPT_MC_0302.jpg
  • Closed papyrus columns with reliefs and hieroglyph inscriptions in the Great Hypostyle Hall in the Precinct of Amun-Re, at the Karnak Temple Complex, Karnak, Thebes, Luxor, Egypt. The Hypostyle Hall, built by Seti I and Ramesses II, 19th dynasty, contained 134 enormous columns in 16 rows, topped with architraves. The site was developed c. 2055 BC - 100 AD, from the Middle Kingdom to the Ptolemaic Kingdom and most of the buildings date to the New Kingdom, dedicated to the Theban Triad of Amun, Mut and Khonsu. Thebes is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_EGYPT_MC_0532.jpg
  • Theatre, 5th century BC, at Segesta, a settlement of the Elymians, an indigenous Sicilian people, in Sicily, Italy. Originally Greek, the theatre was altered during the Roman period, and now seats 4,000 over 20 rows. Segesta was one of the most important Siceliot (Sicilian-Greek) cities of ancient times, and was inhabited until the Middles Ages. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ITALY_MC_070.jpg
  • Roman odeon, 2nd century AD, a musical performance area in the form of a small theatre with a capacity of 300 people seated in 15 rows of seats, Apollonia, Fier, Albania. Apollonia was an ancient Greek city in Illyria, founded in 588 BC by Greek colonists from Corfu and Corinth. It flourished in the Roman period and declined from the 3rd century AD when its harbour was silted up due to an earthquake. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_Albania_MC389.jpg
  • Roman Theatre with 34 rows of seats supported by underground vaults, in Tlos, a Lycian city in the Xanthos valley, Antalya, Turkey. The theatre took 150 years to build and was funded by donations from private citizens. Tlos was a major Lycian city from the 5th century BC, joining the Lycian Federation in the 2nd century BC. It was settled by the Greeks, Romans, Byzantines and finally the Ottoman Turks. Tlos has an agora, rock tombs and sarcophagi, a stadium, an acropolis, public bath, church and theatre, as well as the Ottoman residence of Ali Agha, governor of the region during the 19th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC744.jpg
  • The Roman Theatre, dating from the 2nd century AD with a capacity of 2200, built on the same site as an earlier Hellenistic one, Xanthos, Antalya, Turkey. The upper rows of the auditorium are missing, having been used in constructing the northern wall of the acropolis. Xanthos was a centre of culture and commerce for the Lycians, and later for the Persians, Greeks and Romans, and was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1988. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC673.jpg
  • The Roman Theatre, dating from the 2nd century AD with a capacity of 2200, built on the same site as an earlier Hellenistic one, with remains of the stage building at the front, Xanthos, Antalya, Turkey. The upper rows of the auditorium are missing, having been used in constructing the northern wall of the acropolis. Xanthos was a centre of culture and commerce for the Lycians, and later for the Persians, Greeks and Romans, and was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1988. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC672.jpg
  • Rows of vines in the Burgundy Clos de Vougeot vineyard, near the Route des Grands Crus between Dijon and Beaune in Cote-d'Or in Bourgogne-Franche-Comte, France. The vineyard surrounds the Chateau du Clos Vougeot, built in Renaissance style in the 16th century, on the site of a 12th century winery built by monks from the nearby Abbey of Citeaux. The chateau still houses a medieval vat-house and presses, Cistercian cellar and original kitchens, has been the headquarters of the Confrerie des Chevaliers du Tastevin since 1945. It is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_FRANCE_MC_0326.jpg
  • Small tree in a field near Vezelay, Yonne, Burgundy, France. Vezelay Abbey and the surrounding hillside were added to the UNESCO World Heritage Site list in 1979. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_FRANCE_MC346.jpg
  • Boat transporting goods on the river Nile, painted relief of the Expedition to the Land of Punt, on the Punt Portico on the middle terrace of the mortuary temple of Hatshepsut, built 15th century BC, at Deir el-Bahari in the Theban Necropolis, Thebes, Luxor, Egypt. The Egyptians took 5 boats of goods to Punt in Somalia to trade for frankincense trees, gold, ebony, ivory and exotic animals. Queen Hatshepsut was the 5th pharaoh of the 18th dynasty in the New Kingdom. The temple consists of 3 terraces built into the cliffs, with the sanctuary of the barque of Amun-Re, Hathor shrine and Anubis shrine. The Theban Necropolis is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_EGYPT_MC_0316.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_050.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_045.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_039.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_038.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_036.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_035.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_029.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_028.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_024.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_023.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_022.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_017.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_016.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_015.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_014.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_013.JPG
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_009.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_008.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields, supporting a very large population of breeding waterbirds as well as birds on migration and during the non-breeding period (northern winter). Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_007.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_003.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_002.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_001.jpg
  • The Ebro Delta, province of Tarragona, Spain. Main coastal delta of the Iberian Peninsula with a variety of different ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields which cover around 15,000 ha today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_EbroDelta_MC_049.jpg
  • Village of Cumieres surrounded by champagne vineyards in Hautvillers, Vallee de la Marne, Grand Est, France. The Champagne hillsides are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    DRN_LC21_FRANCE_MC_2286.jpg
  • Champagne vineyards, aerial view, in Hautvillers, Vallee de la Marne, Grand Est, France. The Champagne hillsides are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2246.jpg
  • Village of Cumieres surrounded by champagne vineyards in Hautvillers, Vallee de la Marne, Grand Est, France. The Champagne hillsides are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2240.jpg
  • Village of Cumieres surrounded by champagne vineyards in Hautvillers, Vallee de la Marne, Grand Est, France. The Champagne hillsides are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2243.jpg
  • Champagne vineyards, aerial view, in Hautvillers, Vallee de la Marne, Grand Est, France. The Champagne hillsides are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2244.jpg
  • Champagne vineyards in Hautvillers, Vallee de la Marne, Grand Est, France. The Champagne hillsides are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2245.jpg
  • Champagne vineyards in Hautvillers, Vallee de la Marne, Grand Est, France. The Champagne hillsides are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2247.jpg
  • Village of Cumieres surrounded by champagne vineyards in Hautvillers, Vallee de la Marne, Grand Est, France. The Champagne hillsides are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2248.jpg
  • Village of Cumieres surrounded by champagne vineyards in Hautvillers, Vallee de la Marne, Grand Est, France. The Champagne hillsides are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2249.jpg
  • Champagne vineyards at Pressoria, Ay-Champagne, Marne, Grand Est, France. The Pressoria Champagne Interpretation Centre, opened July 2021 in the former Maison Pommery pressing centre, offers an interactive visitor experience. The vineyards at Ay are listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1665.jpg
  • Old posters in the Salle de spectacles, built 1932, used for theatre performances, concerts and cinema screenings, in the former Hotel Belvedere du Rayon Vert, built 1928-32 in art deco style by Leon Baille, beside the train tracks in Cerbere, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. This was the first building in the world to be constructed from reinforced concrete and its design was inspired by ocean liners. The hotel closed in 1983 and is now apartments, and is listed as a historic monument. Cerbere is situated close to the Spanish border and its international train station opened in 1876, leading to a rapid growth in population. Cerbere is located on the Cote Vermeille or Vermilion Coast. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_0802.jpg
  • Barrels known as demi-muids used for ageing the wine and large winemaking sheds, aerial view, at the Terres des Templiers vineyard near Banyuls-sur-Mer, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. The Terres des Templiers vineyards in Languedoc-Roussillon were first planted by the Phoenicians, then revived by the Knights Templar in the 14th century. They incorporate 750 small vignerons over 1150 hectares. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    DRN_LC20_FRANCE_MC_1023.jpg
  • Barrels known as demi-muids used for ageing the wine and large winemaking sheds, aerial view, at the Terres des Templiers vineyard near Banyuls-sur-Mer, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. The Terres des Templiers vineyards in Languedoc-Roussillon were first planted by the Phoenicians, then revived by the Knights Templar in the 14th century. They incorporate 750 small vignerons over 1150 hectares. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    DRN_LC20_FRANCE_MC_1022.jpg
  • Seating in the auditorium and colonnaded gallery, in the theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_035.jpg
  • Theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_048.jpg
  • Theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_047.jpg
  • Peas & Love urban farm on the roof of Hotel Yooma at Beaugrenelle in the 15th arrondissement of Paris, France. The rooftop garden was planted in spring 2017 and then extended in winter 2017-18, and now contains 250 cultivation plots. The planters use techniques inspired by permaculture with both horizontal and vertical beds, producing organic seasonal fruits and vegetables. Customers rent plots which are tended by community gardeners, and have access to the food grown throughout the year. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0769.jpg
  • Bookshelves with Chinese motifs, lacquer and gilding by Manuel da Silva, in the Black Room of the Joanina Library, or Biblioteca Joanina, a Baroque library built 1717-28 by Gaspar Ferreira, part of the University of Coimbra General Library, in Coimbra, Portugal. The Casa da Livraria was built during the reign of King John V or Joao V, and consists of the Green Room, Red Room and Black Room, with 250,000 books dating from the 16th - 18th centuries. The library is part of the Faculty of Law and the University is housed in the buildings of the Royal Palace of Coimbra. The building is classified as a national monument and UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_PORTUGAL_MC_011.jpg
  • Bookshelves with Chinese motifs, lacquer and gilding by Manuel da Silva, in the Green Room of the Joanina Library, or Biblioteca Joanina, a Baroque library built 1717-28 by Gaspar Ferreira, part of the University of Coimbra General Library, in Coimbra, Portugal. The Casa da Livraria was built during the reign of King John V or Joao V, and consists of the Green Room, Red Room and Black Room, with 250,000 books dating from the 16th - 18th centuries. The library is part of the Faculty of Law and the University is housed in the buildings of the Royal Palace of Coimbra. The building is classified as a national monument and UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_PORTUGAL_MC_060.jpg
  • Hypostyle Hall in the Lower Court on the central terrace, with fluted Doric columns supporting a stone roof covered with trencadis mosaic, at Park Guell, built 1900-14 by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, Catalan Modernist architect, on Carmel Hill, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. This hall was originally designed to be the market area for the park. The park was commissioned by Eusebi Guell and opened in 1926. The area was designed to hold public gardens, houses, paths and roads, irrigation systems and a terrace. Gaudi used organic forms in the structures of the park, incorporating symbols from Catalan nationalism, religious mysticism and ancient poetry and mythology. It is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC445.jpg
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