manuel cohen

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  • Shops on Al-Muizz street, one of the oldest streets in Cairo, founded in the 10th century during the Fatimid dynasty, in the walled city of historic Cairo, Egypt. In the distance is the Mosque-Sabil of Sulayman Agha al-Silahdar, an Ottoman mosque, sabil and kuttab built 1839 under Muhammad Ali Pasha. The street's full name is Al-Muizz li-Din Allah al-Fatimi street, named after caliph Al-Mu'izz Ii-Din Allah, and it is nearly 1km long. Historic Cairo is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_EGYPT_MC_0647.jpg
  • Mosque-Sabil of Sulayman Agha al-Silahdar, an Ottoman mosque, sabil and kuttab built 1839 under Muhammad Ali Pasha, on Al-Muizz street, one of the oldest streets in Cairo, founded in the 10th century during the Fatimid dynasty, in the walled city of historic Cairo, Egypt. The street's full name is Al-Muizz li-Din Allah al-Fatimi street, named after caliph Al-Mu'izz Ii-Din Allah, and it is nearly 1km long. Historic Cairo is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_EGYPT_MC_0646.jpg
  • Shops on Al-Muizz street, one of the oldest streets in Cairo, founded in the 10th century during the Fatimid dynasty, in the walled city of historic Cairo, Egypt. The street's full name is Al-Muizz li-Din Allah al-Fatimi street, named after caliph Al-Mu'izz Ii-Din Allah, and it is nearly 1km long. Historic Cairo is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_EGYPT_MC_0648.jpg
  • Main street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which we can see shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC632.jpg
  • Main street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, looking towards the Southern Gate, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which are shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC631.jpg
  • Main street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which we can see shops of varying sizes, here on the left. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC633.jpg
  • Main street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which are shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC614.jpg
  • Main street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, looking towards the Southern Gate, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, seen here on the right, behind which are shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC617.jpg
  • Western colonnade of the Main street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which we can see shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC615.jpg
  • Main street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, looking towards the Southern Gate, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which are shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC618.jpg
  • Main street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which we can see shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC616.jpg
  • Main street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, looking towards the Southern Gate, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which we can see shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC619.jpg
  • Main street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, looking towards the Southern Gate, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which we can see shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC620.jpg
  • Eastern Ionic colonnade of the Main Street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which are shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC622.jpg
  • Eastern colonnade of the Main Street, connecting the inner harbour to the agora in front of the bouleuterion, Hellenistic period, Patara, Antalya, Turkey. This is a Cardo (North-South street) which intersects with the Decumanus (East-West street). It is 12.6m wide and has a colonnade of granite Ionic columns on its East side and one of marble columns on the West, behind which are shops of varying sizes. This colonnaded wide avenue was completely flooded after the earthquakes in the region, and so far, it has been unearthed over 100m. The lack of wheel marks suggests that it functioned as a pedestrian street. There is a sewer system running underneath the street. 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_MC621.jpg
  • Arcadian Street and Great Theatre in the distance, 3rd century BC, Ephesus, Izmir, Turkey. This street is situated between the Harbour Baths and the Great theatre. Entering from the port, traders and sailors would first arrive in this street, so it was designed with marble slabs and colonnades. It was constructed in the Hellenistic Period, but then was restored during the reign of Emperor Arcadius in the 4th century AD. The theatre seats 25,000 and is believed to be the largest outdoor theatre in the ancient world. Ephesus was an ancient Greek city founded in the 10th century BC, and later a major Roman city, on the Ionian coast near present day Selcuk. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC380.jpg
  • Arcadian Street and Great Theatre in the distance, 3rd century BC, Ephesus, Izmir, Turkey. This street is situated between the Harbour Baths and the Great theatre. Entering from the port, traders and sailors would first arrive in this street, so it was designed with marble slabs and colonnades. It was constructed in the Hellenistic Period, but then was restored during the reign of Emperor Arcadius in the 4th century AD. The theatre seats 25,000 and is believed to be the largest outdoor theatre in the ancient world. Ephesus was an ancient Greek city founded in the 10th century BC, and later a major Roman city, on the Ionian coast near present day Selcuk. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC381.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_007.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_012.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_011.jpg
  • Shop along the colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_023.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street with open water channel, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_026.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_028.jpg
  • Shop along the colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_030.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre (foreground), with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_031.JPG
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_043.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_052.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street and behind, the nymphaeum or Nympahion of Kestros, a monumental fountain under the acropolis, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_050.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street leading down the hill, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_053.JPG
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre (foreground), with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_054.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_055.JPG
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre (foreground), with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_056.JPG
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre (shown here), with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_070.jpg
  • Street art mural, Mona Lisa La Joconde, by Okuda, on an apartment block on the Villa d'Este, a pedestrian street in the Chinese quarter of the quartier de la Gare, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. It was painted as part of the Musee a Ciel Ouvert, an open air street art exhibition in the 13th arrondissement, running since 2015. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1441.jpg
  • Large street art mural, 22m high, by Jorge Rodriguez-Gerada, in charcoal, a portrait of his wife Ana, on the Rue National, in the quartier de la Gare, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. The mural was created as part of the Musee a Ciel Ouvert, an open air street art exhibition in the 13th arrondissement, running since 2015. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1436.jpg
  • Apartment blocks on the Villa d'Este, a pedestrian street in the Chinese quartier of the quarter de la Gare, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. On the right is a street art mural, Mona Lisa La Joconde, by Okuda. It was painted as part of the Musee a Ciel Ouvert, an open air street art exhibition in the 13th arrondissement, running since 2015. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1418.jpg
  • Georgian terrace of houses in Fournier Street, Spitalfields, in the East End of London, England.  The townhouses on this street date from the 1720s and were built to house wealthy French merchants. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_220.jpg
  • Georgian terrace of houses in Fournier Street, Spitalfields, in the East End of London, England. The townhouses on this street date from the 1720s and were built to house wealthy French merchants. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_221.jpg
  • Street scene in Palermo, Sicily, Italy, with market stalls and shops lining a pedestrian street flanked by apartment buildings. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC184.jpg
  • Bars on East 6th St (Dirty Sixth) in the Sixth Street Historic District in downtown Austin, Texas, USA. The area was Austin's commercial district in the late 19th century, and the buildings are mainly Victorian brick structures. It is now known for its lively bars, cafes, nightclubs and music venues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC037.jpg
  • Terminal 6 music venue on East 6th St (Dirty Sixth) in the Sixth Street Historic District in downtown Austin, Texas, USA. The area was Austin's commercial district in the late 19th century, and the buildings are mainly Victorian brick structures. It is now known for its lively bars, cafes, nightclubs and music venues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC038.jpg
  • Statue on Curetes Street and the Library of Celsus in the distance, Ephesus, Izmir, Turkey. Curetes Street was one of 3 main streets in Ephesus, leading from the Hercules Gate to the Library of Celsus. It was a paved road lined with statues. Ephesus was an ancient Greek city founded in the 10th century BC, and later a major Roman city, on the Ionian coast near present day Selcuk. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC390.jpg
  • Clink Street, with Clink Prison Museum on right, Southwark, London, UK. The Clink Prison, founded 1144, gave its name as slang to all prisons. Atmospheric street scene with pedestrians. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_London_MC033.jpg
  • Blue street sign for the Rue Kervegan on Ile Feydeau, in the 4th arrondissement of Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. Straed Kervegan is the Breton equivalent of the modern French. Nantes was an important trading port, profiting greatly from the slave trade from 17th - 19th century. The Ile Feydeau area, a former island in the Loire, was developed from the 1720s with large mansions built by wealthy shipowners and slave traders. The Rue Kervegan is its main street, named after Nantes mayor and shipowner Christophe-Clair Danyel de Kervegan, 1735-1817, and houses 20 such buildings. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_0115.jpg
  • Carved inscription on a stone at the intersection of the 2 main colonnaded streets, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_010.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_041.jpg
  • Arch and basin on the colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_049.jpg
  • Intersection of the 2 main colonnaded streets, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_064.jpg
  • Kashinkids (left), 2017, street art by Kashink, of 4 children with multiple eyes, painted with children from the Rue du Clos school, on the Rue Albert Marquet, in the Charonne quarter of the 20th arrondissement of Paris, France. Kashink is a female street artist of slavic and hispanic roots, known for her huge bold bright works featuring figures with multiple eyes or Mexican skulls, usually with a political or militant message. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1329.jpg
  • Street art in Santa Barbara, created in 2015 for the Hoy Santa Barbara Street Art Festival, in Santa Barbara, Santo Domingo, capital of the Dominican Republic, in the Caribbean. Santa Barbara was originally the place where slaves were brought in and out of Santo Domingo, and is now a residential district away from the tourist centre. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_DominicanRepublic_MC_235.jpg
  • Street art in Santa Barbara, created in 2015 for the Hoy Santa Barbara Street Art Festival, in Santa Barbara, Santo Domingo, capital of the Dominican Republic, in the Caribbean. Santa Barbara was originally the place where slaves were brought in and out of Santo Domingo, and is now a residential district away from the tourist centre. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_DominicanRepublic_MC_234.jpg
  • Georgian terrace of houses in Fournier Street, Spitalfields, in the East End of London, England. The townhouses on this street date from the 1720s and were built to house wealthy French merchants. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_176.jpg
  • The Driskill Hotel, built 1886 in Romanesque Revival style by cattle baron Jesse Driskill, on East 6th St or Dirty Sixth, in the Sixth Street Historic District in downtown Austin, Texas, USA. The area was Austin's commercial district in the late 19th century, and the buildings are mainly Victorian brick structures. It is now known for its lively bars, cafes, nightclubs and music venues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC055.jpg
  • Ferhadija Street, a popular pedestrianised shopping street in the part of town built during the Austro Hungarian Empire in the 19th century, in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The city was originally founded by the Ottomans in 1461. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_Sarajevo_MC109.jpg
  • Relief of the god Hermes or Mercury, Curetes Street, Ephesus, Izmir, Turkey. Here Hermes is seen with his winged staff or caduceus and a ram, symbolising sacrifice. He is the messenger of the gods and has wings on his ankles. Curetes Street was one of 3 main streets in Ephesus, leading from the Hercules Gate to the Celsus Library. Ephesus was an ancient Greek city founded in the 10th century BC, and later a major Roman city, on the Ionian coast near present day Selcuk. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC324.jpg
  • Curetes Street and the Temple of Hadrian, Ephesus, Izmir, Turkey. Curetes Street is one of 3 main streets in Ephesus, and runs from Hercules Gate to the Celsus Library. The Temple of Hadrian was built by Quintilius before 138 AD and was dedicated to the Emperor Hadrian, who came to visit the city from Athens in 128 AD. The facade of the temple has 4 Corinthian style columns supporting a curved arch, in the middle of which contains a relief of Tyche, goddess of victory. Ephesus was an ancient Greek city founded in the 10th century BC, and later a major Roman city, on the Ionian coast near present day Selcuk. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC318.jpg
  • Duke Street Hill buildings and pedestrians reflected in a glass building, Bankside, Southwark, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_London_MC274.jpg
  • Duke Street Hill buildings, bus and pedestrian reflected in a glass building, Bankside, Southwark, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_London_MC275.jpg
  • Old man with raincoat and baby buggy seen from behind, crossing the early morning light reflected off a bright building at the far end of a Barcelona narrow street, Spain. The wet pavement of the street is reflecting the facade of the building. Picture of Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC255.jpg
  • Early morning light reflected off a bright building at the far end of a Barcelona narrow street, Spain. The wet pavement of the street is reflecting the facade of the building. Picture of Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC254.jpg
  • Odos Ippoton, or Street of the Knights, a 600m long medieval road connecting the port to the acropolis, in the town of Rhodes, on the island of Rhodes, in the Dodecanese islands in the Aegean Sea, Greece. The road ends at the Palace of the Grand Master of the Knights of Rhodes, or the Kastello. It houses 7 16th century inns with decorated facades, reflecting the home nations of the masters of the knights. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_GREECE_MC_029.jpg
  • Modernist street, designed to act as a firebreak between the main workspaces (the previous factory burned down), and the Water Tower, at CaixaForum Barcelona, a cultural centre opened 2002 in the former Casaramona textile factory built 1911, designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch, in Montjuic, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The centre was repurposed by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki, b. 1931. It is sponsored by La Caixa bank, and holds temporary exhibitions, concerts, educational workshops and films, and has a media library, auditorium, classroom, restaurant and children's activity space. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_1351.jpg
  • Modernist street, designed to act as a firebreak between the main workspaces (the previous factory burned down), and the Clock Tower, at CaixaForum Barcelona, a cultural centre opened 2002 in the former Casaramona textile factory built 1911, designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch, in Montjuic, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The centre was repurposed by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki, b. 1931. It is sponsored by La Caixa bank, and holds temporary exhibitions, concerts, educational workshops and films, and has a media library, auditorium, classroom, restaurant and children's activity space. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_1350.jpg
  • Street art portrait of Pablo Picasso, who lived in Ceret 1911-12, by FAS, 2017, in the village of Ceret, Pyrenees-Orientales, France. FAS completed a series of several portraits of artists around the streets of Ceret, in acrylic paint, which will weather and disappear over time. Ceret is the capital of the historical Catalan comarca of Vallespir. Ceret developed under the Kingdom of Majorca, and was fortified with defensive town walls with 2 gates, the Porte de France and the Porte d'Espagne. In the early 20th century, several artists lived and worked here, including Chagall, Dali, Matisse and Picasso. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_1546.jpg
  • Street art portrait of Pablo Picasso, who lived in Ceret 1911-12, by FAS, 2017, in the village of Ceret, Pyrenees-Orientales, France. FAS completed a series of several portraits of artists around the streets of Ceret, in acrylic paint, which will weather and disappear over time. Ceret is the capital of the historical Catalan comarca of Vallespir. Ceret developed under the Kingdom of Majorca, and was fortified with defensive town walls with 2 gates, the Porte de France and the Porte d'Espagne. In the early 20th century, several artists lived and worked here, including Chagall, Dali, Matisse and Picasso. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_1545.jpg
  • Blue street sign for the Rue Saint Domingue, in Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. Nantes was an important trading port, and shipowners profited greatly from the slave trade from 17th - 19th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_0157.jpg
  • Street sign for the Rue Kervegan on Ile Feydeau, in the 4th arrondissement of Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. Nantes was an important trading port, profiting greatly from the slave trade from 17th - 19th century. The Ile Feydeau area, a former island in the Loire, was developed from the 1720s with large mansions built by wealthy shipowners and slave traders. The Rue Kervegan is its main street, named after Nantes mayor and shipowner Christophe-Clair Danyel de Kervegan, 1735-1817, and houses 20 such buildings. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_0112.JPG
  • Blue street sign for the Rue Guillaume Grou, a shipowner and founder of the Hospice des Orphelins, or orphans' hospice, 1698-1774, in Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. Nantes was an important trading port, and shipowners profited greatly from the slave trade from 17th - 19th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_0132.jpg
  • Blue street sign for the Rue Guillaume Grou, a shipowner and founder of the Hospice des Orphelins, or orphans' hospice, 1698-1774, in Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. Nantes was an important trading port, and shipowners profited greatly from the slave trade from 17th - 19th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_0133.jpg
  • Bowery Street in Lower Manhattan, looking North towards Midtown and the Empire State Building, in New York City, NY, USA. Bowery St runs from Chatham Square to Cooper Square and defines the Bowery neighbourhood. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_NYC_USA_MC_001.jpg
  • Red Doll, a street art fresco, October 2014, by Vinie and Reaone, on the Rue des Grands Moulins, in the Paris Rive Gauche development in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1456.jpg
  • Street art mural of a girl wearing a helmet with magical creatures, 2016, by Herakut (Jasmin Siddiqui, or Hera, and Falk Lehmann, or Akut), on the wall of the Ecole Publique Primo Levi, at the junction of the Rue Rene Goscinny and Rue Olivier Messiaen, next to the Jardins Grands Moulins Abbe Pierre, in the Paris Rive Gauche district of the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. The 13th arrondissement hosts the Musee a Ciel Ouvert, an open air street art exhibition, running since 2015. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1467.jpg
  • Large street art mural, 22m high, by Jorge Rodriguez-Gerada, in charcoal, a portrait of his wife Ana, on the Rue National, in the quartier de la Gare, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. The mural was created as part of the Musee a Ciel Ouvert, an open air street art exhibition in the 13th arrondissement, running since 2015. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1437.jpg
  • Large street art mural of a gecko, leaves and dripping water, at Les Olympiades, a development of apartment blocks, offices and shops built around a large pedestrianised esplanade, designed by Michel Holley and Andre Martinat and built 1969-77, in the Chinese quarter in the quartier de la Gare, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. The mural was painted as part of the Musee a Ciel Ouvert, an open air street art exhibition in the 13th arrondissement, running since 2015. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1426.jpg
  • Large street art mural, 22m high, by Jorge Rodriguez-Gerada, in charcoal, a portrait of his wife Ana, on the Rue National, in the quartier de la Gare, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. The mural was created as part of the Musee a Ciel Ouvert, an open air street art exhibition in the 13th arrondissement, running since 2015. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1423.jpg
  • Large scale street art graffiti mural on the hull of the barge Grande Fantaisie, by the street artist Marko 93, at the Quai de l'Oise on the Canal de l'Ourcq in the 19th arrondissement of Paris, France. The mural depicts the dancer Sarah Guem beckoning a panther. The Canal de l'Ourcq is a 108.1km waterway begun in 1802 between Port-aux-Perches and the Canal Saint-Martin via the Bassin de la Villette or La Villette Basin. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0124.jpg
  • We Are Still Here, social street art, mural depicting many raised hands and highlighting issues such as poverty, homelessness, austerity and mental health, by Artists for Justice and Peace, at St John's Church, Princes St, Edinburgh, Scotland. The street paintings at the church are regularly changed and encourage passers by to stop and consider social issues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_SCOTLAND_MC_075.jpg
  • Street scene with derelict and demolished buildings, soldiers robbing a woman, dead body, soldier stopping trade and piles of rubble in the street, detail from the fresco of Allegory of Bad Government and the Effects of Bad Government on Town and Country, (Effetti del Cattivo Governo in Citta e in Campagna), from the series The Allegory and Effects of Good and Bad Government (L'Allegoria e Effetti del Buono e del Cattivo Governo), painted 1338-39 by Ambrogio Lorenzetti, c. 1290-1348, in the Sala dei Nove or Salon of Nine or Council Room, in the Palazzo Pubblico or Town Hall, Siena, Tuscany, Italy. Lorenzetti was commissioned by the Council of Nine to produce allegorical frescoes covering 3 of the 4 walls of their council chamber, and he produced 6 scenes on the 3 fresco panels. Picture by Manuel Cohen, with permission of the Comune di Siena / Museo Civico
    LC17_ITALY_MC109.jpg
  • Street scene, with soldiers robbing a woman, dead body, soldier stopping trade and piles of rubble in the street, detail from the fresco of Allegory of Bad Government and the Effects of Bad Government on Town and Country, (Effetti del Cattivo Governo in Citta e in Campagna), from the series The Allegory and Effects of Good and Bad Government (L'Allegoria e Effetti del Buono e del Cattivo Governo), painted 1338-39 by Ambrogio Lorenzetti, c. 1290-1348, in the Sala dei Nove or Salon of Nine or Council Room, in the Palazzo Pubblico or Town Hall, Siena, Tuscany, Italy. Lorenzetti was commissioned by the Council of Nine to produce allegorical frescoes covering 3 of the 4 walls of their council chamber, and he produced 6 scenes on the 3 fresco panels. Picture by Manuel Cohen, with permission of the Comune di Siena / Museo Civico
    LC17_ITALY_MC108.jpg
  • Street signs for 1-21 Wall St and 75-109 Broadway in Lower Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. Wall St is the Financial District of New York and the leading financial centre of the world. Broadway is the Theater District of Manhattan, with 41 professional theatres. It is the oldest North-South street in New York City, and is 13 miles long. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_044.jpg
  • Street signs for 1-21 Wall St and 75-109 Broadway in Lower Manhattan, New York, New York, USA. Wall St is the Financial District of New York and the leading financial centre of the world. Broadway is the Theater District of Manhattan, with 41 professional theatres. It is the oldest North-South street in New York City, and is 13 miles long. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_NEWYORK_MC_043.jpg
  • The main street in Prague castle, 10th - 14th centuries, and St George's Basilica Tower in the distance, founded by Vratislaus I of Bohemia in 920 and rebuilt 1142, Prague, Czech Republic. Prague Castle is the largest ancient castle in the world. The first castle was built here in the 9th century and over the years the kings of Bohemia, Holy Roman emperors, and presidents of Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic have had their offices here. The famous Slovenian architect Josip Plecnik carried out extensive renovations in the First Republic (1918-1938). The historic centre of Prague was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1992. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_PRAGUE_MC106.jpg
  • Relief of the god Hermes or Mercury, Curetes Street, Ephesus, Izmir, Turkey. Here Hermes is seen with his winged staff or caduceus and a ram, symbolising sacrifice. He is the messenger of the gods and has wings on his ankles. Curetes Street was one of 3 main streets in Ephesus, leading from the Hercules Gate to the Celsus Library. Ephesus was an ancient Greek city founded in the 10th century BC, and later a major Roman city, on the Ionian coast near present day Selcuk. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC393.jpg
  • North part of the Colonnaded Street or Cardo Maximus, 2nd century AD, Jerash, Jordan. The arch is the North Tetrapylon, originally the entrance to the North Theatre. It probably had a domed roof and opened on 4 sides to allow the traffic to pass through. The street runs from the North gate to the Forum, it was the main road through Jerash and was lined with shops. The Greco-Roman town of Gerasa is thought to have been founded in 331 BC by Alexander the Great. It was conquered by Pompey in 63 BC and became a prosperous Roman town. Jerash was destroyed by an earthquake in 749 AD and its ruins were discovered in 1806 and the town excavated and reconstructed. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Jordan_MC259.jpg
  • North part of the Colonnaded Street or Cardo Maximus, 2nd century AD, Jerash, Jordan. The arch is the North Tetrapylon, originally the entrance to the North Theatre. It probably had a domed roof and opened on 4 sides to allow the traffic to pass through. The street runs from the North gate to the Forum, it was the main road through Jerash and was lined with shops. The Greco-Roman town of Gerasa is thought to have been founded in 331 BC by Alexander the Great. It was conquered by Pompey in 63 BC and became a prosperous Roman town. Jerash was destroyed by an earthquake in 749 AD and its ruins were discovered in 1806 and the town excavated and reconstructed. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Jordan_MC260.jpg
  • Corinthian columns along the North part of the Colonnaded Street or Cardo Maximus, built 2nd century AD, Jerash, Jordan. The street runs from the Forum to the North gate. It was the main road through Jerash and was lined with shops. The Greco-Roman town of Gerasa is thought to have been founded in 331 BC by Alexander the Great. It was conquered by Pompey in 63 BC and became a prosperous Roman town. Jerash was destroyed by an earthquake in 749 AD and its ruins were discovered in 1806 and the town excavated and reconstructed. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Jordan_MC262.jpg
  • Colonnaded Street, c. 106 AD, Petra, Ma'an, Jordan. The street was originally lined with a double row of columns, built by the Romans over an earlier Nabatean road. Markets were probably held here 100-200 AD. Ruins of the city centre scatter this area. Petra was the capital and royal city of the Nabateans, Arabic desert nomads. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Jordan_MC145.jpg
  • Colonnaded Street, c. 106 AD, Petra, Ma'an, Jordan. The street was originally lined with a double row of columns, built by the Romans over an earlier Nabatean road. Markets were probably held here 100-200 AD. Ruins of the city centre scatter this area. Petra was the capital and royal city of the Nabateans, Arabic desert nomads. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Jordan_MC144.jpg
  • Boy riding donkey down Colonnaded Street, c. 106 AD, Petra, Ma'an, Jordan. The street was originally lined with a double row of columns, built by the Romans over an earlier Nabatean road. Markets were probably held here 100-200 AD. Ruins of the city centre scatter this area. Petra was the capital and royal city of the Nabateans, Arabic desert nomads. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Jordan_MC143.jpg
  • Colonnaded street and audience hall, Umayyad Palace, Amman Citadel, Jabal al Qal'a, Amman, Jordan. This street, built 730 AD, and the Umayyad Palace, also called Dar al-Imara, built c. 720 AD, are believed to be the work of Umayyad Arabs. The palace was an extensive complex of royal and residential buildings and was once home to the governor of Amman. The dome of the audience hall is a later reconstruction by Spanish archaeologists. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Jordan_MC031.jpg
  • Colonnaded street and audience hall, Umayyad Palace, Amman Citadel, Jabal al Qal'a, Amman, Jordan. This street, built 730 AD, and the Umayyad Palace, also called Dar al-Imara, built c. 720 AD, are believed to be the work of Umayyad Arabs. The palace was an extensive complex of royal and residential buildings and was once home to the governor of Amman. The dome of the audience hall is a later reconstruction by Spanish archaeologists. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Jordan_MC032.jpg
  • Old man with raincoat and baby buggy seen from behind, crossing the early morning light reflected off a bright building at the far end of a Barcelona narrow street, Spain. The wet pavement of the street is reflecting the facade of the building. Picture of Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC256.jpg
  • Camden Town High Street's shops and visitors, London, UK. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_London_MC261.jpg
  • Rue de Bacchus, street sign named after the Roman god of wine, with crossed keys, the heraldic symbol of the village, Hautvillers, in the Champagne vineyard region of Vallee de la Marne, Grand Est, France. The surrounding Champagne hillsides are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2264.jpg
  • Modernist street, designed to act as a firebreak between the main workspaces (the previous factory burned down), at CaixaForum Barcelona, a cultural centre opened 2002 in the former Casaramona textile factory built 1911, designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch, in Montjuic, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The centre was repurposed by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki, b. 1931. It is sponsored by La Caixa bank, and holds temporary exhibitions, concerts, educational workshops and films, and has a media library, auditorium, classroom, restaurant and children's activity space. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_1325.jpg
  • Lliures, feministes i rebels, street art by 8M, a feminist organisation who marched on 8th March, International Women's Day, and whose motto is to be free, alive, feminist, combative and rebellious, in the Barri Gotic or Gothic Quarter of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The mural was made in collaboration with local residents. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_1285.jpg
  • Modernist street, designed to act as a firebreak between the main workspaces (the previous factory burned down), and the Water Tower, at CaixaForum Barcelona, a cultural centre opened 2002 in the former Casaramona textile factory built 1911, designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch, in Montjuic, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The centre was repurposed by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki, b. 1931. It is sponsored by La Caixa bank, and holds temporary exhibitions, concerts, educational workshops and films, and has a media library, auditorium, classroom, restaurant and children's activity space. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_1323.jpg
  • Lliures, feministes i rebels, street art by 8M, a feminist organisation who marched on 8th March, International Women's Day, and whose motto is to be free, alive, feminist, combative and rebellious, in the Barri Gotic or Gothic Quarter of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The mural was made in collaboration with local residents. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_1286.jpg
  • Street sign of the Rue de l'Alchimie, Bourges, Centre Val de Loire, France. Bourges has a long tradition with alchemy and many of its buildings, such as the Palais Jacques Coeur, the Cathedral and the Hotel Lallemant display symbols and sculptures which are thought to relate to alchemical processes. Many scholars of alchemy, such as Fulcanelli, Mathe, Chenu, Van Lennep and Bulteau have studied the Bourges buildings. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_0697.jpg
  • Street scene from the Medina of  Marrakech, Morocco. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCMOROCCO_12_MC090.jpg
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