Avetik Isaakyan StatueThe World > Asia > Middle East |
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The statue of Avetik Isaakyan is a popular place for meetings and appointments and as it is near to a transport stop. It is a lot of students and the people in general around.
Komitas statue at the centre of the city, near State Conservatory. Very popular place for all kind of...
Night Extreme in Yerevan :)
Opera square, also knows as Freedom square. Here passed meetings for independence, pass concerts and ...
The statue of Armenian artist Martirosa Sarjana costs in city centre. Round it the garden in which is...
Photo booth in Yerevan, minutes to remember
Around and near Cinema house Moscow and Hotel Yerevan on Abovian street. This that place where give t...
View on Yerevan from cascade after spring rain. The cascade – one of the basic Yerevan sights, the mo...
From the top of the Cascade in Yerevan, Armenia I know, I know, the bottom half is black, but back in...
Northern (Hyusisain) avenue in Yerevan city. November is very warm this year. Very beautiful and cool...
The current statue replaces a monumental statue of Joseph Stalin that was created as a victory memori...
Modern civilization began right here in the Tigris-Euphrates river valley. Also known as the Fertile Crescent or Mesopotamia, this is the place where, six thousand years ago, agriculture, writing and mathematics were brought into widespread use.
The term "Middle East" comes from the British navy, which used it to describe the countries on the trade route from Europe to India and China. Everything from Afghanistan to Morocco may possibly be classified as "middle eastern", depending on whom you ask -- and when.
Only a partial list of past Empires in the middle eastern territory includes Sumeria, Babylonia, Persia, the Ottoman Empire and the Roman Empire!
When northern Europe was still lurking about in slimy cold stone castles playing chess, the Middle East was enjoying the flowers of poetry, luxurious craftsmanship, music and literature. In fact, the Renaissance in Europe was partly inspired by stories brought back from the middle east by travelers along the trade route.
Strategic location, religious history and the world's largest supply of crude oil have kept the Middle East at the center of world activity for centuries. The saga continues.
Text by Steve Smith.