Badly's photos with the keyword: Cedar Island
decorated architectural piece
20 Sep 2011 |
|
"The Great Basilica is one of the remains from the Byzantine Period. Designed with pillars and containing three naves and one apse, the structure is 35.5 x 19 meters making it one of the largest basilicas in Karia. Some architectural elements carrying the middle nave and the floor have partially survived. There are many decorated architectural pieces with good workmanship underneath the dense rubble. Reused material can be seen in the building. In a later period, a cistern was built on the northwest corner of the church. The basilica dates back to the 5th and 6th centuries A.D."
lizard
Cistern
20 Sep 2011 |
|
"The church, which stands on the isthmus extending towards the north belongs to the Byzantine Period and is one of the two structures located outside the city walls. The church has one nave and one apse. On the northwest side of the building a cistern stands intact up to the beginning of the vault. The church dates back to the mid-Byzantine period."
Cleopatra Beach, Keep Off!
20 Sep 2011 |
|
"Sand from the beach cannot be taken away under any circumstances. If caught, a fine in accordance with code 2863 will be enforced."
Cistern
20 Sep 2011 |
|
"The Great Basilica is one of the remains from the Byzantine Period. Designed with pillars and containing three naves and one apse, the structure is 35.5 x 19 meters making it one of the largest basilicas in Karia. Some architectural elements carrying the middle nave and the floor have partially survived. There are many decorated architectural pieces with good workmanship underneath the dense rubble. Reused material can be seen in the building. In a later period, a cistern was built on the northwest corner of the church. The basilica dates back to the 5th and 6th centuries A.D."
very old olive tree
Amphitheatre
20 Sep 2011 |
|
"The Theatre that has survived so far is on the north hillside. The ruin is in the center of city settlement, but out of the walls extending on the east side. The theatre was built outside the city walls of the old city. The capacity of the theatre is 2500 people and its stage has been destroyed to a great extent so far; yet, the stages where the people used to sit were well protected. The workmanship is perfect in the walls with bossages and they are the most important indicators that the theatre is Hellenic in origin, The theatre was used in Roman and Byzantium eras. The lower part of the sitting stairs are covered under the filling. The blocks of the stabuilding were removed and used in the construction of residentialbuildings and port in Byzantium period. Another feature of this theatre is that it is one of the biggest theatres known to be located on the opposite side of Rhodes."
Amphitheatre
Kistak (Isthmus) Church
19 Sep 2011 |
|
"The church, which stands on the isthmus extending towards the north belongs to the Byzantine Period and is one of the two structures located outside the city walls. The church has one nave and one apse. On the northwest side of the building a cistern stands intact up to the beginning of the vault. The church dates back to the mid-Byzantine period."
Amphitheatre
20 Sep 2011 |
|
"The Theatre that has survived so far is on the north hillside. The ruin is in the center of city settlement, but out of the walls extending on the east side. The theatre was built outside the city walls of the old city. The capacity of the theatre is 2500 people and its stage has been destroyed to a great extent so far; yet, the stages where the people used to sit were well protected. The workmanship is perfect in the walls with bossages and they are the most important indicators that the theatre is Hellenic in origin, The theatre was used in Roman and Byzantium eras. The lower part of the sitting stairs are covered under the filling. The blocks of the stabuilding were removed and used in the construction of residentialbuildings and port in Byzantium period. Another feature of this theatre is that it is one of the biggest theatres known to be located on the opposite side of Rhodes."
Amphitheatre
Amphitheatre
blue-tailed lizard
Apse
20 Sep 2011 |
|
"The Great Basilica is one of the remains from the Byzantine Period. Designed with pillars and containing three naves and one apse, the structure is 35.5 x 19 meters making it one of the largest basilicas in Karia. Some architectural elements carrying the middle nave and the floor have partially survived. There are many decorated architectural pieces with good workmanship underneath the dense rubble. Reused material can be seen in the building. In a later period, a cistern was built on the northwest corner of the church. The basilica dates back to the 5th and 6th centuries A.D."
Great Basilica
20 Sep 2011 |
|
"The Great Basilica is one of the remains from the Byzantine Period. Designed with pillars and containing three naves and one apse, the structure is 35.5 x 19 meters making it one of the largest basilicas in Karia. Some architectural elements carrying the middle nave and the floor have partially survived. There are many decorated architectural pieces with good workmanship underneath the dense rubble. Reused material can be seen in the building. In a later period, a cistern was built on the northwest corner of the church. The basilica dates back to the 5th and 6th centuries A.D."
decorated architectural piece
20 Sep 2011 |
|
"The Great Basilica is one of the remains from the Byzantine Period. Designed with pillars and containing three naves and one apse, the structure is 35.5 x 19 meters making it one of the largest basilicas in Karia. Some architectural elements carrying the middle nave and the floor have partially survived. There are many decorated architectural pieces with good workmanship underneath the dense rubble. Reused material can be seen in the building. In a later period, a cistern was built on the northwest corner of the church. The basilica dates back to the 5th and 6th centuries A.D."
Amphitheatre
Capital or corbel or something
20 Sep 2011 |
|
"The Great Basilica is one of the remains from the Byzantine Period. Designed with pillars and containing three naves and one apse, the structure is 35.5 x 19 meters making it one of the largest basilicas in Karia. Some architectural elements carrying the middle nave and the floor have partially survived. There are many decorated architectural pieces with good workmanship underneath the dense rubble. Reused material can be seen in the building. In a later period, a cistern was built on the northwest corner of the church. The basilica dates back to the 5th and 6th centuries A.D."
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