Forwarded from Apu Wild Kingdom
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Forwarded from FTAOL V2
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🔴 Lang lebe Europa
Ich habe dieses Video schon vor ein paar Jahren gemacht. An seiner Aktualität hat es dennoch nichts eingebüßt. Ich spreche zwar unsere Probleme an, zeige aber auch die wahre Vielfalt Europas. Ich denke es ist wichtig, dass man sich öfter einmal verinnerlicht, wie wundervoll Europa eigentlich ist.⚡️
SD 720 | S1#X | Circa 100 MB | 11.36 Minuten | Deutsch
Ich habe dieses Video schon vor ein paar Jahren gemacht. An seiner Aktualität hat es dennoch nichts eingebüßt. Ich spreche zwar unsere Probleme an, zeige aber auch die wahre Vielfalt Europas. Ich denke es ist wichtig, dass man sich öfter einmal verinnerlicht, wie wundervoll Europa eigentlich ist.⚡️
SD 720 | S1#X | Circa 100 MB | 11.36 Minuten | Deutsch
Forwarded from Sailor Saturn 🪐
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Forwarded from Sailor Saturn 🪐
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Forwarded from Tafelrunde (David Korb)
Formed from a single block of excavated stone, Kailasa temple is considered one of the most impressive cave temples in India. The enormous structure is one of 34 cave temples and monasteries that are collectively known as the Ellora Caves. Located in the western region of Maharashtra, the caves are a UNESCO World Heritage Site and include monuments dating between 600 and 1000 CE. While there are many impressive structures on-site, it's the megalithic Kailasa temple that is perhaps the most well known.
Renowned both for its size and impressive ornamentation, it's not entirely clear who had Kailasa temple built. While there are no written records, scholars generally attribute it to Rachtrakuta king Krishna I, who ruled from about 756 to 773 CE. This attribution is based on several epigraphs that connect the temple to “Krishnaraja,” though nothing written directly about the ruler contains information about the temple.
@DavidsWelt
Renowned both for its size and impressive ornamentation, it's not entirely clear who had Kailasa temple built. While there are no written records, scholars generally attribute it to Rachtrakuta king Krishna I, who ruled from about 756 to 773 CE. This attribution is based on several epigraphs that connect the temple to “Krishnaraja,” though nothing written directly about the ruler contains information about the temple.
@DavidsWelt
Forwarded from Tafelrunde (David Korb)
While scholars have yet to discover its true origins, a medieval legend paints a romantic picture behind the mammoth temple. According to a story written in Katha-Kalpataru by Krishna Yajnavalki, when a king was severely ill, his queen prayed to the god Shiva that her husband would be cured. In return for his health, the queen vowed to construct a temple in Shiva's name and fast until the shikhara, or peak, of the temple was completed.
@DavidsWelt
@DavidsWelt
Forwarded from Smokes & Memes v.2.0 (Æþelfrið)
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