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St. Sophia, Kiev (HDR)

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St. Sophia, Kiev (HDR)
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Image by Matt. Create.
 
~~ Photo Series ~~ Churches ~~

Comments and Faves much appreciated!!! ~ Have an awesome weekend everybody!!!

The cathedral’s name comes from the 6th-century Hagia Sophia cathedral in Constantinople (meaning Holy Wisdom, and dedicated to the Holy Wisdom rather than a specific saint named Sophia). According to a less popular theory, its model was the 13-domed oaken Saint Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod (ca. 989), which Yaroslav I the Wise determined to imitate in stone as a sign of gratitude to the citizens of Novgorod who had helped him secure the Kievan throne in 1019.
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After the Russian Revolution of 1917 and during the Soviet antireligious campaign of the 1920s, the government plan called for the cathedral’s destruction and transformation of the grounds into a park “Heroes of Perekop” (after a Red Army victory in the Russian Civil War in Crimea). The cathedral was saved from destruction primarily with the effort of many scientists and historians. Nevertheless, in 1934, Soviet authorities confiscated the structure from the church, including the surrounding seventeenth–eighteenth century architectural complex and designated it as an architectural and historical museum.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Sophia_Cathedral_in_Kiev

It's still an architectural and historical museum today, since three different denominations are laying claim to this property.

Thoughts | Comments | Critiques | Questions ~ Always Welcome

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by Matt Shalvatis - Roads Less Traveled Photography
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Contributor to: HDR Spotting | HDR Photog | Topaz Masters
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DC: Lincoln Memorial
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Image by wallyg
The Lincoln Memorial, located on the National Mall, is a United States Presidential memorial honoring the 16th President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. Dedicated on May 30, 1922, the peripteral structure was designed by Henry Bacon, and houses Daniel Chester French's monumental seated statue of sculpture of Lincoln.

In 1867, Congress incorporated the Lincoln Monument Association to build the memorial. A site wasn't chosen until 1901. In 1911, Congress formally authorized the memorial and the first stone was put into place on Lincoln's birthday, Feburary 12, 1914.

Bacon's design takes the severe form of a Greek Doric temple, with 36 massive columns, each 37 feet high and representative of one the 25 U.S. states and 11 seceeded states at the time of Lincoln's death, surrounding a central cella, flanked by two other cellas, and rises above the porticos. The names of the 48 states of the Union when the memorial was completed are carved on the exterior attic walls, and a later plaque commemorates the admission of Alaska and Hawaii in 1959. The stone is Indiana limestone and Yule marble, quarried at the town of Marble, Colorado.

The focus of the memorial is French's sculpture, which depicts the President worn and pensive, gazing eastward towards the Reflecting Pool and the Washington Monument. Beneath his hands, the Roman fasces, symbols of the authority of the Republic, are sculpted in relief on the seat. The statue stands 19-feet, 9-inches tall and 19 feet wide, and was carved from 28 blocks of white Georgia marble, quarried at the town of Tate. Popular legend claims that Robert E. Lee's face is carved onto the back of the statue, looking back across the Potomoc at Arlington House, and that Lincoln is shown using sign language to represent his initials. The National Park Service denies both stories.

Insriptions of two of Lincoln's well known speeches are inscribed on the interior walls of the outer cellas below a series of murals by Jules Guerin. The south wall bears the text of the Gettysburg address below an angel, representative of truth, freeing a slave. The north wall bears the text of the second inaugural address below the depiction of unity of the American North and South. On the wall behind the statue is the dedication: "In this temple / as in the hearts of the people / for whom he saved The Union / the memory of Abraham Lincoln / is enshrined forever."

The memorial has been the site of many famous events, most famously, Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech, delivered in front of 25,000 people on August 28, 1963, during the rally at the end of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. A marked tile on the memorial's steps shows where Dr. King stood. On May 9, 1970, President Richard Nixon had a impromptu middle-of-the-night meeting with protesters preparing to march against the Vietnam War just days after the Kent State shootings.

The Lincoln Memorial is shown on the reverse of the United States one cent coin, which bears Lincoln's portrait on the front, and on the back of the U.S. five dollar bill, the front of which also bears Lincoln's portrait.

In 2007, The Lincoln Memorial was ranked #7 on the AIA 150 America's Favorite Architecture list.

National Register #66000030 (1966)


Haymarket Square - Site of Boston's Popular Outdoor Market 05/1973
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Image by The U.S. National Archives
Original Caption: Haymarket Square - Site of Boston's Popular Outdoor Market 05/1973

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-7579

Photographer: Halberstadt, Ernst, 1910-1987

Subjects:
Boston (Suffolk county, Massachusetts, United States) inhabited place
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA

Persistent URL: arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=550064

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html



Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

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