The application was created in collaboration with Flyover
Zone, Lebanon’s culture ministry and the German Archaeological Institute. The
projects was made to raise awareness of the UNESCO World Heritage Site by
providing a platform through which people could go on a virtual tour of the
area for free.
During the virtual tour, users can opt to follow a guided
tour of Baalbek ruins or roam around the site freely. It also comes with
commentary from German Archaeological Institute’s experts and a time warp
feature which shows users the current state of the site as it transforms into
the way it would have looked in the third century, when it was a Roman
sanctuary.
One partof the virtual tour’s highlights includes the
sanctuary of Jupiter, one of the world’s largest temple complexes from the
Roman world and shrines that have been conventionally referred to as the Temple
of Bacchus, the Temple of Venus, and the Temple of the Muses.
Baalbek’s “history runs deep,” with some of the area’s
earliest finds being been dated back to 8,000 B.C., according to Flyover Zone.
“The experts who are your guides are the very people who excavated these sites,” says Bernie Frischer about #BaalbekReborn coming March 31. Frischer is our @FlyoverZone #founder and renowned #digital #archaeologist. #travel #tourism #teletour #teletourism pic.twitter.com/C4BAuexRXU
— Flyover Zone (@flyover_zone) March 29, 2021
“Baalbek has always been a very prominent site and travelers
all over the world have been traveling here for hundreds of years,”
Archaeologist Henning Burwitz with theGerman Archaeological Institute, told
Flyover Zone.
“We always joke that pretty much everything in Baalbek is
the biggest in the world,” Burwitz added.
According to Flyover Zone, “the six columns preserved in the
Temple of Jupiter — one of the biggest temples in the Roman Empire— happen to
be the largest preserved columns in the world at almost 74 feet in height.”
Burwitz also said, “these six columns are iconic in Lebanon,
almost like a national symbol: They’re on coins, on stamps, and more.”
0 comments:
Post a Comment