LONDON: Giant replicas of an ancient arch in the Syrian city of Palmyra attacked by Daesh militants will go on show in London and New York next year, organizers said Monday.
The full-size recreation of the arch from the 2,000-year-old Temple of Bel will reportedly made using the world’s biggest 3D printer and put on display in London’s Trafalgar Square and Times Square in New York in April.
Daesh seized Palmyra, a UNESCO World Heritage Site northeast of Damascus known as the “Pearl of the Desert,” in May and beheaded its 82-year-old former antiquities chief three months later.
In September, satellite images confirmed that the Temple of Bel, the main temple at Palmyra, had been targeted by Daesh as part of a campaign to destroy historical monuments, tombs and statues.
UN experts said the main building of the temple plus a row of columns had been destroyed.
Alexy Karenowska, director of technology at the Institute of Digital Archaeology in Oxford which is funding the reconstruction, confirmed a Times newspaper report that the replicas would be created for a special world heritage week.
“Reproductions/models of the structure, large and small, will be produced and installed around the world in schools, museums and prominent public spaces,” Karenowska wrote in an e-mail to AFP.
The institute’s executive director, Roger Michel, was quoted in The Times as saying that the replicas standing 15 meters (50 feet) high were likely to be on temporary display.
The full-size recreation of the arch from the 2,000-year-old Temple of Bel will reportedly made using the world’s biggest 3D printer and put on display in London’s Trafalgar Square and Times Square in New York in April.
Daesh seized Palmyra, a UNESCO World Heritage Site northeast of Damascus known as the “Pearl of the Desert,” in May and beheaded its 82-year-old former antiquities chief three months later.
In September, satellite images confirmed that the Temple of Bel, the main temple at Palmyra, had been targeted by Daesh as part of a campaign to destroy historical monuments, tombs and statues.
UN experts said the main building of the temple plus a row of columns had been destroyed.
Alexy Karenowska, director of technology at the Institute of Digital Archaeology in Oxford which is funding the reconstruction, confirmed a Times newspaper report that the replicas would be created for a special world heritage week.
“Reproductions/models of the structure, large and small, will be produced and installed around the world in schools, museums and prominent public spaces,” Karenowska wrote in an e-mail to AFP.
The institute’s executive director, Roger Michel, was quoted in The Times as saying that the replicas standing 15 meters (50 feet) high were likely to be on temporary display.
No comments:
Post a Comment