Sunday, 22 November 2009

Week 6- History of Xanthos



"The history of Xanthos is quite a violent - the Xanthosians twice demonstrated the fierce independence of the Lycian people when they chose to commit mass suicide rather than submit to invading forces. The Xanthosian men set fire to their women, children, slaves and treasure upon the acropolis before making their final doomed attack upon the invading Persians. Xanthos was later repopulated but the same gruesome story repeated itself in 42 BC when Brutus attacked the city during the Roman civil wars in order to recruit troops and raise money. Brutus was shocked by the Lycians' suicide and offered his soldiers a reward for each Xanthosian saved. Only 150 citizens were rescued.

We made our houses graves
And our graves are homes to us
Our houses burned down
And our graves were looted
We climbed to the summits
We went deep into the earth
We were drenched in water
They came and got us
They burned and destroyed us
They plundered us
And we,
For the sake of our mothers,
Our women,
And for the sake of our dead,
And we,
In the name of our honor,
And our freedom,
We, the people of this land,
Who sought mass suicide
We left a fire behind us,
Never to die out...

Poem found on a tablet in the Xanthos excavations, translated by Azra Erhat

Xanthos became the seat of an archbishopric in the 8th century, but was deserted during the first wave of Arab raids in the 7th century.

Although Charles Fellows carried away most of the finds of Xanthos (now in the British Museum) many interesting monuments and structures remain, including two of the most interesting tombs in Lycia.

Perhaps the most beautiful thing Fellows took from Xanthos was The Nereid Monument, a very large and elaborate Lycian tomb dating from about 380 BC, an interesting mix of Greek and Lycian styles. Other notable objects taken were the lovely Lion Tomb and the Tomb of Payava."
(http://www.lycianturkey.com/lycian_sites/xanthos.htm)

Sunday, 15 November 2009

Week 5- References



Baudrillard says that Simulation interferes the reality instead of trying to hide the reality. "There is no real, there is no imaginary except at a certain distance. What happens when this distance, including that between the real ans the imaginary, tends to abolish itself, to be reabsorbed on behalf of the model?"

Baudrillard. 1994. Simularca and Simulation. The University of Michigan Press, 121.

Thursday, 12 November 2009

week 4- references


Searle,B. 2009. Snow White. http://www.arch.columbia.edu/tags/zalewski


Ferriss, H. 1986. The Metropolis of Tomorrow. Princeton Architectural Press,73-79.


Evans, R.1995. The Projective Cast. MIT Press,367.


Girod,B. 2001. EE368b Image and Video Compression. http://www.stanford.edu/class/ee368b/Handouts/09-HumanPerception.pdf

Wednesday, 4 November 2009

Crime in Lavender Hill

A disabled man who found a loaded revolver in a playground was told by officers to carry it two-and-a-half miles to a police station.
John Leary found the weapon, which was linked to a gangland shooting, inside a plastic bag on the Hemans estate in Stockwell, south London .
Disabled Mr Leary, 51, said: 'I was going to hang the bag on the railings until I felt its weight.
'When I looked inside there was a big revolver, a passport and some cash. It had a long barrel and I could see the chambers were loaded. There was no question of leaving it where kids play.'
Immediately after finding the revolver he was confronted by gang members who tried to get him to hand it over. But he refused and called police.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tribute To Battersea Stab Victim
6:25am UK, Sunday August 03, 2008
The family of a young woman who was stabbed to death in a vibrant London street today have paid tribute to their "beautiful, charming, sweet, and popular" loved one.


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Two shootings in Battersea in two hours - two injured
9:36am Thursday 10th September 2009
By Eleanor Harding »


Two men are seriously ill after two shooting incidents within hours of each other in Battersea last night.
Shortly afterwards, at around 6.40pm, officers found a van in Lavender Hill near Mossbury Road with gunshot damage.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Police tell man to walk two miles with loaded gun he found in playground after officers refuse to collect it
By Daily Mail Reporter
26th October 2009

Tuesday, 3 November 2009

Hunterian Museum

Hunterian Museum at the Royal College of Surgeons
Without some parts! it was interesting. Anatomy ok but i can't stand worms.


Architecture Sir John Soane

Soane's (historical) Museum is a nice building with surprising parts. Different architectural drawings.

"Interior of Soane Museum"



Photographed by Joseph Michael Gandy

Monday, 2 November 2009