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The Destruction Of Baalshamin Temple


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Isis in Palmyra: Militants release first images showing destruction of Baalshamin Temple

 

Isistemplepalmyra3.jpg

 

Unseco has described the attack on Syria's cultural history, reported by activists on Sunday, as a 'war crime', while the British Museum is 'deeply distressed'

 

The Isismilitant group has released a series of images purporting to show the destruction of the ancient Baalshamin Temple in Palmyra.

Images posted online and shared by Isis-affiliated social media accounts showed fighters, whose faces were cropped out of the photographs, lining the 2,000-year-old monument with explosives.

Explosives can be seen wired together both inside and outside the structure of the building, which experts said was one of the best-preserved and most completely intact examples of Greco-Roman architecture at the ancient site.

Other pictures appeared to show the moment of the detonation, followed by the rubble left behind.

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The ancient temple of Baalshamin, as it stood for 2,000 years

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Images shared online by Isis social media accounts appeared to confirm reports of the destruction of Baalshamin Temple Isistemplepalmyra1.jpg

Images show explosives wired together both inside and outside the temple Isistemplepalmyra2.jpg

Activists said the blast was so large it also damaged nearby Roman columns v2-Isistemplepalmyra3.jpg

One of the images purported to show the moment of detonation

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Unesco has condemned the destruction of the temple as a 'war crime' Experts have condemned Isis's destruction of ancient relics in the Syrian city, which was designated a Unesco World Heritage site in 1980.

Unesco's Director-General, Irina Bokova, said that the destruction of the Baalshamin Temple was "an immense loss for the Syrian people and for humanity". She said that Isis's practice of "cleansing" other cultures from the lands it occupies amounted to a "war crime".

Ancient monuments under Isis threat

Syria's national antiquities chief, Maamoun Abdulkarim, said Isis blew up the Baalshamin Temple on Sunday. Activists from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the explosives themselves may have been placed around the site as much as month beforehand.

Believed to date back to 17AD, the temple was 500 metres from Palmyra's famous amphitheater, where Isis murdered more than 20 captive Syrian soldiers after they took the historic town in May.

 

The temple was dedicated to Baalshamin, the Phoenician sky god associated with storms and fertilising rains – sometimes equated to the ancient Greek god Zeus.

The British writer and historian Tom Holland said: “I always feared Baalshamin’s temple was doomed. He was paired with Allat, the only deity to be mentioned in both Herodotus and the Koran – and condemned by name in the latter.â€

Mr Abdulkarim said he and other experts had warned that Isis would not be satisfied with destroying just the statues it found in Palmyra.

He said: "We have said repeatedly the next phase would be one of terrorising people and when they have time they will begin destroying temples.

"I am seeing Palmyra being destroyed in front of my eyes."

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Assholes, surely. It's natural to say that human life is more valuable than physical things, and that the tens of thousands of lives lost in this war outweigh any material losses - but somehow, the loss of the symbols of shared cultural heritage across western Iraq and eastern Syria casts its own type of shadow. Assholes.

 

What they're after is an apocalyptic battle and the end of days, rise of Christ and Anti-Christ and all that nonsense - which makes it a special disappointment that when they finally get what they deserve, an ultimate smackdown by overwhelming military powers supported or led by the West, it will be just what they have been looking for...

 

Fuck them, the fuckers.

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I was at a small temple in Bangkok one afternoon when some Arab looking men walked in and looked around. From the scowls on their faces, I'd say they'd have liked to have done some demolitions.

 

p.s. I remember in the 1980s when our "friends" the Saudis actually ran bulldozers through the ruins of a small Roman outpost inside their country. They toppled every pillar and destroyed the ruins of the theatre. When they finished, there wasn't a sign that anything had ever been there. Inshallah.

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