File:International cooperation, Nubia - UNESCO - PHOTO0000003357 0001.tiff

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Photographer
Dominique Roger    wikidata:Q67013607
 
Description French photographer
Date of birth 1950 / 1932 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth Paris
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q67013607
Description
Français : Détail d'un mur à moitié immergé. On voit une figue (un dieu ou un roi) qui tient un sceptre, il est coiffé d'une immense couronne et a un collier. Le mur est orné de hieroglyphes.
Depicted place Nubian Monuments from Abu Simbel to Philae (Q4923872), Egypt (Q79)
Keywords
InfoField
International cooperation, Temples, Historic monuments, Preservation of monuments, Ancient civilizations,
Date September 1968
date QS:P571,+1968-09-00T00:00:00Z/10
Accession number
PHOTO0000003357
Inscriptions
English: The International Campaign for the saving of the Nubian monuments was launched by UNESCO in1960. Famed for its monuments, the island of Philae in the River Nile has been submerged nine months out of twelve since the first Aswan dam. The construction of the High Dam above the island has worsened the situation; not only are the monuments permanently flooded to a third of their height, but they are subject to daily fluctuations in the water level which eat away their foundations and threaten to bring them down to ruins. In May 1968, the Campaign's Executive Committee endorsed the decision taken by the U.A.R. to dismantle and re-erect the monuments on the neighbouring island of Agilkia which is sufficiently elevated to be above the maximum level of the water. Here, the Temple of Isis the construction of which began about 360 B.C.
Français : Campagne internationale pour la sauvegarde des monuments de Nubie lancée par l'UNESCO en 1960. Célèbre pour ses monuments, l'ile de Philae était submergée neuf mois sur douze depuis la construction du premier barrage d'Assouan. La construction du Haut Barrage, en amont de l'ile, ne devait qu'aggraver la situation les monuments plongent en permanence dans l'eau sur un tiers environ de leur hauteur et ils sont soumis à des variations quotidiennes de niveau qui ont pour effet d'user les fondaments et d'entraîner inévitablement l'effondrement de l'ensemble. En Mai 1968, le Comité exécutif de la Campagne s'est donc associé à la décision prise par la R.A.U. pour déplacer et reconstruire les monuments sur l'ile voisine d'Agilkia, assez élevée pour toujours émerger au-dessus du niveau maximum des eaux. Ici, détail du temple d'Isis dont la construction a commencé vers 360 av. J.C.
Archival code
InfoField
C.4386
Source

UNESCO Archives

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This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 IGO license.
Attribution: UNESCO / Dominique Roger
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