The other day we visited Rome's Grand Mosque(the largest in Europe) on the outskirts of the city. What I liked most about being inside the mosque was the feeling of uncluttered space and the use of natural light. Visual representations of God or prophets are not allowed because they can be worshipped as idols. Instead, the mosque was decorated with incredible geometric patterns and little details.
Saturday, July 10, 2010
The Grand Mosque of Rome
The other day we visited Rome's Grand Mosque(the largest in Europe) on the outskirts of the city. What I liked most about being inside the mosque was the feeling of uncluttered space and the use of natural light. Visual representations of God or prophets are not allowed because they can be worshipped as idols. Instead, the mosque was decorated with incredible geometric patterns and little details.
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Florence
Snapped a shot of the David while no one was looking!
The Duomo! This church and the attached basilica gave the trip to Florence a whole new meaning. I would have made the trip solely for this. The Dumo itself is huge and awe-inspiring. It's one of those places built for the purpose of making one feel small and insignificant.
My favorite place in Florence by far was at the top of the Duoma basilica. There are 451 stairs to the very top--yes, I counted--and the passageway up is tight, hot, and crowded with people going both up and down, but it was worth the effort. At the top, all of Florence is spread out before you. It was an incredible view, and photos can't even come close to capturing it.
Monday, July 5, 2010
Capitoline Museum and Castel San Angelo
Friday, July 2, 2010
a note on garbage...
Public garbage collection fascinates me here. The market in the Campo de Fiori produces A LOT of garbage. Instead of requiring vendors to keep track of their own garbage, it is piled up throughout the campo until midday when the market begins to shut down. Then the piles of garbage become mountains. After the vendors have vacated the square the garbage sits for about half an hour before the city's garbage collectors make their rounds. (Apparently garbage collecting is a highly esteemed job. I have seen quite a few girls in their 20s dressed in the red garbage woman's attire.) There are two types of public garbage collectors: those that come in big trucks and those that arrive in tiny go-cart-like vehicles that only have three wheels. Cleaning the Campo takes about an hour, and then the collectors move on.
Now, this isn't that spectacular, since there is a daily market in the Campo it makes sense to make a daily event of garbage collection. But this happens everywhere! There are no garbage cans anywhere on the streets...and everyone walks while they eat, so garbage accumulates in very odd places. It just seems bizarre to me.
Private garbage collection is another matter altogether. It is quite intimidating. I literally have five different garbage cans in my room, each for a specific type of waste: plastics, food and biodegradable waste, etc, etc, etc. Each of these is collected on a different day of the week, and the site where you throw away the trash is monitored by cameras. So I desperately try not to create any sort of garbage at all. If I happened to mess up the system, they would find out about it, and I would be fined 200 euro.
Macho men with fruity gelatto
Piazza Vittorio
Yesterday we went to the market in Piazza Vittorio, Rome's unofficial China town. Strangely, this particular market place felt a lot more like Seattle than anywhere else I have been in Rome. A more diverse group of people frequent the market--the majority being of Eastern origin, and this reminded me of home.
On the way to the market I walked past a long row of Chinese-owned clothing and retail stores that seemed barren and carried a lot of the same products. This is because in 2007 Rome passed a city ordinance that targeted the Chinese business community. The ordinance banned the sale of wholesale products within the city limits, and, since this is how most Chinese shops obtain their products, the shops were turned into mere "showrooms." The wholesale warehouses that contain the actual products for sale have been moved outside the city. Customers place their orders, and the merchandise is then brought into the city.
Piazza Vittorio made me realize how the rest of Rome is not very diverse. The people are by no means homogenous--but there are a lot of white shopowners and tourists throughout the historic district. Piazza Vittorio was clearly not a tourist destination.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Ancient Tombstone Inscriptions from the Capitoline Museum
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