RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘ancient’

Heathen’s Gate: Ingenious Overlay Reveals History of Ancient Roman Ruin

02 Jun

[ By WebUrbanist in Culture & History & Travel. ]

monumental

A pane of glass overlaid with a simple line drawing brings crumbling ruins to live at one of Austria’s most famous historical sites, reanimates a ruin near the Open Air Museum Petronell. When a viewer lines up the illustration with the structure, known as Heidentor (Heathen’s Gate), the image completes itself in a compelling yet entirely low-tech fashion.

historical military city

Located just east of Vienna, Carnuntum dates back to the the 1st Century A.D., when Roman soldiers expanded on an existing town 50,000 people to create a military encampment. Between 354 AD and 361 AD a huge triumphal monument was erected next to the camp and city. Contemporary reports suggest that Emperor Constantius II had it built to commemorate his victories.

historical military encampment

“When the remains of Carnuntum disappeared after the Migration Period the monument remained as an isolated building in a natural landscape and led Medieval people to believe it was the tomb of a pagan giant. Hence, they called it Heidentor.”

Preserving ancient historical sites is often a balance between stabilization and restoration; fully restoring can enhance the exterior appearance, but is costly and arguably diminishes the authenticity of a ruin. This approach strikes a balance, much like augmented overlays in digital history apps.

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Culture & History & Travel. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Heathen’s Gate: Ingenious Overlay Reveals History of Ancient Roman Ruin

Posted in Creativity

 

Japanese Joinery: Captivating Gifs Reveal Ancient Secrets of Wood Assembly

25 Jan

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

giffed

Before screws, nails, glue and other fasteners, joinery was a matter of complex interlocking forms that shaped not only the structure but also the aesthetic of what was built.

joinerygifs

For generations, Japanese wood craftsmen and their carpentry guilds were known to carefully protect trade secrets of their construction techniques. Even as the approaches found visual representation in print publications, it was often hard to visualize how they worked.

These animated 3D representations communicate the inner workings of these traditional techniques in a way that no static rendering or model could hope to do, depicting them in motion through the assembly process.

Created by a Japanese fan of woodworking, they were made using Fusion360 and derived from historical documents and precedents. He has so far posted dozens of these joinery techniques, many of them highly complex (featuring multiple interlocking parts, twists and turns).

While modern-day technologies have replaced historical joints in most everyday applications, they could also be positioned to bring them back into play — with 3D-printing devices readily available, the sophisticated cutting that used to be done by hand can be done by machine.

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Japanese Joinery: Captivating Gifs Reveal Ancient Secrets of Wood Assembly

Posted in Creativity

 

Still Standing Tall: 7 Monumental Statues of the Ancient World

28 Sep

[ By SA Rogers in 7 Wonders Series & Travel. ]

ancient-statues-easter-island-2

Perhaps we’ll never know what it was like land on a Greek Island and gaze up at the long-lost Colossus of Rhodes, one of the original Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, but there are many other amazingly old monumental statues still standing. From the world’s oldest-known colossal sculpture in the sands of Egypt to a 500-year-old mountain god spewing water and smoke in Italy, these 7 wonders take the human figure (and sometimes, human/animal hybrids) to incredible heights.

Leshan Giant Buddha, China

ancient-statues-leshan-giant-buddha ancient-statues-leshan-giant-buddha-2

 

Carved right out of a cliff face at the confluence of three rivers in the southern Sichuan province of China, the Leshan Giant Buddha stands 233 feet tall from its plinth to the top of its head, making it the largest stone Buddha in the world. Construction began in the year 713, led by a Chinese monk named Hai Tong, who dedicated it to calming the often-rough waters for shipping vessels. He was so dedicated to the project, he reportedly gauged his own eyes out when funding was threatened. But after his death, the money ran out, and construction was stalled for 70 years before his disciples breathed new life into the project. In the end, Hai Tong’s wishes were fulfilled: all the rock that was chipped away from the cliff face fell into the water below, altering the currents and making them safe for passing ships. Today, it’s part of the UNESCO-protected Mount Emei Scenic Area, which also includes 1,000-year-old trees and over 30 temples.

Moai of Easter Island

ancient-statues-easter-island

ancient-statues-easter-island-2

Carved by the Rapa Nui people between 1250 and 1500 C.E., the Moai monolithic human figures of Easter Island all feature massively oversized heads, with the largest measuring 33 feet in height. The heaviest one is shorter but squatter, weighing in at 86 tons. Exactly how the statues were made and transported is still somewhat of a mystery, as the tallest would have measured 69 feet in height if it had ever been completed. While many people erroneously call them the ‘Easter Island Heads,’ they’re actually full bodies, often partially buried beneath the soil with intentionally exaggerated proportions. More than 900 of them have been located on the island, and most of them are made from a compressed volcanic ash. Their empty eye sockets once held eyes made of coral with pupils made of black obsidian or red scoria.

Appennine Colossus, Italy

ancient-statues-colossus

ancient-statues-appennine-colossus

The youngest statue on this list is notable not just for its striking looks, but the fact that it contains several hidden rooms hiding the cool functions that bring it to life. Carved in the late 1500s by Italian sculptor Giambologna as a symbol of Italy’s Apennine Mountains, the ‘mountain god’ stands 35 feet tall over the grounds of the Villa di Pratolino in Tuscany. One of its interior rooms enables water to pass out of the monster in the god’s hand, which pours like a fountain into the body of water below, and another holds a fireplace so smoke can emerge from his nostrils.

Tirthankara Jain Sculptures of India

ancient-statues-tirthankara

ancient-statues-tirthankara-2

ancient-statues-tirthankara-3

The Jain sculptures in Gwalior, an important city in Madhya Pradesh, India, are cut into the rock faces leading up to the 8th century Gwalior fort. Dating back to the 15th century, the statues depict Tirthankaras, or Teaching Gods, which are worshipped by followers of Jainism. 21 temples are cut into the rock on the southern side, with the tallest idol at 58 feet representing Rishabhanatha or Adinatha, the first Tirthankara.

Next Page – Click Below to Read More:
Still Standing Tall 7 Monumental Statues Of The Ancient World

Share on Facebook





[ By SA Rogers in 7 Wonders Series & Travel. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Still Standing Tall: 7 Monumental Statues of the Ancient World

Posted in Creativity

 

Virtual Heist: 2 Artists Secretly 3D-Scan an Ancient Artifact

04 Mar

[ By WebUrbanist in Culture & History & Travel. ]

3d art figure scan

An usually high-tech form of pseudo-theft, executed by a pair of artists, has resulted in a high-resolution scan of the famous Queen Nefertiti statue at the heart of a dispute between Germany and Egypt. Avoiding the watchful gaze of four guards at the Neues Museum in Berlin, Nora Al-Badri and Jan Nikolai Nelles painstakingly scanned the 3,500-year-old bust over the course of three hours using a Kinect.

3d nefriti statue scan

Technically, nothing was taken, but the exact contours of the bust are now publicly available, open-sourced by the artists in question.

3d rendered egyptian artifact

Their work, itself a sort of art project, is in part a commentary on the question of art ownership and accessibility. The statue in question has been in Germany for over 100 years, but the Egyptian government has been lobbying to get it back.

3d figure copy

Since the release of their data dump, thousands of people have downloaded a virtual copy of the statue either to examine or 3D-print a copy. While this is not the same as preservation, it does add layers of redundancy for future researchers should something ever happen to the original figure. Many galleries are already making high-resolution images of famous paintings and drawings available on the web, and there is no reason a similar tactic could not be taken with three-dimensional works as well.

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Culture & History & Travel. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Virtual Heist: 2 Artists Secretly 3D-Scan an Ancient Artifact

Posted in Creativity

 

A Glimpse of Ancient Egypt by Jayant Neogy

29 Apr

It is almost impossible to compress the history and architecture of ancient Egypt into a brief travel blog. Perhaps, that is why it is an audacious and an exciting challenge. So, here is a highly compressed whirlwind tour of Egypt from the Nubian desert in the South to the Northernmost part of this ancient land […]

The post A Glimpse of Ancient Egypt by Jayant Neogy appeared first on dslrBlog.

dslrBlog

 
Comments Off on A Glimpse of Ancient Egypt by Jayant Neogy

Posted in Photography

 

Ancient Engineering Fail: 12 Historic Structural Disasters

16 Apr

[ By Steph in Culture & History & Travel. ]

Engineering Fail Main
You can’t exactly fault ancient architects for building structures that were unable to withstand stone-shattering earthquakes, or simply experimental in nature – failure is part of the learning process, after all, and engineering methods were obviously less advanced back then. Big ambitions led to taking big chances, which often resulted in faulty construction and, occasionally, deadly collapses. Here are 13 examples of mistake-riddled churches, statues, lighthouses, stadiums and more from the period between 2600 BCE and the Renaissance.

Bent Pyramid of Egypt

Engineering Fail Bent Pyramid

Why does Egypt’s Bent Pyramid, an unusual example of early pyramid development created around 2600 BCE, have a sudden change in angle about halfway up? Archaeologists believe that what we see today is basically a mistake created during the learning process, in which the builders realized that the steepness of the original angle would be unstable and prone to collapse. The lower portion of the pyramid inclines at an angle of 54 degrees, while the top is a shallower 43 degrees. Another 54-degree pyramid is believed to have collapsed while this one was under construction, leading the builders to suddenly change their plans. Subsequent pyramids in the area were constructed at the 43-degree angle instead.

The Colossus of Rhodes, Greece

Engineering Fail Colossus of Rhodes

One of the seven wonders of the ancient world, the towering Colossus of Rhodes was a statue of the Greek Titan Helios that stood over 98 feet high on a pedestal in the city’s harbor. Erected by Chares of Lindos in 280 BCE to celebrate Rhodes’ victory over Antigonis I Monopthalmus of Cyprus, the statue was among the tallest of the ancient world. The statue stood for 56 years until the 226 BCE Rhodes earthquake, which brought it crashing down. After the oracle of Delphi stated that the Rhodians had offended Helios, they decided not to rebuild.

It’s certainly not surprising that seismic activity would have caused the statue to collapse, given that it was built long, long before any real understanding of earthquake-resistant engineering. But the fact that such a tall structure could have been built in the first place during that time is a wondering itself; modern engineers have speculated about the bronze plates and iron bars that would have been attached to the feet to reinforce them.

The Lighthouse of Alexandria, Egypt

Engineering Fail Lighthouse Alexandria

Another ancient wonder, the Lighthouse of Alexandria stood somewhere between 393 and 450 feet in height, making it among the tallest structures on earth for centuries. But the limestone structure, completed between 280 and 247 BCE on the island of Pharos, couldn’t stand up to three earthquakes spread out over four hundred years. It likely lost its upper tier before the first one struck in the year 956 CE, and by the third disaster in 1323, it was abandoned. What was left of it was covered with a medieval fort in 1480.

Fidenae Amphitheater Collapse, Italy

Engineering Fail Fidenae Ampthitheater

20,000 people were killed or wounded in the worst stadium disaster in history, which occurred in 27 AD at the Fidenae Ampthitheater about 8 miles north of Rome. The structure was cheaply built of wood and not up to the task of accommodating the 50,000 people who amassed to watch gladiatorial games after a ban on them was lifted. The Roman Senate decided that too many lower class people were ruining everyone’s fun, so they banned anyone with a personal worth under a certain amount from attending the events.

Circus Maximus Upper Tier Collapse, Italy

Engineering Fail Circus Maximus

Built in the 6th century BCE, the infamous Circus Maximus was an ancient Roman chariot racing stadium capable of holding 250,000 spectators who gathered to watch the Roman Games and gladiator fights, and later, the races. The oldest and largest public space in Rome, and has been in near-constant use every since, with its latest incarnation as a public park and space for events like concerts and festivals. But in 140AD, it was the site of a major disaster: the upper tier of seats collapsed under the weight of too many spectators. 1,112 people were killed in what remains the deadliest sports-related incident in history.

Next Page – Click Below to Read More:
Ancient Engineering Fail 12 Historic Structural Disasters

Share on Facebook





[ By Steph in Culture & History & Travel. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Ancient Engineering Fail: 12 Historic Structural Disasters

Posted in Creativity

 

The Ruins of Ancient Hauz Khas in Delhi by Jayant Neogy

14 Jan

Hauz Khas complex in Hauz Khas, south Delhi India houses a water tank, an Islamic Seminary or Madrassa, a mosque, a tomb and pavilions. These were built between 700 and 800 years ago. Today, the ruins abut a subsequently urbanized village which includes living areas, boutique shops and many eating places, A great tourist attraction […]
dslrBlog

 
Comments Off on The Ruins of Ancient Hauz Khas in Delhi by Jayant Neogy

Posted in Photography

 

Stoned Hipsters: Ancient Greeks in Modern Hipster Attire

06 Jul

[ By Delana in Art & Photography & Video. ]

parisian hipster greek statues

We’ve all seen hipsters in the wild, and even if we can’t perfectly define what a hipster is, we know one when we see one. Parisian artist Léo Caillard does too, and he wondered what this modern trend would look like if it were transported back in time…back to when ancient Greeks paid homage to the perfect human form by immortalizing it in stone.

hipster statues

greek statues in hipster clothes

Caillard got the idea while walking through the Louvre and looking at the masterful statues. He wondered what a juxtaposition of modern fashion and ancient art would look like together. And because a question like that simply can’t go unanswered, he set out to make that unlikely combination happen.

Next Page:
Stoned Hipsters Ancient Greeks In Modern Hipster Attire

Share on Facebook



[ By Delana in Art & Photography & Video. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]

    


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Stoned Hipsters: Ancient Greeks in Modern Hipster Attire

Posted in Creativity

 

Skyrim Battles – Sauron (LOTR) vs Balrog, City Guards, Ancient Dragon

17 Oct

www.youtube.com Click here to watch Skyrim Battles: Samurai vs Daedric Samurai, Cyclops, Bullvore and more Skyrim Battles: Sauron (LOTR) vs Balrog, City Guards, Ancient Dragon Episode 14 of Skyrim Battles features Sauron from Lord of the Rings vs Balrog, city guards, and an ancient dragon. DIRECTOR’S CHANNEL: www.youtube.com Don’t forget to subscribe to mans1ay3r so you know when I release more Skyrim Battles! www.youtube.com Machinima Happy Hour is home to the best animation and shorts Machinima has to offer. Check back every weekend for updates on all your favorite shows like Sanity Not Included, Two Best Friends Play, Freeman’s Mind, Sonic For Hire and more! www.youtube.com – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – This video will show you: How to make machinima How to play The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim How to mod Skyrim How to find Sauron’s ring How to defeat Sauron – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – FOR MORE MACHINIMA, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE SPORTS GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE MMO & RPG GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE COMPETITIVE GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE ANIMATIONS & SHORTS, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE TRAILERS, GO TO: www.youtube.com Tags: yt:quality=high “Elder Scrolls V” Skyrim 5 five Bethesda Game Studios Softworks role-playing game RPG Microsoft Windows “PlayStation 3” PS3 Sony Xbox 360 Xbox360

The ability to destroy a planet is insignificant next to the power of the force, but having both on your side makes you pretty unstoppable. www.howitshouldhaveended.com Get your HISHE shirts now howitshouldhaveended.spreadshirt.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
Comments Off on Skyrim Battles – Sauron (LOTR) vs Balrog, City Guards, Ancient Dragon

Posted in Animation Videos

 

IMA Solutions – 3D exploration from CT scan datas of ancient egyptian mummies – Siggraph 2009

11 May

Here is the non 3D stereoscopic version in 720p of the IMA Solutions FullHD 1080p 3D stereoscopic original movie that will be displayed for the Panel Session: “A Journey From Outer to Inner Space: Scientific and Biomedical Stereoscopic Visualization” at SIGGRAPH 2009, New Orleans the Thursday 6 of August 2009 at 3:45pm, room 271-273. Come in to explore ancient Egyptians mummies using the last CT scan and computer graphics technologies and discover their hidden secrets. Animations, production and special effects: IMA Solutions, Benjamin Moreno and Julien Arrué Original soundtrack, compositor and sound engineer: Olivier Lafuma, www.myspace.com/ollaf Curator of the Archeology department of the Musée des Beaux-Arts et d’Archéologie de Besançon: Agathe Legros CT scan performed by: MD. Samuel Mérigeaud, Radiologist, CHU Montpellier CT scan of the two egyptian mummies performed at the CHU de Besançon, France Special thanks to all the people working at the Musée des Beaux-Arts et d’Archéologie de Besançon.

James Cameron’s AVATAR the game (PC) Various footage from the game showing the stereoscopic 3D graphics of the game. All graphics settings maxed, DirectX10. Rendered on ATI Radeon HD5870 Recorded with a Blackmagicdesign Intensity hdmi capture card 3D is rendered with the native 3D rendering integrated into the game, works on PC for both Ati and Nvidia graphics cards and also works on HD consoles for both PS3 and Xbox360. The game does not come with anaglyph (red/blue) glasses, In order to see the 3D effect in the game, you need a proper stereoscopic 3D display. Check the stereoscopy FAQ at Ubisoft forums to see a list of supported displays : forums.ubi.com Youtube only displays 30fps, for the full 60fps framerate download the original file : all links at Meant-To-Be-Seen forums : www.mtbs3d.com Meant To Be Seen : consumer driven stereo-3D advocacy group www.mtbs3d.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5