Asia Wanders Manmade Natural

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    Jascha Emmanuel A. Dadap

    II-NEWTON

    ASIAS wonders

    Manmade wonders1. Temples of Bagan , Burma

    History

    The archeological and religious Bagan complex covers about 16 square miles. Most structures in this

    complex were constructed from the 1000 to 1200 AD. During this time Bagan was the capital of the

    Burmese Empire for second time. The golden age of Bagan began in 1057 AD when the King Anawrahta

    conquest Thaton. Anawrahta was Buddhist; therefore he brought back to Bagan the scriptures of

    Theravada Buddhism and with the help of a monk from Lower Burma, he converted the people of the

    country to the Buddhism.

    Anawrata initiated the massive construction of temples and other religious buildings in Bagan which we

    can see still. But his successors were who continued the tradition started by Anawrata by 290 years, since

    they constructed over 10000 temples and pagodas in Bagan.

    During its apogee Bagan was one of the most important religious and cultural centers of Asia, it reached a

    population 300 000 people and around 10 00 temples and pagodas existed in Bagan. Unfortunately the attacks

    of enemies and several earthquakes destroyed most buildings of the ancient capital of Burma.

    The golden age of Bagan finished in 1287 when the region was invaded by Mongols, who sacked the city and the

    temples. Nevertheless, the city was still an important Buddhist center, but its political importance was lost

    forever. Little by little the city was abandoned and nowadays only the temples and some archeological remains

    survive of which was one of the most important capitals of Asia.

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    2. Angkor wat, Cambodia

    History

    The construction of the temple was started in the XII century when the king Suryavarman (1113 - 1150) ruled in

    the region. The complex was constructed as the state temple as well as the capital of the country. Current

    theories say that the location of the temple was chosen because of its important strategic military position; but

    there are other theories that explain the location of the temple because of a planet-spanning sacred geography.

    It believes that its original name was Vrah Vishnulok, because of the main deity that was adored here.

    The status of the temple did not last long time; since in 1177 Angkor was sacked by the main enemies of the

    Khmer, the Chams. Some time later the empire was rebuilt by the king Jayavarman VII who moved the capital

    and the main temple of the country to another location a short distance to the north.

    Angkor Wat became a Theravada Buddhist during XIV and XV centuries. From the XVI century the temple lost itsimportance; nevertheless, it was never totally abandoned.

    In 1861 the French scientist Henri Mouhot rediscovered accidentally the remains of the temple and he

    popularized the temple in the Western Hemisphere when published its travel notes. The French traveler

    described the temple using these words: One of these temples a rival to that of Solomon, and erected by some

    ancient Michenlangelo might take an honorable place beside our most beautiful buildings. It is grander than

    anything left to us by Greece or Rome, and presents a sad contrast to the state of barbarism in which the nation

    is now plunged.

    In 1908 thanks to the popularity that the temple reached in Europe mainly in France; French people funded and

    managed a great plan of restoration. This restoration is made still today, but it was interrupted during 1980s and

    1990s when the Khmer Rouge took the control of the country during a civil war. Fortunately, this violent war did

    not cause great damage to the remains of the temple.

    Today Angkor Wat is probably the greatest symbol of Cambodia , this temple is so very important to Cambodia

    that its image is part of the countrys flag since 1863. Since 1990 Angkor Wat has experienced a great flood of

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    tourism; mainly after UNESCO declared in 1992 the temple as World Heritage Site. In 2006 this place received

    around 675 000 foreign visitors. The money contributed by tourists has served to provide additional funds for

    the maintenance of the temple and support the economy of the region of Siem Reap in Cambodia.

    3. Forbidden city, china

    History

    The construction of the palace was initiated in 1406 by the Yongle Emperor of the Ming Dynasty. The

    construction of the Forbidden City lasted around 15 years and almost one million workers were required

    to do this monumental work. The main materials used to build the palace were the Phoebe Zhenan (a

    fine Chinese wood) and marble blocks. The floors of the main halls were paved using golden bricks.

    The palace was during over two centuries (1420- 1644) the residence of the Emperors of the Ming Dynasty. In

    1644 a rebellion leaded by Li Zeching captured the Forbidden City and proclaimed Li Zeching emperor. But the

    rebels fled when an army leaded by the general Wu Sangui arrived with Manchu forces, during this fact some

    parts of the complex were burned. Some months later the Manchu forces took the power in China and they

    proclaimed Shunzi Emperor starting the Qing Dinasty. The new dynasty made some changes in the palaces and

    renamed some buildings. Besides, the new Manchu Emperors introduce the Manchu language in Beijing.

    The Forbidden City was captured again in 1860 when the Anglo-Forces occupied the palace during the Opium

    War II. The final episode to the Forbidden City as Imperial Palace occurred in 1912 when the last Emperor Puyi

    abdicated. Nevertheless Puyi remained in the inner Palace until 1924 because of an accord with the Chinese

    government. During this time many treasures of the Palace were sold by Puyi or were stole.

    From 1924 the Forbidden City became museum. But during the World War II because of the Japanese invasion,

    many of the treasures of the palace were evacuated by order of Chiang Kai-Sek to Taiwan. In 1961 the Forbidden

    city was listed by the Chinese government as one of the most important historical monuments under special

    preservation.

    In 1987 the Forbidden City was declared World Heritage by UNESCO. Currently the Forbidden City is managed by

    an organism of the Chinese government The Palace Museum, which is executing a restoration project.

    Nevertheless, this administration has also taken controversial decisions, like to allow the presence of commercial

    enterprises such as Starbucks inside the Forbidden City.

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    This wonderful palace is without doubt today, the greatest symbol of the Imperial China in the capital of the

    country and it is together with the Great Wall the most representative Chinese national symbol.

    4. Great wall of china

    The construction of the Great Wall China began in the 7th century B.C., under the Dynasty Zhou. This wall was

    constructed along many hundreds of years. The first version of the wall was constructed to support invaders far

    from the villages that cultivate the land for the Chinese border. These walls were constructed in weak points in

    the natural landscape or where the threat was perceived like the major one.

    Some of these walls eventually became of greater strategic importance when the localised defences were

    gradually joined to form the Great Wall of China. At those times that the Chinese territory expanded northward,

    earlier walls became secondary defences when a more northerly wall was built. The Great Wall of China was

    built by soldiers, civilians, farmers and prisoners, primarily during three dynasties: the Qin, the Han and the

    Ming, although the Sui Dynasty and the Ten Kingdoms period also played a part. The building styles of each

    dynasty added their own flavour and advanced the techniques learned from the previous.

    The first dynasty of China was the short lived Qin Dynasty. The first emperor, Qin ShiHuang, was a tyrannical

    emperor who unified China by force and set about constructing one Great Wall by joining. He even sent scholars

    to work on the Great Wall, anyone who was deemed unproductive. These workers faced arduous labor, and the

    constant danger of being attacked by bandits.

    Most of early Great Wall was composed of weak stone, but when the natural stone in an area was not sufficient

    did that the engineers were turning to another method, there had to be used a rectangular frame that was filled

    with loose soil. This soil was trampled for several hours by a team of workers until this was solid. This process of

    landfill and to trample would be repeated again and again until the wall was reaching the wished height.

    The second dynasty to add to the Great Wall was the Han Dynasty. The most notable contribution of the Han

    Dynasty is that they extended the Great Wall westwards through the Gobi Desert. Despite a lack of building

    materials, ingenious Chinese engineers found a solution. This method involved first laying down a layer of willow

    reeds, possibly woven. Then a layer of gravel and a little water was applied and trampled solid. After the

    trampling, a new layer of reeds and gravel was added. This process would be repeated until the desired height

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    was reached. Amazingly, some portions of this Great Wall are still standing, partly due to the dry conditions of

    the Gobi.

    The last dynasty to build a northern wall was the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). This dynasty built the biggest,

    longest, strongest and most ornate Great Wall ever. These are the walls that we are familiar with today. Their

    methods of Great Wall building fused all that was learned by the two previous dynasties. First, a center of

    trampled earth was created. Then, around the firm center was applied a shell of stone and bricks. The bricks that

    were created by the Ming are so strong that they compare well with the ones we use today. The strong Ming

    wall was built across some of the most dangerous terrains in China, including steep mountains, sometimes on 75

    degree inclines. It has been said that every foot of the construction of this Great Wall cost one human life.

    The Ming Dynasty Great Wall starts on the eastern end at ShanHai Pass, near QinHuangDao, in Hebei Province,

    next to Bohai Sea. It once spanned 9 provinces and 100 counties, but the final 500 kilometers of the Great Wall

    to the west have all but turned to rubble. Along the Ming Great Wall of China there are many watchtowers,

    spaced from less than a kilometer to several kilometers or more apart. These were partly used to transmit

    military messages. Fire and smoke were the most efficient means for communication; fire was used at night and

    smoke during the day. Straw and dung was used for this. In 1468, a series of regulations set specific meanings to

    these signals: a single shot and a single fire or smoke signal implied about 100 enemies, two signals warned of

    500, three warned of over a 1000 and so on. In this way, a message could be transmitted over more than 500 km

    of the Great Wall within a few hours.

    5. Temple of heaven china

    The temple was constructed from 1406 to 1420 during the reign of the Yongle Emperor (Ming Dynasty) to offer

    sacrifice to Heaven, who was also responsible for the construction of the Forbidden City in Beijing

    Then the complex was extended and renamed Temple of Heaven during the reign of the Jiajing Emperor in the

    16th century. The Jiajing Emperor also built three other prominent temples in Beijing, the Temple of Sun in the

    east, the Temple of Earth in the north, and the Temple of Moon in the west. The Temple of Heaven was

    renovated in the 18th century under the Qianlong Emperor.

    The Temple of Heaven was the place where the emperors of the Ming and Qing dynasties worshipped heaven

    and prayed for good harvests. The emperors visited the temple three times a year: on the 8th day of the first

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    lunar month to pray for a good harvest; during the Summer Solstice to pray for rain; and during Winter Solstice

    to give thanks for a good harvest. During each ceremony, the emperors worshipped heaven and prayed for a

    good harvest. In addition, the emperors also worshipped their ancestors and other natural phenomena such as

    the Cloud God, Rain God and Wind God.

    The Temple of Heaven was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1998 and was described as "a

    masterpiece of architecture and landscape design which simply and graphically illustrates a cosmogony of great

    importance for the evolution of one of the worlds great civilizations" as the "symbolic layout and design of the

    Temple of Heaven had a profound influence on architecture and planning in the Far East over many centuries". It

    is regarded as a Taoist temple, although it is a temple to worship the heaven by the Chinese.

    According to Xinhua, in early 2005, the Temple of Heaven underwent a 47 million Yuan (5.9 million USD)

    restoration in preparation for the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics and the restoration was completed on May 1st,

    2006.

    6. Taj mahal, india

    Taj Mahal was built by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan (1628-1658), grandson of Akbar the great, in the

    memory of his queen Arjumand Bano Begum, entitled Mumtaz Mahal a Muslim Persian princess. The queens

    real name was Arjumand Banu. In the tradition of the Mughals, important ladies of the royal family were given

    another name at their marriage or at some other significant event in their lives, and that new name was

    commonly used by the public.

    She died while accompanying her husband in Burhanpur in a campaign to crush a rebellion after giving birth to

    their 14th child. When Mumtaz Mahal was still alive, she extracted four promises from the emperor: first, that

    he build the Taj; second, that he should marry again; third, that he be kind to their children; and fourth, that he

    visit the tomb on her death anniversary. But this has not been proven to be true, till date.

    According to legend, after his wifes death, Shah Jahan reportedly locked himself in his rooms and refused food

    for eight days, when the emperor emerged from his seclusion, his black beard visible in many Mughal miniature

    paintings had turned completely white. For the monument to his wife, Shah Jahan chose a site occupied by

    sprawling gardens on a bend in the left bank of the Yamuna River. Six months later, her body was transferred to

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    Agra to be finally enshrined in the crypt of the main tomb of the Taj Mahal. The Taj Mahal is the mausoleum of

    both Mumtaz Mahal and Shah Jahan.

    The construction of Taj Mahal started in the year 1631 and it took approximately 22 years to build it. It made use

    of the services of 22,000 labourers and 1,000 elephants for the transportation of the construction materials. The

    materials used in the Taj Mahal complex are bricks, sandstone and white marble. Brick sizes varied between 18-

    19 x 11-12.5 x 2.3 cm, a standard size since Akbar's rule. These bricks were baked in kilns on the outskirts of

    Agra. The sandstone used in the complex has a colour varying from soft red to red with a yellow tint. White

    marble came from the quarries of Makrana in Rajasthan, approx. 400 kms southeast of Agra. The marble used in

    the complex was a white one with black and grey streaks.

    The greatest technical problem in the construction of the Taj Mahal was its heavy superstructures near the

    riverfront. This was accomplished using wells cased in wood and filled with rubble and iron, spaced at 3.75

    meters on center. Precious and semi-precious stones are used in the decoration of the mausoleum than

    elsewhere in the complex. These stones include lapis lazuli, sapphire, cornelian, jasper, chrysolite and heliotrope.

    A strict discipline in colours and decoration is visible in the detailed ornamentation of the Taj Mahal. Floral relief

    carvings are found on the marble and sandstone walls; these carvings are stylistically related to the pietra dura

    work, yet are worked according to the material of the building they adorn.

    The Taj Mahal architecture is a kind of fusion of Persian, Central Asian and Islamic architecture. Specific design

    credit is uncertain, and is given by different sources to Istad Usa, Ustad Ahmad Lahori, Isa Muhammad Effendi or

    Geronimo Veroneo. But construction documents show that its master architect was Istad Usa, the renowned

    Islamic architect of his time. The documents contain names of those employed and the inventory of construction

    materials and their origin. And how the entire complex is designed in such a way that the apparent organic unity

    of the whole does not obscure the individuality of any part, nor does it detract from the prominence of the Taj

    Mahal proper. It was completed in 1648 at a cost of 32 Million Rupees (more than 750 000 dollars).

    Natural wonders

    1. Mount everest, Nepal

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    Mount Everest peak, 29,035 ft (8,850 m) high, on the border of Tibet and Nepal, in the central Himalayas. It

    is the highest elevation in the world. Called Chomolungma or Qomolangma [Mother Goddess of the Land]

    by Tibetans and Sagarmatha [head of the sea] by Nepalis, it is named in English for the surveyor Sir George

    Everest . It was first climbed on May 28, 1953, when Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay of Nepal

    reached the summit. The body of George H. L. Mallory , who died in an earlier attempt (1924), was found on

    the mountain in 1999.

    2. Komodo island, indonesia

    Komodo is one of the 17,508 islands that make up the Republic of Indonesia. The island has a surface area of

    390 km and over 2000 inhabitants. The inhabitants of the island are descendants of former convicts who were

    exiled to the island and who have mixed themselves with the Bugis from Sulawesi. The population are primarily

    adherents of Islam but there are also Christian and Hindu minorities.

    Komodo is part of the Lesser Sunda chain of islands and forms part of the Komodo National Park. Particularly

    notable here is the native Komodo dragon. In addition, the island is a popular destination for diving.

    Administratively, it is part of the East Nusa Tenggara province.

    3. Puerto princes subterranean river

    The Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park is located about 50 kilometers north of the city of

    Puerto Princesa, Palawan, Philippines. The National Park is located in the Saint Paul Mountain Range on the

    northern coast of the island. It is bordered by St. Paul Bay to the north and the Babuyan River to the east.The City Government of Puerto Princesa has managed the National Park since 1992. It is also known as St.

    Paul's Subterranean River National Park, or St. Paul Underground River. The entrance to the Subterranean

    River is a short hike from the town of Sabang. Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park is one of

    the 28 finalists for the "New Seven Wonders of Nature" competition.

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    4. The valley of geysers

    The Valley of Geysers (Russian: ) is the only geyser field in mainland Eurasia (apart from

    the Mutnovsky geyser field) and the second largest concentration of geysers in the world. This 6 km long

    basin with approximately ninety geysers and many hot springs is situated on the Kamchatka Peninsula in the

    Russian Far East, predominantly on the left bank of the ever-deepening Geysernaya River, into which

    geothermal waters flow from a relatively young stratovolcano, Kikhpinych. Temperatures have been found

    to be 250 C, 500 m below the caldera ground. It is part of the Kronotsky Nature Reserve, which, in turn, is

    incorporated into the World Heritage Site "Volcanoes of Kamchatka". The valley is difficult to reach, with

    helicopters providing the only feasible means of transport.

    5. Kopet Dag

    The Kopet Dag, Kpet Dag (Koppeh Dagh) is a mountain range on the frontier between Turkmenistan and Iran,

    extending about 650 km (404 mi) along the border, east of the Caspian Sea. The highest peak of the range in

    Turkmenistan is southwest of the capital Ashgabat and stands at 2,940 m (9,646 ft). The highest Iranian summit

    is 3,191 m (10,466 ft).

    This mountain range has a ski resort officially open by the former president of Turkmenistan Saparmurat

    Niyazov. Despite the lack of snow in the Kopet Dag mountains, Niyazov was determined to build a major

    resort there.