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Tags: addition, adult, advance, age, Amsterdam, Anne, Anne Frank, Anne Frank House, anne frank house amsterdam, annex, area, army, August, Auguste, auguste van pels, Auschwitz, back, Belsen, Bergen, bergen belsen, Bergn, bookshop, British, british army, building, bus, business, call, camp, cannot, cause, Celle, centre, child, cloakroom, company, concentration, concentration camps, daughter, day, diary, documentation, East, Edith Frank, Edith Frank-Hollander, end, entry, EUR, family, fate, Father, father otto, Fearful, fellow, floor, food, food business, Frank, Fritz, Fritz Pfeffer, german authorities, Germany, ground, Hanover, Hermann, hermann van, Hermann van Pels, Holland, hollander, Hotel, hour, information, internet, jewish victims, July, length, life, literature, location, lot, luggage, Magot, Margot, Margot Frank, Mauthausen, May, memorial, month, Mother, Museum, Nelson Mandela, Neuenhamme, number, option, Otto, Otto Frank, Otto Franks, part, persecution, personal thoughts, Peter, Peter van Pels, Phone, POW, Pre-booked, Prinsengracht, prison, public, queue, quote, range, repression, research, Robben Island, round, service, sister, Site, Son, staircase, station, story, Theresienstadt, thoughts and feelings, ticket, time, Today, Town, Travel Tips, trip, video, War, Wehrmacht, whilst, Winsen, world, world war ii, year
Anne Frank was one of the millions of Jewish victims of the Nazis during World War II. Although she was only 13 years old when she died, Anne Frank’s story has been told many times thanks to the diary she kept whilst she was in hiding in Amsterdam. Anne was born in Germany and along with her father (Otto), mother (Edith Frank-Hollander) and sister (Margot), fled to Holland to escape persecution.
Otto had set up a successful food business and part of the company was located in a building on Prinsengracht. In May 1940, Germany invaded Holland and they brought with them, the repression of the Jewish people. Fearful about the fate of his family, in July 1942, Otto Frank moved his family to an annex at the back of the building at 263 Prinsengracht. Later, the Franks were joined in the Annex by Hermann and Auguste van Pels, their son Peter and Fritz Pfeffer.
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Jun 19 2009
Posted: under Travel Tips.
Tags: access, afar, Afghanistan, Agra, AID, Ajuba, amp, Arabic, arabic calligraphy, architect, architecture, archways, Asia, bank, Beautiful, beauty, begum, birth, box, briefcase, calligraphy, century, child, China, click, cloth, cost, craftsmanship, currency, damage, day, display, dome, dura, earthquake, electric vehicle, Emperor, emperor shah jahan, Emperors, end, entrance, favourite, feeling, finials, food, foot, fort, fruit, Garden, Gate, geometrical patterns, Heritage, house, husband, inconsolable, India, india tour, inlaid, Islam, Laid, love, marble, material, mausoleum, military campaigns, minarets, monument, mosque, Mughal, Mumtaz, number, oasis, onion, onion dome, Palace, paradise, Persian, pietra, place, plane, plastic, plinth, pollution, pool, Project, rain, Raised, replica, rest, River, romance, sandstone, semi precious stones, Shah Jahan, side, silence, Site, slipper, Son, space, splendour, style, symbolise, symmetry, Taj Mahal, Taj MahalCovered, target, Today, Tour, tourist, tourist coaches, Travel Tips, true to his word, umbrella, vehicle, wanna, water, west, wife, word, world, world heritage site, Yamuna, yamuna river, year
India tour
If you wanna to India tour then never forget to see Taj Mahal
Agra Monument to Love, Mughal Architecture
1st Ajuba in the world
The Taj Mahal attracts above three million visitors a year, all deeply moved by its romance and beauty and the amazing skills of 17th century Mughal craftsmen.
Located on the bank of the Yamuna river, three km south of Agra, the Taj Mahal took 22 years to complete at a cost of trillions of dollars by today’s currency. Twenty thousand men and over 1000 elephants were working on the project, using material from India and Asia, as far as China and Afghanistan.
The Taj Mahal was declared a World Heritage site in 1983 and measures are in place to protect it from pollution. Tourist coaches and cars are kept well away from the gate and access is on foot or by electric vehicle.
Taj Mahal, Agra Monument to Love
India’s top World Heritage site was built by Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan as a mausoleum for his favourite wife, Mumtaz begum, who died aged 38, giving birth to their 14th child. She had never left her husband’s side, even during his military campaigns, and the inconsolable Emperor promised he would build the most beautiful mausoleum ever seen.
True to his word, Emperor Shah Jahan set to work with his first architect to design the world’s most celebrated monument to love. Later, deposed and imprisoned by his son in Agra’s red fort, the Emperor gazed from afar at the marble dome mirrored in the river, grieving until the day he died. He now rests with Mumtaz in the Taj Mahal.
Beautiful Taj MahalCovered in white marble, inlaid with precious and semi-precious stones, a stunning display of floral and geometrical patterns, Arabic calligraphy. Raised on a plinth, it is topped by a white onion dome and framed by four minarets, detached from the mausoleum to minimize damage in an earthquake.
A day is barely enough to appreciate the fine Mughal craftsmanship, from latticed marble screens to decorated archways, from pietra dura to gilded finials. Inside, visitors gaze in silence at the imperial cenotaphs placed above the actual tombs The magnificent entrance gate faces the mausoleum, some 275 meters away, while to ensure symmetry, the red sandstone mosque on the west side of the gardens is mirrored by a replica rest house to the east.
Taj Mahal Garden
Like all Mughal Emperors, Shah Jahan was fond of gardens. Laid out in classical style, the Taj Mahal Persian Gardens are said to symbolise the four rivers and garden of Paradise. Leading to the mausoleum at the far end, they are divided into four sections, a holy number in Islam, each one subdivided into 16 beds. English lawns have replaced many of the original fruit trees and shrubs but the symmetry and feeling of space remain breathtaking.
Water channels and fountains enhance this peaceful oasis, regardless of crowds, while the central pool reflects the mausoleum in all its splendour. The gardens are enclosed by red sandstone walls on three sides but open towards the river.
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In Tour we should make a good plane and we should aware from that palace where we are planing .
some briefcase also be ready for a good tour like:
1)first AID box
2)cloths
3)shoes&slipper
4)dry food
5)rain or plastic cloth and umbrella
<a target=”_blank” href=”http://www.OneWayTextlink.com”/>click here</a>
Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/travel-tips-articles/travel-in-india-979554.html
Apr 21 2009