Menu Content/Inhalt
        Search by country
        
 Currently 108 countries
                 
  
   
Document sans titre

Satellite dishes on the roofs of Aleppo, Syria (36°13’ N, 37°10’ E).Great Mosque of Aleppo, Aleppo Governorate, Syria (36°12’ N, 37°09’ E).Village near Khanasir, Aleppo Governorate, Syrie (35°47’ N, 37°29’ E).
Lake Assad, west of Ar Raqqah, Syria (35°57’ N, 38°11’ E).Halabiye fortress on the shores Euphrates, north of Deir ez Zor, Syria (35°41’ N, 39°49’ E).Cotton harvesting on the banks of the Euphrates River, near Deir ez-Zor, Syria (35°23
Arab Castle of Qalat ibn Maan, Palmyra, Syria (34°34’ N, 38°15’ E).Roman theater, Palmyra, Syria (34°33’ N, 38°16’ E).Valley of the Tombs, Palmyra, Syria (34°33’ N, 38°15’ E).
Agricultural landscape near Baniyas, Tartus Governorate, Syria (35°07’ N, 35°56’ E).Town of Ma’loula, north of Damascu, Syria (33°51’ N, 36°33’ E).The Umayyad Mosque, Damascus, Syria (33°31’ N, 36°18’ E).
Bad al-Saghir cemetery, Damascus, Syria (33° 31’ N, 36° 18’ E).The Umayyad Mosque, Damascus, Syria (33°31’ N, 36°18’ E).Flamingos, Al-Jabbu salt lake near Aleppo, Syria (36°04’ N, 37°29’ E).
Satellite dishes on the roofs of Aleppo, Syria (36°13Great Mosque of Aleppo, Aleppo Governorate, Syria (36°12’ N, 37°09’ E).The Citadel of Aleppo, Syria (36°12’ N, 37°10’ E).
Norias on the Orontes River in Hama, Syrie (35°08’ N, 36°45’ E).




Great Mosque of Aleppo, Aleppo Governorate, Syria (36°12’ N, 37°09’ E).

Standing in the heart of the old city of Aleppo and on UNESCO’s World Heritage List since 1986, the Great Mosque was built in the year 715 and reconstructed in 1129. While Damascus, the country’s capital, was already an important place in the Roman-Byzantine world, Aleppo began to gain stature in the year 1000. The Roman plan was adapted and the agora, a vast square, became a mosque. Instead of having a building in the center of an open space, the open space is placed in the center of the monument. The Great Mosque’s courtyard is the largest one in the old city. People come here to pray, but also to relax, chat, and meditate. The people of Syria are 90 percent Muslim and, although required to vote, are forbidden to vote against the government. President Bashar al-Assad succeeded his father in an unopposed referendum on July 17, 2000. In October 2005, leading figures and parties of the secular opposition expressed their desire for peaceful and gradual change and the holding of free and transparent legislative elections, signing “The Damascus Declaration for National Democratic Change” to that effect. In late 2008, after twelve reformers from the civil sector were sentenced to two and a half years in prison for signing the “Damascus Declaration,” the European Union asked that these nonviolent militants be freed and called on the Syrian government to honor its international commitments, as Syria had signed and ratified the 1969 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, as well as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Visit the YAB Gallery for books and signed prints

DatsoGallery Multilingual
By Andrey Datso
Discover the others
Yann Athus-Bertrand's projects
          

All photographs displayed on this website are for personal use only. All rights reserved Yann Arthus-Bertrand ©2013 yannarthusbertrand2.org