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Mandag, 19. maj 2008 kl. 21:50 / agf

taget fra www.jame-ghor.com

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The Minaret at Jam stands alone in a remote valley surrounded by barren mountains. The Hari Rud river flows rapidly by the lonely tower, which was once surrounded by a great mosque at Firuz Koh. Built in the 12th century, it is the only well-preserved monument from the Ghorid period. It measures 65 meters (213 feet) tall and is accessable through a set of double sprial stairs that run from the octagonal ba<x>se to the circular top. The tower is decorated with kufic calligraphy etched in stucco and accented with turquoise ceremics. Along the shaft are several balconies and at the top is a large lantern.
The minaret was heavily damaged during the Soviet incursion and the Afghan civil war. It was probably not affected by the American campaign in late 2001.
The Minaret of Jam soars into the sky in a steep-sided valley in central Afghanistan - it is hard to believe that such a magnificent, 63 m high structure could have been ‘forgotten’ about by the outside world after the Mongol destruction of the site ca. 1221-2. Then again, given the remoteness of Jam, perhaps it is not surprising that the Minaret remained virtually unknown until the Russo-Afghan Boundary Commission ‘re-discovered’ it in 1886. Even then, only a handful of scholars and intrepid tourists ventured to the site before the Soviet invasion in 1979, and the subsequent decades of turmoil, effectively placed Jam out of bounds.
The principal study of the minaret was carried out by the French scholars Maricq and Wiet in the late 1950s. With the exception of Herberg and Davary’s brief surveys in the 1970s, little fieldwork had been conducted on the surrounding archaeological site, until the inception of the Minaret of Jam Archaeological Project in 2003. We have recently completed a second season of fieldwork at Jam and are planning to return in 2006
Jam is located at the confluence of the Hari Rud and Jam Rud, about 215 km to the east of Herat, in Ghor province of central Afghanistan. The site is 1900 m above sea-level, with nearby mountain peaks reaching nearly 3500 m. The harsh winters are often followed by severe flooding as the snows melt; the summers are hot and dry. With little flat land available along the scree-covered valleys, local people struggle to survive in a subsistence economy.
The inhospitable climate and terrain make it all the more remarkable that Jam was once the centre of a huge empire - scholars generally agree that Jam is ancient Firuzkuh, the summer capital of the Ghurids
The slender, tapering minaret soars to a height of 65 meters over the floor of a remote valley in western Afghanistan.


Mandag, 19. maj 2008 kl. 20:54 / følelser, islam

det er mig selv

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Hej. Jeg hedder så Fahim Mohammed Ziae. jeg er 12 år det ser lidt mærkeligt ud i forhold til min højde men jeg er 12 år. Jeg kommer fra Afghanistan. man plejre at sige en lille by men jeg er nødt til at en stor fordi det er en stor by. Den store by hedder Kabul. Jeg kan desværre ikke om mig selv mere beucause I do not what I have to read more so bye bye.






FAHIM MOHAMMED ZIAE