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Helen Betts | all galleries >> Saudi Arabia: Life in the Desert >> Experiencing Old Diriyah > Palace, Turaif district (UNESCO World Heritage Site)
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18-JAN-2014

Palace, Turaif district (UNESCO World Heritage Site)

One last capture of this impressive old Saudi palace, which is currently under restoration in conjunction with its status as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Pictures of other palaces in this historic district accompany the image below.

Information from Wiki is here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diriyah and this is from the UNESCO site:

“The At-Turaif District in ad-Dir'iyah was the first capital of the Saudi Dynasty, in the heart of the Arabian Peninsula, north-west of Riyadh. Founded in the 15th century, it bears witness to the Najdi architectural style, which is specific to the centre of the Arabian Peninsula. In the 18th and the early 19th century, its regional political and religious role increased, and the citadel of at-Turaif became the centre of the temporal power of the House of Saud and the spread of the Islamic reform movement in Arabia, Wahhabism. The property includes the remains of many palaces and an urban ensemble built on the edge of the ad-Dir'iyah oasis." (UNESCO World Heritage List http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1329 -- in their gallery are a number of images of the old palaces on the site that aren’t accessible to the public at present.)


Nikon D700 ,Nikkor 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6G IF-ED AF-S VR Zoom
1/250s f/11.0 at 155.0mm iso200 hide exif
Full EXIF Info
Date/Time18-Jan-2014 14:21:04
MakeNikon
ModelNIKON D700
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length155 mm
Exposure Time1/250 sec
Aperturef/11
ISO Equivalent200
Exposure Bias-0.33
White Balance
Metering Mode
JPEG Quality
Exposure Program
Focus Distance

other sizes: small medium original auto
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Gill Kopy28-Jan-2014 01:57
A wonderful feeling of antiquity - I do hope we're going to see what this palace looks like after restoration. V
larose forest photos28-Jan-2014 01:50
Intriguing architecture, well worth preserving. V
Walter Otto Koenig27-Jan-2014 19:23
Intriguing and fascinating. Very well composed image. "V"
bill friedlander27-Jan-2014 17:07
Easy to see why it is a World Heritage Site. It definitely is worth restoring. V
globalgadabout27-Jan-2014 16:03
large scale and impressive...surely worth restoring indeed..
Jim Coffman27-Jan-2014 14:30
Very well composed and captured,Helen!
danad27-Jan-2014 09:32
Superbly composed (as usual) ! V.
Milan Vogrin27-Jan-2014 08:37
Look beautiful!V!
joseantonio27-Jan-2014 05:56
Love the view of those walls that seem made of sand.V