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View of ruins of Marble court in ancient Roman bath gymnasium complex in Sardis, Salihli, Turkey
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Amazing views from Kanlıdivane (ancient Canytelis), which is an ancient city situated around a big sinkhole in Mersin, Turkey.
Ruins of buildings in the center of Bukhara, . UNESCO World Heritage Site
Qasr Al Azraq Castle Courtyard and Basalt Walls in Jordan
antique amphitheatre in Cairo. Egypt
The Temple of Philae in Aswan. Egypt.
Sardis ancient city, Manisa. Turkey
Ruins of the temple of Ba'al in Palmyra Syria.
The Nuraghe La Prisgiona is a large Nuragic archaeological site dating back to the 2nd millennium BC, and consisting in a nuraghe and a village of around 90-100 buildings. It is located near Arzachena in Gallura, in the northeast of Sardinia.
Mayan Puuc style architecture in Chichen Itza, Yucatan, Mexico.
Pompeii ancient ruins, italy
Roman Odeon in ancient site of Gortyn. Messara Plain, Crete, Greece
Porta Marina gate of Pompeii and the city walls, Naples, Italy
Well-preserved roman ruins in Volubilis, Fez Meknes area, Morocco, Northern Africa
Celsus library in Ephesus
Ksar Ouled Debbab, a fortified village near Tataouine, Southern Tunisia. Africa
Iasos ancient city
Hadrian's Villa (Villa Adriana; Villa Hadriana) - The Three Exedras - villa of emperor Hadrian near Tivoli outside Rome, Italy.
Ancient temple columns at Archaeological Park, Kato Paphos, Cyprus.
Sunset time in the ancient city of Sardes or Sardeis. The city of Sard, the capital of the Lydians. Turkey's most famous ancient cities.  Salihli district, Manisa, Turkey
Citadel in Zabid, Yemen.
Valley of the Temples. Historical evidence of the Greek presence on the island of Sicily. UNESCO heritage in Italy.
Antique Amphitheater in Xanthos Ancient City. Antalya, Turkey.
Bosra old basalt city on the desert, Syria
Roman Empire, Anatolia, Greek Culture, no people, UNESCO World Heritage Centre
Takht-i-Bahi buddhist monastery in Mardan, Pakistan
Lindos Acropolis and the ruins of the temple of the goddess Athena Lindia
The Colosseum in El Jem in central Tunisia in North Africa.
Aerial view of The Pir Huseyn Khanqah and Mausoleum\n\nThe Pir Huseyn Khanqah and Mausoleum lies along the left bank of Pirsaat River (Pirsaatçay), 126 kilometers to the southwest of Baku. The inscription plaque over the portal, read by V. Kratchkovskaya in 1952, announces that the khanqah (dervish monastery) was built by Sharaf al-Dawla wal-din Hasan during the reign of the Shirvanshah Afridhun Abul-Muzaffar Fariburz (Fariburz III, 1225–1255).
Free Images: "bestof:Originating from Umma, the tablet dates from the reign of Amar-Sin (also known as Bur-Sin), King of Ur, between 1981-1973 B.C.E. It records the receipt of rent"
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