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Paphos Castle is located at the western end of the city port. It was originally a Byzantine fortress built to protect the port. Today, the visitor can see the Western Frankish Tower with the Venetian additions as restored by the Ottomans in 1592, according to a relevant inscription above the entrance of the castle. Wikipedia
View from St. Hilarion Castle
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I'm tired of living in Central Europe. It's still cold! In my next life I want to live in Cyprus. Is there equal tiles, sea and warm! And pretty girls!
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I met her in the mountains on the island of Cyprus. She was on her stomach knotted child. Maybe she was 20 years old. I do not know. It was a picture! I do not know which country she was.
British Museum London
Cypriot worshipper
450-425 BC
Dali, Sanctuary of Apollo-Reshef
This man wears an elaborate wreath indicating he is a worshipper. The statue is typical of Cypriot art of this period, combining Greek and Persian dress and hair within the local tradition of carving limestone votive images. This statue was dedicated at an important sanctuary in the City of Idalion (modern Dali). The local god worshipped here was later identified with Greek Apollo and his Phoenician equivalent Reshef. Frequently depicted wearing a lion Skin and brandishing a Club, he protected humans against the forces of nature.
The colossal size and high quality of the Carving show this man had great wealth and social status. He was probably a member of the ruling dynasty, perhaps the king himself. As chief worshipper in his realm, he may also have served as the high priest. The sanctuary was one of the major cult places of the Greek-speaking kingdom of Idalion. After Idalion was conquered by its Phoenician neighbour Kition (modern Larnaka) around 450 BC, its new rulers respected the great shrine and made dedications there, including this statue.
The yellowish sandstone, with which the houses of the well-to-do families were built, still dominates the image of some streets in the old town
Residential homes in Latsia, Cyprus. Very different from older local traditions - and also from the frequently baroque style of holiday homes along the coast, modern architecture in Cyprus is often based on concrete and all the potential this material has to offer. The result can be a kind of cubist architecture, a rational design which is practical throughout and also seismically reliable.