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This gold earring depicting the goddess Nike in a chariot was buried with its owner, possibly a Thracian priestess, in the 3rd-2nd century BCE in a mound near present-day Sinemörets, on the southern Black Sea coast. The earring was discovered in 2006 and is now in the National History Museum in Sofia.
ancientbulgaria.bg/thracian/shrines-and-deities
It is only 2.5 cm in size and is displayed under a magnifying glass, allowing visitors to admire this unique piece of a priestess' tiara in detail.
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Explore Jul 6, 2010 #412
Thank you
I'm sorry for my absence. I'm on vacation and having awful internet connection :(
The etymology of the origin of the names in the area leads to the conclusion that pirates were rampant in ancient Sinemorets. It is believed that in the "Ships" area, they lit fires on the high rocks imitating a lighthouse and lured merchant ships to crash on the rocks.
The etymology of the origin of the names in the area leads to the conclusion that pirates were rampant in ancient Sinemorets. It is believed that in the "Ships" area, they lit fires on the high rocks imitating a lighthouse and lured merchant ships to crash on the rocks.
Sinemorets (Bulgarian: Синеморец; "place on the blue sea") is a village and seaside resort on the Black Sea coast of Bulgaria, located in the very southeast of the country close to the border with Turkey, where the river Veleka flows into the sea.
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For my first new photo in 2 months I wanted to create something interesting and new for me. And here is the result: crazy startrails as seen from the village of Sinemorets, Bulgaria. Total length of exposure for the stars is 83 minutes (40 images of 2 minutes each with 5 seconds between each). There might be more noise in the lower half of the image than I would have wanted, but overall it was an interesting experiment.