File:International cooperation, Philae Island, Aswan - UNESCO - PHOTO0000003118 0001.tiff

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Photographer
Alexis N. Vorontzoff  (1927–)  wikidata:Q67013541
 
Date of birth 1927 Edit this at Wikidata
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q67013541
Description
English: A view from a distance of PHILAE island after the removal of its temples to their new site at AGILKIA. The island is surrounded by a water-retaining wall, and linked to the mainland by a causeway. Inside the island, all - except for spotty vegation - is a rocky desolation. There remain a few boats, cranes and large to small sheds scattered around and on the island.
Depicted place Philae Island, Aswan, Egypt (Q79)
Keywords
InfoField
International cooperation, Temples, Historic monuments, Preservation of monuments, Ancient civilizations,
Date March 1977
date QS:P571,+1977-03-00T00:00:00Z/10
Accession number
PHOTO0000003118
Inscriptions
English: The international campaign for the saving of the Nubian monuments, was launched by UNESCO in 1960. Following the construction of the Aswan high dam, the monuments of the island of PHILAE are permanently flooded to a third of their height and subject to daily fluctuations in the water level which eat away their foundations and threaten to bring them down to ruins. In May 1968, it was decided to dismantle and re-erect the monuments on the neighbouring island of AGILKIA which is sufficiently elevated to be above the maximum water level. A view of PHILAE island after the removing of the temples to their new site at AGILKIA island.
Français : Campagne internationale pour la sauvegarde des monuments de Nubie lancée par l'UNESCO en 1960. A la suite de la construction du haut-barrage d'Assouan, les monuments de l'île de PHILAE plongent en permanence dans l'eau sur un tiers environ de leur hauteur et ils sont soumis à des variations quotidiennes de niveau qui usent les fondements et entraîneront inévitablement l'effondrement de l'ensemble. C'est pourquoi il a été décidé, en mai 1968, de déplacer les monuments sur l'île voisine d'AGILKIA, assez élevée pour toujours émerger au-dessus du niveau maximum des eaux. Vue de l'île de Philae après déplacement des temples sur leur nouveau site d'Agilkia.
Archival code
InfoField
39.157
Source

UNESCO Archives

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This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 IGO license.
Attribution: UNESCO / Alexis N. Vorontzoff
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current09:47, 6 November 2020Thumbnail for version as of 09:47, 6 November 20204,290 × 5,610 (69.4 MB)AliciaFagervingWMSE-bot (talk | contribs)pattypan 20.04

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