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Sabratha; Libya: temple of Serapis, Roman capital and the Mediterranean sea - UNESCO World Heritage Site
Timgad, a Roman-Berber city in the Aures Mountains of Algeria. (Colonia Marciana Ulpia Traiana Thamugadi). UNESCO World Heritage Site
Leptis Magna Roman archaeological site, ruins with gorgon or medusa head carving in foreground. Focus on head . Tripoli, Libya. UNESCO World Heritage site.
Sardis ancient city, Manisa. Turkey
Leptis Magna, Libya 6 November 2009. Beautiful view of Arch of Septimus Severus, UNESCO World Heritage Site, dating back to the 2nd Century AD.
Red Basilica, Bergama, Izmir, Turkey
view of the ancient Roman ruins of Sbeitla
Petra, built around 300 B.C. by the Nabataean Arabs, is the world famous archaeological site in Jordan's southwestern desert. Capital of the Nabatean Kingdom it seamlessly blends Arab style with Hellenistic and Roman or Byzantine architecture. Accessed via Al Siq, a narrow canyon, it contains tombs and temples carved into the pink sandstone cliffs, hence the 'Rose City' The most famous and iconic structure is Al Khazneh, a temple with an ornate Greek-style facade, also known as The Treasury
The ruins of the Roman Theatre in the city of Bosra in the south of Syria in the Middle East.
Saint Nicholas, Ancient, Myra, Santa Claus, Bishop, Basilica, Anatolia, Monument, Mosaic, Antalya - Turkey
Marvelous Roman ancient on the Mediterranean sea in the Libya
Archway columns in , ancient gothic and romanesque cathedral La Seu Vella, Lleida, Catalonia, Spain.
Arch in the Roman ruins of Sabratha, in Libya
Kesik Minare Mosque is located in Antalya's Kaleici region. It is also known as Kırık Minare Mosque and Korkut Mosque.
Leptis Magna, Libya - April 2, 2006: Tourists exploring the ancient Roman theatre overlooking the Mediterranean Sea on the coast of Libya.
Petra, built around 300 B.C. by the Nabataean Arabs, is the world famous archaeological site in Jordan's southwestern desert. Capital of the Nabatean Kingdom it seamlessly blends Arab style with Hellenistic and Roman or Byzantine architecture. Accessed via Al Siq, a narrow canyon, it contains tombs and temples carved into the pink sandstone cliffs, hence the 'Rose City' The most famous and iconic structure is Al Khazneh, a temple with an ornate Greek-style facade, also known as The Treasury
blue sky and white clouds on the Roman ruins of Timgad in Algeria, World Heritage Site by UNESCO
Old Stone Arch
view of the ancient Roman ruins of Sbeitla
Palmyra, Ancient Ruins in Syria, Middle East
Roman ruins in Tyre, Sour in Lebanon
antique amphitheatre in Cairo. Egypt
Leptis Magna amphitheater
The ancient city of Kibyra is located in the Gölhisar district of Burdur province in Turkey.
Tall stone columns set against a sunny blue sky, in the ancient Roman bath site at Carthage, Tunisia.
Jerash is the modern name of the remarkably well=preserved ancient city of Gerasa in Jordan, north of Amman. Inhabited since the Bronze Age, the ruins of the walled Greco-Roman settlement outside the modern city are more extensive than either Rome or Pompei. having been protected by and buried in sand for centuries. Featuring the 2nd-century Hadrian’s Arch, Corinthian columns of the Temple of Artemis and the huge Forum’s oval colonnade that leads to the Cado main thoroughfare
Ancient ruins inside The Archaeological Site of Timgad in Batna, Algeria.
Susiya is the site of an archaeologically notable ancient synagogue
Leptis Magna Roman archaeological site, ruins of the ancient marketplace. Tripoli, Libya. UNESCO World Heritage site.
View of the Red Hall Basilica in Pergamon antique city, Bergama, Turkey.
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