Bebel Without a Clause

Bebel Without a Clause

Friday, June 24, 2011

Akibat seks songsang, masyarakat purba POMPEII dimusnahkan oleh ALLAH.

Sesiapa yang berpeluang untuk melawat POMPEII mulalah dengan.lawatan ke gunung Vesuvius yang terletak megah disekitar bandaraya NAPOLI.

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POMPEII terletak diantara NAPOLI dan SORRENTO, satu bandar pelancungan, yang cantik dan bersih berbanding dengan NAPOLI.
NAPOLI walaupun salah bandaraya yang agak besar dan semestinya kita ingat bahawa bandar ini akan memberi impresi masyarakat progresif, namun pandangan itu amat meleset, kerana apa yang didapati adalh sebuah bandar yang amat kotor. Sehingga lapangan terbang pun tidak terurus dan ternyata putung2 rokok bertaburan seperti kita di Malaysia.. Kalau LEE KUAN YEW ke NAPOLI beliau pasti kena heart attack.
Saya akan cerita perihal NAPOLI dan SORRENTO di lain posting nanti.
Kota Lama POMPEII (POMPEII SCAVI atau POMPEII RUINS) adalah bekas tapak arkiologi yang amat luas dan mengambil masa antara 3-4 jam untuk melawat dan mengenali intipati masyarakat POMPEII ketika itu.
Antara yang menarik ialah struktur toko2 atau kedai2 runcit amat tidak jauh berbeza dengan kedai2 runcit kecil moden. Yang mesti lihat dan kalau tidak lihat tidak sah lawatan anda ialah bergambar dengan mayat2 yang bergelimpangan di timbus oleh lelahar gunung berapi. Yang masih ketara adalah tulang kaki yang masih terlekat di badan dan tidak terbakar menjadi abu.
Juga yang menarik adalah sebuah rumah perlacuran(?) atau rumah dimana mereka bertukar pasangan untuk kegiatan seks sumbang. Disekitar rumah perlacuran/rumah asmara ini terdapat berbagai lukisan2 seperti Karma Sutra yang bagaikan ensiklopedia seks bagi pengunjung2.
Apa yang juga diceritakan oleh masyarakat moden bukan sekadar menukar isteri dan suami sahaja, tetapi ada yang bertukarkan anak perempuan dan lelaki untuk melakukan kegiatan orgy. Kegiatan ini amat popular antara masyarakat POMPEII sehingga Raja ROM pun tidak dapat melarang.


Maka ALLAH telah melaknatkan bangsa ini dengan ledakan gunung berapi yang hanya disasarkan ke negara kecil POMPEII.

Jadi tidak lah mustahil sekiranya, kalau kita biarkan mana-mana pemimpin menjalankan kegiatan seks songsang tanpa tentangan kita, satu hari nanti tidak hairanlah kalau Gunung Tahan atau Gunung Jerai pun boleh tiba2 meletup.

Anda boleh seterusnya baca tentang POMPEII selanjutnya:

Pompeii 
The history and art of the city

Article added on March 1, 2006
A short history of the city of Pompeii
  
Pompeii was once a flourishing port city overlooking the Sarno river valley. The origins of the town are unclear, but the oldest report date back to the end of the 7th century BC. It was a multicultural city with native, Etruscan and Greek influences.

At the end of the 5th century BC, the Samnite tribes came down from the mountains of Samnio and Irpinia and settled in the area of what is today known as the province of Campania (fertile plain), with Nuceria as its capital; today's regional capital is the city of Naples.

When Rome expanded towards southern Italy from 343 to 290 BC through a mix of alliances and military campaigns, Pompeii became an ally (socia) of the Roman political system (res publica). However, in 90 and 89 BC, the population of Pompeii and other cities rebelled, demanding equal social and political rights from Rome. Pompeii was besieged by Roman troops led by P. Cornelius Sulla and finally surrendered. It became a Roman colony named Cornelia Veneria Pompeianorum in 80 BC.

As a colony, Pompeii continued to flourish, especially under the reigns of the emperors of Octavian Augustus (from 27 BC to 14 AD) and Tiberius (from 14 AD to 37 AD). In 62, a violent earthquake struck the entire Vesuvian area. Reconstruction was not finished when on August 24, 79 AD the city of Pompeii was buried under ash and rock.

The city was only rediscovered in the 16th century. The exploration of the site only began in 1748 under the reign of the King of Naples Charles III of Bourbon. Today, some 3/4 of the 66 ha of the city of Pompeii have been excavated, whereas in nearby Erolano 2/3 of the city still lay under the ground of the present day city.

Pompeii was covered by some 6m of ashes and rock, killing some 20,000 people, whereas in nearby Ercolano some 5,000 people died in the days following under a 20 meter high pyroclastic mudslide caused by the volcanic eruption; over the years, the material was transformed into an impressive 20m wall of tuff covering the site.



A few of the many sites to visit in Pompeii

Among the many valuable archaeological sites to visit in the Pompeii, one has to mention the Temple of Venus. The goddess Venus was the protectress of Lucius Cornelius Sulla as well as of the city of Pompeii. The Temple of Venus was built on the western edge of the city's hill during the early part of the Sullan colony in 80 BC.

Another outstanding site are the Suburban baths. Built from the 1st century BC to the 1st century AC on an artificial terrace facing the sea, they feature richly decorated bathing rooms. The Suburban baths include a warm indoor pool and a small cold pool with painted walls ending in a niche with a waterfall supplied by an imitation cave, decorated with a mosaic depicting the Roman God Mars and cherub angels. The cold room (frigidarium) is decorated with stucco squares. The dressing room features 16 panels with erotic scenes, including one with two women engaging in Lesbian sex, unique in Roman painting.

The Forum baths were built after 80 BC, following the layout of the larger Stabian baths: the men's and women's sections are separated and located on the sides of the furnaces. The dressing room (apodyterium) is followed by the cold bathing room (frigidarium), the warm room (tepidarium) and the hot room (caldarium). The Forum baths also feature a porticoed palaestra, which can be entered from Via del Foro or the men's dressing room. The warm room was heated by a large bronze brazier.

With its 2970 square meters, the House of the Faun is the largest house in Pompeii. It was built by an unknown wealthy owner over a previous dwelling in the early 2nd century BC. Its mosaic threshold is now on display at the Museum of Archaeology of the City of Naples. In the atrium's low basin (impluvium) stands a bronze statue of the faun (the original is exhibited in Naples). Between two porticoed gardens is the exedra, the core of the house, with Corinthian columns, stuccoed, painted capitals and an outstanding mosaic (exhibited in Naples' Museum of Archaeology) depicting the victory of Alexander the Great over Darius, the King of Persia.

Another famous site is the Lupanare, built in the city's final days. Lupa is the Latin word for prostitute. The Lupanare was Pompeii's only brothel specifically designed for this purpose, and the largest of the some 25 brothels of the city; the other brothels were simply single rooms or part of the top floor of a shop. The stone beds at the Lupanare were covered by mattresses. The walls were decorated with paintings depicting different erotic positions. The prostitutes were slaves, mostly of Greek and Oriental origin.

Pompeii's Great Theatre was built in the 2nd century BC. It could hold some 5000 spectators. Among the works performed here were popular farces in the Oscan language, plays, mimes and pantomimes with dancing and music. The Small Theatre was built around 80 BC, in the early years of the Sullan colony. According to inscriptions, it had a roof and was probably used for musical performances and poetry readings.

The Temple of Isis testifies to the fact that Egyptian divinities were venerated by the Romans too. It was built at the 2nd century BC and rebuilt immediately after the earthquake in 62 AD by N. Popidius Ampliatus, who gave credit to his son Celsinus to advance the latter's political career. Statues of Anubis and Harpokrates greeted the visitors near the entrance of the temple. A fenced area with a water basin was used for purification rites (purgatorium).

In addition to the archaeological sites of Pompeii and Ercolano, don't miss to visit the Museum of Archaeology of the City of Naples, where most of the finds of Pompeii and Ercolano are exhibited.



Source: http://www.cosmopolis.ch

1 comment:

  1. Salam. PAS parti kononnya lebih Islam dari orang lain mana peduli. Dia sanggup berketuakan peliwat.

    ReplyDelete

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