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Motive aus Indien - Motives from India

Chandigarh - Chandigarh, Punjab und Haryana Sun Temple, Modhera, Gujarat  - Sonnentempel von Modhera Set in Stone: Gems and Stones from Royal Indian Courts - Set in Stone: Gems and Stones from Royal Indian Courts Chandigarh - Chandigarh, Punjab und Haryana Jaipur, City Palace Museum - City Palace, Jaipur Set in Stone: Gems and Stones from Royal Indian Courts - Set in Stone: Gems and Stones from Royal Indian Courts Albert Hall Museum, Jaipur - Jaipur, Rajasthan Suit of Elephant
Armour - City Palace, Jaipur Ahmedabad, House of MG - Ahmedabad, Gujarat Set in Stone: Gems and Stones from Royal Indian Courts - Set in Stone: Gems and Stones from Royal Indian Courts Eines der schönsten islamischen Steingitter in Indien, die zumeist einen geometrischen Dekor aufweisen, während hier ein vegetabiles Motiv, unter Umständen ein Lebensbaum, dominiert. - Jali Chandigarh - Chandigarh, Punjab und Haryana Ahmedabad, House of MG - Ahmedabad, Gujarat Hajji Ali Shrine, Mumbai / Bombay - Hajji Ali Schrein, Mumbai Qutb Shahi Heritage Park, Golconda, Telangana - Qutb Shahi Heritage Park, Golkonda

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Kabul 1970: women traditionally and modern dressed

Afghanistan, a country with a long and complex history, underwent dramatic developments during the 1970s. In 1973 the last King Zahir Shah (1914 - 2007, r. since 1933) was replaced in a coup d'etat by his cousin and former prime minister Mohammad Daud, who stayed in power until April 1978 overthrown himself by a military intervention. 


"On 27 April 1978 the world heard that there had been a successful military coup in Afghanistan. The régime headed by Mohammad Daud, which had itself come to power through a coup in July 1973, had been suddenly overthrown by tanks and jet planes that struck in the Afghan capital, Kabul. At first it seemed as if this was yet another military intervention which, although violent and abrupt, involved no major shift in the policies, social character or international alignment of those in power: a change comparable to Daud’s own coup, or to others in neighbouring Pakistan, Bangladesh, and the Arab world. Yet within days it became clear that the announcements of radical change coming over Radio Kabul were more than just the ritual demagogy of military coups: something rather more substantial had occurred." Fred Halliday on https://newleftreview.org/issues/i112/articles/fred-halliday-revolution-in-afghanistan

 

See images of 1970 taken on a private trip from Germany to Kabul on the land route in a VW beetle