
This Is What The Forgotten 7 Wonders Of The Ancient World Really Looked Like In Their Prime
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What is the first thing you do before planning a trip? Hop on the convenient TripAdvisor or one of the thousands of other websites available for advice, must-see destinations, trip highlights, interesting facts, and candid travelers’ photos. Before the magical power of the Internet, people had to discover everything first-hand and sharing their experience on social media wasn’t an option. Ancient tourists had to turn to scholarly advice when it came to beautiful sights to behold. And here is when the ultimate “must-see” list of seven wonders of the World came about.
A list of the greatest examples of human ingenuity, amazing architecture and genius engineering conducted by various Hellenic authors in guidebooks and poems dates from 1st-2nd century BC. Contributors to the list of the Wonders of the World include Philo of Byzantium, Herodotus, Callimachus of Cyrene and Antipater of Sidon. But if you decide to base your holiday plans on this iconic historical sites list, you’re likely to be disappointed as only one of the original ancient history wonders survived the ruthless test of time – the mighty Great Pyramid of Giza.
Even though most of the Seven Wonders have fallen into disrepair, they continued to inspire masterful artists to use their imagination and turn the intangible relicts of Earth’s early civilizations to life. Budget Direct decided to give the modern culture-lovers a chance to visit the majestic ancient structures through a series of photo-realistic 3D renderings. After in-depth research, the exceptional work of architectural design duo Keremcan Kirilmaz and Erdem Batirbek, under the guidance of NeoMam’s art director, and motion graphic artists at Fractal Motion, lifelike recreations depict how the seven wonders would have looked in their heyday.
“Our goal was to inspire people to rediscover the long-forgotten wonders of the ancient world. We aim to spark the curiosity of frequent travelers and Internet users alike, showcasing areas of the world that perhaps they’ve not read about before and have considered visiting. Our focus was to bring these relics to life so that readers could get a better feel of what they really looked like in their prime. The result is seven beautiful animated reconstructions that bring these unique structures to life before your very eyes!” – said the authors of the project.
We grant you a ticket for an interesting historical journey through the seven wonders of the ancient world, so fasten your seatbelts!
More info: budgetdirect.com.au
Colossus of Rhodes
Image credits: Budget Direct
Image credits: Budget Direct
The Colossus was a 104ft tall triumphal statue of Greek sun god Helios built over Mandraki Harbour in Rhodes on 49ft marble pedestals allowing ships to pass between his legs. As if this wasn’t statement enough to mark the victory over Demetrius Poliorcetes’ long siege of Rhodes, the Rhodians built the statue from the melted-down remains of the recently-defeated Cypriot army’s arsenal. The Colossus, a symbol of unity, was sculpted during twelve years beginning in 304 BC by Chares of Lindos. Unfortunately, despite the gigantic size, the marvel couldn’t withstand a powerful earthquake a mere 56 years later. The statue remained in decline for almost a millennium until after the invasion of Arabs, when it was melted down by the Muslim caliph Muawiyah and sold for the scrap.
Great Pyramid of Giza
Image credits: Budget Direct
Image credits: Budget Direct
These days, a ‘new tallest building’ appears almost every month, and it doesn’t impress anyone, but it took modern man until the 19th century to build a taller building than the Great Pyramid of Giza which held the record of being world’s tallest man-made structure for more than four thousand years. The 481ft-tall pyramid was built on 13 acres as a tomb for the Egyptian pharaoh Khufu in 2560 BCE. It was discovered that up to 100,000 skilled Egyptians stayed at the temporary city while building pyramids, and this largest and most impressive construction of 2.3 million stone blocks weighing between 2.5-15 tons is the only ancient wonder left to admire for modern-day tourists.
Hanging Gardens of Babylon
Image credits: Budget Direct
Image credits: Budget Direct
There’s some speculation over whether this list’s entry existed in real life or just in a writer’s imagination. It certainly would’ve been a challenge to build – with its epic 65ft high terraces and complex machinery, it seems like an engineering masterpiece. Legend has it, that The Hanging Gardens of Babylon were built near the Euphrates River in modern-day Iraq as a gift from Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar to his wife, Amytis, who was homesick for the verdant mountains of the Median Empire. Whether a fairytale or true story – the gardens looked like a green paradise on Earth.
Lighthouse of Alexandria
Image credits: Budget Direct
Image credits: Budget Direct
The lighthouse that set the bar for all future lighthouses, the monumental Lighthouse of Alexandria, commissioned by Ptolemy I and built in 300 – 280 BCE by Sostratus of Cnidus, is believed to be the first lighthouse in the world. The spectacular 330ft tall building was for centuries the third tallest building in the world after the pyramids of Giza. A burning fire on top of the structure of three levels: a square level at the bottom, an octagonal level in the middle and a cylindrical top, guided men at sea until the lighthouse was gradually demolished by earthquakes between the 12th century and late 15th century and transformed into a medieval fortress by Mamlūk sultan Qāʾit Bāy.
Mausoleum at Halicarnassus
Image credits: Budget Direct
Image credits: Budget Direct
You know you made a pretty outstanding building when there is a new term created after you. An elaborate tomb built for Mausolus, king of Caria, was so spectacular that the late ruler’s name became a word describing a large funeral monument. The massive 148ft mausoleum was built in present-day Bodrum around 350 BCE. Made of white marble, the structure reflected Greek, Egyptian and Lycian architectural features. It made the list thanks to the huge, spectacular sculptures, one of which was a statue of Mausolus riding a chariot. The Mausoleum gradually fell into disrepair from numerous earthquakes in 13th century.
Statue of Zeus
Image credits: Budget Direct
Image credits: Budget Direct
Wood will always be a true classic of all building materials. Unfortunately, the Elean culture’s Statue of Zeus at Olympia has not stood the test of time – or, more accurately, the test of fire. The 43ft tall remarkable piece, which depicted the God of Thunder on a throne, was an attempt to overshadow the Athenians, but it didn’t shine for long. Its wooden frame and cedar throne were destroyed in 426CE, and its rich gold, ivory, ebony decorations and precious stones are now missing, presumed pilfered.
Temple of Artemis at Ephesus
Image credits: Budget Direct
Image credits: Budget Direct
Say what you want about this tribute to the Greek goddess of chastity, hunting, wild animals, forests, and fertility, but it was certainly provocative. In fact, it was built and destroyed three times: Herostratus was first, in an act of attention-seeking arson; then the Goths, who destroyed the city on the run; and finally, in 401 CE, the Christians left behind only the foundations and a single column which can still be visited today in Turkey.
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These are great, I wish they would restore them in real life.
If some billionaires tried to do that, people would be pissed. If governments tried to use tax money to do it, people would be pissed. It ain't gonna happen if the cathedral is any indication of how stupid people are. Mad it's gone, yet mad people are restoring it.
It's not stupid, you would be paving over actual history with what we think the Pyramid would have looked like, why not just build something similar if that's what you want. In time we maybe able to find techniques that could tell us even more about these wonders which pouring a ton of concrete or whatever way they plan to restore it now would damage.
I don't understand. Why would they be mad about restoration?
This comment is hidden. Click here to view.
I bet your house is an absolute run down dilapidated shit hole, right?
I would donate to do that, and I'm quite sure a lot of people (rich or not) would do the same. but I'm quite sure we are not allowed to touch the original ruins so why we didn't build near them? Or in a place where it's possibile? Like I would definitively travel to Rome to see the original Coliseum then to (add a random location near Rome) where I can see the restored one. It would be fun to do some fake recreations of the battles there or throw in them some opera concert!
Oh chillax people it's an "I wish"
I'm with you on that. Fed up of walking around bits of old building crumbling away. Much more impressive if they were restored to how the builders originally wanted them to look. Children we be much more engaged with history if they walked into a fully functioning castle rather than some crumbling ruins.
The destroyed building themselves have history..not only an homage to the architects that designed and built them, but how well the remains held up through so many wars and natural disasters. I would be nice to have some of them restored, but life takes priority over art/history. And with the current state of radical Muslim and Political terrorists that are making it their mission to destroy anything Historical, Western or Christian...it's best to wait until things calm down.
This comment has been deleted.
Very nice! Thanks for these, Panda's been bringing their A game lately. Keep it up!
This comment is hidden. Click here to view.
Thanks Lazar for your irrelevant comment. Us Pandas REALLLLY needed to hear that...
@Sugar Latte - I think you need a crash course in basic online civility ;)
This comment is hidden. Click here to view.
What about this is nice?!?! Absolutely nothing, that’s what.
Odjebi.
Nice effort to show us how huge these monuments were, and how they would have looked if preserved up to today! amazing! The size of Colossus of Rhodes, f.e. is stunning.
That cant be to scale. It looks about 800 ft high in the picture not 100 ft as stated
The Colossus on the picture is way, way, way bigger than 100ft.
It's a bit out of proportion. 01_Seven-W...05d3dc.jpg
I would kind of like to see a statue made of all the guns that have been confiscated from individuals. I bet that would be quite tall! Perhaps in the form of people feeding children bread....instead of giving them guns.
Who is giving children guns?
@Nikki D, Perhaps you have heard the term "Child Soldiers"? "There are as many as 300,000 children under the age of 18 presently serving as combatants around the globe. Their average age is just over 12 years old. The youngest ever was an armed 5 year old in Uganda. The youngest ever terrorist bomber a 7 year old in Colombia." https://www.brookings.edu/on-the.../young-soldiers-used-in-conflicts-around-the-world/
This comment is hidden. Click here to view.
You have food on your table because Americans carried guns to Italy, France, Germany and to Asia. It was an off duty Border Patrol agent with a gun who short circuited the attack on the San Diego Synagogue a few days ago.
These are great, I wish they would restore them in real life.
If some billionaires tried to do that, people would be pissed. If governments tried to use tax money to do it, people would be pissed. It ain't gonna happen if the cathedral is any indication of how stupid people are. Mad it's gone, yet mad people are restoring it.
It's not stupid, you would be paving over actual history with what we think the Pyramid would have looked like, why not just build something similar if that's what you want. In time we maybe able to find techniques that could tell us even more about these wonders which pouring a ton of concrete or whatever way they plan to restore it now would damage.
I don't understand. Why would they be mad about restoration?
This comment is hidden. Click here to view.
I bet your house is an absolute run down dilapidated shit hole, right?
I would donate to do that, and I'm quite sure a lot of people (rich or not) would do the same. but I'm quite sure we are not allowed to touch the original ruins so why we didn't build near them? Or in a place where it's possibile? Like I would definitively travel to Rome to see the original Coliseum then to (add a random location near Rome) where I can see the restored one. It would be fun to do some fake recreations of the battles there or throw in them some opera concert!
Oh chillax people it's an "I wish"
I'm with you on that. Fed up of walking around bits of old building crumbling away. Much more impressive if they were restored to how the builders originally wanted them to look. Children we be much more engaged with history if they walked into a fully functioning castle rather than some crumbling ruins.
The destroyed building themselves have history..not only an homage to the architects that designed and built them, but how well the remains held up through so many wars and natural disasters. I would be nice to have some of them restored, but life takes priority over art/history. And with the current state of radical Muslim and Political terrorists that are making it their mission to destroy anything Historical, Western or Christian...it's best to wait until things calm down.
This comment has been deleted.
Very nice! Thanks for these, Panda's been bringing their A game lately. Keep it up!
This comment is hidden. Click here to view.
Thanks Lazar for your irrelevant comment. Us Pandas REALLLLY needed to hear that...
@Sugar Latte - I think you need a crash course in basic online civility ;)
This comment is hidden. Click here to view.
What about this is nice?!?! Absolutely nothing, that’s what.
Odjebi.
Nice effort to show us how huge these monuments were, and how they would have looked if preserved up to today! amazing! The size of Colossus of Rhodes, f.e. is stunning.
That cant be to scale. It looks about 800 ft high in the picture not 100 ft as stated
The Colossus on the picture is way, way, way bigger than 100ft.
It's a bit out of proportion. 01_Seven-W...05d3dc.jpg
I would kind of like to see a statue made of all the guns that have been confiscated from individuals. I bet that would be quite tall! Perhaps in the form of people feeding children bread....instead of giving them guns.
Who is giving children guns?
@Nikki D, Perhaps you have heard the term "Child Soldiers"? "There are as many as 300,000 children under the age of 18 presently serving as combatants around the globe. Their average age is just over 12 years old. The youngest ever was an armed 5 year old in Uganda. The youngest ever terrorist bomber a 7 year old in Colombia." https://www.brookings.edu/on-the.../young-soldiers-used-in-conflicts-around-the-world/
This comment is hidden. Click here to view.
You have food on your table because Americans carried guns to Italy, France, Germany and to Asia. It was an off duty Border Patrol agent with a gun who short circuited the attack on the San Diego Synagogue a few days ago.