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DUKAS_183195275_NUR
Bogor Zoological Museum In Indonesia
Visitors observe the collection of preserved tigers on display at the Zoological Museum in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia, on April 4, 2025. The museum and its laboratory are established in 1894 by the Dutch East Indies government. The museum has one of the largest collections of preserved fauna specimens in Southeast Asia. (Photo by Adriana Adie/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183195184_NUR
Bogor Zoological Museum In Indonesia
A visitor takes pictures of a preserved type collection of fish at the Zoological Museum in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia, on April 4, 2025. The museum and its laboratory are established in 1894 by the Dutch East Indies government. The museum has one of the largest collections of preserved fauna specimens in Southeast Asia. (Photo by Adriana Adie/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183195169_NUR
Bogor Zoological Museum In Indonesia
A visitor takes pictures of a preserved type collection of fish at the Zoological Museum in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia, on April 4, 2025. The museum and its laboratory are established in 1894 by the Dutch East Indies government. The museum has one of the largest collections of preserved fauna specimens in Southeast Asia. (Photo by Adriana Adie/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183195166_NUR
Bogor Zoological Museum In Indonesia
A visitor takes pictures of the display case featuring a preserved type collection of fish at the Zoological Museum in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia, on April 4, 2025. The museum and its laboratory are established in 1894 by the Dutch East Indies government. The museum has one of the largest collections of preserved fauna specimens in Southeast Asia. (Photo by Adriana Adie/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183195121_NUR
Bogor Zoological Museum In Indonesia
A visitor observes the collection of preserved tigers on display at the Zoological Museum in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia, on April 4, 2025. The museum and its laboratory are established in 1894 by the Dutch East Indies government. The museum has one of the largest collections of preserved fauna specimens in Southeast Asia. (Photo by Adriana Adie/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183195313_NUR
Bogor Zoological Museum In Indonesia
A preserved elephant head is on display at the Zoological Museum in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia, on April 4, 2025. The museum and its laboratory are established in 1894 by the Dutch East Indies government. The museum has one of the largest collections of preserved fauna specimens in Southeast Asia. (Photo by Adriana Adie/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183195306_NUR
Bogor Zoological Museum In Indonesia
A woman takes pictures of Hornbills preserved on display at the Zoological Museum in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia, on April 4, 2025. The museum and its laboratory are established in 1894 by the Dutch East Indies government. The museum has one of the largest collections of preserved fauna specimens in Southeast Asia. (Photo by Adriana Adie/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_166746524_FER
Tasty rock single released on a slice of pizza
Ferrari Press Agency
Pizza 1
Ref 15626
01/03/2024
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Belushi Speed Ball
A thrash metal rock act has come up with a tasty way to release a new single — on a slice of pizza.
American band Belushi Speed Ball’s new single is called My Favorite Color Is Pizza.
It comes in the form of a pizza slice preserved in resin, complete with a tiny speaker through which the song plays at the press of a button.
Belushi Speed Ball is a part of the “Pizza Thrash” sub-genre of thrash metal, a name for bands that lean on cultural references from the 1980s.
Talking about the release, singer Vinny Crastellano said: “A critic once called us , we assume as an insult, ‘the frozen pizza of pizza thrash.’
“Being the satirical scum bags that we are, we just leaned right on into this comment.
“We proudly became the first Pizza Thrash band to release a song on a physical piece of pizza.”
The preserved pizza in resin release comes in containers with comic-book style single cover art.
The price is $75 USD/ €69 euros from the group’s merchandising website.
Fans are offered the chance to buy either a “Detroit or New York” style pizza slice.
OPS: The Belushi Speed Ball single released via a preserved slice of pizza. Containers come either round or pizza wedge shaped.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_166746515_FER
Tasty rock single released on a slice of pizza
Ferrari Press Agency
Pizza 1
Ref 15626
01/03/2024
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Belushi Speed Ball
A thrash metal rock act has come up with a tasty way to release a new single — on a slice of pizza.
American band Belushi Speed Ball’s new single is called My Favorite Color Is Pizza.
It comes in the form of a pizza slice preserved in resin, complete with a tiny speaker through which the song plays at the press of a button.
Belushi Speed Ball is a part of the “Pizza Thrash” sub-genre of thrash metal, a name for bands that lean on cultural references from the 1980s.
Talking about the release, singer Vinny Crastellano said: “A critic once called us , we assume as an insult, ‘the frozen pizza of pizza thrash.’
“Being the satirical scum bags that we are, we just leaned right on into this comment.
“We proudly became the first Pizza Thrash band to release a song on a physical piece of pizza.”
The preserved pizza in resin release comes in containers with comic-book style single cover art.
The price is $75 USD/ €69 euros from the group’s merchandising website.
Fans are offered the chance to buy either a “Detroit or New York” style pizza slice.
OPS: The Belushi Speed Ball single released via a preserved slice of pizza. Containers come either round or pizza wedge shaped.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_166746513_FER
Tasty rock single released on a slice of pizza
Ferrari Press Agency
Pizza 1
Ref 15626
01/03/2024
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Belushi Speed Ball
A thrash metal rock act has come up with a tasty way to release a new single — on a slice of pizza.
American band Belushi Speed Ball’s new single is called My Favorite Color Is Pizza.
It comes in the form of a pizza slice preserved in resin, complete with a tiny speaker through which the song plays at the press of a button.
Belushi Speed Ball is a part of the “Pizza Thrash” sub-genre of thrash metal, a name for bands that lean on cultural references from the 1980s.
Talking about the release, singer Vinny Crastellano said: “A critic once called us , we assume as an insult, ‘the frozen pizza of pizza thrash.’
“Being the satirical scum bags that we are, we just leaned right on into this comment.
“We proudly became the first Pizza Thrash band to release a song on a physical piece of pizza.”
The preserved pizza in resin release comes in containers with comic-book style single cover art.
The price is $75 USD/ €69 euros from the group’s merchandising website.
Fans are offered the chance to buy either a “Detroit or New York” style pizza slice.
OPS: The Belushi Speed Ball single released via a preserved slice of pizza. Containers come either round or pizza wedge shaped.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_166746511_FER
Tasty rock single released on a slice of pizza
Ferrari Press Agency
Pizza 1
Ref 15626
01/03/2024
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Belushi Speed Ball
A thrash metal rock act has come up with a tasty way to release a new single — on a slice of pizza.
American band Belushi Speed Ball’s new single is called My Favorite Color Is Pizza.
It comes in the form of a pizza slice preserved in resin, complete with a tiny speaker through which the song plays at the press of a button.
Belushi Speed Ball is a part of the “Pizza Thrash” sub-genre of thrash metal, a name for bands that lean on cultural references from the 1980s.
Talking about the release, singer Vinny Crastellano said: “A critic once called us , we assume as an insult, ‘the frozen pizza of pizza thrash.’
“Being the satirical scum bags that we are, we just leaned right on into this comment.
“We proudly became the first Pizza Thrash band to release a song on a physical piece of pizza.”
The preserved pizza in resin release comes in containers with comic-book style single cover art.
The price is $75 USD/ €69 euros from the group’s merchandising website.
Fans are offered the chance to buy either a “Detroit or New York” style pizza slice.
OPS: The Belushi Speed Ball single released via a preserved slice of pizza. Containers come either round or pizza wedge shaped.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_166746510_FER
Tasty rock single released on a slice of pizza
Ferrari Press Agency
Pizza 1
Ref 15626
01/03/2024
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Belushi Speed Ball
A thrash metal rock act has come up with a tasty way to release a new single — on a slice of pizza.
American band Belushi Speed Ball’s new single is called My Favorite Color Is Pizza.
It comes in the form of a pizza slice preserved in resin, complete with a tiny speaker through which the song plays at the press of a button.
Belushi Speed Ball is a part of the “Pizza Thrash” sub-genre of thrash metal, a name for bands that lean on cultural references from the 1980s.
Talking about the release, singer Vinny Crastellano said: “A critic once called us , we assume as an insult, ‘the frozen pizza of pizza thrash.’
“Being the satirical scum bags that we are, we just leaned right on into this comment.
“We proudly became the first Pizza Thrash band to release a song on a physical piece of pizza.”
The preserved pizza in resin release comes in containers with comic-book style single cover art.
The price is $75 USD/ €69 euros from the group’s merchandising website.
Fans are offered the chance to buy either a “Detroit or New York” style pizza slice.
OPS: The Belushi Speed Ball single released via a preserved slice of pizza. Containers come either round or pizza wedge shaped.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_159555026_FER
Amazing mummified bees from time of pharaohs discovered
Ferrari Press Agency
Bees 1
Ref 15060
25/08/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Andrea Baucon/University of Lisbon
Hundreds of incredibly preserved mummified bees from the time of the pharaohs have been unearthed.
The bees were inside their cocoons produced almost three thousand years ago.
They were discovered in a new paleontological site on the coast of Odemira, in Portugal.
They date from the end of the Bronze Age at a time when a Pharaoh named Siamun ruled in Lower Egypt while around the same period, Solomon was to succeed David on the throne of Israel.
Because the striped insects died inside their cocoons , they were preserved in the smallest anatomical detail thanks to an extremely rare fossilisation method.
Normally the skeleton of these insects rapidly decomposes.
The degree of preservation was so exceptional , researchers were able to identify anatomical details that determine the type of bee as well as its sex and even the type of pollen used to feed the larva.
The bees belong to the Eucera species one of about 700 species that still exist in mainland Portugal today.
OPS:One of the cocoon bee specimens extracted from sediment filling a cocoon.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_159555025_FER
Amazing mummified bees from time of pharaohs discovered
Ferrari Press Agency
Bees 1
Ref 15060
25/08/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Federico Bernardini/ICTP
Hundreds of incredibly preserved mummified bees from the time of the pharaohs have been unearthed.
The bees were inside their cocoons produced almost three thousand years ago.
They were discovered in a new paleontological site on the coast of Odemira, in Portugal.
They date from the end of the Bronze Age at a time when a Pharaoh named Siamun ruled in Lower Egypt while around the same period, Solomon was to succeed David on the throne of Israel.
Because the striped insects died inside their cocoons , they were preserved in the smallest anatomical detail thanks to an extremely rare fossilisation method.
Normally the skeleton of these insects rapidly decomposes.
The degree of preservation was so exceptional , researchers were able to identify anatomical details that determine the type of bee as well as its sex and even the type of pollen used to feed the larva.
The bees belong to the Eucera species one of about 700 species that still exist in mainland Portugal today.
OPS:X-ray micro-computed 3D views of a male Eucera bee inside a sealed cocoon. The image shows the architecture of the excavated brood chamber closed by the spiral cap, containing an adult bee close to abandoning the cell.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_159555024_FER
Amazing mummified bees from time of pharaohs discovered
Ferrari Press Agency
Bees 1
Ref 15060
25/08/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Federico Bernardini/ICTP
Hundreds of incredibly preserved mummified bees from the time of the pharaohs have been unearthed.
The bees were inside their cocoons produced almost three thousand years ago.
They were discovered in a new paleontological site on the coast of Odemira, in Portugal.
They date from the end of the Bronze Age at a time when a Pharaoh named Siamun ruled in Lower Egypt while around the same period, Solomon was to succeed David on the throne of Israel.
Because the striped insects died inside their cocoons , they were preserved in the smallest anatomical detail thanks to an extremely rare fossilisation method.
Normally the skeleton of these insects rapidly decomposes.
The degree of preservation was so exceptional , researchers were able to identify anatomical details that determine the type of bee as well as its sex and even the type of pollen used to feed the larva.
The bees belong to the Eucera species one of about 700 species that still exist in mainland Portugal today.
OPS:X-ray micro-computed 3D views of a male Eucera bee inside a sealed cocoon.The image shows the architecture of the excavated brood chamber closed by the spiral cap, containing an adult bee close to abandoning the cell.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_131888381_EYE
Sutton Hoo of the north: £10.4m visitor centre to celebrate Anglo-Saxon site.
The story of Ad Gefrin, a royal complex in Northumberland valley discovered in 1950s, to be told at new attraction.
The construction of the Ad Gefrin centre a new world class cultural visitor attraction in Wooler, Northumberland, which will bring to life the history of the Anglo-British settlement and palace which were discovered at nearby eavering in one of the 20th centuryÕs most remarkable archaeological finds.
Wooler, Northumberland.
4th November 2021.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_131888406_EYE
Sutton Hoo of the north: £10.4m visitor centre to celebrate Anglo-Saxon site.
The story of Ad Gefrin, a royal complex in Northumberland valley discovered in 1950s, to be told at new attraction.
Project director Chris Ferguson stood on the site of the Anglo-Saxon royal court and Great Hall of Ad Gefrin at Yeavering in Northumberland. He is the project director for a new world class cultural visitor centre attraction, due to open nearby in Wooler in autumn 2022, which will bring to life the history of the Anglo-British settlement and palace which were discovered at Yeavering in one of the 20th century’s most remarkable archaeological finds.
Yeavering, Northumberland.
4th November 2021.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_131888379_EYE
Sutton Hoo of the north: £10.4m visitor centre to celebrate Anglo-Saxon site.
The story of Ad Gefrin, a royal complex in Northumberland valley discovered in 1950s, to be told at new attraction.
Project director Chris Ferguson stood on the site of the Anglo-Saxon royal court and Great Hall of Ad Gefrin at Yeavering in Northumberland. He is the project director for a new world class cultural visitor centre attraction, due to open nearby in Wooler in autumn 2022, which will bring to life the history of the Anglo-British settlement and palace which were discovered at Yeavering in one of the 20th century’s most remarkable archaeological finds.
Yeavering, Northumberland.
4th November 2021.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_131888378_EYE
Sutton Hoo of the north: £10.4m visitor centre to celebrate Anglo-Saxon site.
The story of Ad Gefrin, a royal complex in Northumberland valley discovered in 1950s, to be told at new attraction.
Project director Chris Ferguson stood on the site of the Anglo-Saxon royal court and Great Hall of Ad Gefrin at Yeavering in Northumberland. He is the project director for a new world class cultural visitor centre attraction, due to open nearby in Wooler in autumn 2022, which will bring to life the history of the Anglo-British settlement and palace which were discovered at Yeavering in one of the 20th century’s most remarkable archaeological finds.
Yeavering, Northumberland.
4th November 2021.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_131888377_EYE
Sutton Hoo of the north: £10.4m visitor centre to celebrate Anglo-Saxon site.
The story of Ad Gefrin, a royal complex in Northumberland valley discovered in 1950s, to be told at new attraction.
Project director Chris Ferguson stood on the site of the Anglo-Saxon royal court and Great Hall of Ad Gefrin at Yeavering in Northumberland. He is the project director for a new world class cultural visitor centre attraction, due to open nearby in Wooler in autumn 2022, which will bring to life the history of the Anglo-British settlement and palace which were discovered at Yeavering in one of the 20th century’s most remarkable archaeological finds.
Yeavering, Northumberland.
4th November 2021.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_131888380_EYE
Sutton Hoo of the north: £10.4m visitor centre to celebrate Anglo-Saxon site.
The story of Ad Gefrin, a royal complex in Northumberland valley discovered in 1950s, to be told at new attraction.
Project director Chris Ferguson stood on the site of the Anglo-Saxon royal court and Great Hall of Ad Gefrin at Yeavering in Northumberland. He is the project director for a new world class cultural visitor centre attraction, due to open nearby in Wooler in autumn 2022, which will bring to life the history of the Anglo-British settlement and palace which were discovered at Yeavering in one of the 20th century’s most remarkable archaeological finds.
Yeavering, Northumberland.
4th November 2021.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_131888376_EYE
Sutton Hoo of the north: £10.4m visitor centre to celebrate Anglo-Saxon site.
The story of Ad Gefrin, a royal complex in Northumberland valley discovered in 1950s, to be told at new attraction.
Project director Chris Ferguson stood on the site of the Anglo-Saxon royal court and Great Hall of Ad Gefrin at Yeavering in Northumberland. He is the project director for a new world class cultural visitor centre attraction, due to open nearby in Wooler in autumn 2022, which will bring to life the history of the Anglo-British settlement and palace which were discovered at Yeavering in one of the 20th century’s most remarkable archaeological finds.
Yeavering, Northumberland.
4th November 2021.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_131888405_EYE
Sutton Hoo of the north: £10.4m visitor centre to celebrate Anglo-Saxon site.
The story of Ad Gefrin, a royal complex in Northumberland valley discovered in 1950s, to be told at new attraction.
Project director Chris Ferguson stood on the site of the Anglo-Saxon royal court and Great Hall of Ad Gefrin at Yeavering in Northumberland. He is the project director for a new world class cultural visitor centre attraction, due to open nearby in Wooler in autumn 2022, which will bring to life the history of the Anglo-British settlement and palace which were discovered at Yeavering in one of the 20th century’s most remarkable archaeological finds.
Yeavering, Northumberland.
4th November 2021.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_131888403_EYE
Sutton Hoo of the north: £10.4m visitor centre to celebrate Anglo-Saxon site.
The story of Ad Gefrin, a royal complex in Northumberland valley discovered in 1950s, to be told at new attraction.
Project director Chris Ferguson stood on the site of the Anglo-Saxon royal court and Great Hall of Ad Gefrin at Yeavering in Northumberland. He is the project director for a new world class cultural visitor centre attraction, due to open nearby in Wooler in autumn 2022, which will bring to life the history of the Anglo-British settlement and palace which were discovered at Yeavering in one of the 20th century’s most remarkable archaeological finds.
Yeavering, Northumberland.
4th November 2021.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_131888375_EYE
Sutton Hoo of the north: £10.4m visitor centre to celebrate Anglo-Saxon site.
The story of Ad Gefrin, a royal complex in Northumberland valley discovered in 1950s, to be told at new attraction.
Project director Chris Ferguson stood on the site of the Anglo-Saxon royal court and Great Hall of Ad Gefrin at Yeavering in Northumberland. He is the project director for a new world class cultural visitor centre attraction, due to open nearby in Wooler in autumn 2022, which will bring to life the history of the Anglo-British settlement and palace which were discovered at Yeavering in one of the 20th century’s most remarkable archaeological finds.
Yeavering, Northumberland.
4th November 2021.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10105599_043
FEATURE - Pix of he Day: Bilder des Tages
Image ©Licensed to i-Images Picture Agency. 04/10/2018. London, United Kingdom. Bodyworlds photocall. Photocall for world famous exhibition of human anatomy launching as a permanent museum experience, featuring over 200 exhibits including preserved human bodies, at The London Pavilion, Piccadilly Institute, London. Picture by Nils Jorgensen / i-Images
(c) Dukas -
DUK10098885_062
FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Die Bilder des Tages
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ray Tang/REX/Shutterstock (9771480j)
A large full bodied shark is showing as part of the Sea Creatures exhibition. The painstakingly preserved displays use the same plastination process developed by Dr. Gunther von Hagens and made famous by artist Damien Hirst, replacing fluids and soluble fats with resins and allowing us to view incredibly accurate 'cross-sections' of the creatures.
Sea Creatures Exhibition, London, UK - 26 Jul 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10088702_011
FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Bilder des Tages
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Sipa Asia/REX/Shutterstock (9471352k)
The ancient town of Taierzhuang, located in Zaozhuang, east China's Shandong Province, is surrounded by water and is known for classical bridges, an old canal, wetland parks, temples, museums, and numerous traditional architectural buildings of bygone eras. Located on the bank of Beijing-Hangzhou Grand Canal, the two-square-kilometer town is the only remaining ancient town which is well preserved. The Zaozhuang municipal government allocated 4.8 billion yuan ($743.52 million) to restore its previous glory back from the Ming and Qing dynasties
Night Scenery of Tai'erzhuang Ancient Town, Zaozhuang, Shandong Province, China - 08 Mar 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_089
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012917.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000101/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_085
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012898.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000082/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_084
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012899.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000083/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_083
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012902.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000086/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_082
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012907.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000091/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_081
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012910.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000094/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_080
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012914.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000098/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_079
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012916.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000100/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_078
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012909.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000093/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_077
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012922.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000106/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_076
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012920.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000104/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_075
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012923.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000107/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110907 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_074
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012940.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000124/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110907 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_073
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012938.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000122/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110907 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_072
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012937.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000121/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110907 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_071
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012933.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000117/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110907 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_070
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012931.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000115/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110907 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_069
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012928.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000112/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110907 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_068
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012924.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000108/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110907 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_067
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012823.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000007/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110901 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_066
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012840.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000024/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110902 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas -
DUK10068450_065
REPORTAGE - Italien: Apice Vecchia seit dem Erdbeben von 1962 verlassen
Apice is a small center on the border between the Avellino province and the province of Benevento. Today it is divided into Apice Nuova and Apice Vecchia since, following the earthquake of 1962, the municipal administration decided to move the entire population to a new part of the territory. From that moment on, everything has remained unaltered: time seems to have stopped in a snapshot of 40 years ago. At the entrance to the old town there is a Norman castle dating back to the 8th century that surrounds the entire town and opposes other buildings to the way it is preserved. Going through the many lanes, up the narrow streets, you can notice how the environment has been altered only by the ineluctable flow of time and nature that, decidedly, begins to recover its spaces. You can walk through these streets, look into the houses and realize how everything was as it was. Looking through the cracks of the houses and the muddy walls, moving into the different rooms, one imagines what was, as those seemingly quiet lives were shaken by a sudden and ruthless phenomenon such as an earthquake can be: an idea of ??interrupted life that It is time-consuming and today allows you to look away from everyday life, to dream of moments that have never lived. Signs of hand-drawn shops are still intact, the houses are ruined and invaded by the weed; Well-preserved cellars and old cars parked in the garage (Photo by Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press) - pacifi012835.JPG//PACIFICPRESS_xyz00000053_000019/Credit:Sonia Brandolone/PACIFIC /SIPA/1708110901 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00817926
(c) Dukas