Saturday 11 January 2014

Hygiea



Goddess of health in Greek mythology. This head is all that remains of what must have been a beautiful marble statue made by the Greek sculptor and architect Scopa c. 400 BC. 











My copy is a stone reproduction I bought some years ago at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. It is slightly smaller than the original and measures about 23 centimetres from base of neck to top of crown.

Egypt army chief al-Sisi 'may run for president'

General al-Sisi
(BBC) - Egypt's army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi will run for president if the people request it and the military supports the bid, state media quote him saying.

"If I nominate myself, there must be a popular demand, and a mandate from my army," state paper Al-Ahram quoted him as telling Egyptian officials. See:

Khaju Bridge, Isfahan, Iran (2008)


The above image of the Zayandeh River in Isfahan, Iran, is, in itself, unremarkable. But the Khaju Bridge across it, built in c. 1650 AD, is a very beautiful and unusual sight, especially when seen illuminated after dusk.

I took these pictures when touring Iran in 2008.

Khaju Bridge, Isfahan, Iran. (2008)

Israel's warrior Ariel (Arik) Sharon dies

Ariel Sharon (1928 - 2014)
Former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has died aged 85 after spending eight years in a coma following a stroke.
He was a giant of Israel's military and political scene, but courted controversy throughout his long career.
The head of the Sheba Medical Centre near Tel Aviv said Mr Sharon had died on Saturday afternoon of heart failure.
PM Benjamin Netanyahu said he was a great warrior but a senior Palestinian said his path was war and aggression.
He fought in Israel's war of independence in 1948, and from that point until he slipped into a coma in 2006 it seemed there was hardly a moment of national drama in which he did not play a role, our correspondent says.
The 85-year-old became PM in 2001 and in 2005 completed a unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, barely a year before he suffered a massive stroke.
As prime minister, Mr Sharon presided over some of the most turbulent times in Israeli-Palestinian history, a Palestinian uprising that erupted in 2000 and a subsequent tough Israeli military response.
To many Israelis, he was a heroic warrior, having led decisive campaigns in the 1967 and 1973 wars.
But Palestinians remember him for Israel's invasion of Lebanon in 1982, during which a massacre of civilians was carried out by Christian Phalangist militia in Beirut's Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. Ariel Sharon was found personally responsible by an Israeli inquiry for allowing the massacre to happen.
Known as Arik, Mr Sharon entered politics after the 1973 war but he became defence minister in 1981 and took charge of the invasion of Lebanon the following year, in an attempt to remove Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) fighters who had carried out attacks across Israel's northern border.
After the Kahan commission into the Beirut massacres recommended he be removed from office, Mr Sharon was forced to resign as defence minister but stayed in government. But it was not until 2001 that he came to power as prime minister.
Danny Ayalon, a former Israeli ambassador to the US under Ariel Sharon, said the late prime minister's decision to pull out of Gaza in 2005 had changed the political landscape and he was prepared to take creative steps towards a solution with the Palestinians.
~ ~ ~
Sharon was born Ariel Scheinerman in the Sharon Valley in 1928, in a Palestine still under a British mandate. His parents, Shmuel and Devorah, were farmers - Zionist emigres from Russia.
The family farm was often subjected to raids by neighbouring Arab tribesmen. Sharon learned how to fight at an early age.
Wounded warrior
It is said that, as a child, he would bury the family rifle under dung in the cowshed when British patrols passed by. At high school in Tel Aviv he studied agriculture, politics and military affairs, while also learning to be a teenage warrior.
Aged just 14, the young Sharon joined the Haganah, the underground Jewish military organisation which was the forerunner of the Israeli army.
Six years later, in 1948, he was commanding an infantry company when Israel came into being.
Sharon, at one point badly wounded in the stomach in the ensuing war, led from the front, often in an armoured car liberally stocked with vodka and caviar for his men to share.
In 1953, while a military intelligence officer, he founded the commando Unit 101, charged with raiding the West Bank - then under Jordanian occupation - in retaliation for attacks on Israel.
One raid, on the border village of Qibya, ended in shame for Sharon. His men, who had been instructed to blow up 10 homes in retaliation for a raid on Israel which had killed three people, demolished 45 houses and a school and killed 69 people.
The international furore forced the then Israeli Prime Minister, David Ben-Gurion, publicly to apologise for his troops' excesses.
Admired strategist
Even so, Sharon's career went from strength to strength. October 1956 saw Israeli armour spearhead an attack into Egyptian territory on the Sinai peninsula, in support of the British and French attacks on Suez.
Ariel Sharon was once again in the vanguard, in charge of a parachute brigade which captured the strategically-crucial Mitla Pass.
This bloody battle, in which many of his own men had died, was condemned as reckless even by the army's Chief of Staff, Moshe Dayan.
After a spell studying military theory at the British Army's Staff College at Camberley, the newly-promoted Colonel Sharon returned to Israel where, for three years, he ran the army's infantry school.
He was back in action in the 1967 war, commanding an armoured division when Israel's armed forces launched a pre-emptive strike on its Arab neighbours.
He recaptured the Mitla Pass and the route to the Suez Canal, cementing a reputation as a brilliant strategist. 
'Undecided war'
Frustrated in his ambition to become chief of staff, Sharon resigned from the Israeli army in June 1972 to pursue a career in public life.
But his promising political career - he formed the Likud party shortly after leaving the army - was put on hold when he was recalled to active service following Egypt and Syria's surprise attack on Israel in October 1973.
Once again in charge of an armoured division, he spearheaded Israel's counter-attack, crashing through the Egyptian lines to reach, and cross, the Suez Canal again before being ordered by his superiors to advance no further.
Moshe Dayan and Ariel Sharon in 1973
Sharon with Moshe Dayan after crossing the Suez Canal - 1973
Israel's failure, as he saw it, to finish the job by destroying Egypt's armed forces, was a huge mistake. He called it "an undecided war".
His army career over, Sharon now devoted his life to politics. December 1973 saw him elected to Israel's parliament, the Knesset, as a Likud member.
During the mid-1970s he served as defence adviser to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin before being appointed minister of agriculture by Rabin's successor, Menachem Begin, in 1977.
He greatly expanded the ministry's remit, dealing with rural matters but also developing a plan for permanent Jewish settlements in the territories occupied by Israel in 1967.
"I believe that if we establish these settlements," he said at the time, "we will feel sufficiently secure to accept risks for the sake of peace."
Refugee camp massacres
He opposed the Camp David peace accord thrashed out by Begin and Presidents Carter and Sadat, believing that the guidelines on future Palestinian autonomy were too vague.
But he remained, and prospered, in the Israeli government. Promoted to defence minister, Ariel Sharon was still to face the most controversial moment of his career.
In June 1982, he ordered an invasion of Lebanon, Israel's northern neighbour, to push back Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) fighters who were based there.
Within days, Israeli armour and artillery were besieging Lebanon's capital, Beirut.
After two months, 14,000 PLO and Syrian fighters agreed to leave Beirut. But tens of thousands of Palestinians remained behind, crammed into refugee camps such as Sabra and Shatila in Beirut.
Breaking a promise he had given to the Americans, Sharon sent his troops into West Beirut, saying that 2,000 PLO fighters were hiding in the camps.
However he made the fateful decision to let the PLO's foe, the Phalangist Christian militia, go in.
Added to this, the Phalange's former leader, Lebanon's President-elect, Bashir Gemayel, had been assassinated the day before.
In the massacre which followed at least 800 - though figures of up to 2,000 have been mooted - Palestinian refugees died and many others were raped and tortured.
Worldwide condemnation followed - 400,000 people took part in the largest demonstration ever seen in Israel. Sharon was called a murderer.
But he refused to resign from the government and Begin demoted him to minister without portfolio.
Forced from office
The following year an Israeli commission of inquiry ruled that he carried personal responsibility for failing to prevent the massacre in the camps.
Sharon refused to accept any responsibility for the tragedy. "Not for a moment did we imagine that they would do what they did," he protested.
"They [the Phalange] had received harsh and clear warnings. Had we for one moment imagined that something like this would happen we would never have let them into the camp."
But the Kahan commission concluded that he "disregarded the danger" and recommended that he resign from office.
Sharon's career suffered after Lebanon and he remained in the background of Israeli politics, running a number of ministries but not scaling the heights he had previously enjoyed.
That is, until Likud's 1999 election defeat. Unexpectedly, the party chose Sharon to succeed its former leader, Benjamin Netanyahu.
He swept into power in 2001, six months after the beginning of the second Palestinian uprising, or intifada, which began when Sharon paid a controversial visit to the the holy site in Jerusalem known as the Temple Mount to Jews, and Haram al-Sharif to Muslims.
He was elected, like so many of his predecessors, on a promise of peace and security for Israelis, but he struggled to achieve that illusive goal.
West Bank barrier near Bethlehem (2013)Sharon ordered the West bank barrier to be built after waves of deadly attacks by Palestinian militants.
Sharon looked to unilateral measures - the building of a barrier in the West Bank after scores of deadly attacks by Palestinian militants and pulling settlers and troops out of the Gaza Strip and a small area of the West Bank.
But the West Bank barrier - built on occupied land - was unacceptable to the international community. The Gaza disengagement plan had his own constituency, the settlers and the hard right, accusing him of weakness and betrayal.
Tired of the opposition from within his own party over the withdrawal, in November 2005 he resigned from Likud to form a new centrist party, Kadima - meaning "forward" in Hebrew.
The idea was to give himself more room for manoeuvre in seeking a peace deal with the Palestinians.
What this would have achieved will now never be known.
In December 2005, Sharon suffered a mild stroke. A second, major stroke in January 2006 sent Israel's warrior into a coma from which he never awoke.
Sharon, the young warrior

Rain

Into each life some rain must fall

Reading a Novel Changes Your Brain

Scientists have proven in the past that reading stimulates many different parts of the brain. In a 2006 study, for example, research subjects read the words “perfume” and “coffee,” and the part of their brains devoted to the sense of smell lit up. While these  studies have focused on brain activity while a person is reading, a new study suggests that reading doesn’t just make a fleeting impression. It may make long-term changes to to the brain.

Read the full story here: http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2014/01/study-reading-a-novel-changes-your-brain/282952/
The Danube is one of Europe’s principle rivers, flowing through several countries from its source in the Black Forest in Germany until it  empties into the Black Sea in Romania. It flows mainly in a south-easterly direction until it finds its way blocked by the mountains of northern Hungary forcing the river to make a very sharp 90 degrees turn to the south. This rather dramatic and spectacular ‘bend’ in the river occurs at the town of Esztergom, famous for its beautiful mountain-top basilica with its spectacular green dome.


I took this picture of the river in the spring of 2006 from a point just south of the ‘bend’.




And just a short distance further up the river the basilica comes into view. 



The mystery of the most fatal week of the year

More British people die during the first full week of the year than at any other time. But perhaps surprisingly, it's not as simple as blaming the cold weather.
The fact that more people die during the winter months probably won't come as much of a surprise, but the reasons behind it might.
The chart below shows deaths by day during December and January in England and Wales. It shows a peak during the first full week of the year.

Sunshine over London

London from the air on a 'sunny day'


Christopher Jefferies - victim


In December 2010, Christopher Jefferies was arrested for the murder of landscape architect Jo Yeates and vilified by the press. Here, in his most personal and emotional account to date, he writes about the far-reaching impact of the episode, even after he was cleared. To find out what it's like to be caheged with murder when you are innocent read here: 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-25625572.

Friday 10 January 2014

Tehran at Dawn




Dawn image of Tehran with the Alborz Mountains in the background. The tall, minaret-like image (top left), is a communications tower,

Picture taken in spring 2008.