ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 2月22日 05時57分


Black Africans could never have built the Great Zimbabwe monument — or so the white rulers used to say. Sprawling across 2,000 acres in southern #Zimbabwe, the Great Zimbabwe was a city founded in the 11th century and inhabited, at its peak, by more than 10,000 people. Starting as early as 1905, archaeologists said that local Africans had built it, a conclusion reinforced by carbon dating and other scientific developments over the decades. But the British colonial authorities, and then the white-minority government in power, would hear nothing of it. Today, the Great Zimbabwe is a @unesco World Heritage site and one of the few surviving precolonial monuments in sub-Saharan Africa. It’s also the continent’s fiercest archaeological battleground. Zimbabwe’s current leaders have used it to find a rationale for their party’s 37 uninterrupted years in power. Our staff photographer @joaosilva_nyt photographed the #GreatZimbabwe while on #nytassignment.


[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield) 更年期に悩んだら

>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する

9,936

44

2017/2/22

メイドウェルのインスタグラム
メイドウェルさんがフォロー

ニューヨーク・タイムズを見た方におすすめの有名人