Saturday, 27 October 2007
Friday, 26 October 2007

A closeup of the Shkhara Glacier, bottom; and the view back to where we came from, top. The river here comes directly from the glacier itself.
This week's first-time visitor countries: welcome to Denmark, Kenya and Greece! Now you are 60!

Labels:
Caucasus,
glacier,
Republic of Georgia,
Shkhara,
Svaneti

Today, two dead tongues.
Above, Latin.
Below, ever seen Gothic before? Not the fashion statement or the philospohy or the literary genre, but the long-dead language? Well, now you can say that you have. As usual from this Centre, handwritten.

Labels:
Gothic,
Handwritten,
National Manuscript Centre,
Tbilisi
Thursday, 25 October 2007

Below, the river again. (All of these water shots have a shutter speed as slow as the aperture would allow, usually about 1/8 to 1/4 second, in order to blur the water a bit. Hand-held, not tripod-mounted. So they're not as pin-sharp as a tripod would afford; they're still pretty good for such slow shutter speeds.
Above, as close as I got to the glacier itself. It's hard to capture scales here - this is such a gigantic thing, and my 24mm wide-angle lens only makes it seem smaller by compressing more into the image. The little black hole at lower right is a cave big enough to stand up in.
Labels:
Caucasus,
glacier,
Republic of Georgia,
Shkhara,
Svaneti

Two more from the beautiful Armenian Bible of yesterday's posts.

Labels:
Armenian,
Handwritten,
National Manuscript Centre,
Tbilisi
Wednesday, 24 October 2007

Walking towards the glacier, above Ushguli, alongside rocks stained iron-red and a mighty little river fed by the meltwater.

Labels:
Caucasus,
glacier,
Mt Shkhara,
Republic of Georgia,
Svaneti

A lovely handwritten, hand-illuminated Armenian Bible. More to come.

Labels:
Armenian,
Handwritten,
National Manuscript Centre,
Tbilisi
Tuesday, 23 October 2007

Bottom, a massive, awe-inspiring slate outcrop a bit below Ushguli. Hard to get a sense of its scale from most angles; this is one scene which warrants many returns for different lightings.
Top 2, walking with my American friends towards the huge Shkhara glacier. Quite a few more shots from this walk to follow in the next days' posts.

Labels:
Caucasus,
glacier,
Republic of Georgia,
Shkhara,
Svaneti

Bottom, Amharic from Ethiopia, the oldest manuscript I saw, from the 10th century.
Top, Armenian, written on a grape leaf, date unknown.

Labels:
Amharic,
Armenian,
Handwritten,
National Manuscript Centre,
Tbilisi
Monday, 22 October 2007

I had noticed this delicately hanging slate blade several trips prior, on the walk through Svaneti in June. This was the first time I photographed it, though. How long has it waited like this? Months, years, decades? I wouldn't advise standing under it: it is big enough and sharp enough to split or decapitate someone if it falls.

Labels:
Caucasus,
Republic of Georgia,
slate,
Svaneti

A final two from the illuminated Quran, before moving on to other manuscripts and languages.

Labels:
Handwritten,
National Manuscript Centre,
Quran,
Tbilisi
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)