I loved that house the moment I laid eyes on it!
Old enough to awake all the nostalgic feelings that I tend to fall for, so easily and at the same time in a condition good enough to live in, without all the annoying problems of old houses. I should know. My previous house was more than 130 years old and as beautiful as it was, it made our life difficult as it was gradually collapsing on our heads :)
But this one looked great. And in the middle of a wonderful meadow too! How rare is that?
I started fantasising the garden I could create around it. All the vegetables, the fruit trees and the herbs I could plant in this nice plot, leaving of course the emblematic palm tree as a landmark of my house!
Too bad I can't live there, no-one can.
All that, the house, the palm tree, the meadow, they are all in an archeological site which means that the ministry of culture is responsible for them and no-one could ever live there any more. Such an irony for a place that has been inhabited successively since the Neolithic period, something like 7.000 years in a row!
Whoever built this house and lived in it, was probably unaware of the enormous history of this location, as well as of the fact that he/she/they would be the last inhabitants of this specific spot.
Those massive walls are the citadel of Tyrins, very close to the town of Nafplio in Greece. I have already written a post about the archeological significance of this place. If you are interested you can read it here.
But today I want to talk only about this house that will never be used as a house ever again! I don't know why I am so fond of it, let's just call it love at first sight :)
And that view, isn't it great?
Although I was standing on a citadel, a place inseparably associated with war, I couldn't stop myself from daydreaming of a different version of history. A peaceful, creative, harmonious with nature and earth itself version, where citadels would not exist because no-one would be willing to go to war!
And then I wake up from my dream and walked back to the exit :)
This is my entry for the #monomad challenge.
The camera that I used is a Canon EOS 6D mark II with an EF 24-105mm f4L lens attached. I edited the photographs in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic
All the pictures and the words are mine.
Thank you for reading and if you want to know more about me you can check out my introduction post.
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