A thread of lesser-known architectural wonders that we lost over the ages (and what happened to them)... 🧵
1. Old London Bridge - the longest inhabited bridge in Europe
A 12th century marvel spanning 900 feet and lined with shops and houses. Considered a wonder of the world, it was a place of religious pilgrimage and royal pageantry.
It was only demolished in the 19th century in a dilapidated state, when a bridge with a wider road was needed.
2. The Round City of Baghdad, Iraq
Residence of the Abbasid caliphs and the de-facto center of Islamic world from 766 until its destruction by the Mongols in 1258 - thus ending the Islamic Golden Age.
It contained the largest medieval library in the Islamic World, the House of Wisdom.
When the Mongols sacked it, the Tigris river is said to have ran black with the ink of manuscripts tossed into the water - including some of the rarest Greco-Arabic texts in existence.
3. The Bologna Towers, Italy
The "Manhattan of the Middle Ages". In the 12th and 13th centuries, the city of Bologna had a skyline of around 200 towers - mostly around 25 meters but some as high as 100 meters.
We don't know exactly why they built them, but some may have been for defensive purposes. Over the centuries, they either collapsed or were demolished, although around 20 still stand today:
4. Great Pyramid N6, Sudan
Inspired by the Egyptians, Nubian monarchs built pyramidal tombs in the Nile valley between 800 BC and 300 AD.
Among the greatest was this, one of the Nubian Pyramids of Meroë, destroyed by notorious treasure-hunter Giuseppe Ferlini in the 1830s.
5. The Louvre Castle, Paris
This massive 12th century castle once stood in the center of Paris, built by King Philip II to reinforce the old city walls. It was demolished during the Renaissance to make way for the Louvre Palace - now home of the Louvre museum.
6. The Old Bank of England, London
Another of London's most significant lost buildings. Sir John Soane designed this labyrinth of neoclassical spaces in 1788. It was operational until the 1920s when was replaced by a larger structure.
7. Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, Ukraine
Built near Kharkov in the Russian Empire (modern-day Ukraine) and pictured in 1894 shortly after completion. It was razed in the 1930s when thousands of churches were demolished by Stalin.
8. The Neue Elbbrücke Bridge, Hamburg
One of Europe's most glorious bridges - destroyed not by aerial bombs, but by urban planning zealots.
The original was completed in 1887 and featured two beautiful neo-Gothic gateways. It was torn down in 1959 to add an additional lane.
Lent marks Christ's 40 days in the Judaean Desert, where he's confronted by Satan.
Their clash is an epic philosophical showdown, and a masterclass in beating temptation.
Here's how it unfolds — and how to crush temptation yourself... (thread) 🧵
Christ's battle with temptation isn't only that — it's a battle for the soul of all humanity.
Satan tempts Jesus to:
• Make bread from stones to end his hunger
• Jump from a pinnacle to prove his divinity
• Bow to Satan and rule the world in return
But Jesus proves himself at each turn by flatly denying Satan.
The story is only brief in the Gospels, but John Milton's "Paradise Regained" expands it, exposing the nature of temptation — and how to destroy it for good.
The Lord of the Rings does not take place on an imaginary planet — it's Earth.
Middle-earth is our forgotten past, before recorded history, when Eden (Valinor) was a real place.
The truth of Tolkien's world will blow your mind... 🧵
Middle-earth is our Earth long ago, as Tolkien said:
"I have (of course) placed the action in a purely imaginary (though not wholly impossible) period of antiquity, in which the shape of the continental masses was different."
He even compared latitudes directly:
Hobbiton and Rivendell are about the latitude of Oxford, Minas Tirith the latitude of Florence, and Pelargir the latitude of ancient Troy.
This mosaic is the biggest discovery since the Dead Sea Scrolls.
The earliest "Jesus is God" declaration from 230 AD — and it's just the start of what we've found.
Mega thread of archaeology that supports the New Testament... 🧵
When this was found beneath an Israeli prison, it changed the entire narrative of early Christianity. The Megiddo Mosaic is inscribed with the following:
"God Jesus Christ".
Scholars had long claimed Christ's divinity was a later invention, e.g. by the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD.
But it appears that early Christians *did* believe Jesus was the son of God — right from the very start.