The 65 metre tall Minaret of Jam, built by Sultan Ghiyat Ud-Din Muhammad ben San, in around 1190, with Kufic script and verses of the Koran on the exterior and a double-spiral staircase inside, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Ghor Province, Afghanistan, Asia
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Resolución de Internet
366×550px
12.9×19.4cm 28ppcm
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Baja resolución
666×1000px
23.5×35.3cm 28ppcm
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Mediana resolución
1498×2250px
12.7×19.1cm 118ppcm
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Alta resolución
3610×5423px
30.6×45.9cm 118ppcm
* Precio final basado en el uso, no en el tamaño del archivo.
Palabras clave relacionadas
- 841-
- Afganistán
- aire libre
- al aire libre
- arqueología
- arquitectura
- Asia
- asiático
- asiático (lugares y cosas)
- asiático (perteneciente a Asia)
- civilización antigua
- contemporáneo
- decorar
- destino turistico
- día
- edificio
- exterior
- fe
- fotógrafia
- fotografía (arte)
- fotógrafias
- Ghor
- imagen a color
- Islam
- lugar de interés
- medio-oriental (lugares y cosas)
- medio-oriental (relativo al Oriente Medio)
- Medio Oriente
- minarete
- Minaret of Jam
- musulmán (hombre y mujer)
- nadie
- religioso
- robertharding
- rural
- rústico
- sacar fotos
- Shahrak District
- UNESCO patrimonio de la humanidad
- viaje
Imágenes relacionadas
- The 65 metre tall Minaret of Jam, built by Sultan Ghiyat Ud-Din Muhammad ben San, in around 1190, with Kufic script and verses of the Koran on the exterior, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Ghor Province, Afghanistan, Asia
- Detail of decoration on the Minaret of Jam, built by Sultan Ghiyat Ud-Din Muhammad ben San, in around 1190, with Kufic script and verses of the Koran on the exterior, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Ghor Province, Afghanistan, Asia
- Detail of the 12th century Minaret of Jam, including Kufic inscription in turquoise glazed tiles, Quasr Zarafshan in background, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Ghor (Ghur, Ghowr) Province, Afghanistan, Asia
- The minaret of Sultan Mas'ud III, one of two minarets built by Sultan Mas'ud III and Bahram Shah with square Kufic and Noshki script, that served as models for the minaret of Jam, and believed to have originally been part of mosques, Ghazni, Afghanistan, Asia
- The minaret of Bahram Shah, one of two minarets built by Sultan Mas'ud III and Bahram Shah with square Kufic and Noshki script, that served as models for the minaret of Jam, and believed to have originally been part of mosques, Ghazni, Afghanistan, Asia
- The 12th century Minaret of Jam, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Ghor (Ghur, Ghowr) Province, Afghanistan, Asia
- Detail of decoration on minaret including Kufic inscription in turquoise glazed tiles, 12th century Minaret of Jam, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Ghor (Ghur, Ghowr) Province, Afghanistan, Asia
- The 65 metre tall 12th century Minaret of Jam at dawn, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Ghor (Ghur, Ghowr) Province, Afghanistan, Asia
Más imágenes relacionadas
- Detail of decoration on the 12th century Minaret of Jam at dawn, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Ghor (Ghur, Ghowr) Province, Afghanistan, Asia
- Minaret of Jam, UNESCO World Heritage Site, dating from the 12th century, with Quasr Zarafshan in background, Ghor Province, Afghanistan, Asia
- Detail of the 12th century Minaret of Jam at dawn, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Ghor (Ghur, Ghowr) Province, Afghanistan, Asia
- Detail of decoration on minaret dating from 12th century, including Kufic inscription in turquoise glazed tiles, Minaret of Jam, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Ghor (Ghur, Ghowr) Province, Afghanistan, Asia
- Four of the six remaining minarets marking the corners of the long gone Madrassa built by the last Timurid ruler Sultan Husain Baiquara, within the Mousallah Complex of Gaur Shad's mausoleum, Herat, Afghanistan, Asia
- The Friday Mosque or Masjet-eJam, built in the year 1200 by the Ghorid Sultan Ghiyasyddin on the site of an earlier 10th century mosque, Herat, Herat Province, Afghanistan, Asia
- Two early 12th century minarets built by Sultan Mas'ud 111 and Bahram Shah that served as models for the Minaret of Jam, Ghazni, Afghanistan, Asia
- Monument to Afghanistan's fallen soldiers in front of Friday Mosque or Masjet-eJam, Herat, Herat Province, Afghanistan, Asia