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Showing posts from April, 2021

Merdica Square Of Kuala Lampur

A Brief History and Location Situated in the busiest and the most visited part of the Malaysian capital, near the Gin Raja Laut Road, the Mardeka or Independence Square of Kuala Lumpur is admired very much by tourists for its lush green cricket field lying right in its centre. The place is popular in people as the venue for celebrating the New Year’s Eve and the demonstration of the national day parade. Every year, at 12:00. A. M. of Jan 1st, the entire area, spread over approximately 6.2 acres, is illuminated by fireworks. At the same time, thousands of cell phones light up the whole area. The place where now the junction is located was originally a cricket ground for the Royal Salinger Club and also the administrative centre of Kuala Lumpur. On August 31, 1957, when Malaysia gained independence from Britain after a period of 150 years rule, that was the site where the announcement of the freedom of the country was made. The word merdeka in the Malay language means independence; there...

Al-Nasser Square Of Dubai

  A Short History Dubai, once being an unknown and small port town, flourished all of a sudden as a result of the discovery of offshore oil wells during the later decades of the twentieth century. Formerly a small settlement of Beduian traders and pearl divers, Dubai has a history spread over a period of nearly five thousand years. The area was soon chosen by some nomadic Arabs to settle at due to its vast supply of fresh water. Besides, there is an easy access to the Arabian gulf as well as to Arabian sea from here. Consequently, more and more people from far and wide were attracted to come and inhabit both sides of the creek. The modern city of Dubai is, in fact, a merger of two small towns. One being Deira and the other Bur Dubai, both lying on the northern and southern sides of a small inlet of the Gulf water known by the name of Dubai Creek. Since old times the central business district of the city is situated in Deira. It is this very Deira where is located the most renowne...

Al-Najam Square Of Beirut

  Beirut, the capital of the Lebanese Republic, is reputed all over the world for its fascinating night clubs and hotels. It is especially the favourite city of western tourists who notice an obvious French impression on its cafes and other buildings. The city has been destroyed for nine times over the ages. It has, therefore, a rich treasury of archaeological remains buried in her soil. These relics are believed to be found in exuberance in the B. C. D--- Beirut Central District. This same B. C. D. or the Downtown Beirut is also home to the well known Najam Square, the commercial as well as the cultural heart of the city. The square can rightly be called an icon of the city of Beirut in the entire world. After the Second World War, the area was renovated at a considerable cost, unearthing a large amount of riches belonging to the Bronze Age. Visitors can see traces of Phoenician, Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, Mamluk, and Ottoman periods and they can dine by the Roman ruins as o...

Tehrir Square Of Cairo

  Also known by the appellation, Al-Midan Tahrir, and spread over 500 acres, it is the largest public square of Muslim Cairo. It has won universal reputation in recent years because of being the gathering site for mobs protesting and rioting against the 30 years long regime of President Hosni Mubarik, and remaining the focus of international press and electronic media. The location of the square serves as a gateway to the centre of the city of Cairo. A well known national daily News paper of the country, Al – Ahram, quotes about the square: whatever happens in Tehrir Square becomes a national concern. Its immense area easily accommodated the masses of the people belonging to the movement for over throwing Mubarik’s regime. The place in what is now Tehrir Square used to be a large sandy tract during the ancient period of Egyptian history. Much of this land was covered by the Nile when it changed its course during the 10 th  century rendering it into a marshland. By the tim...