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Cracked brick wall painted with an Palestinian flag on the left and a Israeli flag on the right.
Doha, Qatar, December 18,2019 : Street cleaners clean the old market.
Historical Nassif house Al Balad Jeddah old town Saudi Arabia
View of Cairo city at sunset. Medium format film.
A street name plate, in English and Arabic, in the district of Jabal Amman in the capital of Jordan.  In Arabic it identifies a particular sub-district of Jabal Amman. Plates in this style appear on walls throughout the city.  In the background is the Inter-Continental Hotel (left) and a high-rise building (right).   This image was taken on a sunny afternoon on 21 April 2023.
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Santiponce, Spain - April 2, 2019: Mosaic of Planetarium. Informative panel in Spanish and English of this famous mosaic. Roman ruins of Italica. Spain.
Israel and Palestine flags together on old cracked wall texture
Madaba, Jordan - March 19, 2014: People on the street near the archaeological park. Madaba is widely known due to the ancient mosaic map and the mosaic school
Built in 1950 in the place where the Annunciation to the Virgin Mary took place in Nazareth
conflict between Israel and Palestine
Iranian and Israeli Flags on Grunge textured surface
Cabra, Spain - May 19th, 2019: Memorial glazed tiled plaque to Camilo Jose Cela. Cabra, Cordoba, Spain
The Umayyad Palace, located on the Citadel Hill of Amman with the modern buildings of Jordan in the background.
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Beautiful Buildings In Birgu, Malta
Souq Waqif, Doha, Qatar, May,6,2019, Traditional Arabian building built of wood and mud decorated with a facade in the traditional Arabic style.
Valley of the Kings, Luxor, Egypt - July 22, 2022: The tomb of Ramses V and Ramses VI is also known as KV9. Tomb KV9 was originally constructed by Pharaoh Ramesses V. He was interred here, but his uncle, Ramesses VI, later reused the tomb as his own.\n\nThe tomb has some of the most diverse decoration in the Valley of the Kings. Its layout consists of a long corridor, divided by pilasters into several sections, leading to a pillared hall, from which a second long corridor descends to the burial chamber.
Gaziantep, Turkey - 15 October 2022: Gaziantep women martyrs monument, Sehitler Abidesi in Turkish. It honors the brave souls who sacrificed their lives for Turkey's freedom
Cairo, Egypt - February 9, 2011: During the 2011 anti-government demonstrations in Tahrir Square in Cairo, newspapers were daily posted on a wall so that protestors could keep abreast of developments.
An aerial view of Balad, the commercial center of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Mosque minaret, buildings and roads are visible.
An entrance sign outside a temple in Egypt
Tahrir Square in Cairo at sunset
The image shows a bustling marketplace in Deira, Dubai, with colorful shops and street vendors. People are seen interacting and shopping in front of a store with a prominent sign in both English and Arabic.
JUNE 27, 2023, BUKHARA, UZBEKISTAN: View over the Poi Kalon Mosque and Minaret from the Ark fortress, in Bukhara, Uzbekistan. Blue sky with copy space for text
Centre of Madaba in Jordan with the municipality building of Madaba and a banner with king Abdullah
The ancient walls of El Badi Palace or Badi' Palace which is a ruined palace located in Marrakesh, Morocco. It was founded by the sultan Ahmad al-Mansur of the Saadian dynasty in 1578. A mosque is in the background.
This photo was taken in Tenerife, Spain
Valley of the Kings, Luxor, Egypt - July 22, 2022: The tomb of Tutankhamun, also known by its tomb number, KV62, is the burial place of Tutankhamun (reigned c. 1334–1325 BC), a pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty of ancient Egypt, in the Valley of the Kings. The tomb consists of four chambers and an entrance staircase and corridor. It is smaller and less extensively decorated than other Egyptian royal tombs of its time, and it probably originated as a tomb for a non-royal individual that was adapted for Tutankhamun's use after his premature death. The Valley of the Kings is a valley in Egypt where, for a period of nearly 500 years from the 16th to 11th century BC, rock-cut tombs were excavated for the pharaohs and powerful nobles of the New Kingdom (the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Dynasties of Ancient Egypt). The valley stands on the west bank of the Nile opposite Thebes (modern Luxor), within the heart of the Theban Necropolis. The wadi consists of two valleys: the East Valley (where the majority of the royal tombs are situated) and the West Valley (Valley of the Monkeys)
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