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Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degroot org> wrote:
> Here the connection with the Greek part of the city is visible.
Medieval suburbia!
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:-)
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On 4-2-2016 22:05, Cousin Ricky wrote:
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degroot org> wrote:
>> Here the connection with the Greek part of the city is visible.
>
> Medieval suburbia!
>
>
Well yes, it is indeed something like that in Gancaloon :-)
--
Thomas
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On 2/4/2016 4:05 PM, Cousin Ricky wrote:
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degroot org> wrote:
>> Here the connection with the Greek part of the city is visible.
>
> Medieval suburbia!
>
>
yes, with a row of microwave repeating towers. How medieval!
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On 7-2-2016 6:16, dick balaska wrote:
> On 2/4/2016 4:05 PM, Cousin Ricky wrote:
>> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degroot org> wrote:
>>> Here the connection with the Greek part of the city is visible.
>>
>> Medieval suburbia!
>>
>>
> yes, with a row of microwave repeating towers. How medieval!
>
Not entirely strange. Gancaloon is /not/ medieval in our sense, it is an
extended Greek and oriental city. The Greek part of the city follows a
strict planning with a limited number of (megaron) house types, not
unlike what was developed in the Middle East or by the (here
non-existent) Romans. Remember: this is a project of fantasy, not a
historical reconstruction! ;-)
--
Thomas
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On 7-2-2016 9:13, Thomas de Groot wrote:
> Not entirely strange. Gancaloon is /not/ medieval in our sense, it is an
> extended Greek and oriental city. The Greek part of the city follows a
> strict planning with a limited number of (megaron) house types, not
> unlike what was developed in the Middle East or by the (here
> non-existent) Romans. Remember: this is a project of fantasy, not a
> historical reconstruction! ;-)
>
Just to drive the point home :-) Milete and Priene are excellent
examples of such well-planned Greek city layout.
I just found this to illustrate: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9JmPejLa3Y
--
Thomas
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