2017-07-28T21:08:32+03:00[Europe/Moscow] en true Gnatia, Ostia Antica, Thon Buri District, Parícutin, Sardis, Patara, Lycia, Esna, Hedeby, Labraunda, Sodom and Gomorrah, Sura (city), Agdam, Takedda, Mycenae, Sijilmasa, Balasagun, Oradour-sur-Glane (commune), Velia, Loulan Kingdom, Thinis, Al-Qata'i, Ephesus, Kyrros, Troy, Sirmium, Fustat, Laodicea on the Lycus, Destinikon, Aquileia, Hatra, Shangdu, List of French villages destroyed in World War I, Sumar, Iran, Bellefonte, Alabama, Liubice flashcards
Destroyed cities

Destroyed cities

  • Gnatia
    Gnatia, Egnatia, or Ignatia (Greek: Egnatia) was an ancient city of the Messapii, and their frontier town towards the Salentini.
  • Ostia Antica
    Ostia Antica is a large archeological site, close to the modern suburb of Ostia, that was the location of the harbour city of ancient Rome, which is approximately 30 kilometres (19 miles) to the northeast.
  • Thon Buri District
    Thon Buri (Thai: ธนบุรี; IPA: [tʰōn būrīː]) is one of the 50 districts (khet) of Bangkok, Thailand.
  • Parícutin
    Parícutin (or Volcán de Parícutin, also accented Paricutín) is a scoria-cone volcano located in the Mexican state of Michoacán, near the city of Uruapan and about 322 km west of Mexico City.
  • Sardis
    Sardis (/ˈsɑːrdɪs/) or Sardes (/ˈsɑːrdiːz/; Lydian: Sfard; Ancient Greek: Σάρδεις Sardeis; Old Persian: Sparda) was an ancient city at the location of modern Sart (Sartmahmut before 19 October 2005) in Turkey's Manisa Province.
  • Patara, Lycia
    Patara (Lycian: Pttara), later renamed Arsinoe (Greek: Ἀρσινόη), was a flourishing maritime and commercial city on the south-west coast of Lycia on the Mediterranean coast of Turkey near the modern small town of Gelemiş, in Antalya Province.
  • Esna
    Esna (Egyptian Arabic: إسنا‎‎ IPA: [ˈʔesnæ]), known to the ancient Egyptians as Egyptian: Iunyt or Ta-senet; Greek: Λατόπολις (Latopolis or Letopolis) or πόλις Λάτων (Polis Laton) or Λάττων (Latton); Latin: Lato, is a city in Egypt.
  • Hedeby
    Hedeby (Danish pronunciation: [ˈheːð̩byːˀ], Old Norse Heiðabýr, German Haithabu) was an important Viking Age (8th to the 11th centuries) trading settlement near the southern end of the Jutland Peninsula, now in the Schleswig-Flensburg district of Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.
  • Labraunda
    Labraunda (Ancient Greek: Λάβρανδα Labranda or Λάβραυνδα Labraunda) is an ancient archaeological site five kilometers west of Ortaköy, Muğla Province, Turkey, in the mountains near the coast of Caria.
  • Sodom and Gomorrah
    Sodom and Gomorrah (/ˈsɒd.əm/; /ɡə.ˈmɔːr.ə/) were cities mentioned in the Book of Genesis and throughout the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament and in the deuterocanonical books, as well as in the Quran and the hadith.
  • Sura (city)
    Sura was a city in the southern part of ancient Babylonia, located west of the Euphrates River.
  • Agdam
    Ağdam (also spelled Agdam or Aghdam) is a ghost town in the southwest part of Azerbaijan and the formal capital of its Agdam District.
  • Takedda
    Takedda was a town and former kingdom located in the present-day Western Sahara in Niger.
  • Mycenae
    Mycenae (Greek: Μυκῆναι Mykēnai or Μυκήνη Mykēnē) is an archaeological site in Greece, located about 90 kilometres (56 miles) southwest of Athens, in the north-eastern Peloponnese.
  • Sijilmasa
    Sijilmasa (also Sijilmassa, Sidjilmasa, Sidjilmassa and Sigilmassa) was a medieval Moroccan city and trade entrepôt at the northern edge of the Sahara Desert in Morocco.
  • Balasagun
    Balasagun (Turkish: Balasagun -Balassagun, Balasaghun, Karabalsagun; Chinese: 八剌沙衮; pinyin: bālàshāgǔn, Persian: بلاساغون) was an ancient Soghdian city in modern-day Kyrgyzstan, located in the Chuy Valley between Bishkek and Issyk-Kul Lake.
  • Oradour-sur-Glane (commune)
    Oradour-sur-Glane (Occitan: Orador de Glana) is a commune in the Haute-Vienne department in the Limousin region in west-central France, and the name of main village within the commune.
  • Velia
    Velia was the Roman name of an ancient city of Magna Graecia on the coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea.
  • Loulan Kingdom
    Loulan, also called Krorän or Kroraina (simplified Chinese: 楼兰; traditional Chinese: 樓蘭; pinyin: Lóulán; Uyghur: كروران, Кроран‎, ULY: Kroran) and known to Russian archaeologists as Krorayina, was an ancient kingdom based around an important oasis city along the Silk Road already known in the 2nd century BCE on the northeastern edge of the Lop Desert.
  • Thinis
    Thinis or This (Egyptian: Tjenu) was the capital city of the first dynasties of ancient Egypt.
  • Al-Qata'i
    Al-Qaṭāʾi (Arabic: القطائـع) was the short-lived Tulunid capital of Egypt, founded by Ahmad ibn Tulun in the year 868 CE.
  • Ephesus
    Ephesus (/ˈɛfəsəs/; Greek: Ἔφεσος Ephesos; Turkish: Efes; ultimately from Hittite Apasa) was an ancient Greek city on the coast of Ionia, three kilometres southwest of present-day Selçuk in İzmir Province, Turkey.
  • Kyrros
    Kyrros (Greek: Κύρρος; in classical contexts also transliterated Cyrrhus) is a former municipality in the Pella regional unit, Greece.
  • Troy
    Troy (Ancient Greek: Τροία, Troia and Ἴλιον, Ilion, or Ἴλιος, Ilios; Latin: Trōia and Īlium; Hittite: Wilusha or Truwisha; Turkish: Truva) was a city situated in the far northwest of the region known in late Classical antiquity as Asia Minor, now known as Anatolia in modern Turkey, near (just south of) the southwest mouth of the Dardanelles strait and northwest of Mount Ida.
  • Sirmium
    Sirmium was a city in Pannonia, an ancient province of the Roman Empire.
  • Fustat
    Fustat (also Fostat, Al Fustat, Misr al-Fustat and Fustat-Misr, and in Arabic: الفسطاط‎‎, al-Fusţāţ, Coptic: Ⲫⲩⲥⲧⲁⲧⲱⲛ), was the first capital of Egypt under Muslim rule.
  • Laodicea on the Lycus
    Laodicea on the Lycus (Greek: Λαοδίκεια πρὸς τοῦ Λύκου; Latin: Laodicea ad Lycum, also transliterated as Laodiceia or Laodikeia) (modern Turkish: Laodikeia) was an ancient city built on the river Lycus (Çürüksu).
  • Destinikon
    Destinikon (Greek: Δεστινίκον), rendered in Serbian as Dostinik (Serbian Cyrillic: Достиник) or Dostinika (Достиника), was one of eight inhabited cities (καστρα/kastra) of "baptized Serbia" (the hinterland of the Serbian Principality), mentioned in De Administrando Imperio (950s, abbr. DAI).
  • Aquileia
    Aquileia (/ˌækwɪˈliːə/; Italian: [akwiˈlɛːja]; Friulian: Acuilee/Aquilee/Aquilea, Venetian: Aquiłeja/Aquiłegia, German: Aglar, Slovene: Oglej) is an ancient Roman city in Italy, at the head of the Adriatic at the edge of the lagoons, about 10 kilometres (6 mi) from the sea, on the river Natiso (modern Natisone), the course of which has changed somewhat since Roman times.
  • Hatra
    Hatra (Arabic: الحضر‎‎ al-Ḥaḍr) was an ancient city in the Ninawa Governorate and al-Jazira region of Iraq.
  • Shangdu
    Shangdu (Mandarin: [ʂɑ̂ŋ tú]), also known as Xanadu (/ˈzæ.nə.duː/; Mongolian: Šandu), was the capital of Kublai Khan's Yuan dynasty in China, before he decided to move his throne to the Jin dynasty capital of Zhōngdū (Chinese: 中都; literally: "Middle Capital"), which he renamed Khanbaliq, present-day Beijing.
  • List of French villages destroyed in World War I
    During the First World War, specifically at the time of the Battle of Verdun in 1916, many villages in the French département of Meuse were destroyed by the fighting.
  • Sumar, Iran
    Sumar (Persian: سومار‎‎; also Romanized as Sūmār, Soormar, and Sowmār) is a small city in and the capital of Sumar District, in Qasr-e Shirin County, Kermanshah Province, Iran.
  • Bellefonte, Alabama
    Bellefonte is a ghost town in Jackson County, Alabama, United States, near the site of the Bellefonte Nuclear Generating Station.
  • Liubice
    Liubice, also known by the German name Alt-Lübeck ("Old Lübeck"), was a medieval West Slavic settlement near the site of modern Lübeck, Germany.