Jérusalem, Vallée de Josaphat, Faces Ouest et Nord, 1 1854 Auguste Salzmann French Many viewers who encountered the Valley of Jehoshaphat series in the 1850s immediately recognized the subject as the site of the Last Judgment, the sorting of earthly souls into heaven or hell. Salzmann presents the barren, rock-strewn valley, located eleven miles from Jerusalem, as a rolling landscape that dominates the picture frame. He also documents three saints tombs in the valley. The photographs allowed Salzmanns viewers not only to see a biblical site but also to visualize a catastrophic yet holy event still to come. The critic and archaeologist Ernest Feydeau (1821-1873) did just that: "The sun straight above, perpendicular, strikes this world of tombs, bursting and buckling beneath the dreadful white rays. Well! What is more terrible in this specter of the valley, what makes you clutch your jumping heart, is that we know that beneath all these stones rots an army of corpses.. come from the fo

Jérusalem, Vallée de Josaphat, Faces Ouest et Nord, 1 1854 Auguste Salzmann French Many viewers who encountered the Valley of Jehoshaphat series in the 1850s immediately recognized the subject as the site of the Last Judgment, the sorting of earthly souls into heaven or hell. Salzmann presents the barren, rock-strewn valley, located eleven miles from Jerusalem, as a rolling landscape that dominates the picture frame. He also documents three saints tombs in the valley. The photographs allowed Salzmanns viewers not only to see a biblical site but also to visualize a catastrophic yet holy event still to come. The critic and archaeologist Ernest Feydeau (1821-1873) did just that: "The sun straight above, perpendicular, strikes this world of tombs, bursting and buckling beneath the dreadful white rays. Well! What is more terrible in this specter of the valley, what makes you clutch your jumping heart, is that we know that beneath all these stones rots an army of corpses.. come from the fo
SuperStock offers millions of photos, videos, and stock assets to creatives around the world. This image of Jérusalem, Vallée de Josaphat, Faces Ouest et Nord, 1 1854 Auguste Salzmann French Many viewers who encountered the Valley of Jehoshaphat series in the 1850s immediately recognized the subject as the site of the Last Judgment, the sorting of earthly souls into heaven or hell. Salzmann presents the barren, rock-strewn valley, located eleven miles from Jerusalem, as a rolling landscape that dominates the picture frame. He also documents three saints tombs in the valley. The photographs allowed Salzmanns viewers not only to see a biblical site but also to visualize a catastrophic yet holy event still to come. The critic and archaeologist Ernest Feydeau (1821-1873) did just that: "The sun straight above, perpendicular, strikes this world of tombs, bursting and buckling beneath the dreadful white rays. Well! What is more terrible in this specter of the valley, what makes you clutch your jumping heart, is that we know that beneath all these stones rots an army of corpses.. come from the fo by Piemags/PL Photography Limited is available for licensing today.
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Image Number: 6145-29827030Royalty FreeCredit Line:Piemags/PL Photography Limited/SuperStockCollection:PL Photography LimitedContributor:PiemagsModel Release:NoProperty Release:NoResolution:3801×2953
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