Давайте проектировать и строить. Гвоздева А.А - 26 стр.

UptoLike

From the ancient palace of Nebuchadnezzar to a lavish new palace for him, Saddam Hussein used architec-
ture to awe and intimidate.
When Saddam Hussein rose to power in Iraq, he conceived a grandiose scheme to rebuild the ancient City
of Babylon – Hussein said that Babylon's great palaces and the legendary hanging gardens of Babylon (one of
the seven wonders of the ancient world) would rise from dust.
Like the powerful King Nebuchadnezzar II who conquered Jerusalem 2,500 years ago, Saddam Hussein
would rule over the world's greatest empire. The vaulting ambition of Saddam Hussein found expression in
vaulting, and often pretentious, architecture.
In 1982, Saddam's workers began reconstructing Babylon's most imposing building, the 600-room palace
of King Nebuchadnezzar II. Archaeologists were horrified. Many said that to rebuild on top of ancient artifacts
does not preserve history, but disfigures it. The original bricks, which rise two or three feet from the ground,
bear ancient inscriptions praising Nebuchadnezzar. Above these, Saddam Hussein's workers laid more than 60-
million sand-colored bricks inscribed with the words, "In the era of Saddam Hussein, protector of Iraq, who re-
built civilization and rebuilt Babylon." The new bricks began to crack after only ten years.
Adjacent to Nebuchadnezzar's ancient palace and overlooking the Euphrates River, Saddam Hussein built a
new palace for himself. Shaped like a ziggurat (stepped pyramid), Saddam's Babylonian palace is a monstrous
hilltop fortress surrounded by miniature palm trees and rose gardens. The four-storey palace extends across an
area as large as five football fields. Villagers told news media that a thousand people were evacuated to make
way for this emblem of Saddam Hussein's power.
The palace, Saddam built, was not merely large, it was also ostentatious. Containing several hundred thou-
sand square feet of marble, it became a showy confection of angular towers, arched gates, vaulting ceilings,
and majestic stairways. Critics charged that Saddam Hussein's lavish new palace expressed exuberant excess in
land where many died in poverty.
On the ceilings and walls of Saddam's palace, 360-degree murals depicted scenes from ancient Babylon. In
the cathedral-like entryway, an enormous chandelier hung from a wooden canopy carved to resemble a palm
tree. In the bathrooms, the plumbing fixtures appeared to be gold-plated. Throughout Saddam Hussein's palace,
pediments were engraved with the ruler's initials, "SdH".
The role of Saddam Hussein's Babylonian palace was more symbolic than functional. When American
troops entered Babylon in April 2003, they found little evidence that the palace had been occupied or used.
Saddam's fall from power brought vandals and looters. The smoked glass windows were shattered, the furnish-
ings removed, and architectural details – from faucets to light switches – had been stripped away.
Now, Saddam Hussein's Babylonian palace serves as a military encampment for Western troops. Mosqui-
toes buzz in through the broken windows. U.S. marines take refuge in two-man tents pitched inside the vast,
empty rooms.
Active vocabulary
1) to aweвызывать чувство благоговения
2) to intimidateустрашать, вызывать страх
3) grandioseграндиозный
4) powerfulвлиятельный, могущественный
5) pretentiousвычурный
6) to imposeвнушать
7) to horrifyприводить в ужас
8) inscriptionнадпись
9) adjacent – примыкающий, находящийся по соседству
10) zigguratв форме ступенчатой пирамиды
11) monstrousчудовищный
12) ostentatiousпоказной, вычурный
13) angularугловой
14) muralфреска
15) chandelierлюстра