Museum of the History of Medicine - a base for training future medics
Музеят по история на медицината – база за обучение на бъдещи медици
Top 15 Things To Do In Varna, Bulgaria
Cheapest Hotels To Stay In Varna-
Best Tours To Enjoy Varna -
Cheap Airline Tickets -
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Here are top 15 things to do in Varna, Bulgaria
All photos belong to their rightful owners. Credit next to name.
1. Stone Forest -
2. University Botanical Garden -
3. Battle of Varna Park Museum -
4. Retro Museum -
5. The Sea Garden -
6. Varna Roman Baths -
7. Varna Cathedral -
8. Barite Complex -
9. The Wonderful Rocks -
10. Archaeological Museum -
11. Amusement Park Varna -
12. Aladzha Monastery -
13. Golden Sands -
14. Museum of the History of Medicine -
15. Euxinograd -
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Varna Naval Museum - in territory
В этом видео вы увидите экспонаты Военно-Морского Музея города Варны, находящиеся снаружи – на музейной территории.
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Vedy team in Museum of Medicine
at 12th April, 2011 people from different EU countries came together to take part in workshop Alive history. One of the tasks was visiting museums in Varna ... this is the first museum.
Vedy team are saying thanks about translation to Tzveti.:)
The Ambassador to Lithuania guest in the Museum of History of Medecine
Посланикът на Литва в Музея по история на медицината
The Museum Night in the Museum of Medecine
Нощта на музеите в Музея на медицината
Archaeological dig near Geshaview - part one
David Hollands meets archaeologists from the New Bulgarian University as they uncover Bulgaria's past.
Best Travel Experiences: The Oldest Gold of The World
Interview with Florian Castlunger.
Seeing the Oldest Gold Treasure of The World in The National Historical Museum of Sofia, Bulgaria, with view to Vitosha 2 290m high pick is a virtuoso feeling of luxury to make most of the time of a summer best travel experience.
Florian is sharing his choice of the most impressive moment after a guided tour in the museum.
Site:
Location
Follow Florian on Twitter @flo_castlunger, Facebook Instagram
and Google+
This video is being recorded on Android Version 5.1.1. on the go of the travel journey. Processes with Movie Maker.
Open days in MU-Varna 2017
Дни на отворените врати в МУ-Варна 2017
The Roman Baths of Ankara Open Air Museum - Museum Visitors e02
The Roman Baths of Ankara are the ruined remains of an ancient Roman bath complex in Ankara Turkey, which were uncovered by excavations carried out in 1937-1944, and have subsequently been opened to the public as an open-air museum.
The baths are located on a plateau, traditionally known as Çankırı Kapı, which rises 2.5 meters above the west side of Çankırı Street, about 400 meters from the centre of the old Ankara district of Ulus, and has been identified as a höyük (tumulus), with Roman, mixed with Byzantine and Seljuk, material at the top and Phrygian settlement material at the base.
The ancient city of Ancyra stood at the crossroads between the East and West and during the Roman period, the city's strategic location led to its rise to prominence as the capital of the province of Galatia. To the east of this plateau ran a roadway from the city's sacred precinct, the area of the Temple of Augustus, a section of which, flanked by second or third century grey-veined marble columns with Corinthian capitals, was uncovered during the construction of Çankırı Street, during the development of Ankara into the new Turkish capital in the 1930s.
The baths were constructed in the third century by the Roman Emperor Caracalla (212-217), who also constructed the Baths of Caracalla in Rome, in honour of Asclepios, the God of Medicine, and built around three principal rooms: the caldarium (hot bath), the tepidarium (warm bath) and the frigidarium (cold bath) in a typically laid-out 80m x 120m classical complex. The baths were in use up until the eighth century when they were destroyed by fire leaving only the ruins of the basement and first floor.
The adjacent höyük (tumulus) was excavated by Prof. Dr. Remzi Oğuz Arık in 1937 revealing the Phrygian and Roman remains. General Director of Museums Hamit Z. Koşay and field director Necati Dolunay administered further excavations, funded by the Türk Tarih Kurumnu (Turkish Historical Society), which revealed the bath buildings in 1938-1939 and fully exposed them in 1940-1943. Excavation's architect Mahmut Akok investigated and drew a reconstructed plan of the baths before their restoration was begun.
Prof. Dr. Arık was able to date construction of the baths to the reign Caracalla by coins found during the excavations supported by contemporary inscriptions, whilst further coins indicated the baths were in continuous use for about 500 years, undergoing repair from time to time.
WILHELM REICH'S BION BIOGENESIS DISCOVERIES EXPERIMENTAL VERIFICATION
In the 1930s, Dr. Wilhelm Reich made reports in published books and research journals, and to the French Academy of Science, on the discovery of a microscopical vesicle of around 1 micron, which appeared as a transitional form between living and non-living substance. Called the Bion, this vesicle could be derived in abundance as a break-down product from the incandescent heating and freeze/thaw disintegration of inorganic materials such as iron dust, charcoal, clay, or ground up rock powder or beach sand, as well as from deteriorating living tissues. Bions, he observed, were charged with a specific life-energetic radiation of blue color, possessed living properties, could be cultured, and also could re-organize into clumps out of which larger and more complex micro-organisms such as ameba or protozoans would arise. He argued this was an additional process in nature whereby new living microbes could arise from non-living or previously alive matter, aside from the known pathways of dormant spores or direct cell replication. Degeneration and rotting of dying plant or animal tissues, where the life-energetic cohesive charge had been lost, or the deterioration of inorganic matter in water, would give rise to bion formation, after which the chemistry and environment of the solutions would determine how far the life-process would go. Reich argued a similar bionous decay process was at work in the human body to give rise to certain microbes, including cancer cells, which resembled protozoans in many ways. The human bio-energy, or orgone energy as he called it, played a fundamental role in the cohesion of tissues and cells. This is not spontaneous generation but a specific developmental process with similarities to the works of Bechamp, Bastian and other nearly-forgotten pioneers in biology. Reich's work on bionous disintegration anticipated such modern findings as the phenomenon of apoptosis, and new observations on unexpected abundant life in deep-sea hydrothermal vents or boiling hot springs, or life-like forms in incandescent-heated meteorites or deep within the Earth's crustal rock. Reich's bion vesicles thereby have many similarities to modern archaea or extremophiles, and his work suggests to the field of exobiology, that wherever liquid water exists in the cosmos, abundant microbial life should be found. As one of the earliest natural scientists to engage in open research on the Origins Of Life question, a regrettable ridicule and attack followed his work across Europe and into America. In spite of many replications of his experiments on the bions by a small group of credible scientists, professors and physicians world-wide, a great ignorance and hostility about his work still persists within the mainstream community.
This video was produced in hopes to stimulate more openness, particularly among younger students of biology and medicine. It documents one such replication study, undertaken by Dr. James DeMeo, Director of the Orgone Biophysical Research Lab, and presented as a PowerPoint lecture in 2000 to the Second International Symposium on Pleomorphic Microbes in Health and Disease. A reference list to books and articles are provided in the video, but similar information can be obtained from the weblinks to follow.
The presentation is difficult to fully appreciate in the small format of YouTube, and much of the fine detail (and some of the blue energy-field color around red blood cells) is lost, but this is only an introduction to a complex subject, and it is suggested to view at double size to optimize the microphoto images over the text, which remains readable.
To learn more about James DeMeo's research, buy his books via Amazon.com (do a browser search on his name) or go here:
Dr. DeMeo's research website is:
Please consider supporting Dr. DeMeo's research through a tax-deductible donation to the non-profit Orgone Biophysical Research Laboratory.
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FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 106A-117 of the US Copyright Law.
‘Huge Skeleton’ Discovered in Bulgaria’s Varna
A team of archaeologists have uncovered the skeletal remains of a giant in the Bulgarian city of Varna. Located on the eastern shores of the Black Sea, Varna is now a major tourist attraction. The area has a rich culture and its history goes all the way back to 5,000 BC. The oldest golden treasure in the world was found during excavations at the Varna Necropolis and carbon dating revealed it was buried more than 6,500 years ago. In the 7th century BC, the Greeks founded a trading post called Odessos in what is now Varna. It was populated by a mix of Greeks and Thracians. Towards the end of the second century AD, Odessos was turned into a Roman retreat and renamed Odessus. The giant skeleton was found earlier this month, buried near the remains of Odessus’ ancient city wall. It is estimated the giant human lived and died during the 5th century AD.
Valeri Yotov, a member of the excavation team was quoted as saying the size of the bones was “impressive” but refused to provide exact details.
Giant footprints found all over the world
'Vampire' skeletons found in Bulgaria
Bulgarian archaeologists have discovered two 'vampire' skeletons during excavations near the Black Sea, which are now on display at the National Museum of History in Sofia.
The Death of Archaeology
Two experts in the field of anthropology and archaeology discuss their recent findings of a derth of artefects and writings from the long believed to be mythological Atlantean Culture
Bulgaria Archaeologists find ancient golden treasure
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Varna Puppet Theater
Excerpts from Silent Legends, Magic of the Wind Festival Sliven 19-09-2015
May 24 - Day of Bulgarian Education and Culture and Slavonic Literature
24 май - Ден на българската просвета и култура и на славянската писменост
THE RAFTS - THE REDISCOVERED VOYAGES
One respected person from the old totalitarian times, presented before the Varna-City art makers one small collection from 51 rediscovered sea rafts. In the halls of the Museum for the New Varna History - the ancient turkish casemats.
‘Huge Skeleton’ Discovered in Bulgaria’s Varna
A team of archaeologists have uncovered the skeletal remains of a giant in the Bulgarian city of Varna. Located on the eastern shores of the Black Sea, Varna is now a major tourist attraction. The area has a rich culture and its history goes all the way back to 5,000 BC. The oldest golden treasure in the world was found during excavations at the Varna Necropolis and carbon dating revealed it was buried more than 6,500 years ago. In the 7th century BC, the Greeks founded a trading post called Odessos in what is now Varna. It was populated by a mix of Greeks and Thracians. Towards the end of the second century AD, Odessos was turned into a Roman retreat and renamed Odessus. The giant skeleton was found earlier this month, buried near the remains of Odessus’ ancient city wall. It is estimated the giant human lived and died during the 5th century AD.
Valeri Yotov, a member of the excavation team was quoted as saying the size of the bones was “impressive” but refused to provide exact details.
Giant footprints found all over the world
THE RAFTS - THE REDISCOVERED VOYAGES
One respected person from the old totalitarian times, presented before the Varna-City art makers one small collection from 51 rediscovered sea rafts. In the halls of the Museum for the New Varna History - the ancient turkish casemats.