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London life

  • Sep. 21st, 2007 at 3:42 PM
pepper: Pepperpot (Ooh pretty)
I keep meaning to post this - [profile] shinysilvergrl  came to visit these fair isles, and we met up, and it was fun! It was so lovely to meet an LJ person in, ah, person, for the first time. It turned out neither of us was an axe murderer, presumably to the relief of our respective partners (who, bless them, were worrying). We had a wander around Covent Garden, and some food in a noisy pub, and a wander around one of my favourite shops (Forbidden Planet, oh the geeky goodies). It was... well, liberating, quite frankly, to be able to drop names like Jack O'Neill into the conversation without getting blank looks. *g* And we talked about writing fic, and how we respond to feedback, and all that sort of stuff. Whee! Look, I can claim LJ as a legitimate friend-making thingy, now, and not just a tool for sucking up all my time!

I was reminded by the return to London of the Terracotta Army, that I once went to see it, many years ago. I remember it made a big impression on me (and I'm definitely going to see it again, whilst it's here - one day, I'd love to go see the whole thing in situ). I looked up past exhibitions - and apparently they haven't been to London since 1981. I'm amazed I can remember it - I would have been three or four years old. I remember there were red and black walls, and the weather was cold, and the statues were very tall and scary. Years later, I could still remember some of the stuff I was told about how it was discovered by accident, when local farmers drilling for a well broke through into a vast, underground tomb, full of an entire army of life-size terracotta figures - every one individual. The figures are eerie and imposing, and when I was little I thought they looked like they were ready to move, any moment. If an exhibition of it ever comes around your way, I highly recommend going.

We've also got Tutankhamun's treasure coming to London soon - I plan to go see that, too. I'll be having a very Daniel-esque Autumn. *g*

Comments

ext_3557: annerb icon with scenes of all team variations, my OTP (Default)
[identity profile] aurora-novarum.livejournal.com wrote:
Sep. 21st, 2007 04:48 pm (UTC)
I saw it last weekend! It was so cool. I loved how they connecting things from previous pharoahs.

What I found so amazing is how much of it is wood! 3300 year old carved and painted wood, still perfectly preserved! Absolutely amazing!

My favorite thing was that gold box with the missing figurine. The detailed pictures of Tut and Nefertiti's daughter/his wife/half-sister doing various activities.

I knew the mask was too fragile to do the road tour, but I was surprised at what did come that was found ON his mummy, and notes on stuff that were used in his life (like they had sentimental value rather than just ceremonial...it brought a sense of "he's a real person, not just a historical figure" to the exhibit, IMO).

Just amazing.

**shares geekitude with you**...and jealousy that pepper's been to Egypt and SEEN the real place. :-)
ext_3314: Woman writing (Default)
[identity profile] pepper-field.livejournal.com wrote:
Sep. 21st, 2007 10:51 pm (UTC)
Nuts, it's not here until November. I shall have to buy tickets in advance, because it sounds like they're selling out (!).

Egypt was... well, for someone who grew up in a pretty old city, the history there was mind-blowing - and just lying around, all over the place. I didn't see the pyramids, though! Or Cairo. But every time I catch documentaries about The Curse Of Tutaankhamun, or whatever, I bore people by going, "Ooh, that's Luxor / the Valley of the Kings / etc., I went there!" *g*

I love that Stargate has intelligent geek fans.
[identity profile] beanpot.livejournal.com wrote:
Sep. 22nd, 2007 02:08 am (UTC)
Oh I know! The wood was amazing. I tended to avoid the shiny stuff, not only because I didn't want to get tossed out for shoving people, but the ever day items were so much more interesting.

Did you also catch the Planetarium show on the Stars of the Ancients (pretty sure that was the title - regardless, I giggled)? Very cool discussing how they used the stars for religion, architecture, etc. I of course couldn't help but think - and over the course of the years, the star positions have changed which was why computer needed to adjust the addresses. **Facepalm**

Long live geekitude!

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