Geistliche Akademie Plowdiw
Geistliche Akademie für Musik, Tanz und Bildende Kunst Kyrill und Method (bulgarisch Академия за танцово, музикално и изобразително изкуство) ist eine Akademie in Plowdiw, Bulgarien.
Geschichte
Die Schule wurde 1964 als Tochterakademie der Nationalen Musikakademie „Prof. Pantscho Wladigerow“ gegründet, einer orthodoxen geistlichen Akademie in Sofia. 1972 wurde die Fakultät zu einem unabhängigen Höheren Pädagogischen Institute of Music umgewandelt (bulgarisch Висш музикално-педагогически институт). Der erste Rektor der Schule war Asen Diamandiev. Im Jahr 1975 kam die Ausbildung von Choreographen hinzu.[1]
Struktur
- Fakultät „Musikerziehung “
- Fakultät „Folkloremusik und Choreographie“
- Fakultät „Fine Arts“
- Institut für Sprach- und Fachausbildung
Bekannte Absolventen
- Teodosij Spassow, Flötist
- Krassimira Stojanowa, Violinistin
- Lili Ivanova, Sängerin
Weblinks
Einzelnachweise
- ↑ Academy of Music, Dance and Fine Arts – Plovdiv (englisch)
Koordinaten: 42° 8′ 49,8″ N, 24° 45′ 2,5″ O
Auf dieser Seite verwendete Medien
Autor/Urheber: Dennis Jarvis from Halifax, Canada, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 2.0
PLEASE, NO invitations or self promotions, THEY WILL BE DELETED. My photos are FREE to use, just give me credit and it would be nice if you let me know, thanks.
The Roman theatre of Philippopolis is a semi-circle with an outer diameter of 82m (269ft). The stage building (the skene), is situated south of the orchestra and has 3 floors. The stage area (proskenion) is 3.16m (10.4ft) high and its facade, which is facing the orchestra, is decorated with an Ionic marble colonnade with triangular pediments.
According to a builders’ inscription, discovered on the frieze-architrave of the eastern proskenion, the construction of the theatre dates back to the time of Emperor Trajan.
Built with 7,000 seats, each section had the names of the city quarters engraved on the benches so the citizens at the time knew where they were to sit.
The theatre was damaged in the 5th century AD by Attila the Hun.
The theatre was found again in the 1970s due to a landslide, this started a major archeological excavation.