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From the inside - Linkin park - Meteora
I think it's one of their most beautiful songs
Length: 175
Rating: 4.90 (1223 ratings)
Tags: linkin park from the inside meteora
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Linkin Park ~ Meteora - Figure.09
Band: Linkin park
Album: Meteora
Song: Figure.09
Click the links below for playlists to the rest of my uploaded Linkin Park music from their albums.
Hybrid Theory CD.
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=2B91D6CFF11FFB9C
Meteora CD.
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=9CD64327FA9D2412
Minutes to Midnight CD
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=357168842DA905FB
Length: 197
Rating: 4.90 (530 ratings)
Tags: Linkin Park ~ Meteora - figure .09 Music LP
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Linkin Park ~ Meteora - Easier to Run
Band: Linkin park
CD: Meteora
Song: Easier to Run
Click the links below for playlists to the rest of my uploaded Linkin Park music from their albums.
Hybrid Theory CD.
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=2B91D6CFF11FFB9C
Meteora CD.
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=9CD64327FA9D2412
Length: 200
Rating: 4.90 (369 ratings)
Tags: Linkin Park Meteora Easier to Run music
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Meteora Greece
The Meteora (Greek: Μετέωρα, "suspended rocks" or "suspended in the air") is the largest and most important complex of monasteries in all of Greece, second only to Mount Athos. The monasteries are built on spectacular natural sandstone rock pillars at the northwestern edge of the Plain of Thessaly, near the Peneios river and Pindus Mountains, in central Greece. The Meteora is home to six monasteries and is included on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
Length: 589
Rating: 4.70 (22 ratings)
Tags: Meteora Greece Grecia Kalambaka Kalampaka Kastraki Monastery Monasteries Monasterio Grand Meteoron
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Meteora monasteries, Greece
From our trip around the Greece. July 2000.
The Metéora (Greek: Μετέωρα, "suspended rocks", "suspended in the air" or "in the heavens above") is one of the largest and most important complex of monasteries in Kalambaka, Greece and is second only to Mount Athos.[1] The monasteries are built on natural sandstone rock pillars, at the northwestern edge of the Plain of Thessaly near the Peneios river and Pindus Mountains, in central Greece. The Metéora is home to six monasteries and is included on the UNESCO World Heritage List. Although it is unknown when Metéora was established, as early as the 11th century AD hermit monks were believed to be living among the caves and cutouts in the rocks.[1] By the late 11th or early 12th century a rudimentary monastic state had formed called the Skete of Stagoi and was centered around the church of Theotokos (mother of God), which still stands today.[1] The hermit monks, seeking a retreat from the expanding Turkish occupation, found the inaccessible rock pillars of Meteora to be an ideal refuge. Although more than 20 monasteries were built, beginning in the 14th century,[1] only six remain today. These six are: 'Great Meteoron (or Transfiguration), Varlaam, St. Stephen, Holy Trinity, St. Nicholas Anapausas and Rousanou. There is a common belief that St. Athanasios (founder of the first monastery) did not scale the rock, but was carried there by an eagle.[4] Access to the monasteries was originally extremely difficult, requiring either long ladders lashed together or large nets used to haul up both goods and people. This required quite a leap of faith -- the ropes were replaced, so the story goes, only "when the Lord let them break,"[5]. In the words of UNESCO, "The net in which intrepid pilgrims were hoisted up vertically alongside the 373-meter cliff where the Varlaam monastery dominates the valley symbolizes the fragility of a traditional way of life that is threatened with extinction."[6] In about the 1920s there was an improvement in the arrangements. Steps were cut into the rock, making the complex accessible via a bridge from the nearby plateau. During World War II the site was bombed and many art treasures were stolen. Only six of the monasteries remain today[7]. Of the six monasteries, five are inhabited by men, one by women. Each monastery has fewer than 10 inhabitants. and attract numerous tourists every year. The monasteries are now some of the most popular tourist sites in the world and now serve primarily as museums.
Beside the Pindhos Mountains, at the western region of the Thessaly plain in the middle of northern Greece, these sandstone rocks rise from the ground. Since the 9th century, an ascetic group of monks moved up to the ancient pinnacles. The rocks are composed of a mixture of sandstone and conglomerate. They were formed about 60 million years ago. A series of earth movements pushed the seabed upwards, creating a high plateau and causing many fault lines to appear in the thick layer of sandstone.
Continuous weathering by water, wind and extremes of temperature turned them into huge rock pillars, marked by horizontal lines which geologists maintain were made by the waters of a prehistoric sea. Greek historian Herodotus wrote in the fifth century BC that local people believed the plain of Thessaly had once been a sea. If this was accurate, there was most probably an inundation at the end of the last Ice Age, around 8000 BC. However, he failed to mention the rocks of Metéora, and nor are they recorded in the writings of other ancient Greek authors. This has led to the belief that the pinnacles did not exist 2000 years ago; a theory dismissed by modern geologists. The first people to inhabit Metéora were hermits, who lived in hollows and fissures in the rock towers, some of which reach 1800ft (550m) above the plain. This great height, combined with the sheerness of the cliff walls, kept away all but the most determined visitors. Initially the hermits led a life of solitude, meeting only on Sundays and special days to worship and pray in a chapel built at the foot of a rock known as Dhoupiani.
Length: 140
Rating: 4.00 (2 ratings)
Tags: Meteora Metéora Μετέωρα Greece unesco Kalambaka Great Meteoron Varlaam Rousanou St.Stephen Holy Trinity
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Meteora Greece
A mystical place where old monasteries were built using nothing but manual wenches as early as the 11th century.
The group Linkin Park was so mesmerized by this majestic place that they used the name for one of their CDs.
DimitrisByDesign.com
Length: 178
Rating: 5.00 (20 ratings)
Tags: mountains monastery meteora linkin park monk greece monastic
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Meteora Panorama
A panorama of the amazing rocks and monasteries at Meteora in central Greece. Hear more about Greece at my podcastblog: http://reportingfromgreece.blogspot.com
Length: 76
Rating: 4.70 (17 ratings)
Tags: greece travel meteora monastery cliffs rocks
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Meteora - Thessaly - Greece (Photo Mpampis Mantoukas et.al
The Metéora (Greek: Μετέωρα, "suspended rocks", "suspended in the air" or "in the heavens above") is one of the largest and most important complex of monasteries in Greece, second only to Mount Athos.[1] The monasteries are built on spectacular natural sandstone rock pillars, at the northwestern edge of the Plain of Thessaly near the Peneios river and Pindus Mountains, in central Greece. The Metéora is home to six monasteries and is included on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
Length: 310
Rating: 4.90 (21 ratings)
Tags: Meteora Greece Orthodox Thessaly Kalambaka Agion Oros Church Hellas
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Somewhere I Belong - Linkin Park - Meteora
Somewhere I Belong - Linkin Park - Meteora
Somewhere I Belong
When this began
I had nothing to say
And I'd get lost in the nothingness inside of me
I was confused
And I let it all out to find /that I'm
Not the only person with these things in mind
Inside of me
But all the vacancy the words revealed
Is the only real thing that I've got left to feel
Nothing to lose
Just stuck/hollow and alone
And the fault is my own
And the fault is my own
I want to heal
I want to feel
What I thought was never real
I want to let go of the pain I've felt so long
[Erase all the pain 'til it's gone] I want to heal
I want to feel
Like I'm close to something real
I want to find something i've wanted all along
Somewhere I belong
And I've got nothing to say
I can't believe I didn't fall right down on my face
I was confused
Looking everywhere/only to find that it's
Not the way I had imagined it all in my mind
So what am I
What do I have but negativity
Cause I can't justify the
Way everyone is looking at me
Nothing to lose
Nothing to gain/hollow and alone
And the fault is my own
The fault is my own
I will never know
Myself until I do this on my own
And I will never feel
Anything else until my wounds are healed
I will never be
Anything 'til I break away from me
And I will break away
I'll find myself today
I want to heal
I want to feel like I'm
Somewhere I belong
Length: 214
Rating: 5.00 (26 ratings)
Tags: somewhere belong linkin park meteora the best song of rock rap punk pank nu metal heavy alternativa
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