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HECHOS 12:12 -JUAN MARCOS ES EL GRIAL: CHAMP DE MARS (FRENCH PRONUNCIATION) FIELD OF MARS GOD MARS EIFFEL TOWER PARIS
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De: BARILOCHENSE6999  (Mensaje original) Enviado: 25/02/2025 15:15

Champ de Mars

 
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
View southeast from the top level of the Eiffel Tower, down the Champ de Mars, with the Tour Montparnasse (Montparnasse Tower) in the distance. The École Militaire is one third down from the top of the picture.

The Champ de Mars (French pronunciation: [ʃɑ̃  mars]lit.'Field of Mars') is a large public greenspace in ParisFrance, located in the seventh arrondissement, between the Eiffel Tower to the northwest and the École Militaire to the southeast. The park is named after the Campus Martius ("Mars Field") in Rome, which was dedicated to the god Mars. The name alludes to the fact that the lawns here were formerly used as drilling and marching grounds by the French military.

The nearest Métro stations are La Motte-Picquet–GrenelleÉcole Militaire, and Champ de Mars-Tour Eiffel, an RER suburban-commuter-railway station. A disused station, Champ de Mars, is also nearby.

History

[edit]

Originally, the Champ de Mars was part of a large flat open area called Grenelle, which was reserved for market gardening. Citizens would claim small plots and exploit them by growing fruits, vegetables, and flowers for the local market. However, the plain of Grenelle was not an especially fertile place for farming.

The construction, in 1765, of the École Militaire designed by Ange-Jacques Gabriel, was the first step toward the Champ de Mars in its present form. Grounds for military drills were originally planned for an area south of the school, the current location of the place de Fontenoy. The choice to build an esplanade to the north of the school led to the erection of the noble facade which today encloses the Champ de Mars. The planners leveled the ground, surrounded it with a large ditch and a long avenue of elms, and, as a final touch, the esplanade was enclosed by a fine grille-work fence.

The Isle of Swans, formerly a riverine islet at the location of the northeastern foot of the Eiffel Tower, was, for the sake of symmetry and pleasing perspectives, attached to the shore. (The Isle of Swans discussed here should not be confused with the Isle of Swans that sits in the middle of the Seine downstream and around the next bend in the river, between the fifteenth and sixteenth arrondissements.)

Jacques Charles and the Robert brothers launched the world's first hydrogen-filled balloon from the Champ-de-Mars on 27 August 1783.[1]

This place witnessed the spectacle and pageantry of some of the best-remembered festivals of the French Revolution. On 14 July 1790 the first "Federation Day" celebration (fête de la Fédération), now known as Bastille Day, was held on the Champ de Mars, exactly one year after the storming of the prison. The following year, on 17 July 1791, the massacre on the Champ de Mars took place. Jean Sylvain Bailly, the first mayor of Paris, became a victim of his own revolution, and was guillotined there on 12 November 1793.

The Champ de Mars was also the site of the Festival of the Supreme Being on 8 June 1794. With a design by the painter Jacques-Louis David,[2] a massive "Altar of the Nation" was built atop an artificial mountain and surmounted by a tree of liberty.[3] The festival is regarded as the most successful of its type in the Revolution.[4] During the Hundred Days a restored Napoleon held the Champ de Mai ceremony, during which he swore to uphold the Charter of 1815, at the Champ de Mars.[5]

The Champ de Mars was the site of Expositions Universelles in 1867187818891900, and 1937.

 In art, culture, film and sport

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Champ-de-Mars, Paris.

Art and culture

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In 2012, the United Buddy Bears exhibit was held on the Champ de Mars, an international art exhibition with more than 140 two-meter-tall bears representing individual countries. They promote peace, love, tolerance and international understanding and are displayed across the planet. They stand at Champ de Mars in Paris, fronting the Eiffel Tower.[6]

Use in film and television

[edit]

Champ de Mars was used as a filming location in the 1985 James Bond film A View to a Kill, in which Bond (played for the last time by Roger Moore) drove a Renault 11 taxi which he had hijacked at the Eiffel Tower in pursuit of a mysterious assassin, later revealed to be May Day (Grace Jones).[7]

Sports

[edit]
View of the Eiffel Tower from the Eiffel Tower Stadium during the 2024 Olympics.

Champ de Mars contains both a basketball court and a football field. For the 2024 Summer Olympics and Paralympics, a temporary stadium known as the Eiffel Tower Stadium (FrenchStade de la Tour Eiffel) was erected atop the Place Jacques-Rueff, and hosted the beach volleyball and blind football tournaments at the games.[8] The Grand Palais Éphémère was built in 2021 at the south end of the Champ to host Olympic events and conventions displaced by the renovation of the Grand Palais.[9] Portions of the opening ceremony were held at the Champ.

[edit]

See also

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Masonic symbols at the Human Right Monument in the Paris Champ of Mars

 : Masonic symbols at the Human Right Monument in the Paris Champ of Mars
https://www.mediastorehouse.com/uig/universal-images-group/editorial-religion/masonic-symbols-human-right-monument-paris-champ-9655421.html

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De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 25/02/2025 15:48
Imagen

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De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 26/02/2025 18:35
LA "MAQUINA DEL TIEMPO" DEL VATICANO ESTA CONECTADA CON VENECIA / JUAN  MARCOS - Amigos de Gabito - Gabitos
Resultado de imagen para MARS GIZE
Resultado de imagen para MARS GIZE
Resultado de imagen para JUAN MARCOS ALEJANDRIA
Resultado de imagen para MARS GIZE
Resultado de imagen para MARS GIZE
 Resultado de imagen para MARS GIZE

Respuesta  Mensaje 5 de 7 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 28/02/2025 19:43

Plaza San Martín de Tours (Buenos Aires)

 
 
 
Vista de la barranca de la plaza de San Martín de Tours, tomada desde la calle Posadas entre Adolfo Bioy Casares (ex Schiaffino) y la bajada de la avenida AlvearExtremo sur de la plaza, en la intersección de la avenida Alvear y la calle Adolfo Bioy Casares

La plaza de San Martín de Tours es un espacio verde ubicado en el barrio de Recoleta de la ciudad de Buenos AiresArgentina. Forma parte de un amplio conjunto de plazas que conforma el tradicional Paseo de la Recoleta. Se encuentra delimitada por las calles de Eduardo Adolfo de Bioy Casares (ex Schiaffino), Posadas y la avenida Alvear,1​ que en su desembocadura a la avenida del Libertador bordea los márgenes sur y oeste de la plaza. Frente a su margen norte, cruzando la calle Posadas, se ubican el monumento ecuestre a Carlos María de Alvear y el edificio del Palais de Glace. Recibió el nombre en 1962 en homenaje a San Martín de Tours, patrono de Buenos Aires, por decreto del entonces intendente Alberto Prebisch.2

Monumento a San Martín de ToursEl monumento a Alvear en la década de 1930. A la derecha se aprecia la parte inferior de la plaza

La fisonomía de la plaza está marcada por una ladera que desciende hacia la calle Posadas, parte de la barranca ribereña histórica del Río de la Plata. En el bajo se ubica un ombú de gran porte, mientras que la zona elevada forma una terraza donde se encuentran plantados varios especímenes de gomero, retoños del ubicado en la cercana plaza de Juan XXIII. Hacia la esquina de la avenida Alvear y la calle Schiaffino se encuentra una monumento en homenaje al ingeniero y periodista Emilio Mitre realizado en mármol de Carrara con basamento de granito, obra del escultor Hernán Cullen Ayerza emplazada allí en 1931.3​ También en la porción superior de la plaza se ubica un monumento a San Martín de Tours realizado en bronce, del escultor Ermando Bucci.4

Los terrenos que hoy ocupa la plaza de San Martín de Tours formaron históricamente parte de la zona de quintas de la Recoleta, usándose para el cultivo de especies frutales y la cría de animales domésticos. Hasta el último cuarto del siglo xix, antes de que la epidemia de fiebre amarilla de 1871 llevara a la aristocracia porteña a abandonar el Barrio Sur, fue una zona marginal de las afueras de la ciudad. Excavaciones realizadas por un equipo de arqueología urbana encontraron restos de un pozo y materiales que señalan la existencia de viviendas de construcción precaria.5​ Con la redistribución sociodemográfica ocurrida tras la epidemia, los alrededores de la plaza se poblaron a fines de siglo de elaborados palacetes en estilo academicista francés. A principios del siglo xx existió en el sector de la plaza cercano a la avenida Alvear el Recreo de Belvedere, café y restaurante donde por primera vez se habría bailado públicamente el tango. En 1909 el terreno fue adquirido por la Municipalidad, que dispuso su parquización.6

La normativa es inconsistente con respecto a la catalogación del espacio verde. Algunos registros legales de la Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires refieren a la plaza de San Martín de Tours mientras que en ocasiones es mencionada como una plazoleta.1


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De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 18/03/2025 02:25

'Pillars of Hercules':
Quintessential geographical marker for Atlantis
per Plato's writings (said Atlantis lay beyond this gate)

https://www.goroadachi.com/etemenanki/updates-oct10.htm

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De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 08/04/2025 04:26

NASA Photos Show Utah Monolith On Mars, Martian Moon Phobos

Monoliths on Phobos, Mars and the Utah Desert, May All Be Related Structures

 

Apparently the silver Monolith discovered in Utah's Red Rock desert is part of a family of monoliths, distributed throughout our Solar System by another civilization for some unknown purpose. Either that or it's moving around through our solar system, phasing into different locations at different times.

The monolith (or monoliths), has previously been sighted by Nasa's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on Mars and one of its moons, Phobos.

The Mars monolith is a rectangular object discovered on the surface of Mars. It is located near the bottom of a cliff, from which it likely fell. The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter took pictures of it from orbit, roughly 180 miles away.

This of course calls to mind the 2001: A Space Odyssey, where a black monolith is found buried on the moon. Then an astronaut named Dave travels to Jupiter, only to find a black monolith in orbit for thousands of years.

The Phobos monolith was a large pillar located on the surface of Mars's moon Phobos. It measured about 279 ft across and 300 feet in height--significantly bigger than the Utah Monolith.

The Mars monolith is a bright object near Stickney crater, described as a "building sized" boulder, which casts a prominent shadow. It was discovered by Efrain Palermo, who did extensive surveys of Martian probe imagery, and later confirmed by Lan Fleming, an imaging sub-contractor at NASA Johnson Space Center.

"A monolith is a geological feature consisting of a single massive piece of rock. Monoliths also occur naturally on Earth, but it has been suggested that the Phobos monolith may be a piece of impact ejecta," claims Wikipedia. But we know better.

The general vicinity of Phobos' monolith is a proposed landing site by Optech and the Mars Institute, for a robotic mission to Phobos known as PRIME (Phobos Reconnaissance and International Mars Exploration).

The PRIME mission would be composed of an orbiter and lander, and each would carry four instruments designed to study various aspects of Phobos' geology. At present, PRIME has not been funded and does not have a projected launch date. Former astronaut Buzz Aldrin has spoken about the Phobos monolith and his support for a mission to Phobos.

The object appears in Mars Global Surveyor images SPS252603 and SPS255103, dated 1998. The object may be related to another monolith located on the surface of Mars, which NASA noted as an example of a common surface feature in that region. In fact, all three monoliths may be related structures left by an unknown civilization, for us Earthlings to discover and wonder about. Or perhaps they're just rocks.

https://www.smobserved.com/story/2020/12/06/news/nasa-photos-show-utah-monolith-on-mars-martian-moon-phobos/5086.html


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