Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 16833 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Deep Anatolia-Rhythms
  • Fotocult-1.tif
  • A seal in the loch.
    em0761391.jpg
  • Outer Hebrides. Lewis Island: Bernera (Berneraigh) island. Iron Age House of Bostadh, a reconstruction of iron houses village discovered in the dune sands in 1992.
    em0761367.jpg
  • Harris Island, Sgarasta (Sgarista) Beach.
    em0761346.jpg
  • Outer Hebrides. Harris Island, Scalpay Island where lives a fishermen community.
    em0761331.jpg
  • Outer Hebrides. Harris Island, the East Coast where lives mainly a scattered population of croftmen and fishermen.
    em0761328.jpg
  • Outer Hebrides. South Harris Island: Tarbert, the harbour.
    em0761318.jpg
  • Achill island. Atlantic Drive. Keel beach, 3 km long, in the back the Cathedral Rocks cliffs.
    em7210482.jpg
  • The cliffs of Tory Island are the first European land between Canada and Ireland.
    em7210437.jpg
  • The small western village, the most important of the 2 hamlets of the island, where the populartion is not more than 120 people. After 1981.1982 heawy storms that isolated the island for many weeks the Irish governement offered houses to the mainland but only half of the population accepted. Now Tory is still a center of Gaelic culture.
    em7210400.jpg
  • Traditional boats (curraghs) near the harbour.
    em7210388.jpg
  • Clare Island, the family castle of O'Malley clan. The chieftain Granuaille O'Malley (1530-1600 a.D.), or Grainne Nì Mhàille, was one of the most celebrated pirate women of his time.
    em7210382.jpg
  • Chioggia is a miniature version of Venice, with one of the most important fishing markets of all Italy. Chioggia served Carlo Goldoni as the setting of his play Le baruffe chiozzotte, one of the classics of Italian literature.
    em7113363.jpg
  • Chioggia, Canale della Vena. Chioggia is a miniature version of Venice, with one of the most important fishing markets of all Italy. Chioggia served Carlo Goldoni as the setting of his play Le baruffe chiozzotte, one of the classics of Italian literature.
    em7113337.jpg
  • Chioggia, fish market. Chioggia is a miniature version of Venice, with one of the most important fishing markets of all Italy. Chioggia served Carlo Goldoni as the setting of his play Le baruffe chiozzotte, one of the classics of Italian literature.
    em7113292.jpg
  • Chioggia is a miniature version of Venice, with a few canals, chief among them the Canale Vena. Chioggia served Carlo Goldoni as the setting of his play Le baruffe chiozzotte, one of the classics of Italian literature.
    em7113238.jpg
  • Torcello island, the eleventh and 12th century Church of Santa Fosca, which is surrounded by a porticus in form of a Greek cross. In the back the beautiful Cathedral of Santa Fosca founded in 639, with much eleventh and 12th century Byzantine work. Torcello was one of the first lagoon islands to be populated by  Veneti who fled the mainland to take shelter from the barbarian invasions. Torcello rapidly grew as a political and trading centre and in the 10th century had a population of at least 10,000 people and was much more powerful than Venice.
    em7113153.jpg
  • Burano island, at the northern end of the Lagoon, is known for its lacework and its brightly-painted houses, popular with artists. Their colours follow a specific system originating from the golden age and to paint a home one must ask to the local authority for the colours permitted for that lot.
    em7113088.jpg
  • Burano island, the main square with St Martino church. At evening the tourists come back to Venice and the local people goes to the coffees houses, restaurants, or simply to walk around and meet.
    em7113054.jpg
  • Burano island, before dawn when the last fishermen sail with their small boat.
    em7113005.jpg
  • Murano: a old glass factory transformed in a private owned small contemporary art museum where focus is the glass art collections of Studio Berengo of the art merchant Adriano Berengo.
    em7112979.jpg
  • Murano island. Fondamenta dei Vetrai along the local Great Canal. At  early morning the workers deliver murano glasses at the shops before the tourist arrive by boat from Venice.
    em7112957.jpg
  • Murano island: Franco Rossi, the "omo de note" ("night's watcher") of the Formia Glass Factory, has the heavy responsability to inspect the furnaces fires during the night and prepare the glass for the next day's activity.
    em7112914.jpg
  • Murano island: Franco Rossi, the "omo de note" ("night's watcher") of the Formia Glass Factory, has the heavy responsability to inspect the furnaces fires during the night and prepare the glass for the next day's activity.
    em7112901.jpg
  • Otranto, the historical center of the city is very conserved with pleasant narrow lanes.
    em7122885.jpg
  • Otranto, the church of San Pietro, with beautiful Byzantine frescoes.
    em7122819.jpg
  • Otranto, the church of San Pietro, with beautiful Byzantine frescoes.
    em7122814.jpg
  • The Aragonese Castle has been the setting of Horace Walpole's book, The Castle of Otranto, which is generally held to be the first gothic novel. Reinforced by Emperor Frederick II and rebuilt by Alphonso II of Naples  in 1485-1498, has an irregular plan with five sides, with three cylindrical towers and a bastion called Punta di Diamante ("Diamond's Head"). The entrance sports the coat of arms of Emperor Charles V.
    em7122805.jpg
  • Otranto. The Cathedral, consecrated in 1088, has a crypt supported by forty-two marble columns.
    em7122796.jpg
  • Otranto, religious ceremony for a new bishop in the old cathedral. Historically Otranto is the main catholic centre of Salento area.
    em7122725.jpg
  • em7707007.jpg
  • Wittenberg's old market square, the Marktplatz, has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1996. The monument to Philip Melanchthon (left), the first systematic theologian of the Protestant Reformation and Luther's monument (right). At left the City Hall and in the back St. Mary's Church (right), the parish church in which Luther often preached. At left the City Hall.
    em7706622.jpg
  • Puerto Montt, traditional iron and wooden houses iìof Southern Chile.
    em1310129.jpg
  • Chiloè. Castro’s harbour.
    em1310015.jpg
  • Masada. Under Herod the Great the fortress bacame an enormous muntaintop fortress. At the time of Jewish rebellion against Rome (70 A.D.) the Jewish fighters preferred death to surrender. The Roman camp, nearly intact through the dry climate of the desert, is one of the best survived exemple of Roman military technology.
    em2500722.jpg
  • Dead sea, the road connecting Ein Bokek to Jerusalem.
    em2500657.jpg
  • Dead Sea, moshav Neot Ha-Kikkar, 20km south of Ein Bokek, specializes in state-of-the-art desert agricultural technology. Today many immigrants from Thailand work here as laborers.
    em2500613.jpg
  • Quebrada de Humahuaca, Humahuaca village, the market. Andean potatoes
    em1410554.jpg
  • Quebrada de Humahuaca, Tilcara, butcher's shop. The Quebrada de Humahuaca, a narrow mountain valley located in the province of Jujuy in northwest Argentina, it is about 155 kilometres long, bordered by the Altiplano in the west and north, by the Sub-Andean hills in the east, and by the warm valleys (Valles Templados) in the south. The name quebrada (literally "broken") translates as a deep valley or ravine. <br />
This region has always been a economic, social and cultural crossroad,  populated for 10,000 years. It was a caravan road for the Inca Empire in the 15th century, then an important link between the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata and the Viceroyalty of Peru. The Quebrada de Humahuaca has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2 July 2003.
    em1410384.jpg
  • Jujuy province. The colonial church of Susques.
    em1410360.jpg
  • Quebrada di Humahuaca, the Quebrada (canyon) de las Señoritas near Uquia. The Quebrada de Humahuaca, a narrow mountain valley located in the province of Jujuy in northwest Argentina, it is about 155 kilometres long, bordered by the Altiplano in the west and north, by the Sub-Andean hills in the east, and by the warm valleys (Valles Templados) in the south. The name quebrada (literally "broken") translates as a deep valley or ravine. <br />
This region has always been a economic, social and cultural crossroad,  populated for 10,000 years. It was a caravan road for the Inca Empire in the 15th century, then an important link between the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata and the Viceroyalty of Peru. The Quebrada de Humahuaca has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2 July 2003.
    em1410242.jpg
  • Salamanca, convent of Las Duenas nuns is the most beautiful of Salamanca.
    em7419319.jpg
  • Salamanca, University. The Escalera de la Universidad (University Staircase) that connects the two floors has symbols carved into the balustrade, seemingly of giant insects having a frolic with several bishops – to decode them was seen as symbolic of the quest for knowledge.
    em7419291.jpg
  • Salamanca, university's cloister. In the back the cathedral nueva.
    em7419274.jpg
  • Salamanca. Casa de las Conchas, in the back the church of La Clerecia. The House of the Shells, is one of the city's most endearing buildings, named after the 300 scallop shells clinging to its facade.
    em7419228.jpg
  • Salamanca, Cathedral Nueva. The tower of this late-Gothic cathedral with its compelling Churrigueresque (an ornate style of baroque architecture) dome is visible from almost every angle of Salamanca. .
    em7419079.jpg
  • Salamanca, the Plaza Mayor with the City Hall. Built between 1729 and 1755, Salamanca's exceptional grand square is widely considered to be Spain's most beautiful central plaza.
    em7419009.jpg
  • The Old Juderia (Jewish quarter) near the cathedral.
    em7418224.jpg
  • The Old Juderia (Jewish quarter) near the cathedral.
    em7418223.jpg
  • Segovia. Iglesia de Corpus Cristi (Corpus Christi church) occupies the site of Segovia's old main synagogue (Sinagoga Mayor). Dating to the 14th century, it was converted into a convent of the nuns of Order of Saint Clare. The building was almost completely destroyed in a fire in 1899 and has been reconstructed since.
    em7418194.jpg
  • Segovia. The cathedral and the old city area that once was the Jewish quarter (Juderia).
    em7418175.jpg
  • Segovia, the cathedral.
    em7418037.jpg
  • Avila. The old Juderia inside the medieval walls, around Santo Domingo and Vallespin streets.
    em7417441.jpg
  • The old bishop's palace near the medieval city wall.
    em7417105.jpg
  • Ávila's old city, surrounded by imposing city walls comprising eight monumental gates, 88 watchtowers and more than 2500 turrets, is one of the best-preserved medieval bastions in Spain.
    em7417028.jpg
  • Ávila's old city, surrounded by imposing city walls comprising eight monumental gates, 88 watchtowers and more than 2500 turrets, is one of the best-preserved medieval bastions in Spain.
    em7417011.jpg
  • Toledo, the cathedral.
    em7416203.jpg
  • Toledo, the cathedral.
    em7416190.jpg
  • Toledo, the Old Jewish Juderia (Jewish quarter).
    em7416161.jpg
  • Toledo. Synagogue of El Transito is famous for its rich stucco decoration, which bears comparison with the Alcazar of Seville and the Alhambra palaces in Granada. The synagogue was founded by Samuel ha-Levi Abulafia, Treasurer to Peter of Castile, in about 1356. The founder was a member of a family who had served the Castilian kings for several generations and included kabbalists and Torah scholar
    em7416057.jpg
  • Acqui Terme. Archeological Museum, tombstones from the Roman necropolis
    em7240225.jpg
  • Acqui Terme, the Roman aqueduct.
    em7240209.jpg
  • 1972. Central Park.
    em1210241.jpg
  • em1210237.jpg
  • 1972. Central Park. Political rally against the Vietnam war.
    em1210227.jpg
  • 1972. Manhattan. Political rally against the Vietnam war.
    em1210223.jpg
  • em1210189.jpg
  • Puerto Lapice whose village inn is said to be where Quixote was knighted by an exasperated landlord. The Venta Del Qixote is actually a reconstruction of a coaching inn of the day.
    em3714528.jpg
  • Puerto Lapice whose village inn is said to be where Quixote was knighted by an exasperated landlord. The Venta Del Qixote is actually a reconstruction of a coaching inn of the day.
    em3714526.jpg
  • El Toboso village is famous for appearing in the novel Don Quixote by the Spanish writer Miguel de Cervantes, as the town in which the fictional character Dulcinea lives. The Dulcinea del Toboso house-museum, an ambient recreation of Cervantes times and ethnographic value objects. Olive press.
    em3714503.jpg
  • Consuegra. Most Spanish windmills, like those described in Cervantes's Don Quixote, can be found in Castilla-La Mancha. The best examples may be found in Consuegra where several mills spike the hill  giving a view of the 12th-century castle,  once a stronghold when Consuegra was the seat and priory of the Knights of San Juan, the Spanish branch of the Knight's Hospitallers of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem.
    em3714417.jpg
  • Calatrava la Nueva castle and monastery. Its name is a reference to the Order of Calatrava, the first military order founded in Castile in 1157 a.D.
    em3714311.jpg
  • Almagro. The Aristocratic District takes us back the town's most splendid centuries with many emblazoned houses.
    em3714247.jpg
  • Almagro. The Aristocratic District takes us back the town's most splendid centuries with many emblazoned houses.
    em3714215.jpg
  • Almagro. The Plaza Mayor, the Main Square, is a rectangular building with stone porches and wooden balconies running round it. Here are the most symbolic buildings in Almagro, like the Open Air Theatre and the Town Hall.
    em3714051.jpg
  • Nioro du Sahel, poor fences to protect the villages from sandstorm and desertification.
    em3700125.jpg
  • Desertification on the once arable land around Mopti and Niger river.
    em3700087.jpg
  • The Ffestiniog and Welsh Highland Railways stretch for 40 miles through the Snowdonia National Park.
    em0771516.jpg
  • Factory closed neat Turin. "Hi, I'm here to visit you, how it's going here?". "Badly".
    em7116059.jpg
  • Turin. Fiat workers on strike.
    em7116026.jpg
  • Parris Island, Beaufort. Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island (MCRD Parris Island) is used for the training of enlisted Marines.
    em1210204.jpg
  • 1980s. Poor' people shelter, a communal house.
    em7237029.jpg
  • 1969. Political of radical left meeting near the market of Porta Palazzo.
    em7237002.jpg
  • Rom wedding in a five star hotel of Budapest, few months after the collapse of communist government.
    em8200018.jpg
  • Bucarest, 1989. Few days after the Revolution and the deart of Nicola Ceausescu.
    em01831782.jpg
  • Suceava, Celebrations for the anniversary of  the Liberation Day from the Nazis in the WW II.
    em0181807.jpg
  • Vigolzone near Piacenza. "Sagra del Tortello", Raviolo's Fair. For a week thousand of people came from all Italian North to eat and dance traditional Liscio, a folk dance originating from the northern Italian region of Romagna at the end of the 19th century.
    em7128202.jpg
  • Turin, landscape from Monte dei Cappuccini. The Po river and Vittorio Emanuele square with the Mole Antonelliana, symbol of Turin. The tower's composite, classical style contrasts with its verticalism. Until a few years ago it was the highest stone building in Europe (167.50 metres). The Mole was built in 1863 like Synagogue, then become the house of the Museo del Risorgimento, and now it's the site of the new National Cinema Museum.
    em7238094.jpg
  • Turin, landscape from Monte dei Cappuccini. The Po river and Vittorio Emanuele square with the Mole Antonelliana, symbol of Turin. The tower's composite, classical style contrasts with its verticalism. Until a few years ago it was the highest stone building in Europe (167.50 metres). The Mole was built in 1863 like Synagogue, then become the house of the Museo del Risorgimento, and now it's the site of the new National Cinema Museum.
    em7238091.jpg
  • Turin. The Cathedral was built in 1498 and dedicated to John the Baptist. The Chapel of Holy Shroud was added in 1668-1694. Alongside the Cathedral it's possible to admire the romanesque campanile (1470). In the foreground Caesar's statue near the old roman gate.
    em7238023.jpg
  • Langhe landscape around Serralunga.
    em7130161.jpg
  • New areas south of the city.
    em2902131.jpg
  • Old town, a traditional craftman.
    em2902241.jpg
  • Chakhmaq square. On the back some wintowers, or wind catchers, a traditional Iranian architectural element to create natural ventilation in buildings.
    em2902194.jpg
  • Carpet Museum of Iran. Housing more than 100 pieces dating from the 17th century to the present day, this is a great place to see the full range of regional patterns and styles found in Iran.
    em2900446.jpg
  • The Great Bazaar. The maze of bustling alleys and the bazaris (shopkeepers) that fill them make this a fascinating, if somewhat daunting, place to explore. Despite being known as the Grand Bazaar, most of the architecture is less than 200 years old
    em2900421.jpg
  • National Museum. The archeology's collection includes ceramics, pottery, stone figures and carvings, mostly taken from excavations at Persepolis and other archeological sites.
    em2900208.jpg
  • Pilgrimage day inside Hazrat-e Masumeh Holy Shrine. Iran’s second-holiest city after Mashhad, Qom (Ghom) is home to the magnificent Hazrat-e Masumeh shrine and the religious power of the clerics who have ruled the country since 1979. Shiite scholars and students come from across the world to study in its madrasehs (schools).
    em2901089.jpg
  • Pilgrimage day inside Hazrat-e Masumeh Holy Shrine. Iran’s second-holiest city after Mashhad, Qom (Ghom) is home to the magnificent Hazrat-e Masumeh shrine and the religious power of the clerics who have ruled the country since 1979. Shiite scholars and students come from across the world to study in its madrasehs (schools).
    em2901078.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

enrico martino

  • BOOKS
  • PORTFOLIO
  • REPORTAGES
  • MEDIA COVERAGE
  • TEARSHEETS
  • ABOUT
  • MULTIMEDIA
  • PRINTS
  • ARCHIVE
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • CONTACT
  • WORKSHOPS