By BARRY HATTON
The Great Wall of China, Rome's Colosseum, India's Taj Mahal and three
architectural marvels from Latin America were among the new seven
wonders of the world chosen in a global poll released on Saturday.
Jordan's Petra was the seventh winner. Peru's Machu Picchu, Brazil's
Statue of Christ Redeemer and Mexico's Chichen Itza pyramid also made
the cut.
About 100 million votes were cast by the Internet and cellphone text
messages, said New7Wonders, the nonprofit organization that conducted
the poll.
The seven beat out 14 other nominated landmarks, including the Eiffel
Tower, Easter Island in the Pacific, the Statue of Liberty, the
Acropolis, Russia's Kremlin and Australia's Sydney Opera House
The pyramids of Giza, the only surviving structures from the original
seven wonders of the ancient world, were assured of retaining their
status in addition to the new seven after indignant Egyptian officials
said it was a disgrace they had to compete.
The campaign to name new wonders was launched in 1999 by the Swiss
adventurer Bernard Weber. Almost 200 nominations came in, and the list
was narrowed to the 21 most-voted by the start of 2006. Organizers
admit there was no foolproof way to prevent people from voting more
than once for their favorite.
A Peruvian in national costume held up Macchu Picchu's award to the sky
and bowed to the crowd with his hands clasped, eliciting one of the
biggest cheers from the audience of 50,000 people at a soccer stadium
in Portugal's capital, Lisbon.
Many jeered when the Statue of Liberty was announced as one of the
candidates. Portugal was widely opposed to the U.S.-led invasion of
Iraq.
Another Swiss adventurer, Bertrand Piccard, pilot of the first hot-air
balloon to fly nonstop around the world, announced one of the winners —
then launched into an appeal for people to combat climate change and
stand up for human rights before being ushered off the stage.
The Colosseum, the Great Wall, Machu Picchu, the Taj Mahal and Petra
had been among the leading candidates since January, while the Statue
of Christ Redeemer received a surge in votes more recently.
The Statue of Liberty and Australia's Sydney Opera House were near the
bottom of the list from the start.
Also among the losing candidates were Cambodia's Angkor, Spain's
Alhambra, Turkey's Hagia Sophia, Japan's Kiyomizu Temple, Russia's
Kremlin and St. Basil's Cathedral, Germany's Neuschwanstein Castle,
Britain's Stonehenge and Mali's Timbuktu.
Weber's Switzerland-based foundation aims to promote cultural diversity
by supporting, preserving and restoring monuments. It relies on private
donations and revenue from selling broadcasting rights.
The U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO,
keeps a list of World Heritage Sites, which now totals 851 monuments.
But the agency was not involved in Weber's project.
The traditional seven wonders were concentrated in the Mediterranean
and Middle East. That list was derived from lists of marvels compiled
by ancient Greek observers, the best known being Antipater of Sidon, a
writer in the 2nd century B.C.
The Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the Statue of Zeus at Olympia, the
Temple of Artemis at Ephesus, the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus, the
Colossus of Rhodes and the Pharos lighthouse off Alexandria have all
vanished.
Original
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