Posts Tagged ‘cultural’

Trips to Wellington Museum

Wellington City is located in south-western tip of New Zealand’s North Island in Cook Strait. Wellington has become the capital of New Zealand since 1865, the year in which he won the title of Auckland. This is known as the capital of the southernmost in the world and is also regarded as the most remote. Te Papa, the National Museum is often a natural choice for the visitor, if you want to get some cross-sections showing the local history walk Bond Store Queens Wharf and enjoy some time surfing.
Part of the emphasis on maritime history, the technology used and the tools of the first Maori culture, the first European settlers, and to this day. Buildings are placed in a part of history, with an already built in 1892 as a warehouse. Wellington Harbour Board also above, which is based reveals the wealth through their office door with expensive and well appointed. If you want to visit a museum in Wellington, you will find that they are not all about maritime history. Open to Te Papa, she realized the city needed a place of their people and history of the refuse. Now the Museum of Wellington City & Sea includes information and displays about the history of social and cultural capital.
When you go through the construction of a small piece of history hidden in the bottom of New Zealand to go. When the building was built in 1891, a time capsule placed at the base. When the building was turned 100 in 1991, a second capsule buried inside the building, taking some of the most important relics and observations at this age. Wellington Waterfront development projects change each person to build a better city. We have to attend the New Zealand capital, Wellington. This is an opportunity to promote and provide access to the port, creating an unprecedented number of parks and public places, build new residential and commercial areas, while all the advantages of the urban planning and design displays. Urban tourism destination will be strengthened through the creation of culture, recreation and new entertainment.

Kenya-Culture and Tradition

If your visits to Kenya, will find their cultural traditions. Kenya is a country of cultural diversity and fight against the constant change. Kenya Saving a complex story that unfolds through a variety of terrain for the moment.
Kenya is a melting pot of different types and levels of life. These people belong to more than 40 different ethnic groups living in Kenya at the moment. The major groups, including the Bantu tribes, Nilotic, Hamitic, Kikuyu, Luyha, Luo, Kalenjin, Meru, Kamba, Maasai, Swahili, Tirkana and Kisii. They all have their own culture and traditions are very rich and diverse.
Kikuyu tribe had embraced the modern way of living the life, still clinging to the Maasai tribes of their belief that God gave them the responsibility of caring for livestock. The Samburu and Turkana are nomadic tribes, although many of them have adopted modern lifestyles.
Riuki According to tribal custom, the guests were greeted with a traditional drink known as Murattini. The main tribal law and everyone must obey. Ngai tribes are thought to worship the Creator of the tribe. The tribes believe that the sacrifice of a goat beneath a fig tree near the sacred mountain can bring rain. a group dance to the music and colorful costumes will make you wonder.
Traditional cuisine is Githeri, which is basically boiled peanuts and corn (maize), which is a preparation mukino mashed sweet potatoes and green beans with roasted goat. It is a traditional dish of the Kikuyu tribe and combine meat protein is not always necessary that the meat is very rare in the life of the tribe to which most vegetarians eat, but provides the majority of proteins peanuts in this dish.