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Schönnbrunn Palace, Vienna in the morning. Got really lucky with the warm light with the dark clouds in the back
The Catherine Palace is a Rococo palace located in the town of Tsarskoye Selo, 30 km south of St. Petersburg, Russia. It was the summer residence of the Russian tsars.
The Umayyad Palace (Arabic: القصر الأموي) is a large palatial complex from the Umayyad period, located on the Citadel Hill (Jabal al-Qal'a) of Amman, Jordan. Built during the first half of the 8th century, it is now largely ruined, with a restored domed entrance chamber, known as the "kiosk" or "monumental gateway".*
*https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umayyad_Palace
Birthplace of Mary Queen of Scots...........for more information visit..........
www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/linlithgow/linlithgowpalac...
Baliati Palace is a less known tourist spot in Bangladesh to the outer world located at Shaturia in Manikganj. It is one of the finest specimens of 19th century monuments of the Renaissance colonial style in Bangladesh. The founder of the Baliati Zaminder was one Govinda Ram Shaha, who was a big salt merchant in the middle of the 18th century. He left four sons: Dadhi Ram, Ananda Ram, Pandit Ram, and Golap Ram. They built all these buildings in the palace complex. The famous Jagannath College in Dhaka was founded and endowed by a member of Baliati family, Babu Kishori Lal Roy Chowdhury and Roybahadur Harendra Kumar Roy Chowdhury.
The building complex consisted of seven separate blocks surrounded by a high enclosure wall pierced by three identical gateways, surmounted with a lion. The complex occupying an area of 5.88 acres of land and containing over 200 rooms of various shapes and dimensions. To the north, there is a tank with regular masonry landings. The central block of upper storey has a decorative hall called Rong Mohal, which is now used as a museum.
The palatial complex is now preserved as a protected cultural properties (antiquities). The department of archaeology protected this site on 1987.
Royal Palace in Plebiscito Square (built in 1600)
This historic city center square is said to be the largest in Europe... and is listed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site - Naples, Italy.
The elaborate Subway, designed by Charles Barry Jr, first opened in 1865 and provided a direct link for rail passengers coming from the High Level Station under Crystal Palace Parade and into the Palace.
Only open on selected dates : www.crystalpalaceparktrust.org/pages/how-to-visit-the-cry...
Palace in Radziejowice as it looks in the Spring. This part of the palace is called "small castle" :)
The Palace in Radziejowice is a complex of Classical residences surrounded by a park, located in the village of Radziejowice, Poland. The location of the palace was already the site of a residence for the Radziejowski family in the 15th century. During the 17th century, the palace, after various expansions and modernisations, took on the Gothic architectural style, as did the other buildings in the complex. During the complex's greatest time of magnificence, the palace was a residence to various Kings of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth: Zygmund III Waza, Władysław IV and Jan III Sobieski. The current look of the complex comes from the turning point of the 18th and 19th centuries, after Kazimierz Krasiński's reconstruction of the complex, designed and by Jakub Kubicki. The expansion of the complex was later continued by Józef Wawrzyniec Krasiński, who had built the surrounding landscape park and the small Neo-Gothic castle. The castle and complex were devastated during World War II, but the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage has thoroughly restored the site to its former beauty. Since 1965 the complex has performed the function of a cultural centre, including fine arts. Today the palace houses a museum and an exhibition space.
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Pałac w Radziejowicach w wiosennej scenerii. Widoczna na zdjęciu część pałacu nazywana jest "zameczkiem" :)
Zespół pałacowo-parkowy w Radziejowicach – pałac w stylu klasycystycznym wraz z otaczającym go parkiem, położone we wsi Radziejowice w powiecie żyrardowskim. W XV wieku, obok istniejącego obecnie pałacu klasycystycznego z XIX wieku, wznosiła się wieża mieszkalna, będąca siedzibą rodu Radziejowskich. Nieopodal wieży, na początku XVII wieku wojewoda łęczycki Stanisław Radziejowski, polecił zbudować wczesnobarokowy pałac z umieszczoną w elewacji długą arkadową galerią z widokiem na ogród. W czasie największej świetności Radziejowic, gdy zarządzał nimi Stanisław Radziejowski bywał tu król Zygmunt III Waza, a od 22 do 25 listopada 1632 roku przebywał król Władysław IV Waza oraz później także Jan III Sobieski. Obecną postać pałac otrzymał na przełomie XVIII i XIX wieku. W czasie II wojny światowej pałac został zajęty przez Niemców na szpital dla żołnierzy, a następnie zdewastowany przez żołnierzy Armii Czerwonej. W 1956 roku pozostałości radziejowickiego majątku stały się własnością Warszawskiego Stowarzyszenia Historyków Sztuki i postanowiono wówczas utworzyć w pałacu Dom Pracy Twórczej. Obecnie często bywają tam pisarze, publicyści, aktorzy, filmowcy, muzycy i plastycy. Pałac mieści także sale muzealne i galerię wystaw czasowych.
The Winter Palace was the official residence of the Russian Emperors from 1732 to 1917. Today, the palace and its precincts form the Hermitage Museum. Situated between Palace Embankment and Palace Square, in Saint Petersburg, adjacent to the site of Peter the Great's original Winter Palace, the present and fourth Winter Palace was built and altered almost continuously between the late 1730s and 1837, when it was severely damaged by fire and immediately rebuilt. The storming of the palace in 1917, as depicted in Soviet propaganda art and Sergei Eisenstein's 1927 film October, became an iconic symbol of the Russian Revolution.
As completed, the overriding exterior form of the Winter Palace's architecture, with its decoration in the form of statuary and opulent stucco work on the pediments above façades and windows, is Baroque. The exterior has remained as finished during the reign of Empress Elizabeth. The principal façades, those facing the Palace Square and the Neva river, have always been accessible and visible to the public. Only the lateral façades are hidden behind granite walls, concealing a garden created during the reign of Nicholas II. The building was conceived as a town palace, rather than a private palace within a park, such as that of the French kings at Versailles.
The palace was constructed on a monumental scale that was intended to reflect the might and power of Imperial Russia. From the palace, the Tsar ruled over 22,400,000 square kilometers (8,600,000 sq mi) (almost 1/6 of the Earth's landmass) and over 125 million subjects by the end of the 19th century. It was designed by many architects, most notably Bartolomeo Rastrelli, in what came to be known as the Elizabethan Baroque style. The green-and-white palace has the shape of an elongated rectangle, and its principal façade is 215 metres (705 ft) long and 30 m (98 ft) high. The Winter Palace has been calculated to contain 1,886 doors, 1,945 windows, 1,500 rooms and 117 staircases. Following a serious fire, the palace's rebuilding of 1837 left the exterior unchanged, but large parts of the interior were redesigned in a variety of tastes and styles, leading the palace to be described as a "19th-century palace inspired by a model in Rococo style".
The Potala Palace is located in Lhasa, Tibet Autonomous Region. It was named after Mount Potala, the abode of Chenresig or Avalokitesvara. The Potala Palace was the chief residence of the Dalai Lama until the 14th Dalai Lama fled to Dharamsala, India, after an invasion and failed uprising in 1959. Today the Potala Palace has been converted into a museum by the Chinese.
The building measures 400 meters east-west and 350 meters north-south, with sloping stone walls averaging 3 m. thick, and 5 m. (more than 16 ft) thick at the base, and with copper poured into the foundations to help proof it against earthquakes. Thirteen stories of buildings – containing over 1,000 rooms, 10,000 shrines and about 200,000 statues – soar 117 meters (384 ft) on top of Marpo Ri, the "Red Hill", rising more than 300 m (about 1,000 ft) in total above the valley floor. Tradition has it that the three main hills of Lhasa represent the "Three Protectors of Tibet." Chokpori药王山, just to the south of the Potala, is the soul-mountain (bla-ri) of Vajrapani金刚手菩萨, Pongwari that of Manjushri文殊菩萨, and Marpori, the hill on which the Potala stands, represents Chenresig or Avalokiteshvara.
The Palace of Fine Arts was built for the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition, which was held in San Francisco. None of the buildings were meant to be permanent. However, the Palace of Fine Arts was so beautiful that it was not torn down after the fair. Miraculously, the palace survived the 1989 earthquake with little damage. The Beaux-Arts style structure features and dome and Roman-style curved colonnades. Surrounding the palace is a park with a duck pond. Adjacent to the palace is the San Francisco Exploratorium, which is a discovery museum with hands-on exhibits on science, art and human perception.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE PALACE OF FINE ARTS:
"The Palace was not designed as 'a Valentine for San Francisco.' Maybeck visualized its colonnade streaming with people, finding a reward within the great doors."
The task of creating a Palace of Fine Arts for the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition fell to the architect Bernard R. Maybeck, then fifty years old and known for his innovative ideas. Setting to work on this new project, he chose as his theme a Roman ruin, mutilated and overgrown, in the mood of a Piranesi engraving. But this ruin was not to exist solely for itself to show "the mortality of grandeur and the vanity of human wishes .... " Although it was meant to give delight by its exterior beauty, its purpose was also to offer all visitors a stimulating experience within doors.
In playing host to the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, The Fair, which opened on February 20, 1915, San Francisco was honoring the discovery of the Pacific Ocean and the completion of the Panama Canal; it was also celebrating its own resurrection after the shattering earthquake and fire of 1906.
The problems of choosing the exact site in the city had finally been overcome and groundwork had been going on for some time. Last of the buildings to be erected, on the lagoon and close by a group of Monterey cypresses, was Maybeck's Palace of Fine Arts. With its exhibition hall to house the work of living artists (dominated by the Impressionists), its colonnade, and its rotunda -- plans for all of which had dazzled the Commissioners when the huge brown-paper sketch was put before them -- it fulfilled the architect's dream: it was as beautiful reflected in the water as it was against the sky. And when the Palace was completed (Roman in style although a freely-interpreted, purely romantic conception, and Greek in decorative treatment) its exceptional harmony gave it instant appeal to the public.
The Palace of Holyroodhouse, Her Majesty The Queen's official residence in Scotland, stands at the end of Edinburgh's Royal Mile against the spectacular backdrop of Arthur's Seat.
www.royalcollection.org.uk/visit/palace-of-holyroodhouse
#holyrood #holyroodhouse #palace #city #edinburgh #architecture #queen #story #travel #scoltand
The Palace of the Tsar Alexey Mikhailovich was built in 1667-1672 by the order of the Tsar as a gala summer residence at the Tsar's Courtyard in Kolomenskoye. The palace served for the rest of the Tsar's family in the country, court ceremonies and reception of overseas ambassadors. The division of the palace into men's and women's half reflected the patterns of life of the Tsar's family in the XVII century. The men's half comprised the Tsar's and the Tsareviches' (the Tsar's sons") towers, while the women's half consisted of the Tsarina's (the Tsar's wife's) and the Tsarevnas' (the Tsar's daughters') towers. The courtier poet Simeon Polotsky referred to the palace as "the Eight Wonder of the World".
The palace building served its purpose for a hundred years, but eventually fell into disrepair and was dismantled in 1767 by the order of Empress Catherine II. Plans, descriptions and images of the palace have survived to our days.
In 2007 - 2010, the palace was reconstructed. The opening ceremony took place on 5th September 2010, on Moscow Day.