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Monica with grandpa at left and with Don at right. We hadn't yet moved the three blocks from Monica, so the empty, unfinished home on Outer Dr. was perfect for a bar Mitzvah reception - just after Thanksgiving in Nov, 1953.
Abbey Road Bar, Novo Hamburgo/RS.
Foto:
Giovani Paim
para Abbey Road Bar
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Pour is a unique Victorian building, located in the heart of Mount Kisco. Its design inspiration was the Speakeasies of the Prohibition era and its design harkens back to the Golden Age of Hollywood. Owner Anthony Colasacco serves beautiful wine and cocktails in vintage glasses and offers an impressive collection of rare whiskeys (one of the many reasons why Pour is a 9 time winner of the "Best of Westchester" distinction!) Legal capacity inside is 50.
In the Early Middle Ages, Antivari (Latin: Antibarium) remained a subject of the Byzantine Empire, as part of the Theme of Dyrrhacium. Stefan Vojislav, incorporated it into his state in c. 1040, and his family till 1090, after which it became part of the medieval Serbian state culminating in the Empire under the Nemanjić dynasty. It was briefly annexed by the Republic of Venice. About 1360, the Balšić family of Zeta gained control of Bar as the Serbian Empire crumbled, after which Louis I of Hungary controlled Bar briefly before it was annexed by Venice again in 1443. Bar remained under the rule of Venice until it was taken by the Ottoman Empire in 1571 as part of the Ottoman expansion into Europe.
On 13 November 1877, during the Montenegrin–Ottoman War (1876–78), the town was besieged by forces under the command of Mašo Vrbica. The defenses of the town were in the hands of Ibrahim Bey, who refused to surrender the town despite the Montenegrin heavy artillery bombardment, consisting of four Russian guns, and six Ottoman guns that had been seized at the Battle of Nikšić. The bombardment lasted over seven weeks and much of the town was destroyed. On 5 January 1878, the Montenegrins detonated a 225 kg explosive inside the Bar Aqueduct which cut off the town's water supply. Ibrahim Bey surrendered the town on 9 January. The Bar peninsula and the town were awarded to the newly recognized Principality of Montenegro at the Congress of Berlin (1878).
After the 1979 Montenegro earthquake destroyed the aqueduct that supplied water to the town, the location was abandoned, and the new town of Bar constructed on the coast at the old port facilities. After the aqueduct was restored some years later, people began to return.
Somehow you would expect a bar to be more extravagant. But in a small village in Provence you will off course make do with what you got. And I must say I like the choice of colors. :-)
You can also see other images from France in my France set.
You could watch this Large On Black since that brings out more details. My pictures aren't balanced for a white background and a lot of the finer details are lost in this small format. the large version is a sixth of the original - The medium size shown here even smaller...
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Abbey Road Bar, Novo Hamburgo/RS.
Foto:
Giovani Paim
para Abbey Road Bar
_______________________
_______________________
*Para salvar a imagem, siga os passos:
Clique como botão direito do mouse sobre a foto.
Depois, 'Ver todos os tamanhos'.
Opte pelo "Tamanho Original" e "Fazer Download".