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Herculaneum : Collegio degli Augustali Dedicated To Augustus and Caesar and any case to the cult of the Emperor -Frescoes -<79AD
The Collegio di Spagna (Royal Spanish College or Royal College of Spain in Bologna) (officially Real Colegio Mayor de San Clemente de los Españoles) is a college for Spanish students at the University of Bologna, Italy, which has been functioning since the 14th century. It has been under the Royal patronage of the Spanish Crown since 1488, as authorized by Pope Innocent VIII.
Herculaneum : Collegio degli Augustali dedicated to Augustus and Caesar and any case to the cult of the Emperor - Frescoes - <79AD
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Kutná Hora, Pacákovy sady (CZ) 05-08-2018
Pohled na Jezuitskou kolej a Chrám svaté Barbory.
Uitzicht op het jezuïetencollege en de kerk van St. Barbara.
View of the Jesuit College and the Church of St. Barbara.
Blick auf das Jesuitenkolleg und die Kirche St. Barbara.
Vue du Collège des Jésuites et de l'église Sainte-Barbara.
Vista del Colegio Jesuita y la Iglesia de Santa Bárbara.
Vista del Collegio dei Gesuiti e della Chiesa di Santa Barbara.
Vista do Colégio dos Jesuítas e da Igreja de Santa Bárbara.
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Piazza del Collegio.
The facade gleams with Byzantine mosaics.
19th century Romanesque style XI.
19th century mosaics XIII, "Ascension of Christ", by Berlinghieri (attribute).
The church of San Frediano is one of the oldest in Lucca. The construction of the first church is between 560 and 588. The saint was bishop of the Lucca citadel. In the year 1112 the reconstruction began, with the new building consecrated in 1147.
Irlanda, County Dublin, Dublino, Primavera 2023
Il Trinity College (irlandese: Coláiste na Tríonóide), è l'unico collegio costituente dell'Università di Dublino, un'università di ricerca a Dublino, Irlanda. La regina Elisabetta I fondò il college nel 1592. L'università ha formato molti dei poeti, drammaturghi e autori irlandesi di maggior successo, tra cui Oscar Wilde e Bram Stoker. La Sala Lunga è la camera principale lunga 65 metri della Biblioteca Vecchia, la Sala Lunga, fu costruita tra il 1712 e il 1732 e ospita 200.000 dei libri più antichi della Biblioteca. Inizialmente, la Sala Lunga aveva un soffitto piatto, scaffali per i libri solo al piano inferiore e una galleria aperta. Nel 1850 la stanza dovette essere ampliata man mano che gli scaffali furono riempiti perché alla Biblioteca era stato concesso il permesso di ottenere una copia gratuita di ogni libro che era stato pubblicato in Irlanda e Gran Bretagna. Nel 1860, il tetto della Sala Lunga fu rialzato per ospitare una galleria superiore. La Sala Lunga è fiancheggiata da busti di marmo.
Trinity College (Irish: Coláiste na Tríonóide), is the sole constituent college of the University of Dublin, a research university in Dublin, Ireland. Queen Elizabeth I founded the college in 1592. The university has educated many of Ireland's most successful poets, playwrights and authors, including Oscar Wilde and Bram Stoker. The Long Room is the 65-metre-long main chamber of the Old Library, the Long Room, was built between 1712 and 1732 and houses 200,000 of the Library's oldest books. Initially, The Long Room had a flat ceiling, shelving for books only on the lower level, and an open gallery. By the 1850s the room had to be expanded as the shelves were filled due to the fact that the Library had been given permission to obtain a free copy of every book that had been published in Ireland and Britain. In 1860, The Long Room's roof was raised to accommodate an upper gallery. The Long Room is lined with marble busts.
Collegio Aycardi - Finale Ligure
ora sede INPS
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The world's first shopping mall, with the Torre delle Milizie and the Collegio Angelico (Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas) behind, as seen from the Monument to Victor Emmanuel II, in Rome, Italy.
Built in around 100 AD by famous architect Apollodorus of Damascus, as part of Emperor Trajan's Forum.
Shot with a Nikon D7000 and a Nikkor AFS DX 18-200mm F/3.5-5.6G lens, and processed in GIMP and Photoscape.
Collegio Salesiana
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Piazza del Collegio.
The facade gleams with Byzantine mosaics.
19th century Romanesque style XI.
19th century mosaics XIII, "Ascension of Christ", by Berlinghieri (attribute).
The church of San Frediano is one of the oldest in Lucca. The construction of the first church is between 560 and 588. The saint was bishop of the Lucca citadel. In the year 1112 the reconstruction began, with the new building consecrated in 1147.
Cloister of Collegio Papio, Ascona, Ticino, Switzerland.
Thank you for your visits / comments / faves!
The Collegio del Cambio frescos are a series of allegorical fresco paintings in the Audience Chamber (Sala delle Udienze) of the Collegio del Cambio in Perugia, painted by Perugino.
In 1452 the Arte del Cambio was authorised to set up a headquarters near the fringes of the palazzo dei Priori. They built the building between 1452 and 1457. In 1496 they decided to commission Perugino to decorate the building's Audience Chamber. He was then among the most in-demand artists in Italy, leading studios in both Florence and Perugia.
They signed the contract with the painter on 26 January 1496, though he mainly worked on the cycle in 1498, finishing it in 1500. His assistants on the project included Andrea d'Assisi and probably the young Raphael for the figure of Strength and the face of Solomon. He was paid 350 gold ducats on 11 June 1507. Vasari praised it in his Lives of the Artists:
This very beautiful work was praised more than any other which Pietro [Vanucci] painted in Perugia, and today the inhabitants of this town value it as a memory of a highly esteemed representative of their fatherland.
by Paolo VERONESE (1575-82)
The Sala del Collegio (the Hall of the College) was the room where foreign delegations or important, famous personages were received and granted an audience by the College, a magistracy composed of the doge and six councilors.
Ceiling paint Mars and Neptune
Report and full photo gallery on my website: www.obsidianurbexphotography.com/education/dark-music-sch...
Dark Music School (Collegio S) was a Roman Catholic boarding school which became abandoned in the 1980s. There are classrooms, an auditorium and chap
Report and full photo gallery on my website: www.obsidianurbexphotography.com/education/dark-music-sch...
Dark Music School (Collegio S) was a Roman Catholic boarding school which became abandoned in the 1980s. There are classrooms, an auditorium and chap
Regno Unito, Oxfordshire, Oxford, Autunno 2015
All Souls è un collegio dell'Università di Oxford in Inghilterra. Non ha studenti nel corso di laurea, ma ogni anno gli studenti post-laurea di Oxford hanno diritto a richiedere una borsa di studio mediante un esame molto competitivo (una volta descritto come "l'esame più difficile al mondo"). Il Collegio fu fondato da Enrico VI dell'Inghilterra nel 1438. Una grande ristrutturazione dell'estremità settentrionale del Collegio fu intrapresa dal grande architetto Nicholas Hawksmoor (1661-1736) che, insieme alla creazione di Radcliffe Square e della sua biblioteca, avrebbe trasformare il centro architettonico di Oxford. Conosciuto come "architetto del diavolo", Hawksmoor era una misterioso massone che amava i simboli pagani. Le torri gemelle, furono ritenute la rovina dello skyline di Oxford quando è stato costruito al tempo della loro costruzione.
All Souls is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in England.
It has no undergraduate members, but each year recent graduate and postgraduate students at Oxford are eligible to apply for Examination Fellowships through a competitive examination (once described as "the hardest exam in the world"). The College was founded by Henry VI of England in 1438. A great refashioning of the northern end of the College was undertaken by the great architect Nicholas Hawksmoor (1661-1736), which, along with the creation of Radcliffe Square and its library, would transform the architectural centre of Oxford. Known as the 'devil's architect', Hawksmoor was a mysterious freemason who loved pagan symbols. The twin towers, were lambasted for ruining the Oxford skyline when first built.
The Almo Collegio Borromeo is a private university hall of residence (collegio) in Pavia, region of Lombardy, Italy. It is classified as a "highly qualified Cultural Institute" by the Ministry of Education, Universities and Research and is the oldest such institution remaining in operation in Italy. Together with Collegio Ghislieri – with which a sharp goliardic rivalry has developed during the centuries – it is one of two colleges in Pavia with historical heritage. The building that houses the college was designed by Pellegrino Tibaldi, and overlooks the Ticino, surrounded by landscaped gardens and the Borromeo Gardens. Vasari described it as a "palace of knowledge" ("palazzo per la Sapienza").
The college selects students of the University of Pavia through a rigorous public competition based on tests taken annually. The services offered by the college are not limited to food and housing, but rather are focused on providing training in parallel and integrated with the university: for example, CEGA (Center for General and Applied Ethics) is hosted by the college; along with conferences, presentations of books on current affairs, hosting the chair in theology, and offering countless moments of reflection, in addition to the ever-rich artistic and musical seasons in the life of the college. The college also offers various exchange programmes, with institutions such as Corpus Christi College, Cambridge and the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University.
Collegio Borromeo was founded in 1561 by the estate of cardinal St. Charles Borromeo which aimed to create an institution to accommodate young promising students experiencing economic hardship. This is still the aim of the Fondazione Collegio Borromeo. On May 10, 2009, the Women's Section was opened in the presence of Minister Mariastella Gelmini and Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi; it is intended to accommodate approximately fifty of the most deserving female students from the University of Pavia.
The student rooms are divided according to the sides of the building: "Piazza" ("Square") on the western side, facing Piazza Borromeo, "Giardino" ("Garden") on the south side, "Vicolo" ("Lane") on the north side, looking onto Via Cardinal Tosi. The east side is called "Richini", as it is situated on a seventeenth-century garden designed by Francesco Maria Richini, and houses two auditorium-style rooms ("White Room" and "Mural Room") with private upstairs rooms for guests. The rooms are also divided into several levels: "Mezzanino" (mezzanine), "Nobile" (piano nobile), "Paradiso" (second mezzanine) and "Iperuranio" (attic). Also on the south side are "Sangiovannino alto" and "basso" ("Upper" and "Lower"), saved from the Church of San Giovanni in Borgo before demolition in the nineteenth century.
College admission follows an open, meritocratic competition divided into a variety of assessments; only those who have obtained a minimum score of 80 in their graduation exam may apply for the admissions competition. This competition is now run in conjunction with the Scuola Superiore Studi Pavia IUSS, the School for Advanced Studies, of which the Almo Collegio Borromeo is a founding member and, indeed, the admission test is valid for access to IUSS courses to the extent of space reserved for the college. Nevertheless, it is important to note that the gaining a place at Borromeo does not automatically secure a place in IUSS: although it is not the norm, there are students of Borromeo who are not students of IUSS, as the rankings of the IUSS competition and the Borromeo competition are separate and follow different criteria (distinguishing different classes and thresholds).
The first part of the competition includes a written test administered by the IUSS, divided into the following disciplines: Italian, Latin, History, Philosophy, Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry and Biology. Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry problems were recently introduced. One can choose the track and the exercises regardless of the degree course chosen and can obtain a maximum score of 20 points from this written test. Those obtaining a minimum score of 12 points in the written test are invited to two oral examinations. In these, candidates are tested on the content of their last three years of high school in two subjects of their choice, however relevant to their degree course. The test begins from a topic chosen by the student and listed in the schedule ("tesario"; containing the list of topics to prepare for each discipline). The oral exam can provide up to 60 points, 30 for each interview. Additionally, as part of these tests, the candidate is interviewed by the appropriate college Rector and, in order to gauge the strength of compatible cultural background, he or she has a test of general knowledge and an aptitude interview with a psychologist seeking to determine eligibility for collegiate life. The latter tests have no value for the IUSS competition but contribute 20 points overall towards Borromeo entry. To be eligible, a candidate must achieve the minimum score of 65 points.
To retain their place at the college, students are required to have a university average of at least 27/30, with no marks below 24, and to pass all required exams by the formal closing of the academic year. The ability to speak at least two foreign languages is required, demonstrated through specific, internationally recognized certificates. Students must also attend additional courses required by IUSS or, alternatively, take at least two internal courses per academic year.
Vittorio Emanuele II National Boarding School
From Italian Wikipedia:
"The complex of the National Boarding School, formally known as the Vittorio Emanuele II National Boarding School, is one of the historical-religious complexes of Naples; it is located in the historical center, in piazza Dante.
The history of the Convitto begins in 1768, when Ferdinand IV of Bourbon, after having expelled the Jesuits from the Kingdom, founded the Casa del Salvatore in their original complex.
In 1807 the Casa became the Collegio del Gesù Vecchio, then the First Royal College of Naples with the name of "Royal college of sciences, letters and fine arts of San Sebastiano" and, finally, with the authorization of Gioacchino Murat, Liceo del Salvatore. In 1826 the high school was moved to the monastery of San Sebastiano where the French had placed the music conservatory after the confiscation of ecclesiastical property. In 1828, after the Jesuits had returned, it acquired the name of Collegio dei Nobili.
In 1835 the Jesuits opened an entrance to the Convitto from Piazza Dante in the central niche of the Foro Carolino, where an equestrian statue of Charles III of Bourbon should have been placed.
Decades later, the entry of Giuseppe Garibaldi caused the abolition of the Jesuit order and the nationalization of their assets: the structure in question was thus transformed into the Vittorio Emanuele II National Boarding School in Naples.
It currently houses a primary school, a lower secondary school and three upper secondary schools (a European classical high school (ESABAC and Spanish), a traditional scientific high school and a scientific sports high school). Students attending the educational structure can use the service as boarders and semi-boarders." (Wikipedia)
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Cloister of Collegio Papio, Ascona, Ticino, Switzerland.
Thank you for your visits / comments / faves!
Construction on this church started in 1622 by the Jesuits, attached to their college, Collegio Romano. It started being used in 1650, and finally consecrated in 1722.
Urbex ✧ Collegio di Musica
▻ Errer des heures, aller de surprise en surprise, le temps comme suspendu, et l'étrange impression que les écoliers me suivent, d'un pas léger et insouciant...
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Urbex ✧ Collegio di Musica
▻ Wandering for hours, going from one surprise to another, time as suspended, and the strange feeling that the students follow me, softly and carefree...
⋆
The Almo Collegio Borromeo is a private university hall of residence (collegio) in Pavia, region of Lombardy, Italy. It is classified as a "highly qualified Cultural Institute" by the Ministry of Education, Universities and Research and is the oldest such institution remaining in operation in Italy. Together with Collegio Ghislieri – with which a sharp goliardic rivalry has developed during the centuries – it is one of two colleges in Pavia with historical heritage. The building that houses the college was designed by Pellegrino Tibaldi, and overlooks the Ticino, surrounded by landscaped gardens and the Borromeo Gardens. Vasari described it as a "palace of knowledge" ("palazzo per la Sapienza").
The college selects students of the University of Pavia through a rigorous public competition based on tests taken annually. The services offered by the college are not limited to food and housing, but rather are focused on providing training in parallel and integrated with the university: for example, CEGA (Center for General and Applied Ethics) is hosted by the college; along with conferences, presentations of books on current affairs, hosting the chair in theology, and offering countless moments of reflection, in addition to the ever-rich artistic and musical seasons in the life of the college. The college also offers various exchange programmes, with institutions such as Corpus Christi College, Cambridge and the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University.
Collegio Borromeo was founded in 1561 by the estate of cardinal St. Charles Borromeo which aimed to create an institution to accommodate young promising students experiencing economic hardship. This is still the aim of the Fondazione Collegio Borromeo. On May 10, 2009, the Women's Section was opened in the presence of Minister Mariastella Gelmini and Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi; it is intended to accommodate approximately fifty of the most deserving female students from the University of Pavia.
The student rooms are divided according to the sides of the building: "Piazza" ("Square") on the western side, facing Piazza Borromeo, "Giardino" ("Garden") on the south side, "Vicolo" ("Lane") on the north side, looking onto Via Cardinal Tosi. The east side is called "Richini", as it is situated on a seventeenth-century garden designed by Francesco Maria Richini, and houses two auditorium-style rooms ("White Room" and "Mural Room") with private upstairs rooms for guests. The rooms are also divided into several levels: "Mezzanino" (mezzanine), "Nobile" (piano nobile), "Paradiso" (second mezzanine) and "Iperuranio" (attic). Also on the south side are "Sangiovannino alto" and "basso" ("Upper" and "Lower"), saved from the Church of San Giovanni in Borgo before demolition in the nineteenth century.