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360° panorama by Wayne Drzewiecki. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Heritage listed lighthouse, views across the enterance to Sydney harbour , North head, Manly, the Pacfic ocean and one of the decomissioned gun pits, taken 19 May 2020 at 4:30 PM.
360° panorama by Gary Davies. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Beaumaris Castle has been described as an 'unfinished masterpiece' and the 'greatest castle never built'. Along with Caernarfon, Conwy and Harlech, it is one of four castles from the reign of Edward I designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites. They formed part of his 'iron ring' of castles in North Wales, built to enforce his authority over the defeated Welsh. All were designed and built by Master James of St George, the greatest military architect of the age. With Beaumaris he was able to start with a black canvas, rather than having to develop plans from the remains of an existing fortification. What he came up with was a fortress built on flat, marshy land, with four concentric lines of defensive walls within walls that included a sea-filled moat with its own dock and access to the open sea. The castle was never fully completed due to a lack of finances and the King's attention turning towards Scotland.
360° panorama by Gary Davies. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Beaumaris Castle has been described as an 'unfinished masterpiece' and the 'greatest castle never built'. Along with Caernarfon, Conwy and Harlech, it is one of four castles from the reign of Edward I designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites. They formed part of his 'iron ring' of castles in North Wales, built to enforce his authority over the defeated Welsh. All were designed and built by Master James of St George, the greatest military architect of the age. With Beaumaris he was able to start with a black canvas, rather than having to develop plans from the remains of an existing fortification. What he came up with was a fortress built on flat, marshy land, with four concentric lines of defensive walls within walls that included a sea-filled moat with its own dock and access to the open sea. The castle was never fully completed due to a lack of finances and the King's attention turning towards Scotland.
360° panorama by Gary Davies. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Beaumaris Castle has been described as an 'unfinished masterpiece' and the 'greatest castle never built'. Along with Caernarfon, Conwy and Harlech, it is one of four castles from the reign of Edward I designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites. They formed part of his 'iron ring' of castles in North Wales, built to enforce his authority over the defeated Welsh. All were designed and built by Master James of St George, the greatest military architect of the age. With Beaumaris he was able to start with a black canvas, rather than having to develop plans from the remains of an existing fortification. What he came up with was a fortress built on flat, marshy land, with four concentric lines of defensive walls within walls that included a sea-filled moat with its own dock and access to the open sea. The castle was never fully completed due to a lack of finances and the King's attention turning towards Scotland.
360° panorama by Gary Davies. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Beaumaris Castle has been described as an 'unfinished masterpiece' and the 'greatest castle never built'. Along with Caernarfon, Conwy and Harlech, it is one of four castles from the reign of Edward I designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites. They formed part of his 'iron ring' of castles in North Wales, built to enforce his authority over the defeated Welsh. All were designed and built by Master James of St George, the greatest military architect of the age. With Beaumaris he was able to start with a black canvas, rather than having to develop plans from the remains of an existing fortification. What he came up with was a fortress built on flat, marshy land, with four concentric lines of defensive walls within walls that included a sea-filled moat with its own dock and access to the open sea. The castle was never fully completed due to a lack of finances and the King's attention turning towards Scotland.
360° panorama by Gary Davies. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Beaumaris Castle has been described as an 'unfinished masterpiece' and the 'greatest castle never built'. Along with Caernarfon, Conwy and Harlech, it is one of four castles from the reign of Edward I designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites. They formed part of his 'iron ring' of castles in North Wales, built to enforce his authority over the defeated Welsh. All were designed and built by Master James of St George, the greatest military architect of the age. With Beaumaris he was able to start with a black canvas, rather than having to develop plans from the remains of an existing fortification. What he came up with was a fortress built on flat, marshy land, with four concentric lines of defensive walls within walls that included a sea-filled moat with its own dock and access to the open sea. The castle was never fully completed due to a lack of finances and the King's attention turning towards Scotland.
360° panorama by Gary Davies. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Beaumaris Castle has been described as an 'unfinished masterpiece' and the 'greatest castle never built'. Along with Caernarfon, Conwy and Harlech, it is one of four castles from the reign of Edward I designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites. They formed part of his 'iron ring' of castles in North Wales, built to enforce his authority over the defeated Welsh. All were designed and built by Master James of St George, the greatest military architect of the age. With Beaumaris he was able to start with a black canvas, rather than having to develop plans from the remains of an existing fortification. What he came up with was a fortress built on flat, marshy land, with four concentric lines of defensive walls within walls that included a sea-filled moat with its own dock and access to the open sea. The castle was never fully completed due to a lack of finances and the King's attention turning towards Scotland.
360° panorama by Simona Bartolomei. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Cypresses have become the symbol of Tuscany all over the world. You can finde them along the roads, in the country paths or in the middle of the fields. In the municipality of Fauglia there is a little circle of cypresses in the top of a little hill.
360° panorama by Simona Bartolomei. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Cypresses have become the symbol of Tuscany all over the world. You can finde them along the roads, in the country paths or in the middle of the fields. In the municipality of Fauglia there is a little circle of cypresses in the top of a little hill.
360° panorama by David Vasicek - pix123 photography Frankfurt. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Aerial panorama above the new rebuild oldtown of Frankfurt in the early morning taking while lockdown of Germany in march 2020 with no airplanes in the sky and no people on the ground.
360° panorama by David Vasicek - pix123 photography Frankfurt. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Aerial panorama above the new rebuild oldtown of Frankfurt in the early morning taking while lockdown of Germany in march 2020 with no airplanes in the sky and no people on the ground.
360° panorama by Sjoerd van der Hucht. Click the image to open the interactive version.
On Tuesday May 16, 1944, the 19 Sinti and Roma families also had to leave The Hague. At four in the morning, policemen banged on the doors of the houses in the courtyard. Everyone had to come. Later that day, 112 Sinti and Roma were brought in trucks to Staatsspoor Station (now The Hague Central Station) and transported by train to the Westerbork Transit Camp. In Westerbork other Sinti and Roma came from other Dutch towns. Three days later, on May 19, 1944, the 112 Sinti and Roma from The Hague were deported to German extermination camps and gassed or employed there, together with 143 other gypsies in camp Westerbork. All 35 Roma and Sinti children from The Hague have been murdered.
360° panorama by Sjoerd van der Hucht. Click the image to open the interactive version.
On Tuesday May 16, 1944, the 19 Sinti and Roma families also had to leave The Hague. At four in the morning, policemen banged on the doors of the houses in the courtyard. Everyone had to come. Later that day, 112 Sinti and Roma were brought in trucks to Staatsspoor Station (now The Hague Central Station) and transported by train to the Westerbork Transit Camp. In Westerbork other Sinti and Roma came from other Dutch towns. Three days later, on May 19, 1944, the 112 Sinti and Roma from The Hague were deported to German extermination camps and gassed or employed there, together with 143 other gypsies in camp Westerbork. All 35 Roma and Sinti children from The Hague have been murdered.
360° panorama by Sjoerd van der Hucht. Click the image to open the interactive version.
On Tuesday May 16, 1944, the 19 Sinti and Roma families also had to leave The Hague. At four in the morning, policemen banged on the doors of the houses in the courtyard. Everyone had to come. Later that day, 112 Sinti and Roma were brought in trucks to Staatsspoor Station (now The Hague Central Station) and transported by train to the Westerbork Transit Camp. In Westerbork other Sinti and Roma came from other Dutch towns. Three days later, on May 19, 1944, the 112 Sinti and Roma from The Hague were deported to German extermination camps and gassed or employed there, together with 143 other gypsies in camp Westerbork. All 35 Roma and Sinti children from The Hague have been murdered.
360° panorama by Sjoerd van der Hucht. Click the image to open the interactive version.
On May 8, 1945, The Hague was liberated by Canadian troops and the Princess Irene Brigade. As in the rest of the Netherlands, a period of purges began in The Hague in which society was denazified. The Duindorp district in Scheveningen, which had been completely evacuated by the Germans during the occupation, was set up as a prison camp for NSB members and collaborators, who had to live there pending criminal investigations and possible trial.
360° panorama by Sjoerd van der Hucht. Click the image to open the interactive version.
On May 8, 1945, The Hague was liberated by Canadian troops and the Princess Irene Brigade. As in the rest of the Netherlands, a period of purges began in The Hague in which society was denazified. The Duindorp district in Scheveningen, which had been completely evacuated by the Germans during the occupation, was set up as a prison camp for NSB members and collaborators, who had to live there pending criminal investigations and possible trial.
360° panorama by Sjoerd van der Hucht. Click the image to open the interactive version.
On May 8, 1945, The Hague was liberated by Canadian troops and the Princess Irene Brigade. As in the rest of the Netherlands, a period of purges began in The Hague in which society was denazified. The Duindorp district in Scheveningen, which had been completely evacuated by the Germans during the occupation, was set up as a prison camp for NSB members and collaborators, who had to live there pending criminal investigations and possible trial.