Architecture

Wednesday, 6 May 2026
13 facts about Palais Garnier
13 facts about Palais Garnier
Académie Nationale de Musique
The Opéra Garnier, officially known as the Palais Garnier, is an outstanding architectural work and symbolizes the golden age of opera and ballet in t ...

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Mont Saint-Michel
In 966 monks from Saint-Wandrille came to the island and founded a new Benedictine abbey there - the Abbey of SaintWandrille de Fontenelle.
In 1256 and 1264, King Louis IX of France made pilgrimages to the abbey. Numerous pilgrims also came there, and in order to take proper care of them, a town was built at the foot of the sanctuary.
Great Wall of China
Every year, the Great Wall hosts a marathon run - the Great Wall Marathon.
Hagia Sophia
In the northwestern part of the building, there is a column with a hole in the middle, covered with bronze plates.
The column is called the "column of weeping," the "column of wishing," or the "column of sweat." Leg ...
Malbork Castle
In 1457, King Casimir Jagiellon ceremonially entered the castle in Malbork, which remained in the Kingdom of Poland for over 300 years.
Malbork was a royal castle, the king's temporary residence, and the banner of the Kingdom of Poland ...
Windsor Castle
Windsor Castle is the largest inhabited castle in the world and the longest-used castle in Europe.
In 2006, approximately 500 people lived and worked in the castle.Queen Elizabeth increasingly used t ...
Big Ben
For the first time in history, the clock stopped before 1878 - it was caused by very heavy snowfall.
In 1976, the first and only mechanism failure occurred. Other clock stops that occurred were mainly caused by unfavorable weather conditions.
Palace of Versailles
Designers of contemporary castles included bathrooms and toilets but ultimately abandoned them as they were considered unnecessary.
This was the standard of cleanliness at that time, which did not include washing the body itself, bu ...
Malbork Castle
After the Battle of Grunwald and as a result of previous military operations in the years 1409-1411, the Teutonic treasury, until then the most powerful and richest in Europe, began to run empty.
The Prussian Confederation, created from dissatisfied subjects (burghers and lay knights) of the Teu ...
Great Wall of China
Less than 20% of the Great Wall of China from the Ming Dynasty has survived to the present day.
Despite legal protection by the state, in some sections, the wall was dismantled by local residents, who built houses and outbuildings out of the material they obtained.
Brandenburg Gate
The Brandenburg Gate appears on the reverse of German euro cents in denominations of 10, 20 and 50.