Architecture

Sunday, 10 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 ...

Did you know?

Colosseum
It was constructed for the emperor Vespasian as a gift for the Roman people.
By the time of Vespasian's death in 79 AD, three stories of the construction were completed. The who ...
Stonehenge
The trilithon structure was 13.7 meters wide, and its open end faced the northeast.
The horseshoe made of trilithons was a symmetrical structure. Each of the stones weighed about 50 tons and was linked using fanciful techniques.
Petra
The Temple of Winged Lions was dedicated to the wife of the highest Nabataean male deity, Dushara - Lord of the Mountains.
Statue of Liberty
The Statue of Liberty is a gift from France to the U.S. for the centennial of the Declaration of Independence.
French lawyer Édouard René Lefèbvre de Laboulaye suggested in 1865, shortly after the Civil War, tha ...
Neuschwanstein Castle
The king moved into Neuschwanstein in 1884, although the castle was not yet complete.
In 1885, Louis II invited his mother, Marie Frederick of Prussia, to the castle to celebrate her sixtieth birthday.
Lighthouse of Alexandria
The building was constructed according to the plans of the Greek architect Sostratos of Cnidus.
Schönbrunn Palace
Schönbrunn Park is home to a palm house dating back to 1880-the largest in Europe and one of the three largest in the world.
With a total length of 111 meters, a width of 28 meters, and a height of 25 meters, the palm house h ...
Balmoral Castle
Queen Victoria and Prince Albert first visited Scotland in 1842, five years after they came to the throne and two years after their wedding.
They then stopped at Taymouth Castle. They returned to Scotland in 1844, having no property of their ...
Palace of Versailles
The period of Versailles' splendor ended with the French Revolution, which broke out in 1789.
King Louis XVI returned to Paris, and the palace, deprived of its royal court, began to decline. The ...
Petra
Bedouins also explain why Perta was a secret for so long.
The Nomads' descendants, who guarded the city's secret location, killed all foreigners who wandered into their land, and that is why the West never heard about Petra.