Architecture

Thursday, 2 April 2026
18 facts about Hagia Sophia
18 facts about Hagia Sophia
The most significant work of Byzantine architecture
The Hagia Sophia's Temple, now an Istanbul mosque, was initially built as the Church of Divine Wisdom. It was the highest-ranking temple in the Byzant ...

Did you know?

Windsor Castle
During the reign of George V, the dynastic name of the German Royal House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha also changed.
King George decided to take the name from the castle and the royal family became the House of Windsor in 1917. This change was dictated by anti-German sentiments during World War I.
Space Needle
It is Seattle’s most popular firework display on New Year’s Eve.
Balmoral Castle
The estate, along with the original castle, was purchased by Prince Albert, husband of Queen Victoria, in 1852.
Earlier, however, in the first half of the 14th century, King Robert II of Scotland had a hunting lo ...
Stonehenge
Between 1930 BC and 1600 BC, part of the diabase was removed from the northeast side and then arranged into a horseshoe-like shape, reflecting the trilithons in the center of the structure.
It was the penultimate construction phase, known as Stonehenge 3 V.
Mont Saint-Michel
Mont Saint-Michel (Saint-Michel Hill) is a granite rocky tidal islet with a circumference of about 960 meters, in the Bay of Mont-Saint-Michel.
It is a piece of land whose connection to the mainland is only exposed at low tide (the regularly re ...
Windsor Castle
When George III came to the throne in 1760, he reversed the trend in Windsor.
Initially, the atmosphere in the castle remained very informal, local children played there, and the ...
Great Wall of China
The Wall of China is about 2,700 years old.
Neuschwanstein Castle
A huge amount of building materials were used for the construction
List includes 465 tons of Salzburg marble, 1550 tons of sandstone, 400,000 bricks and 2050 cubic meters of wood for scaffolding.
Statue of Liberty
In 1884, the Statue was presented to the American ambassador, then dismantled and transported by ship to New York in June 1885.
Spanish Steps
At the southern end of Spanish Square is the Palazzo di Propaganda Fide, seat of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples.
The palace was designed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, who created the main façade; the rest of the buildi ...