photo: Creative Commons
St. Peter's Lutheran Church, Riga, Latvia
photo: Creative Commons / Wojsyl
Vilnia River
photo: Creative Commons / M.K.
Vilnius University
photo: Creative Commons / Wojsyl
The Angel of Užupis
photo: Creative Commons / Trounce
Ashbourne's main street
photo: Creative Commons
Raudonė Basic School, located in Raudonė Castle.
photo: Creative Commons
Vilnius — City municipality —
photo: Creative Commons / HV
Blintz
photo: Creative Commons
Vytautas the Great. Lithuania reached the height of its power under his reign. (17th century painting)
photo: Creative Commons / Ludmiła Pilecka
Shashlik
photo: Creative Commons / Msulik
Sorrel soup
photo: Creative Commons / DanielMJ
Węgorzewo [vɛŋgɔˈʐɛvɔ] (German: Angerburg, Lithuanian: Ungura) is a tourist town in the Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, Poland, not far from the border with Russia's Kaliningrad Oblast. It is the seat of Węgorzewo County. Lake Mamry is close to the town.
photo: Creative Commons / Yiddish
Gediminas Tower
photo: Creative Commons
Baba Jaga, by Viktor Vasnetsov.
photo: Creative Commons
Stamp with the Cross of St. Euphrasyne from 1991
photo: Creative Commons / Sebastianm
Białystok [bjaˈwɨstɔk] ( listen) (also known by alternative names) is the largest city in northeastern Poland and the second most densely populated city of the country. It is located near Poland's border with Belarus and is the capital of the Podlaskie region. In June 2009, its population was 294,399[1]. From 1921 to 1998, it lay within Białystok Voivodeship; since 1999, it has been the capital of Podlaskie Voivodeship.
photo: Creative Commons / Staben
Canada Geese on Spokane River, Washington.
photo: Creative Commons / Ivan Bilibin
Vasilisa the Beautiful at the Hut of Baba Yaga, by Ivan Bilibin
photo: Creative Commons / Rainer Ebert
The English Market, Cork.
photo: Creative Commons
Charlemagne (left) and Pippin the Hunchback. Tenth-century copy of a lost original from about 830
photo: Creative Commons / Arria Belli
Plates of vareniki with smetana and onion
photo: Public Domain / Roman Z
Halych (Ukrainian: Галич, Russian: Галич, Polish: Halicz, Lithuanian: Halyčas) is a historic city on the Dniester River in western Ukraine. The town gave its name to the historic province and kingdom of Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia, of which it was the capital until the early 14th century, when the seat of the local princes was moved to Lviv. In 1340-1772, the province comprised the Ruthenian Voivodeship. Today Halych is a small city and is located right next to the former capital of the Galicia
photo: Creative Commons
The Univ Lavra was established in 1400 by the ruler Lubart's son Theodore and remains the holiest monastery of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church.
photo: Creative Commons
Riga in 1650. The inscription reads: Prospect der Stadt Riga ums Jahr 1650 (View at the City of Riga in 1650). Drawing by Johann Christoph Brotze
photo: Creative Commons / Vasarossunus
Klaipėda (About this sound pronunciation (help·info) [ˈklaɪpe:da]; German: Memel) is a city in Lithuania situated at the mouth of the Curonian Lagoon where it flows into the Baltic Sea. As Lithuania's only seaport, it has ferry terminal connections to Sweden and Germany. Some of its older buildings have picturesque half-timbered construction, similar to that found in Germany, France, England, Denmark and southern Sweden. The population shrank from 207,100 in 1992 to 187,442 in 2005. Popular seas
photo: Creative Commons
St. George's Cathedral in Lviv served as the mother church of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church during 19th and 20th centuries.