photo: Public Domain / Makthorpe
Le Nain
photo: White House / Joyce N. Boghosian
President Bush Signs H.R. 1593, the Second Chance Act of 2007
photo: White House / Eric Draper
President Bush Signs H.R. 1593, the Second Chance Act of 2007
photo: Creative Commons / Chris huh
Fort Jesus, Mombasa. The fort was originally built by the Portuguese in 1593 to defend the Old Port from attack. From above the Fort has a shape of a man, and was named Jesus accordingly.
photo: Creative Commons / Hasegawa Tōhaku
Maple, Chishaku-in, 1593. Tōhaku started his artistic career as a painter of Buddhist paintings in his home province of Noto. By the age of twenty Tōhaku was a professional painter, and by his thirties, had moved to Kyoto to study under the prestigious Kanō School, then headed by Kanō Shōei
photo: White House / Eric Draper
President Bush Signs H.R. 1593, the Second Chance Act of 2007
photo: Creative Commons / Arheo
The beach of Maria Pia. Palazzo Carcassona, Alghero Cathedral (Cattedrale di Santa Maria Immacolata di Alghero). Begun in 1570, it was opened in 1593 but finished and consecrated only in 1730.
photo: Public Domain / Sir Gawain
Matthäus Merian
photo: Public Domain / Inkub0
Caravaggio
photo: Public Domain / Artemisia Gentilesch
Artemisia Gentileschi
photo: UN
The Security Council adopts resolution 1593 (2005) by a vote of 11 in favour, none against with 4 abstentions (Algeria, Brazil, China, United States)
photo: Creative Commons / Jean-Pol GRANDMONT
Ajaccio Cathedral Cathédrale Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption d'Ajaccio
photo: Creative Commons / Hdamm
Siamese King Naresuan fighting the Burmese crown prince at the battle of Battle of Yuthahatthi in Jan. 1593. The subsequent years saw constant warfare as numerous states attempted to exploit the collapse of Khmer hegemony.
photo: Public Domain / Kordas
Rosenburg
photo: Creative Commons / Sa-se
Fort Jesus is a Portuguese fort built in 1593 by order of King Philip II of Spain ( King Philip I of Portugal ), then ruler of the joint Portuguese and Spanish Kingdoms, located on Mombasa Island to guard the Old Port of Mombasa, Kenya.
photo: Creative Commons / Sandro Senn
Building inside the fort Jesus is a Portuguese fort built in 1593 by order of King Philip II of Spain ( King Philip I of Portugal ), then ruler of the joint Portuguese and Spanish Kingdoms, located on Mombasa Island to guard the Old Port of Mombasa, Kenya.
photo: Public Domain / Pethan (talk | contribs)
Wild Boar Hunt (Rockox House, Antwerp) Oil on canvas, 194 x 340 cm
photo: Creative Commons / Mnd
Kuro-mon Gate When Toyotomi Hideyoshi transferred Ieyasu to the Kantō region, he placed Ishikawa Norimasa in charge of Matsumoto.
photo: Creative Commons / Bobbacon
University of Aberdeen, Elphinstone Hall Aberdeen has two universities, the University of Aberdeen and The Robert Gordon University. Aberdeen's student rate of 11.5% is higher than the national average of 7%.
photo: Creative Commons / Angusmclellan
Ponders End is a place in the London Borough of Enfield, North London. It is roughly located in the area either side of Hertford Road (High Street, Ponders End) between The Ride and the Boundary Public House (North to South) and Wharf Road and the Southbury railway station/Kingsway (East to West).[1]
photo: Public Domain / Lestath
Toszek [ˈtɔʂɛk] (German: Tost) is a town in Poland, in Gliwice County, Silesian Voivodeship, with 4,000 inhabitants.
photo: Creative Commons / Escarlati
Interior view.
photo: Public Domain / Cupcakekid
Danny is an impressive Grade I listed Elizabethan red brick Mansion near Hurstpierpoint in West Sussex, England. It lies at the northern foot of Wolstonbury Hill and one of the finest stately houses in Sussex, with 56 bedrooms and 28 apartments. The present house was built 1593-95 by George Goring, slightly to the east of an older house. It is set in eight acres (32,000 m²) of gardens at the foot of the South Downs.
photo: Creative Commons / Cupcakekid
Danny is an impressive Grade I listed Elizabethan red brick Mansion near Hurstpierpoint in West Sussex, England. It lies at the northern foot of Wolstonbury Hill and one of the finest stately houses in Sussex, with 56 bedrooms and 28 apartments. The present house was built 1593-95 by George Goring, slightly to the east of an older house. It is set in eight acres (32,000 m²) of gardens at the foot of the South Downs.
photo: Creative Commons / Frans II Francken
Abbas I as a new Caesar being honoured by the Trumpets of Fame, together with the Persian embassy to Europe (1609–1615), in Allégorie de l'Occasion, by Frans II Francken, 1628.
photo: Creative Commons / Steinninn
ISK 10 note
photo: Creative Commons
Murals in the galleries
photo: Creative Commons / Mtaylor848
Dewsbury Minster
photo: Creative Commons
Corner view showing the doubling of columns from lower to upper floor
photo: Creative Commons / Mats Halldin
From south.