photo: Creative Commons / Henrysalome
Le Chesnay is a commune in the Yvelines department in the Île-de-France region in north-central France. It is located in the western suburbs of Paris 16.7 km (10.4 mi) from the center.
photo: Creative Commons
Procession of students at Wartburg Festival. In 1815 in Jena (Germany) the "Urburschenschaft" was founded. That was a Studentenverbindung that was concentrated on national and democratic ideas.
photo: Creative Commons
India Wharf, Boston, 19th c. An observer in 1815 describes: "across from the long wharves, or in the western part of the city, the India Wharf runs from north to south.
photo: Creative Commons / Unknown author
Mount Merapi in Central Java.
photo: Creative Commons / Rabe
The old Building of the University and its library in 1815
photo: Creative Commons
Royal Decree of Graces, 1815
photo: Creative Commons / Prohibit Onions
View of northern Frankfurt riverfront With the dissolution of the Margraviate of Brandenburg during the Napoleonic Wars, Frankfurt became part of the Province of Brandenburg in 1815.
photo: Creative Commons / Charles Thévenin
Surrender of the town of Ulm, 20 October 1805, Napoleon I receives the capitulation of general Mack (1815)
photo: Creative Commons / Jwnabd
The Gendarme market as it appeared in 1815. Frederick Street, named after King Frederick I, the founder of Friedrich's tad, including the section in the Dorothee stat neighborhood, is 3.3 km (2.1 mi) length.
photo: Creative Commons / Ecemaml
General Eliott bronze bust in the Gibraltar Botanic Gardens. General Don had commissioned a memorial of George Augustus Eliott, 1st Baron Heath field in 1815, which did not materialize in the form initially requested.
photo: Creative Commons / André Leroux
Altar She was born in the Burgundy region of France to Pierre Labouré, a farmer, and Louise Madeleine Gontard, the ninth of 11 living children. Catherine's mother died on October 9, 1815, when was she was just nine years old.
photo: Creative Commons / Unify
The town archives and the C.P.E. Bach Concert Hall With the dissolution of the Margraviate of Brandenburg during the Napoleonic Wars, Frankfurt became part of the Province of Brandenburg in 1815. In the 19th century, Frankfurt played an important role in trade.
photo: Creative Commons / Moralist
The memorial in 1815, the Jacobite cause was no longer a political threat. Alexander Macdonald of Glenaladale built a memorial tower at Glenfinnan surmounted by a statue of an anonymous Highlander in a kilt, to commemorate the raising of the standard.
photo: Creative Commons / Karmafist
Capitol sign in 2005 Concord has many landmarks and other tourist attractions in it. Probably the largest is the New Hampshire State House, which was designed by architect Stuart Park and constructed between 1815 and 1818, is the oldest state house in which the legislature meets in its original chambers.
photo: Creative Commons / Vhorvat
Lavender fields on the island of Hvar. The Austrians regained control of the island in accordance to the 1815 Treaty of Vienna and into the beginning of the 20th century brought a period of relative prosperity.
photo: Creative Commons / Durova
The Capitol after the burning of Washington, D.C. in the War of 1812 Not long after the completion of both wings, the Capitol was partially burned by the British on August 24, 1814, during the War of 1812. Reconstruction began in 1815 and was completed by 1819.
photo: Creative Commons / Aude
Beall-Dawson house, located in Rockville, Maryland, was built in 1815 by Upton Beall, Clerk of the Montgomery County Court. It is now a museum, operated by the Montgomery County Historical Society.
photo: Creative Commons
Battle of Waterloo
photo: Creative Commons / André Leroux
Ex-votos, rue du Bac, Paris She was born in the Burgundy region of France to Pierre Labouré, a farmer, and Louise Madeleine Gontard, the ninth of 11 living children. Catherine's mother died on October 9, 1815, when was she was just nine years old.
photo: Creative Commons / Urashimataro
Gifu Great Buddha/Gifu பெரிய புத்தர்
photo: Creative Commons
Ex-Voto of a Naval Battle between a Turkish ship from Algiers (front) and a ship of the Order of Malta under Langon, 1719. The history of Algiers from 1815 to 1962 is bound to the larger history of Algeria and its relationship to France.
photo: Creative Commons / Victoria and Albert Museum
Boat-building near Flatford Mill 1815 by Constable, John Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Constable once wrote in a letter to Leslie, "My limited and abstracted art is to be found under every hedge, and in every lane, and therefore nobody thinks it worth picking up".
photo: Public Domain / Ericstoltz
John Carroll (bishop)
photo: Public Domain / Roger Griffith
Eglinton Tournament Bridge
photo: Creative Commons / Rob Lavinsky
Gehlenite
photo: Creative Commons / Axt
Late medieval, Gothic architecture in Greifswald. Vorpommern is the smaller, western part of the formerly all-German region of Pomerania; the eastern part became part of Poland after the end of World War II. In the Middle Ages, the area was ruled by the Pomeranian dukes as part of the Duchy of Pomerania.
photo: Creative Commons / Adam.J.W.C.
Cronulla dunes with the city of Sydney and a rubbish dump in View. The first land grant was issued in 1815 when a whaler and merchant by the name of James Birnie, was given 700 acres (2.8 km2) of land and 160 acres (0.6 km2) of saltwater marshes on the Kurnell Peninsula
photo: Creative Commons
Locks on the Caledonian Canal at Fort Augustus.
photo: Creative Commons / Concrete Cowboy
The 1815 windmill near New Brad well village, beside the playing fields. The remainder of the designated area outside the four main towns (Bletchley, Newport Pagnell, Stony Stratford,
photo: Creative Commons / JimmyGimlet (talk | contribs)
Maloja Pass (Italian: Passo del Maloja, German: Malojapass) (el. 1815 m.) is a high mountain pass in the Swiss Alps in the canton of Graubünden, linking the Engadin with the Val Bregaglia and Chiavenna in Italy.