photo: Creative Commons / Highflier
Cutaway of Allison V-1710
photo: European Community / Cacophony
A View of Longleat, by Jan Siberechts, 1675 Thomas Thynne, 2nd Viscount Weymouth (21 May 1710–1751) was an English peer, descended from the first Sir John Thynne of Longleat House.
photo: Creative Commons
The Peterhof Palace (1709—1755) in Petergof
photo: Creative Commons
Boston in 1768, with Long Wharf extending into the harbor. Engraving by Paul Revere. Long Wharf (built 1710-1721) in Boston, Massachusetts "was the busiest pier in the busiest port in America during early colonial times.
photo: Creative Commons / Emt147
The XB-38 Flying Fortress was a prototype United States bomber aircraft of World War II.
photo: Creative Commons / Peripitus
Allison 1710 V12 Aircraft Engine
photo: GFDL / World Imaging
Soft-paste porcelain,
photo: Creative Commons
Veduta of Porta del Popolo, Rome, by Giuseppe Vasi.
photo: Creative Commons / Csörföly Dániel
County Hall A more peaceful era started after 1710. Industry, trade and viticulture prospered, manufactures were founded, a new city hall was built. The feudal lord of the city was the Bishop of Pécs, but the city wanted to free itself from episcopal control
photo: Creative Commons
Rosenborg Castle
photo: Creative Commons / Magnus Manske
Rockingham, Kingston
photo: GFDL / World Imaging
Meissen porcelain.
photo: Creative Commons / Magnus Manske
Front of Rockingham in 2007
photo: Creative Commons / Arne List
Bøur
photo: Public Domain / Louis le Grand
Louis XV of France
photo: Creative Commons / Gryffindor
The complex of Berlin's residential castle and the Supreme Parish Church with its double-tower façade of 1538 in the right (southern) corner. Miniature shown in the present church building.
photo: Creative Commons
Tinted engraving of Queen Anne from an atlas commissioned by Augustus II the Strong, ca. 1706–1710
photo: Creative Commons / Uzo
A more peaceful era started after 1710. Industry, trade and viticulture prospered, manufactures were founded, a new city hall was built. The feudal lord of the city was the Bishop of Pécs, but the city wanted to free itself from episcopal control. Bishop George Klimó, an enlightened man (who founded the first public library of the country) would have agreed to cede his rights to the city, but the Holy See forbade him to do so. When Klimó died in 1777, Queen Maria Theresa quickly elevated Pécs to
photo: Creative Commons / Stefano Bistolfi
Chapel 5. Disputation with the Doctors The Sacro Monte di Ossuccio (‘’Sacred Mount of Ossuccio’’) is located on a hillside slope between olive groves and woods along the western edge of Lake Como facing Isola Comacina.
photo: Creative Commons / Wknight94
Albany City Hall
photo: Creative Commons / Mats Halldin
North-western corner of the palace in February 2007.
photo: Creative Commons / Amba
Lida (Belarusian: Лі́да, Russian: Ли́да, Lithuanian: Lyda, Polish: Lida) is a city in western Belarus in Hrodna Voblast, situated 160 km west of Minsk. It is the fourteenth largest city in Belarus.
photo: Creative Commons / Zol87
18th is an 'L' station on the CTA's Pink Line. It is located at 1710 West 18th Street in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois. The station is decorated with colorful murals painted by local artists from Pilsen.
photo: Creative Commons / Angelo.romano
Norman Arc.
photo: Creative Commons / Tijuana Brass
Capitol Building following its designation as the Capital of the Colony, immediate provision was made for construction of a capitol building and for plotting out the new city according to the survey of Theodoric Bland.
photo: Creative Commons / Dlanglois
Replica of Champlain's habitation at the Port-Royal National Historic Site of Canada, Nova-Scotia,Port Royal (known as Annapolis Royal) was once the capital of Acadia and is now a small rural community in the western part of the Canadian province of Nova Scotia.
photo: Creative Commons / COPYRIGHT, 2007
Sadovaya Street
photo: Creative Commons
The policies of the Bourbon Dynasty in Spain, such as those of Philip V, stimulated the economic growth and consolidation of the Spanish America.
photo: Creative Commons / Angusmclellan
Castledawson (Irish: Caisleán Dhásain) is a village in County Londonderry, Northern Ireland. It is within the townland of Shanemullagh (Irish: an Seanmhullach meaning "the old peak"). The village lies four miles from the north-western shore of Lough Neagh, close to the market town of Magherafelt and at the foot of the Sperrins. In 2001 it had a population of 2,089 according to the Census.
photo: Creative Commons / Peter I. Vardy
Tidal dock at the end of the Bridgewater Canal in 2004