photo: Creative Commons / Fczarnowski
Castle in Tykocin, built in 1433 and expanded in 1550-1582 by king Sigismund Augustus. Destroyed 1771/1914, was partially rebuilt in 2005.
photo: Creative Commons
The castle of the Xavier family was later acquired by the Company of Jesus and reconstructed.
photo: Creative Commons / Mathiasrex
Mannerist architecture and sculpture in Poland dominated between 1550 and 1650, when it was finally replaced with baroque.
photo: Creative Commons
Sixteenth-century maps of Russia often showed "Chumbalik Kingdom" as Russia's southeastern neighbor, which could be reached by traveling from Yugra up the Ob River toward "Lake Kythay". (Map by Giacomo Gastaldi, 1550)
photo: Public Domain / Good kitty
05LERNESTO 2006
photo: Public Domain / Mattes
Paul and Mattheus Brill
photo: Public Domain / Vassil
Maiolica
photo: Public Domain
Bemisia argentifolii - Whitefly
photo: Creative Commons / Para
Alte Pinakothek building in 1900. The Wittelsbach collection was begun by William IV (1508-1550) who ordered important contemporary painters to create several history paintings. Elector Maximilian I (1597-1651) acquired paintings, especially the work of Albrecht Dürer
photo: Creative Commons / TimVickers
Neutrophil with anthrax copy
photo: Creative Commons / Espresso Addict
Jacobethan
photo: Creative Commons / Captain Fearnought
Entrance to Saint Seachnall's Church of Ireland, site of the village's original ecclesiastical foundation in the fifth century AD.
photo: Public Domain / Jastrow (2006)
Damascus ware"
photo: Creative Commons / File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske)
Jacobethan
photo: Creative Commons / Celsius
University of Salamanca
photo: Public Domain / File Upload Bot (Eloquence)
In Rome he also started working in the circle of Michelangelo and befriended him.
photo: Creative Commons
Adam and Eve, 1543, 82 x 56 mm
photo: Creative Commons / Themightyquill
Beaver hat.
photo: Creative Commons / Arpingstone
St Mary's Parish church
photo: Creative Commons / Roland zh
Stadtmuseum Rapperswil (SG) : Rapperswil in Codex Vindobonensis, 1550. Settlements in the region of Rapperswil date back to at least 5000 years ago. Archaeological relicts have been found at a Bronze Age village, and the remains of a first wooden bridge (1523 B.C., reconstructed in 2001)
photo: GFDL / World Imaging
Blue and white porcelain .
photo: Creative Commons
Monastery of San Agustin of Yuriria, Mexico, founded in 1550. Sent by their Provincial St.Thomas of Villanova, the first group of Spanish/Castilian Augustinians arrived in Mexico in 1533[5] after the subjugation of Aztec Mexico by Hernan Cortez.
photo: Creative Commons / Kaare
Etowah Indian Mounds is a fifty-four acre archaeological site in Bartow County, Georgia south of Cartersville, Georgia in the United States. Built and occupied in three phases, from 1000-1550 AD, the site is located on the north shore of the Etowah River. Etowah Indian Mounds Historic Site is a designated National Historic Landmark, managed by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Late 20th-century studies showed the mounds were built and occupied by people of the Mississippian culture, w
photo: GFDL / Arpingstone
Almondsbury is a large village near junction 16 of the M5 motorway, in South Gloucestershire, England.
photo: Creative Commons / Sl-Ziga
Opera house in Ljubljana Slovenia's first book was printed by the Protestant reformer Primož Trubar (1508–1586).
photo: Public Domain / East of Borschov
Troy House
photo: Creative Commons / Wiegee (talk | contribs)
Red Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador
photo: Public Domain / Misibacsi
Rudas Baths
photo: GFDL / Arpingstone
Almondsbury is a large village near junction 16 of the M5 motorway, in South Gloucestershire, England.
photo: Creative Commons / Tim Ross
Mound 4 at Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park