photo: Creative Commons
Double finial minaret of Qansah al-Ghuri
photo: Creative Commons
Wooden three-story pagoda of Ichijō-ji in Japan, built in 1171 AD
photo: Creative Commons / Urashimataro
An oki-dōrō Yukimi-dōrō (雪見燈籠?) or legged lanterns have as a base not a post but from one to six curved legs, and a wide umbrella with a finial either low or absent. Relatively low, they are used exclusively in gardens.
photo: Creative Commons / A Morozov
Chigi with katsuogi billets, Sumiyoshi-jinja, Hyōgo. Chigi (千木, 鎮木, 知木, 知疑?), Okichigi (置千木?) or Higi (氷木?) are forked roof finials found in Japanese and Shinto Architecture. Chigi predate Buddhist influence and is an architectural element endemic to Japan.
photo: Public Domain / Roger Griffith
Eglinton Tournament Bridge
photo: Creative Commons / Valerie McGlinchey
Silver chocolate pot
photo: Creative Commons / Uspn
The tomb
photo: GFDL
The Christian flag displayed alongside the flag of the USA next to the pulpit in a church in California. Note the eagle and cross finials on the flag poles. /ntf1
photo: GFDL / Husond
Queluz National Palace, Portugal
photo: Creative Commons / Rosser Roger Griffith
The view from Barnweill Hill looking south. Robert Snodgrass senior in 1855-7,[10] built a square plan Gothic tower from polished sans tone ashlar blocks, 3-stage, 12 feet wide at the base, sixty feet high,
photo: Creative Commons / あなたのサンドバッグになりたい
A hexagonal hanging lantern
photo: Creative Commons
Mosque in Aswan, Egypt, with minarets.
photo: Creative Commons / Daderot
The Pickering House (circa 1651) is a Colonial house, owned and occupied by ten successive generations of the Pickering family including Colonel Timothy Pickering. This house is believed to be the oldest house in the United States continuously occupied by one family. It is located at 18 Broad Street, Salem, Massachusetts and is open to the public under the auspices of the nonprofit Pickering Foundation.
photo: Creative Commons / Candijay
Roman Catholic Church, Candijay, Bohol
photo: Creative Commons / Ashycat84
Iowa State Capitol
photo: Creative Commons / Varun Shiv Kapur
Lal Gumbad (Rakabwala Gumbad)
photo: Creative Commons / Varun Shiv Kapur
The tomb in Sadhana Enclave
photo: European Community / Bgag
Detail of a gopuram at Chennai A gopuram is usually rectangular in form with ground-level wooden doors, often richly decorated, providing access. Above is the tapering gopuram, divided into many stores which diminish in size as the gopuram tower narrows.
photo: European Community / Kaiser Tufail
Great gate (Darwaza-i rauza)In 2000, India's Supreme Court dismissed P.N. Oak's petition to declare that a Hindu king built the Taj Mahal.
photo: Creative Commons / Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum until 1990-03-18
Landscape with an Obelisk, 1638, Govaert Flinck, until recently attributed to Rembrandt
photo: Creative Commons
A sun disk found in tombs in Alacahöyük; dates back to early Bronze Age.
photo: Creative Commons / Miya.m
Full rear view of the Hawa Mahal Backside of Jaipul INDIA. The palace is a five-story pyramidal shaped monument that rises to a height of 50 feet (15 m) from its high base
photo: Creative Commons / COPYRIGHT, 2005
Saint Catherine Church Built at the end of the 16th century, the Szczebrzeszyn House belonged to the town of Szczebrzeszyn. Its function was to keep the town’s treasures and assets in Zamość fortress that was regarded as a safe place. The house has four windows, arcades and a richly ornamented finial in the form of a cartouche in which Szczebrzeszyn coat of arms was allegedly placed.[24] Built in the 1600s in line with Bernardo Morando's design, the Turobin House was built for the town of Turobi
photo: Creative Commons
The South Stand starting to fill up for the last match of the 2006–07 season
photo: Creative Commons / Jnn
First torii leading to Izumo-taisha. The main structure of Izumo Oyashiro was built in the Taisha style, the oldest style of building shrines. An impressive sized gable-entrance structure is built for the main structure, which gave the name of The Great Shrine or The Grand Shrine.
photo: Creative Commons
Victoria Tower
photo: Creative Commons / Ashycat84
Pioneer Statuary Group outside the Capitol overlooking West Capitol Terrace and downtown.
photo: Creative Commons / Arpingstone
Detail of The Circus
photo: Creative Commons / Kaihsu
The Circus is an example of Georgian architecture in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, begun in 1754 and completed in 1768. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', which means a ring, oval or circle. It has been designated as a Grade I listed building.[1]
photo: Creative Commons
Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium