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Haus Wittgenstein (also known as the Stonborough House and the Wittgenstein House) is a house in the modernist style on the Kundmanngasse, Vienna, Austria. It "shows remarkably similar characteristics in its obsession with detail and complete disregard for the requirements of the people who are expected to live within it."
Wilton House is an English country house at Wilton near Salisbury in Wiltshire, which has been the country seat of the Earls of Pembroke for over 400 years. It was built on the site of the medieval Wilton Abbey .
Academy of Fine Arts Vienna: Vienna AUT: Oil on canvas 25,8 × 19,5 cm Self-portrait (1617–18) 1617–1618 Alte Pinakothek: Munich DEU: Oil on canvas 82,5 × 70 cm Portrait of a Lady: ca. 1620 Legion of Honor Museum, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco: San Francisco USA: Oil on Canvas 148 x 109.2 cm Portrait of Cornelis van der Geest: ca. 1620
The title descended directly to Henry, 10th Earl (1734–1794), a soldier, who wrote "The Method of Breaking Horses" (1762); then to George Augustus, 11th Earl (1759–1827), an ambassador extraordinary to Vienna in 1807. [6] Robert Henry, 12th Earl (1791–1862), died in France without issue and was buried in the Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.
In 1985 and ’86, the members would jam on the porch of the Wilton House where he, Perry, and Jane Bainter—the Jane—lived. They did acoustic jams in the living room and at backyard barbecues ...
Wilton House Museum is a museum in a historic house located in Richmond, Virginia. Wilton was constructed c. 1753 by William Randolph III , son of William Randolph II , of Turkey Island . Wilton was originally the manor house on a 2,000-acre (8.1 km 2 ) tobacco plantation known as "World's End" located on the north bank of the James River ...
Earlier 1635 painting with both Prince Charles and Prince James wearing skirts. In 1635 Van Dyck had painted a portrait of the same three children, which was intended to be sent to the Queen's sister Christina, in exchange for portraits of the Duchess's children.
Villa Wertheimstein is a house in Vienna, Austria. It is part of the 19th borough Döbling. [1] In this villa, Josephine von Wertheimstein and her daughter Franziska held their literary salons. The building now houses the Döbling Museum (Bezirksmuseum Döbling) next to the park which bears the name Wertheimstein Park. [2]