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  2. Our Lady of Cabra Island - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Lady_of_Cabra_Island

    The children’s accounts led to a growing number of pilgrims from Manila and other islands. Their individual stories, notes, photographs, and the messages from the “lady bathed in light, and always smiling, always with a kindly expression on her face” were documented and published in the 1978 book The Apparitions of Cabra Islet.

  3. City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_Vicenza_and_the...

    City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto is a World Heritage Site in Italy, which protects buildings by the architect Andrea Palladio. UNESCO inscribed the site on the World Heritage List in 1994. [1] At first the site was called "Vicenza, City of Palladio" and only buildings in the immediate area of Vicenza were included.

  4. Jacob Wilhelm Frohne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_Wilhelm_Frohne

    Jacob Wilhelm Frohne (15 August 1832 – 13 July 1909), usually referred to as J. W. Frohne was a Danish master mason, architect and art collector. A book about 18th-century Danish faience manufacturers by him was published posthumously in 1910.

  5. Pancho Villa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancho_Villa

    In both cases of official recognition there was considerable controversy. The fact that Villa's image and legacy were not quickly appropriated and manipulated by the ruling party the way Zapata's was [122] kept Villa's memory and myth in the hearts of the people. "Popular tastes wanted Villa to be thrilling, not respectable.

  6. Hadrian's Villa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadrian's_Villa

    Hadrian's Villa (Italian: Villa Adriana; Latin: Villa Hadriana) is a UNESCO World Heritage Site comprising the ruins and archaeological remains of a large villa complex built around AD 120 by Roman emperor Hadrian near Tivoli outside Rome.

  7. Urraca of Covarrubias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urraca_of_Covarrubias

    She was the daughter of García Fernández, count of Castile, and his spouse Ava de Ribagorza.On 24 November 978, her parents gave her the place known as Covarrubias and many other villas and properties throughout Castile as well as the Abbey of Saint Cosme and Saint Damian, and other villas and salt mines in Álava.

  8. Georgina Masson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgina_Masson

    Georgina Masson was a photographer and an architectural historian whose interests took in Ancient Rome through to the medieval period in Sicily.Her writings are extensive and her works include studies of gardens and villas and biographies as well as Roman Architecture and later Italian Architecture.

  9. Villa La Pietra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_La_Pietra

    The cypress avenue leading to the villa. Villa La Pietra is a renaissance villa in the hills outside Florence, in Tuscany in central Italy. It was formerly the home of Arthur Acton and later of his son Harold Acton, on whose death in 1994 it was bequeathed to New York University.

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