Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Templar establishments in Europe. Templar fortress of Paris, now destroyed. Commandry of Coulommiers, France [6] Commandry of Avalleur, in Bar-sur-Seine [7] Commandry of Saint-Blaise, Hyères [8] La Rochelle, Charente Maritime, France [1] Chapelle des Templiers de Metz - 12th-century Gothic chapel with octagonal plan and various paintings. [9]
America Unearthed was an American entertainment television series and the first original series to air on the A&E Networks channel H2. [2] The show premiered on December 21, 2012, and was produced by Committee Films of Minneapolis, Minnesota. [ 3 ]
Chornohora (Ukrainian: Чорногора, lit. 'black mountain') is the highest mountain range in Western Ukraine . It is within the Polonynian Beskids , a subgroup of the mountain group of Eastern Beskids , which in turn is part of the Outer Eastern Carpathians .
The Primeval Beech Forests of the Carpathians include ten separate massifs located along the 185 km (115 mi) long axis from the Rakhiv mountains and Chornohora ridge in Ukraine over the Poloniny Ridge (Slovakia) to the Vihorlat Mountains in Slovakia. The Ancient Beech Forests of Germany include five locations, cover 4,391 hectares and were ...
Time Team America is an American television series that airs on PBS.It premiered on July 8, 2009. It is an Oregon Public Broadcasting adaptation of the British show Time Team, produced in collaboration with Channel 4, which commissioned the original show, [1] in which a team of archeologists and other experts are given 72 hours to excavate an historic site.
This carving on the cave ceiling is 6 feet long and appears to show a human figure wearing Native American regalia. It dates from about 1,000 years ago; nothing like it has been seen before, and ...
Massif of Pip Ivan with the ruins of the observatory on top. Pip Ivan (Ukrainian: Піп Іван; Polish: Pop Iwan) is the third highest peak [1] (after Hoverla and Brebeneskul) in the Chornohora (Czarnohora) range, with a height of 2022 meters (6,634 ft) above sea level.
The Avellino family emigrated from a poverty-stricken Italian island in the early 20th century. But now they’re back – and living in their ancestral cave home.