Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mic Sokoli tower house in Bujan, northern Albania. Tower houses (singular: Albanian: kullë; Bosnian: odžak Bulgarian: кули, kuli; Serbian: кула, Romanian: culă) developed and were built since the Middle Ages in the Balkans, [1] particularly in Albania, Kosovo and Montenegro, [2] but also in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Greece, North Macedonia and Serbia, as well as in Oltenia ...
Gill House/Blackburn Building: 1876: 444 Main St. Victorian False-front. 28: Grangreen-Ward-Gill House: 1870: 452 Main St. 1870 residence joined to a 1918 storefront. 29: G. W. Williams Building: 1888: 455 Main St. Modified in 1920, 1948, and 1954. Upper floor subsequently rebuilt and restored by Ferndale Blacksmith Company. 30
Grab a Coney dog at Lafayette Coney Island, sample El Paso-style brisket at Tacos Hernandez, and enjoy smoky cevapi at Balkan House. For dessert, ...
Chardak, constructed in 1771. A chardak (Bulgarian, Macedonian and Serbian: чардак, čardak) is an old typical house in the Balkans.It is derived from the word çardak, which is a component of Ottoman Turkish house design. [1]
Tallest sacral building on Balkan Alban Tower [2] Tirana: 107 m 25 2021 Albania: NV Tower: Sofia: 107 m: 21: 2021 Bulgaria: Bucharest Tower Center: Bucharest: 106 m: 23: 2008 Romania: ANA Tower: Bucharest: 105 m: 25: 2019 Romania: Millennium Center – Office Tower Sofia: 105 m 24 2017 Bulgaria: Ušće Tower 2: Belgrade: 104 m 22 2020 Serbia ...
Shaw House (Ferndale, California) This page was last edited on 18 May 2024, at 15:17 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
In 1874, James E. Brown built what is now the back part of this house at a different location, 421 Main Street, in the current Main Street historical district. [3]William B. Alford (1851–1921), a local pharmacist after whom the house is named, arrived in Humboldt County at age 21 in 1872 and moved to Ferndale in 1875 where he jointly owned a drugstore with his brother Frank A. Alford, M.D ...
In 1901, Andreasen sold the house to the Rossen family who lived there until 1988. [3] New owners repaired and refinished original woodwork and rewired all the original lighting fixtures; for a time opening it for tours to the public. [3] The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on 25 September 1989. [1]