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Constanța Cathedral, with ruins of the ancient city of Tomis in the foreground. The Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul, Constanța (Romanian: Catedrala Sfinții Apostoli Petru și Pavel din Constanța), located at 25 Arhiepiscopiei Street, Constanța, Romania, is the seat of the Romanian Orthodox Archbishop of Tomis, as well as a monastery.
The museum building was designed as a city hall by architect Victor Ștefănescu. Prince Ferdinand laid the cornerstone in May 1912. Construction was halted in 1913, restarted in summer 1914, then stopped again during World War I.
Constanța (UK: / k ɒ n ˈ s t æ n t s ə /, US: / k ən ˈ s t ɑː n (t) s ə /; [3] [4] [5] [6] Romanian: [konˈstantsa] ⓘ) [a] is a port city in the Dobruja ...
Grown in the RCJ Farul Constanța youth team, along with his older brother Laurențiu he formed a lock combination that was the backbone of the club and of the Romania national team throughout the decade, winning the national title with Farul in 1986.
The Port of Constanța is located in Constanța, Romania, on the western coast of the Black Sea, 179 nautical miles (332 km) from the Bosphorus Strait and 85 nmi (157 km) from the Sulina Branch, through which the Danube river flows into the sea.
R.K. kerk Sint Cyriacus en Franciscus [] in Hoorn, Netherlands; H.H. Simon en Judaskerk in Lattrop, Netherlands; Church of Our Lady of Sorrows, Poznań, Poland; University Church of the Blessed Name of Jesus, Wrocław, Poland
Henri-Benjamin Constant de Rebecque (French: [ɑ̃ʁi bɛ̃ʒamɛ̃ kɔ̃stɑ̃ də ʁəbɛk]; 25 October 1767 – 8 December 1830), or simply Benjamin Constant, was a Swiss and French political thinker, activist and writer on political theory and religion.
In 2011, the Prado in Madrid, Spain, announced discovery of what may be the earliest known replica. [4] [20] Miguel Falomir, heading the Department of Italian Renaissance Painting at the time of the discovery, stated the Prado "had no idea of (the painting's) significance" until a recent restoration. [4]