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Tazza D'Oro (Italian: [ˈtattsa ˈdɔːro]) is a café and espresso bar located in Pittsburgh. [1] The name means "Golden Cup/Mug" in Italian. [3] The main location is in Highland Park neighborhood, where it has become a centerpiece of neighborhood [4] There is a second location in the Gates and Hillman Centers at Carnegie Mellon University.
The bowl of the Tiberius tazza (with original fluted base, and now associated with the figurine of Domitian) is the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. The tazza was donated to the Victoria and Albert Museum by Walter Leo Hildburgh in 1956, after being displayed on loan there since 1937. The bowl was traditionally thought to show Domitian but ...
The Ca' d'Oro, or Palazzo Santa Sofia, is a palace on the Grand Canal in Venice, northern Italy. Ca' d'Oro or Cadoro translates to "House of Gold" or "Golden House" in English because of the gilt and polychrome external decorations that once adorned its walls. [1] [2] It was designed by Marino Contarini and later restored by Baron Giorgio ...
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Casa de Oro, Ca looking east on Campo Road with Santa Sophia Church on the left hand side. Casa de Oro (Spanish for "House of Gold") is a neighborhood in east San Diego County, California, United States. The community, 12 miles east of San Diego, is in the unincorporated town of Spring Valley and an unincorporated part of La Mesa.
The Casa del Prado comprises several reconstructed buildings that were initially built for the Panama–California Exposition in Balboa Park in San Diego, California. [1] Current tenants include the San Diego Botanical Garden Foundation, Civic Dance Arts, the San Diego Floral Association, the San Diego Civic Youth Ballet, the San Diego Junior ...
The latter resided in an apartment within the Casa del Commun Tesoro. [6] In 1708, Malta's first proper postal service was established, and a room within the Casa del Commun Tesoro became the island's first post office. The building continued to house the Packet Office until around 1841, when it was transferred to the Banca Giuratale. On 1 ...
The House of the Centenary (Italian Casa del Centenario, also known as the House of the Centenarian) was the house of a wealthy resident of Pompeii, preserved by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. The house was discovered in 1879, [1] and was given its modern name to mark the 18th centenary of the disaster. [2]