Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Miramare Castle, c. 1880 The gardens of Miramare Castle, c. 1880. Designed in 1856 by Carl Junker, an Austrian architect, [1] the architectural structure of Miramare was finished in 1860. The style reflects the artistic interests of the archduke, who was acquainted with the eclectic architectural styles of Austria, Germany and England.
MIB School of Management Trieste; Miramare Castle; ... Revoltella Museum; Risiera di San Sabba; S. Saint Spyridon Church, Trieste; Sant'Antonio Taumaturgo, Trieste;
Miramare Castle near Trieste (1856–1860) First Vienna Mountain Spring Pipeline (1865) Publications. Carl Junker (1873): Die Wasserversorgung der Stadt Wien, in ...
Piazza Unità d'Italia, headed by the Trieste City Hall Previous head office of Italia Marittima. Piazza Unità d'Italia (English: Unity of Italy Square) is the main square in Trieste, a seaport city in northeast Italy. Located at the foot of the hill with the castle of San Giusto, the square faces the Adriatic Sea. It is often said to be ...
The Revoltella Museum (Italian: Museo Revoltella) is a modern art gallery founded in Trieste, Italy, in 1872 by Baron Pasquale Revoltella. [1] The baron, after he left his house to the city (located in Piazza Venezia) and all the works, furniture and books it contained.
Seeing the riots between the Nazi occupiers and the Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale on 30 April 1945 he made a vow to erect a church, if Trieste was saved from total destruction. The city was saved and in 1959 Santin obtained permission from Pope John XXIII to build a pilgrimage church dedicated to the Holy Mary as a symbol of the peace and ...
Fishing and the cultivation of wine and olives dominated the area until the 19th century. In 1826 Barcola had 418 inhabitants and people from Trieste increasingly began to build their summer residences in the settlement, including Archduke Maximilian's famous Miramare Castle, completed in 1860. At the end of the 19th century, Barcola ...
The last heir of the Sartorio family, Baroness Anna Segrè Sartorio, left the villa and all its furniture to Trieste's city council with the explicit wish to make it a public museum. The villa was used by the Allies, as their headquarters after WW2, as can be seen by the marks on the tiles and walls where the telephone and electric leads were ...