Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Stephanuskirche (Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. Stephen) also known as Detmerode Church is a church and parish center in Wolfsburg, Germany designed by Finnish architect Alvar Aalto in Completed in 1968, the building is a prominent example of International modernism in Germany.
[1] November 1958, Alvar Aalto was personally commissioned to design the church by then-pastor Erich Bammel; Aalto began designing the building the same year. [1] The design was completed and construction started in 1961. The church opened the following year. [2]
The Alvar Aalto Cultural Centre (German: Alvar-Aalto-Kulturhaus) is a cultural venue in the city of Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony, Germany, [1] designed by the renowned Finnish architect Alvar Aalto [2] in 1958 and inaugurated in 1962. [3] [4] It comprises a library, educational and youth facilities, municipal offices and retail premises. [3] [5]
[10] [5] [38] Some scholars have defined the Albanian Kanun as a set of traditions which are more or less ancient and widespread in the Balkans and in the Mediterranean area, however it should be considered independently as a "customary code and a normative heritage" of a people who, on the basis of their own social sense, have created a legal ...
[2] During the 1967-1990 religion ban in Albania, the church was used as a hideout by Catholics to pray in the house of God despite its state of disrepair. [3] During that period, a wall was erected in front of the façade of the church. [4] It reopened in 1990. The bell-tower had been destroyed, but the bell was saved.
St. Mary's Church in Moscopole. Aromanians in Albania are predominantly Eastern Orthodox Christians like the rest of Aromanians. In Korçë (Aromanian: Curceaua, Curceauã, Curceau or Curciau), they have an Aromanian-language church named St. Sotir (Ayiu Sutir).
Mat District (Albanian: Rrethi i Matit) was one of the 36 districts of Albania, which were dissolved in July 2000 and replaced by 12 newly created counties.It had a population of 61,906 in 2001, and an area of 1,028 km 2 (397 sq mi). [1]
The Evangelical Heritage Version (EHV) is a translation of the Bible into the English language. The translation project was called The Wartburg Project and the group of translators consisted of pastors, professors, and teachers from the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS) and Evangelical Lutheran Synod (ELS), both based in the United States.