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  2. Great Globe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Globe

    The Great Globe at Swanage is one of the largest stone spheres in the world and stands at Durlston Castle within Durlston Country Park, a 113-hectare (280-acre) country park and nature reserve. [1] It is constructed of Portland stone, weighs about 40 tonnes and is 3 metres (10 ft) in diameter. [2] The Great Globe with Durlston Castle in the rear

  3. Globus Jagellonicus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globus_Jagellonicus

    The globe belonged to the medieval Cracow Academy (now called the Jagiellonian University); it is on display at the Collegium Maius Museum. It was rediscovered in the early 1870s [ 2 ] and described as Globus Jagellonicus in 1900 by Prof. Tadeusz Estreicher in the Transactions of the Cracow Academy of Sciences for that year.

  4. Asterism (gemology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asterism_(gemology)

    An asterism (from Ancient Greek ἀστήρ (astḗr) 'star' and -ism) is a star-shaped concentration of light reflected or refracted from a gemstone. It can appear when a suitable stone is cut en cabochon (i.e. shaped and polished, not faceted). A gemstone that exhibits this effect is called a star stone or asteria.

  5. Peridot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peridot

    The Oxford English Dictionary suggests an alteration of Anglo–Norman pedoretés (classical Latin pæderot-), a kind of opal, rather than the Arabic word faridat, meaning "gemstone". The Middle English Dictionary ' s entry on peridot includes several variations: peridod, peritot, pelidod and pilidod — other variants substitute y for letter i ...

  6. Replogle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Replogle

    Replogle Globes was started by Luther Replogle (1902-1981) when, in 1930, he began selling globes which he crafted by hand in his apartment in Chicago, using maps from England. [2] His vision was to make globes a common feature in people's households, rather than something found only in academic settings. Luther Replogle co-founded Scanglobe in ...

  7. Globus cruciger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globus_cruciger

    To citizens of the Roman Empire, the plain spherical globe held by the god Jupiter represented the world or the universe, as the dominion held by the Emperor. A 2nd-century coin from the reign of Emperor Hadrian shows the Roman goddess Salus with her foot upon a globus , and a 4th-century coin from the reign of Emperor Constantine I shows him ...

  8. Globe of Gottorf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globe_of_Gottorf

    Globe of Gottorf, 21st century reconstruction at Gottorf Castle, near Schleswig, Germany Globe of Gottorf, 18th century reconstruction at the Kunstkamera in Saint Petersburg, Russia. The Globe of Gottorf is a 17th-century, large, walk-in globe of the Earth and the celestial sphere. It measures 3.1 meters in diameter.

  9. Columbus Globe for State and Industry Leaders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbus_Globe_for_State...

    The Columbus Globe for State and Industry Leaders (also known as Hitler's Globe or the Führer Globe) were two purpose-made globes designed in Berlin in the 1930s, one each for Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party. The Columbus Globe for State and Industry Leaders was located in Hitler's office throughout most of its existence.

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