The Globe Johann Ortin Õun 8B 2014 The History of the Globe Built in 1599 Burned in 1613 Rebuilt in 1614 Banks of Thames Everyone used to go (17th) Poor near (no covering) Wealthier shelter / balconies Daytime no artificial lighting No curtains + Women Their parts/played by boys Inside The New Globe Theatre Closed in 1642 (why?) 1987 Work began 180 m / real materials & methods 1997 opened Still daytime Shakespeare & other playwrights of his time Used materials http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgnInT4x8kA http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globe_Theatre
saunas. All rooms have air conditioning. 108 places of accommodation: single and double rooms, rooms for three and suite. The Green House and the White House are connected with a glass gallery. 280 places of accommodation: single and double rooms, suites. All hotel rooms are hypoallergenic. Standard rooms have comfortable beds, desks, satellite TV, telephones, toilets and shower rooms. Most rooms have balconies. Extra beds are available. All hotel buildings are equipped with ramps and lifts.
anniversary of American Declaration of Idepedence. The Statue was made in sections in June on 1885 and they put it into 214 boxes and shipped it to New York. After they reassembled the Statue in four months. In 1924 the Statue of Liberty was declared national monument. The Statue of Liberty is visted by more than a million people every year. Tourists can also climb 354 steps to reach the crown or admire the view from 25 balconies. It can be visited the Staue of Liberty exhibit and seen some museum objects , a photographs, a prints and a videos. You will be amazed by this delightful statues, which should not be missed by any visitor to the New York area.
The castle has many parts. One part is basement, what was used as store and household room. That included kitchen, brewing room and furance. The second part is the main floor. It was built very elaborately, because there situated the most important rooms. A chaple the highest room in the castle is situated in the south corner. In the nortwestern corner are bishop´s living rooms. Main room also includes a big dining room and two beautiful balconies. The Defence Tower has suffered the most and has been numerously rebuilt. The tower has Neogothical paintings on the wall, fireplace, staicase and a gallery made of oak. The other tower, Tall Herman is the oldest and best preserved part of the castle. The tower is isolated from the castle, the only connection is drawbridge. History It was founded in 1381. Kuressaare castle was a bishops resident til the end of Livonian war. In 1559. Johannes V Münchhausen sold the castle to Danes
Linda M adalik created the grand hall's excellent acoustics. It is considered, that the hall has the best acoustics in the country. Beside two concert halls and orchestra hall, inside the main building of Jõhvi Theater is situated the Estonia's biggest cinema Amadeus, Jõhvi City Gallery, Jõhvi M usic School, H obby Centre and famous for it's exotic dishes Café M ozart . Main Concert Hall · ~ 600 m2 · 3 balconies · Adjustable seats (up to 926 seats) · Adjustable hall floor · Retractable seating system · 4 stage sections, up to 7 steps · 2 side stages · Orchestra pit · Adjustable hall floor 3rd floor lobby 2nd floor lobby Café Mozart 2nd scene Orchestra Hall Jõhvi Concert hall stages became a home to many festivals and annual events like Jõhvi Ballet Festival, `Eesti Talent', `M usic of 7 towns', `Lights N ights', Runo Song Festival etc. Lots of operas, ballets, plays and art
celebrations as well. It is a federal holiday in Alabama, Florida and in 8 counties of Lousiana. History In 1829, some young men returned to New Orleans, Louisiana, from a visit to Paris. Carrying on a lively French custom, they dressed in costumes and masks and paraded through the narrow streets of the French Quarter of New Orleans. More people joined and followed them until they caught the attention of the ladies of the town, who leaned over their balconies and threw chocolates and kisses to them. From that time on, masked walking parades became fashionable in New Orleans in the springtime. The festivals became more organized in 1857 when a group of people calling themselves "The Mystick Krewe of Comus" made their way through the streets on floats pulled by horses. One float was carrying the king of the Crewe on a throne and another carried a devil sitting among flames made from paper and representing hell.
prepare by maid servants who would work half-days on Thursdays — the tradition has well and truly stuck. Most traditional lunch restaurants serve pea soup and pancakes with lingonberry sauce or any kind of jam (sylt) on Thursdays. Crazy for crawfish Crawfish parties (kräftskivor) are popular in August, when warm summer evenings are spent feasting on these red bite-sized fresh-water crustaceans in gardens and on balconies all over Sweden. Eaten only by Sweden’s upper-class citizens and aristocracy in the 16th century, crawfish have become a national delicacy enjoyed by all, with mass importation having significantly brought down the price over the centuries. Surströmming — foul-smelling fish Every culture has at least one culinary specialty that makes both locals and visitors cringe. From late August to early September, a stinky tradition is upheld in Sweden, particularly in the northern part of the
Songs sung by a chorus told stories about gods. There were also dances. Today the interior of a modern theatre looks different. The two main parts of a modern theatre are the stage and the hall. The hall is separated from the stage by the orchestra. At the sides of the stage are the wings. A curtain covers the stage. The seats on the floor are known as stalls. The raised back part of the ground floor is the pit, the small compartments are the boxes. Then follow the dress circle, the balconies and finally the gallery. The first professional theatre in Estonia was founded in Tallinn in 1809, but the real beginning of Estonian national theatre was in 1870 when Lydia Koidula started writing and staging plays for the ''Vanemuine'' society in Tartu. During this century the inventors created a number of new ways of listening to an acted story or seeing a show. First came the cinema. The cinema's possibilities are unlimited. It possesses important advantages
can be undertaken. A number of schemes of massing options have been studied, and the strongest two have been selected for illustration to suggest alternate ways to approach this unique problem.At this stage, it is suggested that the recommendations in this study be equally reviewed. Spectacular solar site: the southern face along Grant Road will provide enough solar energy for the entire three level structure. Skylights, balconies, and sunken gardens provide light to below grade levels. An open design: interior plan of lower level conference room utilizes moving dividing walls to create privacy amongst community. Above is a detail from the proposed expansion plan north of the Grant Community Center.
music have been handed down for hundreds of years. They dance to the sound of guitars and castanets. Children think of the Three Wise Man as the gift bearers. Tradition has it that they arrive on January 6th, the date the Wise Men gave gifts to Jesus. Shoes are filled with straw or barley for the tired camels that must carry their riders through the busy night. By morning the camel food is gone and in place of the straw or barley are presents. Shoes also may be placed on balconies on the night of the 6th January in the hope that the Wise Men will fill them with gifts. Most homes have a manger, like cathedrals and churches. These are complete with carved figures. During the weeks before Christmas, families gather around their manger to sing, whilst children play tambourines and dance. The Spanish especially honor the cow at Christmas because it is thought that when Mary gave birth to Jesus the cow in the stable breathed on the Baby Jesus to keep him warm.
Waiting. "I'm not running anywhere," I promised. "We'll see," he said, smiling again. I frowned at him. "So, go on -- Carlisle was swimming to France." He paused, getting back into his story. Reflexively, his eyes flickered to another picture -- the most colorful of them all, the most ornately framed, and the largest; it was twice as wide as the door it hung next to. The canvas overflowed with bright figures in swirling robes, writhing around long pillars and off marbled balconies. I couldn't tell if it represented Greek mythology, or if the characters floating in the clouds above were meant to be biblical. "Carlisle swam to France, and continued on through Europe, to the universities there. By night he studied music, science, medicine -- and found his calling, his penance, in that, in saving human lives." His expression became awed, almost reverent. "I can't adequately describe the struggle; it took Carlisle two centuries of torturous effort to perfect his self-control