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  • Kamenice ned Lipou, Kamnitz an der Linde, a town in Pelhřimov District, the Vysočina Region, Czech Republic, Tschechien, Tsjekkia, tsjekkisk, Tsjekoslovakia, landlocked country in Central Europe, architecture, arkitektur, Bohemia, building, bygning, Bøhmen, Böhmen, capital, catholic, catholic churches, Česká republika, Česko, christian, christianity, church, churches, cultural heritage, culture, Czech, Czech religion, Czeck churches, democratic, demokrati, den kristne kulturarven, Den tsjekkiske republikk, EU, Europa, Europe, European, European Union, exciting history, gamle hus, gamle kirker, gudshus, hellig bygning, hellig rom, heritage, historie, historisk, history, innlandsstater i Europa, , katolikker, katolsk,  Kirken, kirker, kirker i Tsjekkia, kristendom, kultur, kulturminner, landene midt i Europa, largest city, mai, mirakler, mobilbilder, Morava, Moravia, Mähren, natur, nature, reiseliv, religion, religious, republikk, riter, ritualer, Sentral-Europa, sightseeing, the Czech Republic, tidligere kommunistland, tourisme, tradisjon, travel, turisme, Østblokken, østblokklandene, små byer i Tsjekkia, small towns,
    kamenice_museum-3.jpg
  • Exhibition Kamenice castle. Doll House.Kamenice ned Lipou, Kamnitz an der Linde, a town in Pelhřimov District, the Vysočina Region, Czech Republic, Tschechien, Tsjekkia, tsjekkisk, Tsjekoslovakia, landlocked country in Central Europe, architecture, arkitektur, Bohemia, building, bygning, Bøhmen, Böhmen, capital, catholic, catholic churches, Česká republika, Česko, christian, christianity, church, churches, cultural heritage, culture, Czech, Czech religion, Czeck churches, democratic, demokrati, den kristne kulturarven, Den tsjekkiske republikk, EU, Europa, Europe, European, European Union, exciting history, gamle hus, gamle kirker, gudshus, hellig bygning, hellig rom, heritage, historie, historisk, history, innlandsstater i Europa, , katolikker, katolsk,  Kirken, kirker, kirker i Tsjekkia, kristendom, kultur, kulturminner, landene midt i Europa, largest city, mai, mirakler, mobilbilder, Morava, Moravia, Mähren, natur, nature, reiseliv, religion, religious, republikk, riter, ritualer, Sentral-Europa, sightseeing, the Czech Republic, tidligere kommunistland, tourisme, tradisjon, travel, turisme, Østblokken, østblokklandene, små byer i Tsjekkia, small towns,
    kamenice_museum.jpg
  • Hotellet i Kamenice ned Lipou, Kamnitz an der Linde, a town in Pelhřimov District, the Vysočina Region, Czech Republic, Tschechien, Tsjekkia, tsjekkisk, Tsjekoslovakia, landlocked country in Central Europe, architecture, arkitektur, Bohemia, building, bygning, Bøhmen, Böhmen, capital, catholic, catholic churches, Česká republika, Česko, christian, christianity, church, churches, cultural heritage, culture, Czech, Czech religion, Czeck churches, democratic, demokrati, den kristne kulturarven, Den tsjekkiske republikk, EU, Europa, Europe, European, European Union, exciting history, gamle hus, gamle kirker, gudshus, hellig bygning, hellig rom, heritage, historie, historisk, history, innlandsstater i Europa, , katolikker, katolsk,  Kirken, kirker, kirker i Tsjekkia, kristendom, kultur, kulturminner, landene midt i Europa, largest city, mai, mirakler, mobilbilder, Morava, Moravia, Mähren, natur, nature, reiseliv, religion, religious, republikk, riter, ritualer, Sentral-Europa, sightseeing, the Czech Republic, tidligere kommunistland, tourisme, tradisjon, travel, turisme, Østblokken, østblokklandene, små byer i Tsjekkia, small towns,
    kamenice_nadlipou-45.jpg
  • Kamenice ned Lipou, Kamnitz an der Linde, a town in Pelhřimov District, the Vysočina Region, Czech Republic, Tschechien, Tsjekkia, tsjekkisk, Tsjekoslovakia, landlocked country in Central Europe, architecture, arkitektur, Bohemia, building, bygning, Bøhmen, Böhmen, capital, catholic, catholic churches, Česká republika, Česko, christian, christianity, church, churches, cultural heritage, culture, Czech, Czech religion, Czeck churches, democratic, demokrati, den kristne kulturarven, Den tsjekkiske republikk, EU, Europa, Europe, European, European Union, exciting history, gamle hus, gamle kirker, gudshus, hellig bygning, hellig rom, heritage, historie, historisk, history, innlandsstater i Europa, , katolikker, katolsk,  Kirken, kirker, kirker i Tsjekkia, kristendom, kultur, kulturminner, landene midt i Europa, largest city, mai, mirakler, mobilbilder, Morava, Moravia, Mähren, natur, nature, reiseliv, religion, religious, republikk, riter, ritualer, Sentral-Europa, sightseeing, the Czech Republic, tidligere kommunistland, tourisme, tradisjon, travel, turisme, Østblokken, østblokklandene, små byer i Tsjekkia, small towns,
    kamenice_nadlipou-44.jpg
  • Policie, Kamenice ned Lipou, Kamnitz an der Linde, a town in Pelhřimov District, the Vysočina Region, Czech Republic, Tschechien, Tsjekkia, tsjekkisk, Tsjekoslovakia, landlocked country in Central Europe, architecture, arkitektur, Bohemia, building, bygning, Bøhmen, Böhmen, capital, catholic, catholic churches, Česká republika, Česko, christian, christianity, church, churches, cultural heritage, culture, Czech, Czech religion, Czeck churches, democratic, demokrati, den kristne kulturarven, Den tsjekkiske republikk, EU, Europa, Europe, European, European Union, exciting history, gamle hus, gamle kirker, gudshus, hellig bygning, hellig rom, heritage, historie, historisk, history, innlandsstater i Europa, , katolikker, katolsk,  Kirken, kirker, kirker i Tsjekkia, kristendom, kultur, kulturminner, landene midt i Europa, largest city, mai, mirakler, mobilbilder, Morava, Moravia, Mähren, natur, nature, reiseliv, religion, religious, republikk, riter, ritualer, Sentral-Europa, sightseeing, the Czech Republic, tidligere kommunistland, tourisme, tradisjon, travel, turisme, Østblokken, østblokklandene, små byer i Tsjekkia, small towns,
    kamenice_nadlipou-43.jpg
  • Kamenice ned Lipou, Kamnitz an der Linde, a town in Pelhřimov District, the Vysočina Region, Czech Republic, Tschechien, Tsjekkia, tsjekkisk, Tsjekoslovakia, landlocked country in Central Europe, architecture, arkitektur, Bohemia, building, bygning, Bøhmen, Böhmen, capital, catholic, catholic churches, Česká republika, Česko, christian, christianity, church, churches, cultural heritage, culture, Czech, Czech religion, Czeck churches, democratic, demokrati, den kristne kulturarven, Den tsjekkiske republikk, EU, Europa, Europe, European, European Union, exciting history, gamle hus, gamle kirker, gudshus, hellig bygning, hellig rom, heritage, historie, historisk, history, innlandsstater i Europa, , katolikker, katolsk,  Kirken, kirker, kirker i Tsjekkia, kristendom, kultur, kulturminner, landene midt i Europa, largest city, mai, mirakler, mobilbilder, Morava, Moravia, Mähren, natur, nature, reiseliv, religion, religious, republikk, riter, ritualer, Sentral-Europa, sightseeing, the Czech Republic, tidligere kommunistland, tourisme, tradisjon, travel, turisme, Østblokken, østblokklandene, små byer i Tsjekkia, small towns,
    kamenice_nadlipou.jpg
  • Among the most valuable landmarks in Třebíč’s Jewish Quarter is without question the Rear, or New, Synagogue.<br />
The old Třebíč Jewish Quarter is unique as a whole. However, within it visitors will find several stunning sights deserving of a tour of their own. Among them is unquestionably the Rear Synagogue, which is also known as the New School, the Upper Prayer Hall and the New Synagogue. Dating from 1669, this Renaissance synagogue is the highlight of the Jewish Quarters with its beautifully restored frescoes and a wonderful historical model of the ghetto as it appeared in the mid-19th century. The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_jewish_quarter-8.jpg
  • The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_jewish_quarter-4.jpg
  • Among the most valuable landmarks in Třebíč’s Jewish Quarter is without question the Rear, or New, Synagogue.<br />
The old Třebíč Jewish Quarter is unique as a whole. However, within it visitors will find several stunning sights deserving of a tour of their own. Among them is unquestionably the Rear Synagogue, which is also known as the New School, the Upper Prayer Hall and the New Synagogue. Dating from 1669, this Renaissance synagogue is the highlight of the Jewish Quarters with its beautifully restored frescoes and a wonderful historical model of the ghetto as it appeared in the mid-19th century. The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_jewish_quarter.jpg
  • The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_jewish_quarter-9.jpg
  • Among the most valuable landmarks in Třebíč’s Jewish Quarter is without question the Rear, or New, Synagogue.<br />
The old Třebíč Jewish Quarter is unique as a whole. However, within it visitors will find several stunning sights deserving of a tour of their own. Among them is unquestionably the Rear Synagogue, which is also known as the New School, the Upper Prayer Hall and the New Synagogue. Dating from 1669, this Renaissance synagogue is the highlight of the Jewish Quarters with its beautifully restored frescoes and a wonderful historical model of the ghetto as it appeared in the mid-19th century. The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_jewish_quarter-7.jpg
  • The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_jewish_quarter-6.jpg
  • The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_jewish_quarter-3.jpg
  • The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_jewish_quarter-5.jpg
  • The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_jewish_quarter-2.jpg
  • Skjæreunger som nettopp har hoppet ut fra redet. Very young magpies. Skjære (Pica pica) er art i kråkefamilien (Corvidae) som er utbredt over det meste av Eurasia. Arten består i kraft av ni aksepterte underarter. Det var flere før, men noen av disse har fått status som selvstendige arter, mens andre nå inngår i andre underarter. To av underartene finnes i Skandinavia. I Norge er arten lokalt også kjent under navn som skato, skjor, skjure, skjurru og sjura. The Eurasian magpie or common magpie (Pica pica) is a resident breeding bird throughout Europe, much of Asia and the Maghreb. It is one of several birds in the crow family designated magpies, and belongs to the Holarctic radiation of "monochrome" magpies. In Europe, "magpie" is used by English speakers as a synonym for the European magpie: the only other magpie in Europe is the Iberian magpie (Cyanopica cooki), which is limited to the Iberian peninsula. <br />
The Eurasian magpie is one of the most intelligent birds, and it is believed to be one of the most intelligent of all non-human animals(W)
    young_magpies_pica_pica.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-27.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-24.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-23.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-11.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-8.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-7.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-4.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-25.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-26.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-21.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-20.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-22.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-19.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-16.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-18.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-17.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-14.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-13.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-12.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-9.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-10.jpg
  • Oølser og svineknoke, grillmat i Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-6.jpg
  • Oølser og svineknoke, grillmat i Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-5.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-3.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad.jpg
  • Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been aware of the curative effects of thermal springs.<br />
<br />
From the end o
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-15.jpg
  • Tsjekkisk øl serves selvfølgelig også fra en kiosk utendørs. Karlovy Vary (tysk: Karlsbad), en by i regionen Karlovy Vary vest i Tsjekkia. Ca. 110 km vest for Praha, der sideelva Teplá renner ut i hovedelva Ohře.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary er Tsjekkias nest mest besøkte turistby etter Praha, og er kjent for sine «helbredende» kilder. En rekke vannårer med varierende innhold av mineraler gir grunnlag for flere offentlige bad, og flere springvann og kraner der det naturlige mineralvannet kan drikkes, i overbevisning om at vannet kan forebygge eller til og med helbrede lidelser. En åpen søylehall, kolonnadaen, en sentral plass i byen, har vann fra flere enn ti forskjellige vannårer.<br />
<br />
Et kjent bygg i byen er luksushotellet Grandhotel Pupp. <br />
I byen avholdes også filmfestivalen Karlovy Vary filmfestival. Karlovy Vary,  German: Karlsbad, formerly also spelled Carlsbad in English), a spa city in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 48,000 inhabitants. It lies on the confluence of the rivers Ohře and Teplá, approximately 130 km west of Prague. It is named after Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, who founded the city.<br />
<br />
Karlovy Vary is the site of numerous hot springs (13 main springs, about 300 smaller springs, and the warm-water Teplá River), and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.] The historic city centre with the spa cultural landscape is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. It is the largest spa complex in Europe. In 2021, the city became part of the transnational UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name "Great Spa Towns of Europe" because of its spas and architecture from the 18th through 20th centuries. An ancient late Bronze Age fortified settlement was found in Drahovice. A Slavic settlement on the site of Karlovy Vary is documented by findings in Tašovice and Sedlec. People lived in close proximity to the site as far back as the 13th century and they must have been
    karlovy_vary_karlstad-2.jpg
  • Zielona Góra, the largest city in Lubusz Voivodeship, located in western Poland, with 140,403 inhabitants (2021). Zielona Góra is one of the two capital cities of Lubusz Voivodeship, where is the seat of the province's elected assembly, while the seat of the centrally appointed governor is located in the city of Gorzów Wielkopolski. Zielona Góra has a favourable geographical position, being located not far from the Polish-German border and on several international road and rail routes connecting Scandinavia with Southern Europe and Warsaw with Berlin.[3] The region is also closely associated with vineyards and holds an annual Wine Fest Zielona Góra is surrounded by tree-covered hills and the adjacent woodland alone makes up approximately half of the city's total area. The name of the city itself translates to 'Green Mountain' in both Polish and German. Moreover, Zielona Góra features several tourist attractions and important historical sites including the preserved medieval Old Town, 13th-century Market Square, tenements, palaces, parks and the famous Palm House on Wine Hill. Its strong connection to vineyards and grape-picking earned Zielona Góra a nickname "The City of Wine".<br />
Wineries<br />
<br />
The city has been known for its wines for centuries. It is now one of two places in Poland with wine grape cultivation mainly for white wines (the other being the wine growing region near the town of Warka in Masovia). The first wineries around the city were built in 1314. At the Paradyż Abbey near Zielona Góra, monks have been making wine since 1250. The number of vineyards at peak production is estimated at 4,000 in the region, and 2,500 in Zielona Góra itself. During the communist era wine production was reduced, but since 1990 it has recovered. Since 1852 an annual Wine Festival has taken place in the town. However, nowadays wine is no longer produced in Zielona Góra itself (the last factory was closed in the early 1990s).<br />
<br />
Vodka Luksusowa (namely: Luxury vodka), made
    zielona_gora_polen-9.jpg
  • Zielona Góra, the largest city in Lubusz Voivodeship, located in western Poland, with 140,403 inhabitants (2021). Zielona Góra is one of the two capital cities of Lubusz Voivodeship, where is the seat of the province's elected assembly, while the seat of the centrally appointed governor is located in the city of Gorzów Wielkopolski. Zielona Góra has a favourable geographical position, being located not far from the Polish-German border and on several international road and rail routes connecting Scandinavia with Southern Europe and Warsaw with Berlin.[3] The region is also closely associated with vineyards and holds an annual Wine Fest Zielona Góra is surrounded by tree-covered hills and the adjacent woodland alone makes up approximately half of the city's total area. The name of the city itself translates to 'Green Mountain' in both Polish and German. Moreover, Zielona Góra features several tourist attractions and important historical sites including the preserved medieval Old Town, 13th-century Market Square, tenements, palaces, parks and the famous Palm House on Wine Hill. Its strong connection to vineyards and grape-picking earned Zielona Góra a nickname "The City of Wine".<br />
Wineries<br />
<br />
The city has been known for its wines for centuries. It is now one of two places in Poland with wine grape cultivation mainly for white wines (the other being the wine growing region near the town of Warka in Masovia). The first wineries around the city were built in 1314. At the Paradyż Abbey near Zielona Góra, monks have been making wine since 1250. The number of vineyards at peak production is estimated at 4,000 in the region, and 2,500 in Zielona Góra itself. During the communist era wine production was reduced, but since 1990 it has recovered. Since 1852 an annual Wine Festival has taken place in the town. However, nowadays wine is no longer produced in Zielona Góra itself (the last factory was closed in the early 1990s).<br />
<br />
Vodka Luksusowa (namely: Luxury vodka), made
    zielona_gora_polen-5.jpg
  • Zielona Góra, the largest city in Lubusz Voivodeship, located in western Poland, with 140,403 inhabitants (2021). Zielona Góra is one of the two capital cities of Lubusz Voivodeship, where is the seat of the province's elected assembly, while the seat of the centrally appointed governor is located in the city of Gorzów Wielkopolski. Zielona Góra has a favourable geographical position, being located not far from the Polish-German border and on several international road and rail routes connecting Scandinavia with Southern Europe and Warsaw with Berlin.[3] The region is also closely associated with vineyards and holds an annual Wine Fest Zielona Góra is surrounded by tree-covered hills and the adjacent woodland alone makes up approximately half of the city's total area. The name of the city itself translates to 'Green Mountain' in both Polish and German. Moreover, Zielona Góra features several tourist attractions and important historical sites including the preserved medieval Old Town, 13th-century Market Square, tenements, palaces, parks and the famous Palm House on Wine Hill. Its strong connection to vineyards and grape-picking earned Zielona Góra a nickname "The City of Wine".<br />
Wineries<br />
<br />
The city has been known for its wines for centuries. It is now one of two places in Poland with wine grape cultivation mainly for white wines (the other being the wine growing region near the town of Warka in Masovia). The first wineries around the city were built in 1314. At the Paradyż Abbey near Zielona Góra, monks have been making wine since 1250. The number of vineyards at peak production is estimated at 4,000 in the region, and 2,500 in Zielona Góra itself. During the communist era wine production was reduced, but since 1990 it has recovered. Since 1852 an annual Wine Festival has taken place in the town. However, nowadays wine is no longer produced in Zielona Góra itself (the last factory was closed in the early 1990s).<br />
<br />
Vodka Luksusowa (namely: Luxury vodka), made
    zielona_gora_polen.jpg
  • Zielona Góra, the largest city in Lubusz Voivodeship, located in western Poland, with 140,403 inhabitants (2021). Zielona Góra is one of the two capital cities of Lubusz Voivodeship, where is the seat of the province's elected assembly, while the seat of the centrally appointed governor is located in the city of Gorzów Wielkopolski. Zielona Góra has a favourable geographical position, being located not far from the Polish-German border and on several international road and rail routes connecting Scandinavia with Southern Europe and Warsaw with Berlin.[3] The region is also closely associated with vineyards and holds an annual Wine Fest Zielona Góra is surrounded by tree-covered hills and the adjacent woodland alone makes up approximately half of the city's total area. The name of the city itself translates to 'Green Mountain' in both Polish and German. Moreover, Zielona Góra features several tourist attractions and important historical sites including the preserved medieval Old Town, 13th-century Market Square, tenements, palaces, parks and the famous Palm House on Wine Hill. Its strong connection to vineyards and grape-picking earned Zielona Góra a nickname "The City of Wine".<br />
Wineries<br />
<br />
The city has been known for its wines for centuries. It is now one of two places in Poland with wine grape cultivation mainly for white wines (the other being the wine growing region near the town of Warka in Masovia). The first wineries around the city were built in 1314. At the Paradyż Abbey near Zielona Góra, monks have been making wine since 1250. The number of vineyards at peak production is estimated at 4,000 in the region, and 2,500 in Zielona Góra itself. During the communist era wine production was reduced, but since 1990 it has recovered. Since 1852 an annual Wine Festival has taken place in the town. However, nowadays wine is no longer produced in Zielona Góra itself (the last factory was closed in the early 1990s).<br />
<br />
Vodka Luksusowa (namely: Luxury vodka), made
    zielona_gora_polen-3.jpg
  • Zielona Góra, the largest city in Lubusz Voivodeship, located in western Poland, with 140,403 inhabitants (2021). Zielona Góra is one of the two capital cities of Lubusz Voivodeship, where is the seat of the province's elected assembly, while the seat of the centrally appointed governor is located in the city of Gorzów Wielkopolski. Zielona Góra has a favourable geographical position, being located not far from the Polish-German border and on several international road and rail routes connecting Scandinavia with Southern Europe and Warsaw with Berlin.[3] The region is also closely associated with vineyards and holds an annual Wine Fest Zielona Góra is surrounded by tree-covered hills and the adjacent woodland alone makes up approximately half of the city's total area. The name of the city itself translates to 'Green Mountain' in both Polish and German. Moreover, Zielona Góra features several tourist attractions and important historical sites including the preserved medieval Old Town, 13th-century Market Square, tenements, palaces, parks and the famous Palm House on Wine Hill. Its strong connection to vineyards and grape-picking earned Zielona Góra a nickname "The City of Wine".<br />
Wineries<br />
<br />
The city has been known for its wines for centuries. It is now one of two places in Poland with wine grape cultivation mainly for white wines (the other being the wine growing region near the town of Warka in Masovia). The first wineries around the city were built in 1314. At the Paradyż Abbey near Zielona Góra, monks have been making wine since 1250. The number of vineyards at peak production is estimated at 4,000 in the region, and 2,500 in Zielona Góra itself. During the communist era wine production was reduced, but since 1990 it has recovered. Since 1852 an annual Wine Festival has taken place in the town. However, nowadays wine is no longer produced in Zielona Góra itself (the last factory was closed in the early 1990s).<br />
<br />
Vodka Luksusowa (namely: Luxury vodka), made
    zielona_gora_polen-4.jpg
  • Among the most valuable landmarks in Třebíč’s Jewish Quarter is without question the Rear, or New, Synagogue.<br />
The old Třebíč Jewish Quarter is unique as a whole. However, within it visitors will find several stunning sights deserving of a tour of their own. Among them is unquestionably the Rear Synagogue, which is also known as the New School, the Upper Prayer Hall and the New Synagogue. Dating from 1669, this Renaissance synagogue is the highlight of the Jewish Quarters with its beautifully restored frescoes and a wonderful historical model of the ghetto as it appeared in the mid-19th century. The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_tsjekkia_world_heritage-6.jpg
  • The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_tsjekkia_world_heritage-5.jpg
  • The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_tsjekkia_world_heritage-2.jpg
  • Tora-ruller. Torah Binder made of red velvet decorated with a star in a field in a border. The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_tsjekkia_world_heritage-3.jpg
  • The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_tsjekkia_world_heritage.jpg
  • Zielona Góra, the largest city in Lubusz Voivodeship, located in western Poland, with 140,403 inhabitants (2021). Zielona Góra is one of the two capital cities of Lubusz Voivodeship, where is the seat of the province's elected assembly, while the seat of the centrally appointed governor is located in the city of Gorzów Wielkopolski. Zielona Góra has a favourable geographical position, being located not far from the Polish-German border and on several international road and rail routes connecting Scandinavia with Southern Europe and Warsaw with Berlin.[3] The region is also closely associated with vineyards and holds an annual Wine Fest Zielona Góra is surrounded by tree-covered hills and the adjacent woodland alone makes up approximately half of the city's total area. The name of the city itself translates to 'Green Mountain' in both Polish and German. Moreover, Zielona Góra features several tourist attractions and important historical sites including the preserved medieval Old Town, 13th-century Market Square, tenements, palaces, parks and the famous Palm House on Wine Hill. Its strong connection to vineyards and grape-picking earned Zielona Góra a nickname "The City of Wine".<br />
Wineries<br />
<br />
The city has been known for its wines for centuries. It is now one of two places in Poland with wine grape cultivation mainly for white wines (the other being the wine growing region near the town of Warka in Masovia). The first wineries around the city were built in 1314. At the Paradyż Abbey near Zielona Góra, monks have been making wine since 1250. The number of vineyards at peak production is estimated at 4,000 in the region, and 2,500 in Zielona Góra itself. During the communist era wine production was reduced, but since 1990 it has recovered. Since 1852 an annual Wine Festival has taken place in the town. However, nowadays wine is no longer produced in Zielona Góra itself (the last factory was closed in the early 1990s).<br />
<br />
Vodka Luksusowa (namely: Luxury vodka), made
    zielona_gora_polen-8.jpg
  • Zielona Góra, the largest city in Lubusz Voivodeship, located in western Poland, with 140,403 inhabitants (2021). Zielona Góra is one of the two capital cities of Lubusz Voivodeship, where is the seat of the province's elected assembly, while the seat of the centrally appointed governor is located in the city of Gorzów Wielkopolski. Zielona Góra has a favourable geographical position, being located not far from the Polish-German border and on several international road and rail routes connecting Scandinavia with Southern Europe and Warsaw with Berlin.[3] The region is also closely associated with vineyards and holds an annual Wine Fest Zielona Góra is surrounded by tree-covered hills and the adjacent woodland alone makes up approximately half of the city's total area. The name of the city itself translates to 'Green Mountain' in both Polish and German. Moreover, Zielona Góra features several tourist attractions and important historical sites including the preserved medieval Old Town, 13th-century Market Square, tenements, palaces, parks and the famous Palm House on Wine Hill. Its strong connection to vineyards and grape-picking earned Zielona Góra a nickname "The City of Wine".<br />
Wineries<br />
<br />
The city has been known for its wines for centuries. It is now one of two places in Poland with wine grape cultivation mainly for white wines (the other being the wine growing region near the town of Warka in Masovia). The first wineries around the city were built in 1314. At the Paradyż Abbey near Zielona Góra, monks have been making wine since 1250. The number of vineyards at peak production is estimated at 4,000 in the region, and 2,500 in Zielona Góra itself. During the communist era wine production was reduced, but since 1990 it has recovered. Since 1852 an annual Wine Festival has taken place in the town. However, nowadays wine is no longer produced in Zielona Góra itself (the last factory was closed in the early 1990s).<br />
<br />
Vodka Luksusowa (namely: Luxury vodka), made
    zielona_gora_polen-6.jpg
  • Zielona Góra, the largest city in Lubusz Voivodeship, located in western Poland, with 140,403 inhabitants (2021). Zielona Góra is one of the two capital cities of Lubusz Voivodeship, where is the seat of the province's elected assembly, while the seat of the centrally appointed governor is located in the city of Gorzów Wielkopolski. Zielona Góra has a favourable geographical position, being located not far from the Polish-German border and on several international road and rail routes connecting Scandinavia with Southern Europe and Warsaw with Berlin.[3] The region is also closely associated with vineyards and holds an annual Wine Fest Zielona Góra is surrounded by tree-covered hills and the adjacent woodland alone makes up approximately half of the city's total area. The name of the city itself translates to 'Green Mountain' in both Polish and German. Moreover, Zielona Góra features several tourist attractions and important historical sites including the preserved medieval Old Town, 13th-century Market Square, tenements, palaces, parks and the famous Palm House on Wine Hill. Its strong connection to vineyards and grape-picking earned Zielona Góra a nickname "The City of Wine".<br />
Wineries<br />
<br />
The city has been known for its wines for centuries. It is now one of two places in Poland with wine grape cultivation mainly for white wines (the other being the wine growing region near the town of Warka in Masovia). The first wineries around the city were built in 1314. At the Paradyż Abbey near Zielona Góra, monks have been making wine since 1250. The number of vineyards at peak production is estimated at 4,000 in the region, and 2,500 in Zielona Góra itself. During the communist era wine production was reduced, but since 1990 it has recovered. Since 1852 an annual Wine Festival has taken place in the town. However, nowadays wine is no longer produced in Zielona Góra itself (the last factory was closed in the early 1990s).<br />
<br />
Vodka Luksusowa (namely: Luxury vodka), made
    zielona_gora_polen-2.jpg
  • The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč is one of the best preserved Jewish ghettos in Europe. Therefore it was listed in 2003 (together with the Jewish Cemetery and the St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč) in the UNESCO World Heritage List and it is the only Jewish monument outside Israel specifically placed on the List. <br />
The Jewish Quarter is by the River Jihlava. There are 123 houses, two synagogues and a Jewish cemetery. <br />
All original Jewish inhabitants (in 1890 there lived nearly 1,500 Jews, but in the 1930s only 300 of them were Jewish) were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazis during the World War II. Only ten of them came back after the war. Therefore many buildings of the Jewish town (e. g. the town hall, rabbi's office, hospital, poorhouse or school) do not serve their original purpose any more and the houses are now owned by people of non-Jewish faith.
    trebic_tsjekkia_world_heritage-4.jpg
  • Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (23).jpg
  • Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (22).jpg
  • Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (19).jpg
  • Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (17).jpg
  • Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (4).JPG
  • rogn Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (25).jpg
  • Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (24).jpg
  • Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (21).JPG
  • Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (2).JPG
  • Rogn, blader Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (1).jpg
  • Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), European Rowan, Mountain ash, or European mountain ash, is a species of the genus Sorbus, native to most of Europe (except for the far south), and northern Asia.
    rogn_rowan_sorbus_aucuparia (16).jpg
  • Engvokssopp, Cuphophyllus pratensis is a species of agaric (gilled mushroom) in the family Hygrophoraceae. It has been given the  English name of meadow waxcap in the UK and in North America has variously been called the meadow waxy cap, salmon waxy cap, and butter meadowcap. The species has a widespread, mainly temperate distribution, occurring in grassland in Europe and in woodland elsewhere. The basidiocarps (fruit bodies) are edible.
    engvokssopp_cuphophyllus_pratensis.jpg
  • Nore stavkirke, Wiki: "en korskirke av midtmasttypen, antatt opprinnelig bygget som en enskipet stavkirke (langkirke), i Nore i Nore og Uvdal kommune i Numedal. Det er vanlig å datere stavkirken til slutten av 1100-tallet. Deler av konstruksjonen har blitt årringdatert til 1167, men kirken er trolig først bygget noen år senere. Kirken har kraftig preg av renessanse og rokokko.<br />
<br />
Stavkirken har 150 plasser, og adkomst er via Fv116 og Rv40. Skipet er rektangulært bygget i stavverk. Koret og tverrfløyene er i laft. Tverrfløyene kan ha hatt avsluttende apsider og små tårn, mens skipet hadde et større tårn. Det mest unike med kirken er at den alt i middelalderen ser ut til å ha blitt ombygd til korskirke, det finnes ingen paralleller. Opprinnelig var den imidlertid en enskipet stavkirke av midtmasttypen. Den har en korsformet grunnplan, våpenhus og sør- og nordfløy. Koret er i samme bredde som skipet. Kirken har en åttekantet takrytter.<br />
<br />
Det er foretatt en rekke ombygninger. Fløyene ble ombygget i 1709 og 1714 og koret utvidet i 1683. Kirken fikk våpenhus i 1723 og midt på 1700-tallet ble det bygget sakristi. Kirken har en korsformet grunnplan med seksten staver i midtskipet og fløyene. Midt i skipet står en kraftig søyle med terningkapitel.<br />
<br />
Kirken er bygget med gallerier. vegger, gallerier og søyler ble malt i sterke farger i 1655. <br />
I 1888 kjøpte Lorentz Dietrichson kirken og ga den to år senere til Fortidsminneforeningen. Visitnorway: Nore Stave Church is located in Nore and Uvdal municipality in Buskerud. Nore Stave Church was built according to an architectural style called: Numedalstype. The church was built as a cruciform church approximately 1167, with galleries, a chancel and cross naves with an apse. This was very rare at the time, and one does not know of of any other church in Norway or Europe that could have been a model for this structure.<br />
<br />
The church was partially rebuilt in the 1600s and 1700s. The naves and chancel have remnants o
    nore_stavkirke-7.jpg
  • Nore stavkirke, Wiki: "en korskirke av midtmasttypen, antatt opprinnelig bygget som en enskipet stavkirke (langkirke), i Nore i Nore og Uvdal kommune i Numedal. Det er vanlig å datere stavkirken til slutten av 1100-tallet. Deler av konstruksjonen har blitt årringdatert til 1167, men kirken er trolig først bygget noen år senere. Kirken har kraftig preg av renessanse og rokokko.<br />
<br />
Stavkirken har 150 plasser, og adkomst er via Fv116 og Rv40. Skipet er rektangulært bygget i stavverk. Koret og tverrfløyene er i laft. Tverrfløyene kan ha hatt avsluttende apsider og små tårn, mens skipet hadde et større tårn. Det mest unike med kirken er at den alt i middelalderen ser ut til å ha blitt ombygd til korskirke, det finnes ingen paralleller. Opprinnelig var den imidlertid en enskipet stavkirke av midtmasttypen. Den har en korsformet grunnplan, våpenhus og sør- og nordfløy. Koret er i samme bredde som skipet. Kirken har en åttekantet takrytter.<br />
<br />
Det er foretatt en rekke ombygninger. Fløyene ble ombygget i 1709 og 1714 og koret utvidet i 1683. Kirken fikk våpenhus i 1723 og midt på 1700-tallet ble det bygget sakristi. Kirken har en korsformet grunnplan med seksten staver i midtskipet og fløyene. Midt i skipet står en kraftig søyle med terningkapitel.<br />
<br />
Kirken er bygget med gallerier. vegger, gallerier og søyler ble malt i sterke farger i 1655. <br />
I 1888 kjøpte Lorentz Dietrichson kirken og ga den to år senere til Fortidsminneforeningen. Visitnorway: Nore Stave Church is located in Nore and Uvdal municipality in Buskerud. Nore Stave Church was built according to an architectural style called: Numedalstype. The church was built as a cruciform church approximately 1167, with galleries, a chancel and cross naves with an apse. This was very rare at the time, and one does not know of of any other church in Norway or Europe that could have been a model for this structure.<br />
<br />
The church was partially rebuilt in the 1600s and 1700s. The naves and chancel have remnants o
    nore_stavkirke-8.jpg
  • Nore stavkirke, Wiki: "en korskirke av midtmasttypen, antatt opprinnelig bygget som en enskipet stavkirke (langkirke), i Nore i Nore og Uvdal kommune i Numedal. Det er vanlig å datere stavkirken til slutten av 1100-tallet. Deler av konstruksjonen har blitt årringdatert til 1167, men kirken er trolig først bygget noen år senere. Kirken har kraftig preg av renessanse og rokokko.<br />
<br />
Stavkirken har 150 plasser, og adkomst er via Fv116 og Rv40. Skipet er rektangulært bygget i stavverk. Koret og tverrfløyene er i laft. Tverrfløyene kan ha hatt avsluttende apsider og små tårn, mens skipet hadde et større tårn. Det mest unike med kirken er at den alt i middelalderen ser ut til å ha blitt ombygd til korskirke, det finnes ingen paralleller. Opprinnelig var den imidlertid en enskipet stavkirke av midtmasttypen. Den har en korsformet grunnplan, våpenhus og sør- og nordfløy. Koret er i samme bredde som skipet. Kirken har en åttekantet takrytter.<br />
<br />
Det er foretatt en rekke ombygninger. Fløyene ble ombygget i 1709 og 1714 og koret utvidet i 1683. Kirken fikk våpenhus i 1723 og midt på 1700-tallet ble det bygget sakristi. Kirken har en korsformet grunnplan med seksten staver i midtskipet og fløyene. Midt i skipet står en kraftig søyle med terningkapitel.<br />
<br />
Kirken er bygget med gallerier. vegger, gallerier og søyler ble malt i sterke farger i 1655. <br />
I 1888 kjøpte Lorentz Dietrichson kirken og ga den to år senere til Fortidsminneforeningen. Visitnorway: Nore Stave Church is located in Nore and Uvdal municipality in Buskerud. Nore Stave Church was built according to an architectural style called: Numedalstype. The church was built as a cruciform church approximately 1167, with galleries, a chancel and cross naves with an apse. This was very rare at the time, and one does not know of of any other church in Norway or Europe that could have been a model for this structure.<br />
<br />
The church was partially rebuilt in the 1600s and 1700s. The naves and chancel have remnants o
    nore_stavkirke-3.jpg
  • Nore stavkirke, Wiki: "en korskirke av midtmasttypen, antatt opprinnelig bygget som en enskipet stavkirke (langkirke), i Nore i Nore og Uvdal kommune i Numedal. Det er vanlig å datere stavkirken til slutten av 1100-tallet. Deler av konstruksjonen har blitt årringdatert til 1167, men kirken er trolig først bygget noen år senere. Kirken har kraftig preg av renessanse og rokokko.<br />
<br />
Stavkirken har 150 plasser, og adkomst er via Fv116 og Rv40. Skipet er rektangulært bygget i stavverk. Koret og tverrfløyene er i laft. Tverrfløyene kan ha hatt avsluttende apsider og små tårn, mens skipet hadde et større tårn. Det mest unike med kirken er at den alt i middelalderen ser ut til å ha blitt ombygd til korskirke, det finnes ingen paralleller. Opprinnelig var den imidlertid en enskipet stavkirke av midtmasttypen. Den har en korsformet grunnplan, våpenhus og sør- og nordfløy. Koret er i samme bredde som skipet. Kirken har en åttekantet takrytter.<br />
<br />
Det er foretatt en rekke ombygninger. Fløyene ble ombygget i 1709 og 1714 og koret utvidet i 1683. Kirken fikk våpenhus i 1723 og midt på 1700-tallet ble det bygget sakristi. Kirken har en korsformet grunnplan med seksten staver i midtskipet og fløyene. Midt i skipet står en kraftig søyle med terningkapitel.<br />
<br />
Kirken er bygget med gallerier. vegger, gallerier og søyler ble malt i sterke farger i 1655. <br />
I 1888 kjøpte Lorentz Dietrichson kirken og ga den to år senere til Fortidsminneforeningen. Visitnorway: Nore Stave Church is located in Nore and Uvdal municipality in Buskerud. Nore Stave Church was built according to an architectural style called: Numedalstype. The church was built as a cruciform church approximately 1167, with galleries, a chancel and cross naves with an apse. This was very rare at the time, and one does not know of of any other church in Norway or Europe that could have been a model for this structure.<br />
<br />
The church was partially rebuilt in the 1600s and 1700s. The naves and chancel have remnants o
    nore_stavkirke-6.jpg
  • Nore stavkirke, Wiki: "en korskirke av midtmasttypen, antatt opprinnelig bygget som en enskipet stavkirke (langkirke), i Nore i Nore og Uvdal kommune i Numedal. Det er vanlig å datere stavkirken til slutten av 1100-tallet. Deler av konstruksjonen har blitt årringdatert til 1167, men kirken er trolig først bygget noen år senere. Kirken har kraftig preg av renessanse og rokokko.<br />
<br />
Stavkirken har 150 plasser, og adkomst er via Fv116 og Rv40. Skipet er rektangulært bygget i stavverk. Koret og tverrfløyene er i laft. Tverrfløyene kan ha hatt avsluttende apsider og små tårn, mens skipet hadde et større tårn. Det mest unike med kirken er at den alt i middelalderen ser ut til å ha blitt ombygd til korskirke, det finnes ingen paralleller. Opprinnelig var den imidlertid en enskipet stavkirke av midtmasttypen. Den har en korsformet grunnplan, våpenhus og sør- og nordfløy. Koret er i samme bredde som skipet. Kirken har en åttekantet takrytter.<br />
<br />
Det er foretatt en rekke ombygninger. Fløyene ble ombygget i 1709 og 1714 og koret utvidet i 1683. Kirken fikk våpenhus i 1723 og midt på 1700-tallet ble det bygget sakristi. Kirken har en korsformet grunnplan med seksten staver i midtskipet og fløyene. Midt i skipet står en kraftig søyle med terningkapitel.<br />
<br />
Kirken er bygget med gallerier. vegger, gallerier og søyler ble malt i sterke farger i 1655. <br />
I 1888 kjøpte Lorentz Dietrichson kirken og ga den to år senere til Fortidsminneforeningen. Visitnorway: Nore Stave Church is located in Nore and Uvdal municipality in Buskerud. Nore Stave Church was built according to an architectural style called: Numedalstype. The church was built as a cruciform church approximately 1167, with galleries, a chancel and cross naves with an apse. This was very rare at the time, and one does not know of of any other church in Norway or Europe that could have been a model for this structure.<br />
<br />
The church was partially rebuilt in the 1600s and 1700s. The naves and chancel have remnants o
    nore_stavkirke-5.jpg
  • Nore stavkirke, Wiki: "en korskirke av midtmasttypen, antatt opprinnelig bygget som en enskipet stavkirke (langkirke), i Nore i Nore og Uvdal kommune i Numedal. Det er vanlig å datere stavkirken til slutten av 1100-tallet. Deler av konstruksjonen har blitt årringdatert til 1167, men kirken er trolig først bygget noen år senere. Kirken har kraftig preg av renessanse og rokokko.<br />
<br />
Stavkirken har 150 plasser, og adkomst er via Fv116 og Rv40. Skipet er rektangulært bygget i stavverk. Koret og tverrfløyene er i laft. Tverrfløyene kan ha hatt avsluttende apsider og små tårn, mens skipet hadde et større tårn. Det mest unike med kirken er at den alt i middelalderen ser ut til å ha blitt ombygd til korskirke, det finnes ingen paralleller. Opprinnelig var den imidlertid en enskipet stavkirke av midtmasttypen. Den har en korsformet grunnplan, våpenhus og sør- og nordfløy. Koret er i samme bredde som skipet. Kirken har en åttekantet takrytter.<br />
<br />
Det er foretatt en rekke ombygninger. Fløyene ble ombygget i 1709 og 1714 og koret utvidet i 1683. Kirken fikk våpenhus i 1723 og midt på 1700-tallet ble det bygget sakristi. Kirken har en korsformet grunnplan med seksten staver i midtskipet og fløyene. Midt i skipet står en kraftig søyle med terningkapitel.<br />
<br />
Kirken er bygget med gallerier. vegger, gallerier og søyler ble malt i sterke farger i 1655. <br />
I 1888 kjøpte Lorentz Dietrichson kirken og ga den to år senere til Fortidsminneforeningen. Visitnorway: Nore Stave Church is located in Nore and Uvdal municipality in Buskerud. Nore Stave Church was built according to an architectural style called: Numedalstype. The church was built as a cruciform church approximately 1167, with galleries, a chancel and cross naves with an apse. This was very rare at the time, and one does not know of of any other church in Norway or Europe that could have been a model for this structure.<br />
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The church was partially rebuilt in the 1600s and 1700s. The naves and chancel have remnants o
    nore_stavkirke-4.jpg
  • Nore stavkirke, Wiki: "en korskirke av midtmasttypen, antatt opprinnelig bygget som en enskipet stavkirke (langkirke), i Nore i Nore og Uvdal kommune i Numedal. Det er vanlig å datere stavkirken til slutten av 1100-tallet. Deler av konstruksjonen har blitt årringdatert til 1167, men kirken er trolig først bygget noen år senere. Kirken har kraftig preg av renessanse og rokokko.<br />
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Stavkirken har 150 plasser, og adkomst er via Fv116 og Rv40. Skipet er rektangulært bygget i stavverk. Koret og tverrfløyene er i laft. Tverrfløyene kan ha hatt avsluttende apsider og små tårn, mens skipet hadde et større tårn. Det mest unike med kirken er at den alt i middelalderen ser ut til å ha blitt ombygd til korskirke, det finnes ingen paralleller. Opprinnelig var den imidlertid en enskipet stavkirke av midtmasttypen. Den har en korsformet grunnplan, våpenhus og sør- og nordfløy. Koret er i samme bredde som skipet. Kirken har en åttekantet takrytter.<br />
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Det er foretatt en rekke ombygninger. Fløyene ble ombygget i 1709 og 1714 og koret utvidet i 1683. Kirken fikk våpenhus i 1723 og midt på 1700-tallet ble det bygget sakristi. Kirken har en korsformet grunnplan med seksten staver i midtskipet og fløyene. Midt i skipet står en kraftig søyle med terningkapitel.<br />
<br />
Kirken er bygget med gallerier. vegger, gallerier og søyler ble malt i sterke farger i 1655. <br />
I 1888 kjøpte Lorentz Dietrichson kirken og ga den to år senere til Fortidsminneforeningen. Visitnorway: Nore Stave Church is located in Nore and Uvdal municipality in Buskerud. Nore Stave Church was built according to an architectural style called: Numedalstype. The church was built as a cruciform church approximately 1167, with galleries, a chancel and cross naves with an apse. This was very rare at the time, and one does not know of of any other church in Norway or Europe that could have been a model for this structure.<br />
<br />
The church was partially rebuilt in the 1600s and 1700s. The naves and chancel have remnants o
    nore_stavkirke.jpg
  • Tåresneglehatt. Limacella guttata, weeping slimecap. Typisk er dråpene på stilken oppunder hatten, over den kraftige ringen. En blek sopp med hvite skiver. Øsa.  A mushroom-forming fungus in the family Amanitaceae. Limacella guttata is found in Europe and North America, where it grows in damp woodlands typically dominated by deciduous plants such as ash, beech, and elm. The specific epithet guttata is derived from Latin, meaning "with droplets". Limacella is a small genus of slimy gilled mushrooms with white spore prints and gills that are free from the stem. In old age the slime on some Limacella species can dry up, and they are then likely to be confused with members of the Lepiota family. When young they can approximate the Waxy Caps, but do not have thick, waxy gills that are broadly attached to the stem.<br />
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DNA studies have apparently confirmed the traditional view (based primarily on microscopic observation of the gills) that Limacella is closely related to Amanita, though collectors are not likely to confuse the two genera. It is unclear whether species of Limacella are saprobic or mycorrhizal
    taresneglehatt_limacella_g.jpg
  • orerørsopp, Gyrodon lividus. Gul farge, vokser i oreskog, sjelden og rødlistet. Rørlaget blir fort blågrønt ved berøring. Mild lukt og smak. Spiselig, men regnes ikke til matsoppene. Funnet nord til Nord-Trøndelag. Gyrodon lividus, commonly known as the alder bolete, is a pored mushroom bearing close affinity to the genus Paxillus. Although found predominantly in Europe, where it grows in a mycorrhizal association with alder, it has also recorded from China, Japan and California. Fruit bodies are distinguished from other boletes by decurrent bright yellow pores that turn blue-grey on bruising. as a pale brown, buff or ochre cap 4–10 cm which is convex and later flat in shape, can be sticky when wet. Like other boletes, it has pores instead of gills that make up the hymenophore on the underside of the cap. These large pores are decurrent in their attachment to the stipe. Bright yellow, they turn blue-grey when cut or bruised. The thin flesh is pale yellow. The ringless stipe is initially the same colour as the cap but later darkens to a red-brown; it is 3–7 cm by 1–2 cm wide. The spore print is olive-brown and the oval spores are 4.5–6 x 3–4 μm. The mushroom has a non-distinctive smell and taste
    orerorsopp_gyrodon.jpg
  • Fibret slørsopp, Cortinarius glaucopus. Fibret slørsopp med flumpet fot. Cortinarius glaucopus, commonly known as the blue-foot webcap, is a basidiomycete mushroom of the genus Cortinarius native to Europe and North America. a sticky-when-fresh, variously colored (grays, browns, and olives) cap that becomes radially streaked with innate fibrils; a stem that features a rimmed, short-bulbous base and bluish hues (at least when young). Gills that are initially purple to lilac; and fairly small, slightly roughened spores<br />
Within the genus Cortinarius, it is classified in the subgenus Phlegmacium and section Glaucopodes. A 2014 genetic study confirmed it was syonymous with C. glaucopoides and that Cortinarius subrubrovelatus was a distinct species. Other close relatives include C. subfoetens and C. pansa  Common names in other languages include Schwachknolliger Klumpfuss,  Cortinaire à pied glauque (French) and Szálaskalapú pókhálósgomba.<br />
The fruit bodies of this fungus have convex caps 4 to 10 cm (1.6 to 3.9 in) across and ochre or tawny in colour with prominent darker brown fibres. Like other members of the genus, young mushrooms are covered in a web-like veil (cortina) from the cap margin to the stipe.[7] The bulbous stipe is pale lilac-blue initially with lower parts fading to yellow-white. The flesh is yellow-white with a blue hue in the upper stipe. The lilac-blue gills are adnate or free, and become brown as the spores mature. The smell, if present, is slightly mealy. The spore print is red-brown and the spores measure 6.5–8.5 by 4.5–5 µm. Fruit bodies appear from August onwards into autumn in deciduous and coniferous forests, often in profuse numbers. It can be found in fairy rings. Cap: 3-12 cm; convex, becoming broadly convex or nearly flat; sticky when fresh and young, but often dry when collected; bald over the center and silky toward the margin; developing radial streaks of innate fibers; variable in color, ranging from grayish olive to steely gr
    fibret_slorsopp_cortinarius_glaucopu...jpg
  • Fåresopp eller sauesopp (Albatrellus ovinus) er en 5–25 cm bred, matt, tørr, hvit eller gråbrun sopp med porer under hatten. Den vokser i Norge særlig på Østlandet og i Trøndelag og regnes som en av de «sikre» soppene, det vil si spiselige sopper som ikke lett forveksles med giftige. <br />
Av slekten albatrellus er det fire arter i Norge. Både franskbrødsopp (Albatrellus confluens) og grønn fåresopp er uspiselig. Fåresoppen er hvitaktig, ofte grålig på oversiden, og har tynne porer på undersiden. Den regnes som den eneste spiselige poresoppen. Blir gul ved varmebehandling. Må ikke forveksles med franskbrødsopp. Den har større og mindre tette porer, og ser ut som stekt franskbrød, dvs. litt mer oransje tone. Franskbrødsopp blir ikke gul ved steking. Smaken er relativt (men ikke helt) mild, mens den hos franskbrødsopp er bitter. <br />
Fåresopp vokser helst på gammel, mosedekket granskogbunn, gjerne i skråninger. Ofte i store grupper. Mest på Østlandet og i Trøndelag tidlig på høsten. Svensk: Fårticka. Kan forveksles med brödticka - fläckas i orangebrunt, växer ofta tuvat, ätlig som ung, men bitter. Albatrellus ovinus is a terrestrial polypore fungus found in western North America, and Northern Europe. It is very closely related to the more common A. subrubescens, from which it may be distinguished microscopically by the amyloid spore wall. It is edible and sold commercially in Finland. A fuller discussion of the small color differences from the inedible Albatrellus subrubescens can be found at that extensive article. Microscopically, the spores of A. subrubescens are amyloid, while the ones of A. ovinus are not.
    sauesopp_albatrellus_ovinus_polypore...jpg
  • Fåresopp eller sauesopp (Albatrellus ovinus) er en 5–25 cm bred, matt, tørr, hvit eller gråbrun sopp med porer under hatten. Den vokser i Norge særlig på Østlandet og i Trøndelag og regnes som en av de «sikre» soppene, det vil si spiselige sopper som ikke lett forveksles med giftige. <br />
Av slekten albatrellus er det fire arter i Norge. Både franskbrødsopp (Albatrellus confluens) og grønn fåresopp er uspiselig. Fåresoppen er hvitaktig, ofte grålig på oversiden, og har tynne porer på undersiden. Den regnes som den eneste spiselige poresoppen. Blir gul ved varmebehandling. Må ikke forveksles med franskbrødsopp. Den har større og mindre tette porer, og ser ut som stekt franskbrød, dvs. litt mer oransje tone. Franskbrødsopp blir ikke gul ved steking. Smaken er relativt (men ikke helt) mild, mens den hos franskbrødsopp er bitter. <br />
Fåresopp vokser helst på gammel, mosedekket granskogbunn, gjerne i skråninger. Ofte i store grupper. Mest på Østlandet og i Trøndelag tidlig på høsten. Svensk: Fårticka. Kan forveksles med brödticka - fläckas i orangebrunt, växer ofta tuvat, ätlig som ung, men bitter. Albatrellus ovinus is a terrestrial polypore fungus found in western North America, and Northern Europe. It is very closely related to the more common A. subrubescens, from which it may be distinguished microscopically by the amyloid spore wall. It is edible and sold commercially in Finland. A fuller discussion of the small color differences from the inedible Albatrellus subrubescens can be found at that extensive article. Microscopically, the spores of A. subrubescens are amyloid, while the ones of A. ovinus are not.
    sauesopp_albatrellus_ovinus_polypore.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-6.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-4.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-2.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-7.jpg
  • Kråkeunge. Kråke (Corvus corone cornix) regnes ikke (lenger) som en selvstendig art, men inngår nå som en underart av svartkråke (Corvus corone). Som sådan inngår den i kråkefamilien (Corvidae). The hooded crow (Corvus cornix) (also called hoodie).  An Eurasian bird species in the Corvus genus. Widely distributed, it is also known locally as Scotch crow and Danish crow. In Ireland it is called caróg liath or grey crow, just as in the Slavic languages and in Danish. In German it is called "mist crow" ("Nebelkrähe"). Found across Northern, Eastern, and Southeastern Europe.  It is an ashy grey bird with black head, throat, wings, tail, and thigh feathers, as well as a black bill, eyes, and feet. Like other corvids, it is an omnivorous and opportunistic forager and feeder. (W)
    young_crow_corvus.jpg
  • The Pinkas Synagogue is the second oldest preserved synagogue in Prague. Built in the late Gothic style in 1535, it was founded by Aaron Meshulam Horowitz, a prominent member of the Prague Jewish Community, and probably named after his grandson, Rabbi Pinkas Horowitz. It was originally a place of prayer for the Horowitz family and was located near a ritual bath (mikveh). It was restored to its original form in 1950-54.<br />
Memorial to the Bohemian and Moravian Victims of the Shoah. In 1955-60 the Pinkas Synagogue was turned into a memorial to the nearly 80,000 Jewish victims of the Shoah from Bohemia and Moravia. One of the earliest memorials of its kind in Europe, it is the work of two painters, Václav Boštík and Jiří John. After the Soviet invasion of 1968, the memorial was closed to the public for more than 20 years. It was fully reconstructed and reopened to the public in 1995 after the fall of the Communist regime.  Located on the first floor, this exhibition focuses on the fate of Jewish children who were incarcerated in the Terezín ghetto during the Second World War. It is based on the now world famous children's drawings that were made in the ghetto between 1942 and 1944 under the supervision of the artist Friedl Dicker-Brandeis. These emotionally powerful drawings bear testimony to the persecution of Jews during the Nazi occupation of the Bohemian lands in 1939–45. They document the transports to Terezín and daily life in the ghetto, as well as the dreams of returning home and of life in the Jewish homeland of Palestine. The vast majority of the children perished in the gas chambers of Auschwitz-Birkenau.  (https://www.jewishmuseum.cz) The Jewish Quarter in Prague, known as Josefov, is located between the Old Town Square and the Vltava River. Its history dates from the 13th century. The Prague Jewish town represent a unique complex of Jewish monuments. The Prague ghetto and the Jewish community has continued from the early Middle Ages up to our days. T
    pinkas_praha_synagogue_memorial-3.jpg
  • Sannsynligvis hjulblekksopp, Parasola plicatilis.  Kan være Parasola kuehneri. Denne har ikke norsk navn. Må mikroskoperes for å kunne bestemme disse. Hjulblekksopper, Parasola Redhead. Denne vokser på plen, Selbu i Sør-Trøndelag. Nylen: Hatten først klokkeformet, senere hvelvet til utbredt, 1-2 cm. Gulbrun til gråbrun, eller grå med gulbrunt midtparti, samt radiært rynket. Skivene fjernstilte. Først bleke, senere svarte, og de når ikke fram til stilken. Stilk 3-5 cm, 0,1 cm tykk, og halvt gjennomsiktig. Svarte sporer. Uspiselig. Vokser sommer og høst i gressmatter og beitemark og er vanlig i store deler av landet. sjekkes mot noen flere: P. hercules, P. leiocephala, P. schroeteri, P. lilatincta, P. megasperma, P. auricoma, P. misera og P. conopilus. Det høres kanskje litt demotiverende ut, men kan trøste med at disse ikke er så vanskelige å skille når man mikroskoperer og har blitt vant med nøklene man bruker. Er artskart "up to date"?) P. auricoma = oransjebrun blekksopp. P. leiocephala = sumphjulblekksopp. P. misera = Pusleblekksopp. Resten har ikke norsk navn. Svært mange arter som finnes i Norge som ikke har norsk navn enda, og noen av dem er ikke sjeldne engang. (Andreas Krogevoll Svensen). Parasola plicatilis, hjulblekksopp, engelsk: Pleated Inkcap, and sometimes as the Little Japanese Umbrella. Har den noe norsk navn? "This is one of the many short-lived grassland fungi that appear overnight following rain; the fruitbodies develop, expand, shed their spores and decay within 24 hours and by the next morning there is usually no evidence of them ever having existed. Common and widespread in Britain and Ireland, this little mushroom is found also throughout mainland Europe as well as in many other parts of the world including North America. If you have a lawn and you don't smother it in weedkillers and fertilisers, this is one of the little mushrooms that you are likely to see there in summer and autumn. You need to get up early in the mornin
    sans_hjulblekksopp_parasola_plicatil...jpg
  • Johan Sara Jr., komponist og musiker, og joiker, Masi i Kautokeino kommune, Finnmark. Masi kalles Máze på nordsamisk. Johan Sara jr. (født 1963 i Kautokeino og oppvokst i Alta) er en samisk musiker (gitar og joik) og en sentral samisk komponist, produsent, lærer, arrangør, skuespiller og utøver av samtidsmusikk med røtter i samisk tradisjon. Han har studert klassisk gitar ved Musikkonservatoriet i Tromsø, samt musikkpedagogikk, og har undervist ved Samisk høgskole i Kautokeino. Sara jr. leder «J.S. & Group», som ga ut Ovcci vuomi ovtta veaiggis (DAT, 1995). Med ny besetning (Geir Lysne blås, Knut Aalefjær tromme, Erik Halvorsen tangent) utkom Boska (DAT, 2003), med et musikkuttrykk beskrevet som punk-joik-jazz.[2] Den neste plata heter Orvoš (2009) fra Johan Sara jr. Group.<br />
Orkesteret har en omfattende turnéliste internasjonalt. I 2010 turnerte han i Japan der han spilte for utsolgte hus i Osaka og Tokyo, hvor han skulle holde tilsammen fire konserter. Sommeren 2011 spilte han på Roskildefestivalen, der han høstet massiv applaus fra et oppløftet festivalpublikum, for sin oppjazzede joik med et band bestående av blant andre Terje Johannessen. Samme år ble også tildelt Edvardprisen 2011, fra TONO, for albumet Transmission – Rievdadus i åpen klasse, under Ultimafestivalen. Johan Sara Jr. is one of the world’s best performers in one of Europe’s oldest song traditions, Sami music from the Arctic, the joik. His unique combination of joik and contemporary elements provides a hypnotic and meditative sound, which has been praised both at home and abroad, and his latest album, Orvoš, has confirmed his position as a vital, fresh and genre free innovator. <br />
Johan Sara Jr. was born in Alta and grew up with reindeer herders on the vast snow-covered tundra in the arctic north. He is now settled in the Sami town of Maze. He was born into a culture where nature and the natural was everywhere, a culture where the joik had a central position and had a mothe
    johan_sara_jr_masi-3.jpg
  • Johan Sara Jr., komponist og musiker, og joiker, Masi i Kautokeino kommune, Finnmark. Masi kalles Máze på nordsamisk. Johan Sara jr. (født 1963 i Kautokeino og oppvokst i Alta) er en samisk musiker (gitar og joik) og en sentral samisk komponist, produsent, lærer, arrangør, skuespiller og utøver av samtidsmusikk med røtter i samisk tradisjon. Han har studert klassisk gitar ved Musikkonservatoriet i Tromsø, samt musikkpedagogikk, og har undervist ved Samisk høgskole i Kautokeino. Sara jr. leder «J.S. & Group», som ga ut Ovcci vuomi ovtta veaiggis (DAT, 1995). Med ny besetning (Geir Lysne blås, Knut Aalefjær tromme, Erik Halvorsen tangent) utkom Boska (DAT, 2003), med et musikkuttrykk beskrevet som punk-joik-jazz.[2] Den neste plata heter Orvoš (2009) fra Johan Sara jr. Group.<br />
Orkesteret har en omfattende turnéliste internasjonalt. I 2010 turnerte han i Japan der han spilte for utsolgte hus i Osaka og Tokyo, hvor han skulle holde tilsammen fire konserter. Sommeren 2011 spilte han på Roskildefestivalen, der han høstet massiv applaus fra et oppløftet festivalpublikum, for sin oppjazzede joik med et band bestående av blant andre Terje Johannessen. Samme år ble også tildelt Edvardprisen 2011, fra TONO, for albumet Transmission – Rievdadus i åpen klasse, under Ultimafestivalen. Johan Sara Jr. is one of the world’s best performers in one of Europe’s oldest song traditions, Sami music from the Arctic, the joik. His unique combination of joik and contemporary elements provides a hypnotic and meditative sound, which has been praised both at home and abroad, and his latest album, Orvoš, has confirmed his position as a vital, fresh and genre free innovator. <br />
Johan Sara Jr. was born in Alta and grew up with reindeer herders on the vast snow-covered tundra in the arctic north. He is now settled in the Sami town of Maze. He was born into a culture where nature and the natural was everywhere, a culture where the joik had a central position and had a mothe
    johan_sara_jr_masi.jpg
  • sauetang, er en vanlig brunalge på berg/svaberg. Ganske liten. Pelvetia canaliculata, channelled wrack, is a very common brown alga (Phaeophyceae) found on the rocks of the upper shores of Europe. It is the only species remaining in the monotypic genus Pelvetia.
    IMG_8542.jpg
  • Skarp rustbrunpigg, Hydnellum peckii, the bleeding tooth fungus, also known as the red juice tooth or the devil's tooth. <br />
In conditions of high humidity, several species can form striking colored drops on the actively growing caps: red drops in H. peckii, H. diabolus, H. ferrugineum, and H. cruentum, yellow drops in H. caeruleum, and coffee-colored drops in H. mirabile. The common names of H. peckii reflect its appearance: "strawberries and cream" and "bleeding tooth fungus". Some Hydnellum species have a mealy odor (e.g. H. mirabile and H. pineticola) similar to freshly ground flour. H. zonatum smells like melilot, while H. suaveolens has an sweet odor resembling anise or peppermint. All are too tough and woody to be edible, and many have an acrid taste anyway.<br />
Hydnellum peckii is an inedible (though not toxic) fungus, and a member of the genus Hydnellum of the family Bankeraceae. It is a hydnoid species, producing spores on the surface of vertical spines or tooth-like projections that hang from the undersurface of the fruit bodies. It is found in North America, Europe, and was recently discovered in Iran (2008) and Korea (2010). Hydnellum peckii is a mycorrhizal species, and forms mutually beneficial relationships with a variety of coniferous trees, growing on the ground singly, scattered, or in fused masses.
    skarp_rustbrunpigg_hydnellum_peckii.jpg
  • Pluggsopp (Paxillus involutus) er en vanlig sopp i Norge, som i fjellet vokser opp til bjørkebeltet normalt fra august til oktober. Giftig. Commonly known as the brown roll-rim, common roll-rim, or poison pax. Paxillus involutus, commonly known as the brown roll-rim, common roll-rim, or poison pax, is a basidiomycete fungus widely distributed across the Northern Hemisphere. It has been unintentionally introduced to Australia, New Zealand, and South America, likely been transported in soil with European trees. Various shades of brown in colour, the fruit body grows up to 6 cm high and has a funnel-shaped cap up to 12 cm with a distinctive inrolled rim and decurrent gills that may be pore-like close to the stipe. Although it has gills, it is more closely related to the pored boletes than to typical gilled mushrooms. was widely eaten in Central and Eastern Europe until World War II, although English guidebooks did not recommend it. In Poland, the mushroom was often eaten after pickling or salting. It was known to be a gastrointestinal irritant when ingested raw but had been presumed edible after cooking. In the mid-1980s, Swiss physician René Flammer discovered an antigen within the mushroom that stimulates an autoimmune reaction causing the body's immune cells to consider its own red blood cells as foreign and attack them. Despite this, it was not until 1990 that guidebooks firmly warned against eating P. involutus
    pluggsopp_axillus_involutus.jpg
  • seig kusopp, Suillus bovinus. Hatt 4-10 cm, hvelvet til utbredt. Brungul, ofte mange tett sammen. Litt nedløpende rørlag, grågult med oliven tone. Kantete rørmunninger, rør "inni" rørene. Gulbrun stilk. Ved furu. Spiselig. Skal være ekstra god tørket, og gir meget godt soppmel med mye aroma. Also known as the Jersey cow mushroom or bovine bolete, is a pored mushroom of the genus Suillus in the family Suillaceae. A common fungus native to Europe and Asia, it has been introduced to North America and Australia. The fruit body—colloquially called a mushroom, of Suillus bovinus is smaller and daintier than most other boletes. The cap is initially convex, then flat with a wavy margin and a grey-yellow or ochre with pink tinge in some specimens. It ranges from 3–10 cm and has a sticky skin. The flesh is whitish, yellowish or clay-coloured and has a fruity smell. Sometimes turning a pink tinge when bruised.
    seig_kusopp_suillus_bovinus.jpg
  • seig kusopp, Suillus bovinus. Hatt 4-10 cm, hvelvet til utbredt. Brungul, ofte mange tett sammen. Litt nedløpende rørlag, grågult med oliven tone. Kantete rørmunninger, rør "inni" rørene. Gulbrun stilk. Ved furu. Spiselig. Skal være ekstra god tørket, og gir meget godt soppmel med mye aroma. Also known as the Jersey cow mushroom or bovine bolete, is a pored mushroom of the genus Suillus in the family Suillaceae. A common fungus native to Europe and Asia, it has been introduced to North America and Australia. The fruit body—colloquially called a mushroom, of Suillus bovinus is smaller and daintier than most other boletes. The cap is initially convex, then flat with a wavy margin and a grey-yellow or ochre with pink tinge in some specimens. It ranges from 3–10 cm and has a sticky skin. The flesh is whitish, yellowish or clay-coloured and has a fruity smell. Sometimes turning a pink tinge when bruised.
    seig_kusopp_suillus_bovinus-2.jpg
  • Fibret slørsopp, Cortinarius glaucopus, commonly known as the blue-foot webcap, is a basidiomycete mushroom of the genus Cortinarius native to Europe. Schwachknolliger Klumpfuss (German), Cortinaire à pied glauque (French) and Szálaskalapú pókhálósgomba (Hungarian). The fruit bodies of this fungus have convex caps 4 to 10 cm and ochre or tawny in colour with prominent darker brown fibres. Like other members of the genus, young mushrooms are covered in a web-like veil (cortina) from the cap margin to the stipe. The bulbous stipe is pale lilac-blue initially with lower parts fading to yellow-white. The flesh is yellow-white with a blue hue in the upper stipe. The lilac-blue gills are adnate or free, and become brown as the spores mature. The smell, if present, is slightly mealy. The spore print is red-brown and the spores measure 6.5–8.5 by 4.5–5 µm. <br />
Fruit bodies appear from August onwards in deciduous and coniferous forests, often in profuse numbers. It can be found in fairy rings. C. glaucopus forms ectomycorrhizae that are unusually hydrophobic (water-repellent) compared with other fungi, which has led to interest in decoding its genome. DNA studies indicate it may decompose toxic polycyclic aromatic compounds in the soil with specially adapted oxidizing enzymes.
    fibret_slorsopp_cortinarius_glaucopu...jpg
  • Cortinarius caperatus, commonly known as the gypsy mushroom, is a highly esteemed edible mushroom of the genus Cortinarius. It was known as Rozites caperata for many years, before genetic studies revealed it lay within the large genus Cortinarius. The ochre-coloured fruiting bodies appear in autumn in coniferous and beech woods, as well as heathlands in late summer and autumn. The gills are free and clay-coloured and the smell and taste mild. It is found across northern Europe, mainly in Scandinavia. In the British Isles it is uncommon outside the Scottish Highlands[2] and the New Forest. This mushroom is known to hyperaccumulate heavy metals from its environment. Following the Chernobyl disaster, resulting in radioactive contamination in countries as distant as Scandinavia, health authorities in these countries caution against overconsumption of C. caperatus. I Norge er det mye rimsopp i fjellbjørkeskogen.
    rimsopp_cortinarius_caperatus.jpg
  • Midtmasten, Nore stavkirke, Wiki: "en korskirke av midtmasttypen, antatt opprinnelig bygget som en enskipet stavkirke (langkirke), i Nore i Nore og Uvdal kommune i Numedal. Det er vanlig å datere stavkirken til slutten av 1100-tallet. Deler av konstruksjonen har blitt årringdatert til 1167, men kirken er trolig først bygget noen år senere. Kirken har kraftig preg av renessanse og rokokko.<br />
<br />
Stavkirken har 150 plasser, og adkomst er via Fv116 og Rv40. Skipet er rektangulært bygget i stavverk. Koret og tverrfløyene er i laft. Tverrfløyene kan ha hatt avsluttende apsider og små tårn, mens skipet hadde et større tårn. Det mest unike med kirken er at den alt i middelalderen ser ut til å ha blitt ombygd til korskirke, det finnes ingen paralleller. Opprinnelig var den imidlertid en enskipet stavkirke av midtmasttypen. Den har en korsformet grunnplan, våpenhus og sør- og nordfløy. Koret er i samme bredde som skipet. Kirken har en åttekantet takrytter.<br />
<br />
Det er foretatt en rekke ombygninger. Fløyene ble ombygget i 1709 og 1714 og koret utvidet i 1683. Kirken fikk våpenhus i 1723 og midt på 1700-tallet ble det bygget sakristi. Kirken har en korsformet grunnplan med seksten staver i midtskipet og fløyene. Midt i skipet står en kraftig søyle med terningkapitel.<br />
<br />
Kirken er bygget med gallerier. vegger, gallerier og søyler ble malt i sterke farger i 1655. <br />
I 1888 kjøpte Lorentz Dietrichson kirken og ga den to år senere til Fortidsminneforeningen. Visitnorway: Nore Stave Church is located in Nore and Uvdal municipality in Buskerud. Nore Stave Church was built according to an architectural style called: Numedalstype. The church was built as a cruciform church approximately 1167, with galleries, a chancel and cross naves with an apse. This was very rare at the time, and one does not know of of any other church in Norway or Europe that could have been a model for this structure.<br />
<br />
The church was partially rebuilt in the 1600s and 1700s. The naves and chancel hav
    nore_stavkirke-12.jpg
  • Nore stavkirke, Wiki: "en korskirke av midtmasttypen, antatt opprinnelig bygget som en enskipet stavkirke (langkirke), i Nore i Nore og Uvdal kommune i Numedal. Det er vanlig å datere stavkirken til slutten av 1100-tallet. Deler av konstruksjonen har blitt årringdatert til 1167, men kirken er trolig først bygget noen år senere. Kirken har kraftig preg av renessanse og rokokko.<br />
<br />
Stavkirken har 150 plasser, og adkomst er via Fv116 og Rv40. Skipet er rektangulært bygget i stavverk. Koret og tverrfløyene er i laft. Tverrfløyene kan ha hatt avsluttende apsider og små tårn, mens skipet hadde et større tårn. Det mest unike med kirken er at den alt i middelalderen ser ut til å ha blitt ombygd til korskirke, det finnes ingen paralleller. Opprinnelig var den imidlertid en enskipet stavkirke av midtmasttypen. Den har en korsformet grunnplan, våpenhus og sør- og nordfløy. Koret er i samme bredde som skipet. Kirken har en åttekantet takrytter.<br />
<br />
Det er foretatt en rekke ombygninger. Fløyene ble ombygget i 1709 og 1714 og koret utvidet i 1683. Kirken fikk våpenhus i 1723 og midt på 1700-tallet ble det bygget sakristi. Kirken har en korsformet grunnplan med seksten staver i midtskipet og fløyene. Midt i skipet står en kraftig søyle med terningkapitel.<br />
<br />
Kirken er bygget med gallerier. vegger, gallerier og søyler ble malt i sterke farger i 1655. <br />
I 1888 kjøpte Lorentz Dietrichson kirken og ga den to år senere til Fortidsminneforeningen. Visitnorway: Nore Stave Church is located in Nore and Uvdal municipality in Buskerud. Nore Stave Church was built according to an architectural style called: Numedalstype. The church was built as a cruciform church approximately 1167, with galleries, a chancel and cross naves with an apse. This was very rare at the time, and one does not know of of any other church in Norway or Europe that could have been a model for this structure.<br />
<br />
The church was partially rebuilt in the 1600s and 1700s. The naves and chancel have remnants o
    nore_stavkirke-10.jpg
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