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  • Hôtel de Bernuy. Built by a merchant who had made his fortune in woad, this mansion has an octagonal staircase tower which is the highest in the city.
    em7304363.jpg
  • Hôtel de Bernuy. Built by a merchant who had made his fortune in woad, this mansion has an octagonal staircase tower which is the highest in the city.
    em7304366.jpg
  • the mansion of the  direct descendants<br />
of 'last Raja of Calcutta (NM Mitra) who died here. More than a dwelling in 1934 is a fascinating museum<br />
World Anglo-Indian. In the thirties the tub<br />
that you see at the crystal fountain was full<br />
of small crocodiles.
    em3510704.jpg
  • Cortés mansion.
    em0212762.jpg
  • Mansion Carvajal.
    em0210347.jpg
  • Merida. The Roman Temple of Diana, merged in a sixteenth century mansion.
    em7410087.jpg
  • Ilk Pansiyon is a small hotel in a restored traditional turkish mansion.
    em2711948.jpg
  • The old Lynch's Castle, the mansion of one of the powerful merchants families of Galway.
    em7211546.jpg
  • Quinta Luz, mansion of Pancho Villa, now a museum of the Mexican Revolution. The bedroom of Pancho Villa.
    em0212695.jpg
  • Caceres, medieval architecture. The city is Unesco World Heritage. Family coat of arms on the facade of Golfines mansion.
    em7410045.jpg
  • Castle Coole, a late-18th-century neo-classical mansion situated in Enniskillen. Castle Coole was constructed between 1789 and 1798 for Armar Lowry-Corry, the 1st Earl Belmore, as neo-classical Georgian architectural style by the English architect James Wyatt.
    em7212594.jpg
  • The old Lynch's Castle, the mansion of one of the powerful merchants families of Galway.
    em7211543.jpg
  • Hotel ?Casa de la Marquesa?, in a old spanish mansion with original colonial furnishing.
    em0211384.jpg
  • Mexicos's most populous Indian community, a mosaic of more than 400.000, lives in a most unexpected place, in the heart of the one of the largest megalopoli on earth, Mexico City. Tenaciously clinging to to ancient traditions, they continue to weave dreams and make plans difficult to undertand by  those part of their world. The ties to their homes are so strong, that some researchers define these urban groups as ?embassies? for their distant villages...that form, in many ways, a different world. This Indian world of the city is a subterranean universe, often hidden behind the annonymous doorway of some rundown colonial mansion.
    em0213204.jpg
  • Salve. B&B Anticadimora dei Pepe in the old Baroque mansion of Palazzo Ceuli.
    em7125746.jpg
  • Outer Hebrides. Harris Island, the West Coast. Scarista House a Georgian traditional mansion. Now is a charming country house.
    em0761354.jpg
  • Outer Hebrides. Harris Island, the West Coast. Scarista House a Georgian traditional mansion. Now is a charming country house.
    em0761351.jpg
  • Davila mansion on the southern medieval walls.
    em7417087.jpg
  • El Toboso village is famous for appearing in the novel Don Quixote by the Spanish writer Miguel de Cervantes, as the town in which the fictional character Dulcinea lives. The Dulcinea del Toboso house-museum, a farming mansion from 16th century called “La Casa de la Torrecilla”, for being crowned by a tower. There is an ambient recreation of Cervantes times and ethnographic value objects.
    em3714481.jpg
  • Cortés mansion.
    1em0212760.jpg
  • Mexicos’s most populous Indian community, a mosaic of more than 400.000, lives in a most unexpected place, in the heart of the one of the largest megalopoli on earth, Mexico City. Tenaciously clinging to to ancient traditions, they continue to weave dreams and make plans difficult to undertand by  those part of their world. The ties to their homes are so strong, that some researchers define these urban groups as “embassies” for their distant villages...that form, in many ways, a different world. This Indian world of the city is a subterranean universe, often hidden behind the annonymous doorway of some rundown colonial mansion.
    em0213202.jpg
  • Merida, Casa de Montejo, for centuries the mansion of the family of the conquitador Francisco de Montejo, now a museum. The facade with  conquistadores standing on the heads of barbarians, inescapable association with Maya.
    em0210493.jpg
  • Merida, Casa de Montejo, for centuries the mansion of the family of the conquitador Francisco de Montejo, now a museum.
    em0210481.jpg
  • Sculpture in a traditional colonial mansion.
    carreteras de papel-0216054.jpg
  • Mexicos’s most populous Indian community, a mosaic of more than 400.000, lives in a most unexpected place, in the heart of the one of the largest megalopoli on earth, Mexico City. Tenaciously clinging to to ancient traditions, they continue to weave dreams and make plans difficult to undertand by  those part of their world. The ties to their homes are so strong, that some researchers define these urban groups as “embassies” for their distant villages...that form, in many ways, a different world. This Indian world of the city is a subterranean universe, often hidden behind the annonymous doorway of some rundown colonial mansion.
    carreteras de papel-0213202.jpg
  • Hotel “Casa de la Marquesa”, in a old spanish mansion with original colonial furnishing.
    em0211383.jpg
  • Hotel “Casa de la Marquesa”, in a old spanish mansion with original colonial furnishing.
    em0211380.jpg
  • Sculpture in a traditional colonial mansion.
    em0216059.jpg
  • Tradirional Mexican skeleton in a patio of a traditional colonial mansion.
    em0216053.jpg
  • Copper Canyon (Barranca del Cobre): Batopilas, Hacienda San Miguel, the ruined mansion of Alexander Shepard, the owner of rich Batopilas mines.
    em0212417.jpg
  • Mansion Carvajal.
    em0210344.jpg
  • Mansion Carvajal.
    em0210359.jpg
  • Mansion Carvajal.
    em0210346.jpg
  • Ilk Pansiyon is a small hotel in a restored traditional turkish mansion.
    em2711957.jpg
  • Ilk Pansiyon is a small hotel in a restored traditional turkish mansion.
    em2711940.jpg
  • Ostuni. The so-called "Old Town" is Ostuni's citadel built on top of a hill and still fortified by the ancient walls. This old mansion is now the charming Relais Hotel La Sommità. Ostuni is regarded as an architectural jewel, and is commonly referred to as "the White Town" ("La Città Bianca", in Italian) for its white walls and its typically white-painted architecture.
    em7136203.jpg
  • Ostuni. The so-called "Old Town" is Ostuni's citadel built on top of a hill and still fortified by the ancient walls. This old mansion is now the charming Relais Hotel La Sommità. Ostuni is regarded as an architectural jewel, and is commonly referred to as "the White Town" ("La Città Bianca", in Italian) for its white walls and its typically white-painted architecture.
    em7136164.jpg
  • Ostuni. The so-called "Old Town" is Ostuni's citadel built on top of a hill and still fortified by the ancient walls. This old mansion is now the charming Relais Hotel La Sommità. Ostuni is regarded as an architectural jewel, and is commonly referred to as "the White Town" ("La Città Bianca", in Italian) for its white walls and its typically white-painted architecture.
    em7136158.jpg
  • Chihuahua: pre-revolutionary mansion.
    em0212701.jpg
  • Chihuahua: pre-revolutionary mansion.
    em0212699.jpg
  • Chihuahua: pre-revolutionary mansion.
    em0212698.jpg
  • Zafra, old mansion.
    em7410112.jpg
  • Caceres, medieval architecture. The city is Unesco World Heritage. Family coat of arms on the facade of Golfines mansion.
    em7410044.jpg
  • Mexicos’s most populous Indian community, a mosaic of more than 400.000, lives in a most unexpected place, in the heart of the one of the largest megalopoli on earth, Mexico City. Tenaciously clinging to to ancient traditions, they continue to weave dreams and make plans difficult to undertand by  those part of their world. The ties to their homes are so strong, that some researchers define these urban groups as “embassies” for their distant villages...that form, in many ways, a different world. This Indian world of the city is a subterranean universe, often hidden behind the annonymous doorway of some rundown colonial mansion.
    em0213223-1.jpg
  • Solar do Unhâo, a old slave quarters of a XVII cent. mansion, now a restaurant.
    em0910100.jpg
  • Sculpture in a traditional colonial mansion.
    actos de fe-15.jpg
  • Tangier, El-Minzah hotel, once a Moorish style mansion build by lord Bute. In the thirties was a smart set for spies, bilionaires and adventurers.
    em4010142.jpg
  • Tangier, El-Minzah hotel, once a Moorish style mansion build by lord Bute. In the thirties was a smart set for spies, bilionaires and adventurers.
    em4010139.jpg
  • Tangier, El-Minzah hotel, once a Moorish style mansion build by lord Bute. In the thirties was a smart set for spies, bilionaires and adventurers.
    em4010122.jpg
  • Tangier, El-Minzah hotel, once a Moorish style mansion build by lord Bute. In the thirties was a smart set for spies, bilionaires and adventurers.
    em4010121.jpg
  • Mexicos's most populous Indian community, a mosaic of more than 400.000, lives in a most unexpected place, in the heart of the one of the largest megalopoli on earth, Mexico City. Tenaciously clinging to to ancient traditions, they continue to weave dreams and make plans difficult to undertand by  those part of their world. The ties to their homes are so strong, that some researchers define these urban groups as ?embassies? for their distant villages...that form, in many ways, a different world. This Indian world of the city is a subterranean universe, often hidden behind the annonymous doorway of some rundown colonial mansion.
    em0213251.jpg
  • Ayacucho: Casona Jauregui, a old colonial mansion.
    em1011990.jpg
  • Ayacucho: Casona Jauregui, a old colonial mansion.
    em1011958.jpg
  • Mexicos's most populous Indian community, a mosaic of more than 400.000, lives in a most unexpected place, in the heart of the one of the largest megalopoli on earth, Mexico City. Tenaciously clinging to to ancient traditions, they continue to weave dreams and make plans difficult to undertand by  those part of their world. The ties to their homes are so strong, that some researchers define these urban groups as ?embassies? for their distant villages...that form, in many ways, a different world. This Indian world of the city is a subterranean universe, often hidden behind the annonymous doorway of some rundown colonial mansion.
    em0213219.jpg
  • Mexicos's most populous Indian community, a mosaic of more than 400.000, lives in a most unexpected place, in the heart of the one of the largest megalopoli on earth, Mexico City. Tenaciously clinging to to ancient traditions, they continue to weave dreams and make plans difficult to undertand by  those part of their world. The ties to their homes are so strong, that some researchers define these urban groups as ?embassies? for their distant villages...that form, in many ways, a different world. This Indian world of the city is a subterranean universe, often hidden behind the annonymous doorway of some rundown colonial mansion.
    em0213201.jpg
  • Suzhou: Tong Li, a old water town. A old mansion's gardens.
    em3210079.jpg
  • Davila mansion on the southern medieval walls.
    em7417091.jpg
  • Sculpture in a traditional colonial mansion.
    em0216054.jpg
  • Merida, Casa de Montejo, for centuries the mansion of the family of the conquitador Francisco de Montejo, now a museum. The facade with  conquistadores standing on the heads of barbarians, inescapable association with Maya.
    em0210494.jpg
  • Hotel “Casa de la Marquesa”, in a old spanish mansion with original colonial furnishing.
    em0211385.jpg
  • Interior of a traditional colonial mansion.
    em0216055.jpg
  • Mansion Carvajal.
    em0210345.jpg
  • Ilk Pansiyon is a small hotel in a restored traditional turkish mansion.
    em2711938.jpg
  • Cap Corse. The village of Erbalunga. The hotel Brando in a old mansion of the "americans", built by Corses emigrated in Latin America and Portorico
    em7305625.jpg
  • Ostuni. The so-called "Old Town" is Ostuni's citadel built on top of a hill and still fortified by the ancient walls. This old mansion is now the charming Relais Hotel La Sommità. Ostuni is regarded as an architectural jewel, and is commonly referred to as "the White Town" ("La Città Bianca", in Italian) for its white walls and its typically white-painted architecture.
    em7136162.jpg
  • Chihuahua: Quinta Luz, mansion of Pancho Villa, now a museum of the Mexican Revolution.
    em0212714.jpg
  • Quinta Luz, mansion of Pancho Villa, now a museum of the Mexican Revolution. The Dodge car in which Villa was assasinated.
    em0212694.jpg
  • Quinta Luz, mansion of Pancho Villa, now a museum of the Mexican Revolution. The Dodge car in which Villa was assasinated.
    em0212692.jpg
  • Rothe House, the most important historical mansion.
    em7214960.jpg
  • Solar do Unhâo, a old slave quarters of a XVII century mansion.
    em0910102.jpg
  • Tangier, El-Minzah hotel, once a Moorish style mansion build by lord Bute. In the thirties was a smart set for spies, bilionaires and adventurers.
    em4010140.jpg
  • Tangier, El-Minzah hotel, once a Moorish style mansion build by lord Bute. In the thirties was a smart set for spies, bilionaires and adventurers. In the foreground the trucks waiting for the ferry sailing to the Spain.
    em4010119.jpg
  • Dar el-Makhzen, the old Sultan's mansion, now a museum.
    em4010028.jpg
  • Torre Tagle Palace, a spectacular colonial mansion (1730), now home of Ministry for Foreign Affairs.
    em1010020.jpg
  • Castle Coole, a late-18th-century neo-classical mansion situated in Enniskillen. Castle Coole was constructed between 1789 and 1798 for Armar Lowry-Corry, the 1st Earl Belmore, as neo-classical Georgian architectural style by the English architect James Wyatt.
    em7212576.jpg
  • Ayacucho. Casona Jauregui, a traditional colonial mansion.
    em1011957.jpg
  • Mexicos's most populous Indian community, a mosaic of more than 400.000, lives in a most unexpected place, in the heart of the one of the largest megalopoli on earth, Mexico City. Tenaciously clinging to to ancient traditions, they continue to weave dreams and make plans difficult to undertand by  those part of their world. The ties to their homes are so strong, that some researchers define these urban groups as ?embassies? for their distant villages...that form, in many ways, a different world. This Indian world of the city is a subterranean universe, often hidden behind the annonymous doorway of some rundown colonial mansion.
    em0213217.jpg
  • Merida. Paseo de Montejio, the old mansions of henequén landlords. Canton Palace, now the Regional Anthropology and Archeological museum.
    em0210504.jpg
  • The mansions of the landlords of the prerevolutionary years.
    em0211639.jpg
  • The mansions of the landlords of the prerevolutionary years.
    em0211638.jpg
  • Presicce, a historical town of Salento with many old mansions.
    em7125831.jpg
  • Presicce, a historical town of Salento with many old mansions.
    em7125825.jpg
  • Safranbolu, Havuzlu Asmazlar Konagi is the most atmospheric hotel in a restored Ottoman traditional old houses. A fine beautiful pool is right on the centre of the main room (Havuzlu means with pool"9): This pool is the best of the indoor pools of Safranbolu, utilised not for swimming but to cool the room and gave a pleasant background sound. Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712431.jpg
  • Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Kaymakamlar Muze Evi, with a display of traditional Ottoman life, is the most interesting. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712454.jpg
  • Safranbolu, bazaar. Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712413.jpg
  • Safranbolu view from Hidirlik Parki, in the foreground Izzet Pasha Camii (mosque). Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712409.jpg
  • Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712397.jpg
  • Safranbolu, small copies of the famous wooden houses. Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712391.jpg
  • Safranbolu, small copies of the famous wooden houses. Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712387.jpg
  • Safranbolu, baker shop. Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712356.jpg
  • Safranbolu, Traditional house. Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712349.jpg
  • Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712348.jpg
  • Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712335.jpg
  • Safranbolu, The restored Yemeniciler Arastasi (Pleasnt-Shoe-Makers Bazaar), whewre the old shoemakers wooden shops are now souvenir shops and café. . Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712318.jpg
  • Safranbolu, Cinci Hani, a caravanserail dating from 1645, is now a smart hotel . Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712296.jpg
  • Plaza de Armas (or Plaza Mayor), colonial mansions, "casonas", once owned from sugar cane landlords.
    em1010601.jpg
  • Ayacucho: colonial mansions, ?casonas?.
    em1011975.jpg
  • Ayacucho: colonial mansions, ?casonas?.
    em1011972.jpg
  • Safranbolu, Havuzlu Asmazlar Konagi is the most atmospheric hotel in a restored Ottoman traditional old houses. A fine beautiful pool is right on the centre of the main room (Havuzlu means with pool"9): This pool is the best of the indoor pools of Safranbolu, utilised not for swimming but to cool the room and gave a pleasant background sound. Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712445.jpg
  • Safranbolu has a beautifully preserved collection of old Ottoman houses and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. During the 17th century Safranbolu was on the main Ottoman trade road between Gerede and the Black Sea harbours, bringing commerce and wealth to the town. During 18th and 19th centuries wealthy inhabitants built mansions of sun-dried mud bricks, wood and stucco.
    em2712332.jpg
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