New Zealand, home of the famous saga dedicated to “The Lord of the Rings”, has changed in the last 20 years: here’s how it has changed.
Taiwan’s Yehliu Geopark is for geology enthusiasts like Disneyland and Legoland put together for an attraction-hungry kid.
It seems that, when it comes to lakes, Canada always has something to surprise.
It is called Ganh Da Dia and means, more or less, “cliff of stone slabs“: it is a large stretch of coast near An Ninh Dong, in the Vietnamese province of Phu Yen, characterized by the presence of 35 thousand columns of basalt rocks, the result of volcanic eruptions that thousands and thousands of years…
The Kingdom of Norway is a state in Northern Europe and is part of the Scandinavian peninsula. This country offers several natural wonders, such as the Northern Lights, the midnight sun, the fjords, and spectacular mountains.
In addition to the Amalienborg Palace complex, in the greenest part of the city lies the fairytale Rosenborg Castle, with its red sandstone blocks, the copper roofs and tall green towers with spires that touch the sky.
Tivoli Gardens is the most famous and impressive amusement park in Denmark and one of the oldest in the world.
Peterhof is a magnificent complex of palaces, gardens, fountains, waterfalls and water features designed by Peter I who dreamed of an imperial residence outside St. Petersburg to be accessed by sea, like the Palace of Versailles.
Imposing, magnificent, monumental. This is how the current St. Isaac Church, the fourth, built by the French architect Montferrand at the behest of Tsar Alexander and, further magnified under Tsar Nicholas I, I between 1818 and 1858.
Peter the Great designed the fortress on the island of the Neva delta to protect its access to the Baltic Sea by the Swedish power.