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Bolwoningen

The bolwoningen (which interprets as either "ball" or "globule" houses/lofts) were planned in the late 1970s by eccentric craftsman and artist Dries Kreijkamp and worked in 1984. They impart many attributes to the significantly more well known by Piet Blom in Rotterdam – developed around the same time and imagined in a comparable soul. In any case, while Blom's Cube houses are only one more strange note in the engineering clamor of Rotterdam, the bolwoningen are genuine outsiders in their dull-as-ditchwater neighborhood of a medium sized town. Like their rakish urban cousins in Rotterdam, the bolwoningen remain off the ground on plinths – here barrels that look like sort stalks. On entering the front entryway set into one of these "stalks", you locate a little storage room and a staircase driving up into the globe above. The staircase spirals around the internal skin of the circle, driving first to the quaint little inn, past the restroom and latr...

10 most beautiful Russian models

While many describe them as steadfast, cold, and disagreeable people, the vast majority of people agree that Russians are a handsome people - at least this is an undeniable fact when it comes to Russian women. Just remember the world of famous people and there you will find plenty of Russian names, or VIPs that originate from Russia - like. Maria Sharapova or Anna Kournikova (former tennis player, now models). So, just like the tennis world filled with Russian beauties, the same thing happens in the fashion world - where Russian patterns have conquered the world. Next, we bring you the 10 sexiest models that "produced" Russia, but that, now, most of them live in fashion cities in Western countries. For Russian women it is said that they have stunning charm - silent, often without emotion and a bit complicated, but still they are very attractive. 10. Vika Falileeva 9. Gia Skova 8. Emiliya Vishnevskaya 7. Anna Ko...

Peter Plogojowitz (Serbian form: Petar Blagojević/Петар Благојевић) was a Serbian peasant believed to have become a vampire after his death and to have killed nine of his fellow villagers.

Peter Plogojowitz (Serbian form: Petar Blagojević/Петар Благојевић) was a Serbian peasant believed to have become a vampire after his death and to have killed nine of his fellow villagers. The case was described in the report of Imperial Provisor Frombald, an official of the Austrian administration, who witnessed the exorcism via impalation by stake of Plogojowitz. Peter Plogojowitz lived in a village named Kisilova (Kisiljevo) in the part of Serbia that temporarily passed from Ottoman into Austrian hands after the Treaty of Passarowitz (1718) and was ceded back to the Ottomans with the Treaty of Belgrade (1739). Plogojowitz died in 1725. His death was followed by a spate of other sudden deaths (after very short maladies of about twenty-four hours each). Within eight days, nine persons perished. On their death-beds the victims allegedly claimed to have been throttled by Plogojowitz at night. Plogojowitz's wife stated that he had visited her and asked her for his opanci (...