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Casa Nova is a 19th-century neo-Georgian mansion located in Oamaru, New Zealand. Casa Nova was the first residence in Oamaru to be constructed from Oamaru limestone . It is registered as a category 1 building by Heritage New Zealand .
Nova Europa (Portuguese for "New Europe") is a municipality in the state of São Paulo in Brazil. The population is 11,355 (2020 est.) in an area of 160.3 km 2 (61.9 sq mi). [ 2 ] The elevation is 490 metres (1,610 ft).
Michael Palin's New Europe is a travel documentary presented by Michael Palin and first aired in the UK on the BBC on 16 September 2007 and in the US on the Travel Channel on 28 January 2008. [1]
The Continent Makers and Other Tales of the Viagens by L. Sprague de Camp, Twayne Publishers, 1953. The Viagens Interplanetarias series is a sequence of science fiction stories by L. Sprague de Camp, begun in the late 1940s and written under the influence of contemporary space opera and sword and planet stories, particularly Edgar Rice Burroughs's Martian novels.
Venice in the 1730s. Giacomo Girolamo Casanova was born in Venice in 1725 to actress Zanetta Farussi, wife of actor and dancer Gaetano Casanova.Giacomo was the first of six children, followed by Francesco Giuseppe (1727–1803), Giovanni Battista (1730–1795), Faustina Maddalena (1731–1736), Maria Maddalena Antonia Stella (1732–1800), and Gaetano Alvise (1734–1783).
Casa Europa (transl. Europe House) [note 1] is an historic late nineteenth-century Portuguese colonial building in the Bidau Lecidere suco of Dili, capital city of East Timor. Initially a Portuguese Quartel de Infantaria (infantry barracks), the building became the home of the municipality of Dili administration in the late 1930s.
English: The Casa Europa, Dili, East Timor - originally the Quartel de Infantaria (Infantry Barracks), built between 1884 and 1899. Date: 17 October 2018, 11:57:38:
Europa Island (French: Île Europa, pronounced [il øʁɔpa]), in Malagasy Nosy Ampela [1] is a 28-square-kilometre (11 sq mi) low-lying tropical atoll in the Mozambique Channel, about a third of the way from southern Madagascar to southern Mozambique. The island had never been inhabited until 1820, when the French family of Rosier moved to it.