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The Bare Cemetery is a cemetery complex in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina opened in 1965, with the first funeral and interment occurring on 3 January 1966. [1]The central part of the cemetery is a spacious plateau with a staircase and a porch that connects the Catholic, Orthodox, Muslim, Jewish and atheist chapels, designed by Smiljan Klaić, and the frescoes in the porch were painted by ...
The following list sorts all the cities in the Pakistani province of Punjab with a population of more than 100,000 according to the 2023 Census.As of 1 March 2023, 81 cities fulfill this criterion and are listed here.
Unearthed grave from the medieval Poulton Chapel. Burial, also known as interment or inhumation, is a method of final disposition whereby a dead body is placed into the ground, sometimes with objects.
The OId Jewish Cemetery is a cemetery in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.It is located on the slopes of Trebević mountain, in the Kovačići-Debelo Brdo area, in the south-western part of the city.
Trifko Grabež was born on 28 June [O.S. 16 June] 1895 in Pale, a small town in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina.His father Đorđe Grabež was a Serbian Orthodox priest. At the age of seventeen, Grabež was expelled from school for striking one of his teachers.
Hadžići is marked with number 2 on this map of the Sarajevo Canton.. Hadžići (Serbian Cyrillic: Хаџићи) is a town and municipality located in Sarajevo Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Ruins of Bobovac. Within its main walls' enclosure, the royal town of Bobovac had large residential area, the complex of places of worship with the Burial Chapel for the Bosnian Kings and the Grand Church, the Royal Court complex, separated from the rest of the town with its inner walls and forecourts or courtyards, designed with representative architectural elements in Gothic architectural style.
Dnevni avaz evolved from a weekly publication Bošnjački avaz which was first published in September 1993. In 1994, it became known simply as Avaz and was published weekly in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Germany.