pavilion$58515$ - traduzione in greco
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pavilion$58515$ - traduzione in greco

CULTURAL VENUE IN ZAGREB, CROATIA
Mestrovic Pavilion; Mestrović Pavilion
  • The pavilion was furnished with three minarets.
  • Aerial view from the south-east

pavilion      
n. περίπτερο, υπόστεγο, κιόσκι
dance hall         
  • Old West]]. This photograph shows customers and staff at Hovey's Dance Hall in [[Clifton, Arizona]], in 1884. The famous author Anton Mazzanovich is standing next to the tree at right.
  • The Dance Hall at Toledo Beach in Michigan, 1906
  • A postcard from the early 20th century, showing the dance pavilion on [[Cedar Point]], Ohio, built in 1882, then labeled "The largest Dance Floor on [[Lake Erie]]".
  • language = fi}}</ref><ref>''Koillis-Savo'' (#51), p. 4, June 26, 2014. (in Finnish)</ref>
HALL FOR DANCING
Dance Hall; Dancehalls; Dancing halls; Dance pavilion; Frolic pad; Dance halls; Dancing hall
αίθουσα χορού

Definizione

pavilion
¦ noun
1. Brit. a building at a cricket ground or other sports ground used for changing and taking refreshments.
2. a summer house or other decorative shelter in a park or large garden.
a marquee with a peak and crenellated decorations, used at a show or fair.
a temporary stand in which items are displayed at a trade exhibition.
3. a detached or semi-detached block at a hospital or other building complex.
Origin
ME: from OFr. pavillon, from L. papilio(n-) 'butterfly or tent'.

Wikipedia

Meštrović Pavilion

The Meštrović Pavilion (Croatian: Meštrovićev paviljon), also known as the Home of Croatian Artists (Croatian: Dom hrvatskih likovnih umjetnika) and colloquially as the Mosque (Croatian: Džamija), is a cultural venue and the official seat of the Croatian Society of Fine Artists (HDLU) located on the Square of the Victims of Fascism in central Zagreb, Croatia. Designed by Ivan Meštrović and built in 1938, it has served several functions in its lifetime. An art gallery before World War II, it was converted into a mosque under the Independent State of Croatia and was subsequently transformed into the Museum of the Revolution in post-war Yugoslavia. In 1990, it was given back to the Croatian Association of Artists. After extensive renovation, it has served as a space for exhibitions and events since 2006.