Sfatul Țării Palace
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Sfatul Țării Palace
The Sfatul Țării Palace is a building in Chișinău, Moldova. Overview The building is located near Central Chișinău. It served as a meeting place for the Sfatul Țării, the assembly which proclaimed the independence of the Moldavian Democratic Republic in 1917 then union with Romania in 1918. The building was heavily damaged in the Second World War. It is currently home to the Academy of Music, Theatre and Fine Arts. Gallery Image:Sfatul Tarii, 10 December 1918.jpg, Sfatul Țării Palace, 10 December 1918 Image:Unirea Basarabiei 1918-1928.jpg, 1928 stamp Image:Stamp of Moldova 325.gif, 1997 stamp Image:Stamp of Moldova 129.gif, Pan Halippa and Sfatul Țării Palace Image:Stamp of Moldova 303.gif, 1998 stamp File:Sfatul Ţării Palace, Chişinău.jpg, Capitoline Wolf and Sfatul Țării Palace File:Sfatul Ţării Palace.jpg File:Stamp of Moldova md099cvs.jpg, In the 1930s, it was a seat of the Agricultural State University of Moldova See also * Capitoline Wolf, Ch ...
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Rosalia Spirer
Rosalia Spirer, also Etti-Rosa Spirer (16 April 1900 – 30 March 1990), was a Romanian-born Soviet Moldavian architect. Born in Galați, in the Romanian Old Kingdom, Spirer was one of five children, four girls and a boy, in a Jewish family. Her father, Ludwig, was an estate manager while her mother, a housewife, instructed her in needlework. After completing high school, she studied architecture at the Ion Mincu University of Architecture and Urbanism, Bucharest Superior School of Architecture, graduating in 1925. In 1932, she moved to Bălți, in the Bessarabia province of what had become Greater Romania. There, as the only trained architect, she oversaw architectural planning, including expansion of the prefecture building. During the Second World War, she worked on a farm in the Saratov Oblast, Saratov region, although she spoke no Russian. In 1944, she returned to Bessarabia, much of which was now part of the Moldavian SSR within the Soviet Union. There, she worked in the rep ...
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