The most beautiful parts of the world
The different countries of the world are characterized by unique natural and cultural features, given by beauty. This beauty can be natural in terms of the diversity of nature and its terrain, such as rivers, mountains, and others. It may be a civil beauty, in which the country is characterized by its buildings and architectural structures. Such as: Australia, or dense rain forest with diverse wildlife, such as: Brazil. The country can also be distinguished by its cities, human life and age. As in the case of ancient Italian cities such as Rome and Positano. [1]
The beauty of any country is associated with a particular city or place. In this article, some of the places mentioned in the article "The Most Beautiful Cities in the World" appear in Condé Nast Traveler, , Edited by Kathleen Morton and Kathryn Lagriff, [2] and listed in the United States' most beautiful list of the Ranker newspaper. [3]
Chicago
Chicago is a major city, northeast of Illinois, with a population of more than three million. The skyscraper was invented for the first time. The city saw an all-out rise in the construction of giant skyscrapers and high buildings in the mid-1880s. It was not only the first skyscraper In the world. It has been a model of a new generation of building designs that have overtaken many cities of the world, dominated its architectural facades, and the architectural influence of Chicago on the world is reflected in so many high-rise buildings of the 1950s and 1960s. Chicago's high-rise buildings have broken several world records since the 1970s, including the Willis Tower, built in 1974, with a height of 442 meters, the longest in the world at the time. [4]
New York
New York is the name of a city in the United States of America, as well as one of its states, originally a Dutch settlement, built on the banks of the Hudson River in 1626, and was then called New Amsterdam; relative to the capital of the Netherlands, On the island of Manhattan, where one of the city's main neighborhoods is now located. From the end of the 19th century until 1954, millions of immigrants arrived in New York. They arrived in the port from overseas, and it is estimated that the ancestors of about 40% of Americans arrived in the country through this port. New York is now home to more than 19 million people. Its capital is Albany, but New York City is one of the most important cities in the United States. It was chosen as the country's first capital after the Constitution was amended in 1788 and is known for its financial and economic status. (Wall Street). [5]
Shanghai
Shanghai is a very large industrial and economic center, the most populous city in China. With a population of more than 24 million, the city has one of the largest seaports in the world and one of the first Chinese seaports to open its trade to the Western world. Where China was previously a closed and isolated country. Located on the shore of the East China Sea, overlooking the mouth of the Yangtze River, one of the longest rivers in the world. It is located north of Hangzhou Bay, surrounded by farmland and extensive meadows filled with villages. The geography of the city has undergone fundamental changes with the expansion of its industrial suburbs, Modern in them. [6]
Tokyo
Tokyo is located at the top of Tokyo Bay in eastern Japan, the country's capital, the center of a giant urban area of suburbs, villages and urban stretches called Tokyo, Japan's largest city and industrial center. The city was named in the past Edo, a list in the same place hundreds of years ago, and became known by its current name starting from 1868. Tokyo is now home to many companies, financial sectors that are very important in Japan's economy, and its minions are witnessing active trade movement from around the world. [7]
Singapore
Singapore is the name of a South East Asian country, between the borders of Malaysia to the north and Indonesia to the south, as its capital and most important cities, and occupies the southern part of an island also called Singapore Island, strategically located between the Indian Ocean to the west and the South China Sea to the east. Singapore is the largest seaport in the whole of South-East Asia. It has an area of only 93 km2, one of the most important economic centers in the world. It is famous for its many parks, tree-lined streets and picturesque natural beauty. Garden City. [8]
Sydney
Sydney is the capital of New South Wales, Australia's largest city, but contrary to popular belief, it is not the capital of the country, but the city of Canberra. Sydney's most famous sights are its great harbor, high-rise skyscraper, Sydney Harbor Bridge, and the historic Opera House with its sails-like roof. These are well known city symbols in the world
Lucerne
Lucerne is a town in central Switzerland. [2] Switzerland borders Germany to the north, to the west to France, to the south to Italy, to the east by Austria and Liechtenstein, and to the snow-capped mountains, where the vast lakes and grasslands abound. The city of Lucerne is a lake with its own name. The gateway to the central part of Switzerland is surrounded by mountains. The most important mountains around the city are Mount Reggie, Pilate, and Stensirorn, with a bridge over a lake at its ends. It is one of the oldest wooden bridges in the continent Europe, coming back to the era of the pillar T Central, this is covered by the roof of the bridge, he painted several paintings. The center of Lucerne houses old buildings; cars are forbidden to be used, and people walk only on their feet. [11]
Frankfurt
The German city of Frankfurt is located on the banks of the Main River in the western side of the country; where 30 km away from the point of separation -Main the Great Rhine River, with a population with its suburbs more than three million people. Before World War II, the old city of Frankfurt was the largest medieval city in Europe, still intact, but most of them were destroyed by Allied bombing in 1944. The city still has some important historical monuments, Which is surrounded by several palaces dating back to the Middle Ages
No comments:
Post a Comment