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The Old Museum of Berlin, built by Schinkel, view from the Lustgarten, around 1895, Germany, digitally restored reproduction of an old original, historical, exact date unknown-stock-photo
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Rosengarten, Germany. 29th July, 2025. Hermann Benesch, Chairman of the Kiekeberg Beekeepers' Association, checks a beehive on the museum grounds. Growing your own vegetables and keeping a colony of bees is in vogue - more and more people are becoming beekeepers. Because the work is quite tedious, many people stop. Valuable knowledge is imparted in courses at the Kiekeberg. Credit: Philipp Schulze/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-photo
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PRODUCTION - 29 July 2025, Lower Saxony, Rosengarten: Historic beehives can be found on the grounds of the Kiekeberg Open-Air Museum. Growing your own vegetables and keeping a colony of bees is in vogue - more and more people are becoming beekeepers. Because the work is quite tedious, many people stop. Valuable knowledge is imparted in courses at Kiekeberg. Photo: Philipp Schulze/dpa-stock-photo
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PRODUCTION - 29 July 2025, Lower Saxony, Rosengarten: Bees can be seen on honeycombs on the grounds of the Kiekeberg Open-Air Museum. Growing your own vegetables and keeping a colony of bees is in vogue - more and more people are becoming beekeepers. Because the work is quite tedious, many people stop. Valuable knowledge is imparted in courses at the Kiekeberg. Photo: Philipp Schulze/dpa-stock-photo
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PRODUCTION - 29 July 2025, Lower Saxony, Rosengarten: Bees can be seen on honeycombs on the grounds of the Kiekeberg Open-Air Museum. Growing your own vegetables and keeping a colony of bees is in vogue - more and more people are becoming beekeepers. Because the work is quite tedious, many people stop. Valuable knowledge is imparted in courses at the Kiekeberg. Photo: Philipp Schulze/dpa-stock-photo
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PRODUCTION - 29 July 2025, Lower Saxony, Rosengarten: Hermann Benesch, Chairman of the Kiekeberg Beekeepers' Association, stands in front of historic beehives on the museum grounds. Growing your own vegetables and keeping a colony of bees is a trend - more and more people are becoming beekeepers. Because the work is quite tedious, many people stop. Valuable knowledge is imparted in courses at the Kiekeberg. Photo: Philipp Schulze/dpa-stock-photo
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PRODUCTION - 29 July 2025, Lower Saxony, Rosengarten: Hermann Benesch, Chairman of the Kiekeberg Beekeepers' Association, checks a beehive on the museum grounds. Growing your own vegetables and keeping a colony of bees is in vogue - more and more people are becoming beekeepers. Because the work is quite tedious, many people stop. Valuable knowledge is imparted in courses at the Kiekeberg. Photo: Philipp Schulze/dpa-stock-photo
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PRODUCTION - 29 July 2025, Lower Saxony, Rosengarten: Hermann Benesch, Chairman of the Kiekeberg Beekeepers' Association, holds a frame with honeycombs in his hands on the museum grounds. Growing your own vegetables and keeping a colony of bees is in vogue - more and more people are becoming beekeepers. Because the work is quite tedious, many people stop. Valuable knowledge is imparted in courses at the Kiekeberg. Photo: Philipp Schulze/dpa-stock-photo
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PRODUCTION - 29 July 2025, Lower Saxony, Rosengarten: 'Imkerverein am Kiekeberg' is written on a logo. Growing your own vegetables and keeping a colony of bees is the trend - more and more people are becoming beekeepers. But because the work is quite tedious, many people stop. Valuable knowledge is imparted in courses at Kiekeberg. Photo: Philipp Schulze/dpa-stock-photo
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PRODUCTION - 29 July 2025, Lower Saxony, Rosengarten: Hermann Benesch, Chairman of the Kiekeberg Beekeepers' Association, holds a frame with honeycombs in his hands on the museum grounds. Growing your own vegetables and keeping a colony of bees is in vogue - more and more people are becoming beekeepers. Because the work is quite tedious, many people stop. Valuable knowledge is imparted in courses at the Kiekeberg. Photo: Philipp Schulze/dpa-stock-photo
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PRODUCTION - 29 July 2025, Lower Saxony, Rosengarten: Bees can be seen at a beehive on the grounds of the Kiekeberg Open-Air Museum. Growing your own vegetables and keeping a colony of bees is a trend - more and more people are becoming beekeepers. Because the work is quite tedious, many people stop. Valuable knowledge is imparted in courses at the Kiekeberg. Photo: Philipp Schulze/dpa-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Visitors see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Visitors see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Visitors see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Visitors see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. This photo shows a reflection of visitors viewing heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Visitors see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Visitors see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Students see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Visitors see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Visitors see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Visitors see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Papuan women see Papuan heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. This photo shows a West Java heirloom called kujang on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Indonesian Minister of Culture Fadli Zon (first left) see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. 29th July, 2025. Students see heirlooms on display at the Nusantara Heritage Exhibition at the Sri Baduga Museum, Bandung, West Java. The Nusantara Heritage Exhibition, featuring 238 collections such as kujang, keris, kudi, and swords from 21 museums across Indonesia, was held to foster camaraderie among museum managers in Indonesia and to increase public access and outreach to cultural diversity through heirlooms. (Credit Image: © Dimas Rachmatsyah/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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Ingolstadt, Germany. 29th July, 2025. A defendant (2nd from left) enters the courtroom of Ingolstadt district court before the start of the trial. Following the theft of the gold treasure from the Celtic Roman Museum in Manching in Upper Bavaria, four men have been sentenced to prison terms of between four years and nine months and eleven years. Credit: Peter Kneffel/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-photo
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Ingolstadt, Germany. 29th July, 2025. The defendants took their seats with their lawyers before the start of the trial in the courtroom of Ingolstadt district court. Following the theft of the gold treasure from the Celtic Roman Museum in Manching in Upper Bavaria, four men have been sentenced to prison terms of between four years and nine months and eleven years. Credit: Peter Kneffel/dpa - ATTENTION: People have been pixelated for legal reasons/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-photo
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Ingolstadt, Germany. 29th July, 2025. The defendants took their seats with their lawyers before the start of the trial in the courtroom of Ingolstadt district court. Following the theft of the gold treasure from the Celtic Roman Museum in Manching in Upper Bavaria, four men have been sentenced to prison terms of between four years and nine months and eleven years. Credit: Peter Kneffel/dpa - ATTENTION: People have been pixelated for legal reasons/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-photo
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Ingolstadt, Germany. 29th July, 2025. The defendants took their seats with their lawyers before the start of the trial in the courtroom of Ingolstadt district court. Following the theft of the gold treasure from the Celtic Roman Museum in Manching in Upper Bavaria, four men have been sentenced to prison terms of between four years and nine months and eleven years. Credit: Peter Kneffel/dpa - ATTENTION: People have been pixelated for legal reasons/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-photo
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Ingolstadt, Germany. 29th July, 2025. The defendants took their seats with their lawyers before the start of the trial in the courtroom of Ingolstadt district court. Following the theft of the gold treasure from the Celtic Roman Museum in Manching in Upper Bavaria, four men have been sentenced to prison terms of between four years and nine months and eleven years. Credit: Peter Kneffel/dpa - ATTENTION: People have been pixelated for legal reasons/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-photo
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Ingolstadt, Germany. 29th July, 2025. The defendants took their seats with their lawyers before the start of the trial in the courtroom of Ingolstadt district court. Following the theft of the gold treasure from the Celtic Roman Museum in Manching in Upper Bavaria, four men have been sentenced to prison terms of between four years and nine months and eleven years. Credit: Peter Kneffel/dpa - ATTENTION: People have been pixelated for legal reasons/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-photo
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LORTON, Virginia — The Palladian Room at Gunston Hall showcases the sophisticated classical design elements created by English architect William Buckland for George Mason's Georgian mansion between 1755-1759. The room features ornate carved shells, acanthus leaves, and floral motifs within a framework of classical architectural principles, including inset arched niches with fluted columns and broken pediments. Gunston Hall, designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960, served as the intellectual birthplace of the Virginia Declaration of Rights that influenced the U.S. Bill of Rights and rem-stock-photo
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LORTON, Virginia — The formal garden at George Mason's Gunston Hall showcases the 18th-century plantation owner's precise mathematical design with symmetrical pathways, boxwood borders, and carefully planned planting beds. The recently restored one-acre Riverside Garden features a 12-foot-wide central promenade that perfectly aligns with the mansion's central hallway, demonstrating Mason's meticulous attention to detail and preference for geometric order. Archaeological excavations revealed the original garden structure including gravel walkways, boxwood borders, and three gently sloping terra-stock-photo
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LORTON, Virginia — George Mason's Gunston Hall, a Georgian mansion built between 1755-1759 on Mason Neck peninsula along the Potomac River, features the only known coordinated chinoiserie woodwork in colonial America. The historic plantation house served as home to George Mason IV (1725-1792), primary author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights that influenced the U.S. Bill of Rights and one of only three delegates who refused to sign the U.S. Constitution due to its lack of individual rights protections. The Commonwealth of Virginia owns the property while the National Society of Colonial Da-stock-photo
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MASON NECK, Virginia — George Mason's Gunston Hall, a meticulously preserved Georgian mansion built between 1755-1759, stands as one of colonial America's most architecturally significant homes and the intellectual birthplace of the Virginia Declaration of Rights that influenced the U.S. Bill of Rights. The mansion showcases unprecedented interior design featuring the only known coordinated chinoiserie woodwork in colonial America, created under the supervision of English architect William Buckland. Now operated as an accredited museum on 550 preserved acres, the property includes the recently-stock-photo
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LORTON, Virginia — The eastern side of Gunston Hall, the historic Georgian mansion built between 1755-1759 for founding father George Mason IV, shows some of the plantation's exterior dependencies including the laundry building. The 5,500-acre tobacco plantation along Virginia's Potomac River served as home to Mason, primary author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights that influenced the U.S. Bill of Rights. The property, now owned by the Commonwealth of Virginia and operated as a museum by the National Society of Colonial Dames of America, preserves 550 acres of the original plantation and f-stock-photo
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LORTON, VIRGINIA — The formal Riverside Garden at Gunston Hall, the historic plantation home of George Mason IV, author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights and influential Founding Father. The recently restored one-acre garden features symmetrical gravel pathways, boxwood borders, and four planting quadrants based on extensive archaeological evidence of Mason's original 18th-century design. Completed in 2023 after four decades of research, the garden restoration recreates the formal landscape that complemented the Georgian mansion built between 1755-1759, where Mason developed ideas about na-stock-photo
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LORTON, VIRGINIA — The formal Riverside Garden at Gunston Hall, the historic plantation home of George Mason IV, author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights and influential Founding Father. The recently restored one-acre garden features symmetrical gravel pathways, boxwood borders, and four planting quadrants based on extensive archaeological evidence of Mason's original 18th-century design. Completed in 2023 after four decades of research, the garden restoration recreates the formal landscape that complemented the Georgian mansion built between 1755-1759, where Mason developed ideas about na-stock-photo
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LORTON, VIRGINIA — The formal Riverside Garden at Gunston Hall, the historic plantation home of George Mason IV, author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights and influential Founding Father. The recently restored one-acre garden features symmetrical gravel pathways, boxwood borders, and four planting quadrants based on extensive archaeological evidence of Mason's original 18th-century design. Completed in 2023 after four decades of research, the garden restoration recreates the formal landscape that complemented the Georgian mansion built between 1755-1759, where Mason developed ideas about na-stock-photo