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00:00 - Start - Viewpoint I
00:32 - Tiny planet
00:37 - Viewpoint II
05:31 - Viewpoint I
06:03 - Tiny planet
06:39 - Viewpoint II
09:56 - Viewpoint I
10:38 - Viewpoint II
13:24 - Viewpoint I
14:51 - Tiny planet
16:19 - Viewpoint II
This episodes features a 4k Virtual Tour in the first snow this winter in Bucharest, Carol Park.
Carol I Park (Romanian: Parcul Carol) is a public park in Bucharest, Romania, named after King Carol I of Romania. A French garden located in the southern-central area of Bucharest, partly on Filaret hill,[1] originally capable of hosting various exhibitions, it suffered considerable modifications during the communist regime, including a name change to Parcul Libertății (Liberty Park).
The park has officially been listed as a historical monument since 2004. Administration of the park is undertaken mostly by the Bucharest City Hall, whereas monuments are in the care of the Ministry of Culture and Religious Affairs.
The park was designed by French landscape artist Édouard Redont [fr] in 1900 on Filaret Hill, under the supervision of Constantin Istrati, then president of the Romanian Academy. It was inaugurated in 1906, on the 40th anniversary of the coronation of King Carol I. The park had an initial surface area of 36 hectares, including the 20,000 m2 (220,000 sq ft) lake Filaret.[2] It hosted the 1906 Bucharest Exhibition, and included many pavilions and buildings, of which only the Technical Museum and the open air Roman Arenas survive.
The park once contained busts of Ioan Lahovary and Constantin Istrati, but these were replaced after 1948 with busts of George Coșbuc, Alexandru Sahia, Nicolae Bălcescu (these three by Constantin Baraschi [ro]) and the "shoemaker poet" Dumitru Theodor Neculuță (by Emil Mereanu [ro]), which remain today.
The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, inaugurated in 1923 in memory of Romanian soldiers fallen in World War I, was dismantled and moved in 1958 to Mărășești, being replaced by the Mausoleum of the Communist Heroes (see below). In 1991 it was returned to the park, to be moved again in 2007, closer to its original location.[3]
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