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The World of Interiors is a magazine not a store of any kind. There are various addresses one in London and one in Cheshire. Both addresses look like just contact addresses for reporters.
this is not a good place to do ask this question. try goggle and type in home Interiors and gifts catalog Inc, look at this catalog online.
The chapel at the Alamo (which is what remains) is typical of churches of the time. It was shaped like a cross.
Most Anglican Churches from a Birds eye view look like a cross, pointing east. Most Catholic churches do not; they usually have a tower by the entrance which then leads in to a rectangular room.
Pretty much like churches in the UK or USA. Some may be a little bit more rudimentry though depending on what funds are available for development. Some are very simple structures.
the people who look after the churches are called a vicar
it was an religious place and it had loads of buildings eg churches villages monastry chathedrals ect
Baroque buildings are buildings that have architectural details for color, intensity and sculptural value. They look like old churches that are meticulously built and designed.
The houses at Skara Brae were built from stone with a rectangular layout. They had flat roofs and were connected by covered passageways. The interiors featured stone furniture such as beds, dressers, and hearths.
post-reformation, most protestant churches would've been identical to catholic structures in architechtural construction and style. however they would've been much plainer, white-washed walls, and without statues or similar artwork, which filled catholic churches.
pretty big actually... they are much bigger than today's churches about three times the size if you look up BC churches they are big