YOU4419596: Choir of the Church of St. Ignatius of Loyola (Chiesa di Sant Ignazio di Loyola) in Rome, Italian religious architecture in Baroque style, built in the 17th century, edifice dedicated to lgnace of Loyola, founder of the company of Jesus, canonized in 1622 and known for its fresco in trompe l'oeil on the central vault representing the apotheosis of Ignatius La, the allegory of Jesuit missionary work, made in 1685 by Andrea Pozzo (1642-1709), Art of the Contre Reforme. Photography, KIM Youngtae, Rome, Lazio, Italy. / Bridgeman Images
YOU4419628: View of the loggia from the stadium of the Imperial Palace (Stadio della Domus Augustana) to the Palatine in Rome, Roman civil architecture, original garden, forming part of the whole palace built by Emperor Domitian (51-96), often called Hippodrome for its circus form, the loggia was added by Emperor Hadrian (76-138), Theodoric the Great ( circa 455-526), king of the Ostrogoths, organized foot races there. Photography, KIM Youngtae, Rome, Lazio, Italy. / Bridgeman Images
YOU4419650: Facade of the Basilica of Santa Maria Novella in Florence, Gothic and Italian Renaissance religious architecture, church built between 13th and 15th centuries, whose Renaissance facade is the work of architect Leon Battista Alberti (1404-1472). Photography, KIM Youngtae, Florence, Tuscany, Italy. / Bridgeman Images
YOU4419763: The Triumph of the name of Jesus (Il Trionfo del nome di Gesu), a trompe l'oeil fresco of the central vault of the church of Gesu (chiesa del Gesu) in Rome, the main church of the company of Jesus founded by Ignatius of Loyola (1491-1556), Art of the Counter Reform, Painting made in the 17th century by Giovanni Gaulli dit Il Baciccio (1639-1709), Italian religious architecture in Baroque style dating from the 16th century. Photography, KIM Youngtae, Rome, Lazio, Italy. / Bridgeman Images
YOU4419774: View of the stadium of the Imperial Palace (Stadio della Domus Augustana) in the Palatine in Rome, Roman civil architecture, original garden, forming part of the whole palace built by Emperor Domitian (51-96), often called Hippodrome for its circus form, Theodoric the Great (circa 455-526), king of the Ostrogoths, organized foot races there. Photography, KIM Youngtae, Rome, Lazio, Italy. / Bridgeman Images
YOU4419880: Cupola of the chapel of the Virgin of the Church of Saint Roch in Paris, Chapel designed by Jules Hardouin Mansart (1646-1708), built in 1709 at the bedside of the church of Saint Roch whose plans designed by the architect Jacques Le Mercier (1585-1654), are inspired by the model of the church established by the Jesuites as the Church of Gesu and the Church of Saint Ignace of Saint Ignace of Loyola a Rome, Assumption in the centre of the dome is the work of Jean Baptiste Marie Pierre (1714-1789). French religious architecture in Baroque style. Photography, KIM Youngtae, Paris. / Bridgeman Images
YOU4419924: Facade de l'Hotel de la Marine (Hotel du Garde Meuble), French civil architecture, built between 1757 and 1772 to house the Garde Meuble of the Crown. With its counterpart, the hotel des Monnins (now hotel de Crillon), it is part of an architectural ensemble, Place Louis XV, designed by the first architect of the King, Ange Jacques Gabriel (1698-1782), now the place de la Concorde, the hotel houses the headquarters of the National Navy. Photography, KIM Youngtae, Paris. / Bridgeman Images