Warsaw is Poland's capital and Mazowieckie województwo's capital. City suffered multiple wars: Swedish-Prussian occupation (1655-56), Russian massacre (1794). Hitler destroyed city in 1944, but people returned in 1945. Population grew from 0.5 to 172 square miles between 17th and 1957
Campus comes from Latin "campus" meaning field, first used at Princeton in 1774. Tradition began with medieval European universities in cloistered environments. Term expanded to include college buildings in 20th century
Completed in 1938 by Frank Lloyd Wright for Kaufmann family in Mill Run, Pennsylvania. Features 5,330 square feet of space with integrated waterfall design. Includes low ceilings, built-in furnishings, and central hearth. Wright's illustrations show influence of Japanese culture and Hokusai
Born in 1852 in Reus or Riudoms to a French-originating family. Suffered from poor health and adopted vegetarianism early in life. Studied architecture at Barcelona Higher School of Architecture from 1878
Founded at Amstel River mouth in 1275 as a fishing village. Became major world port during Dutch Golden Age (17th century). Known as "Venice of the North" for its canals. Population grew from 1,000 in 1300 to 872,000 in 1959
Warsaw is Poland's capital and largest city with 1.86 million residents. Located on Vistula River in east-central Poland, 523 km east of Berlin. Classified as alpha global city and major cultural and economic hub