L'ambassade de Turquie en Algérie est la représentation diplomatique de la république de Turquie auprès de la république algérienne démocratique et populaire. Elle est située à Alger, la capitale du pays, et son ambassadeur est, depuis 2023, Mücahit Küçükyılmaz (tr).
Location
1 explorer visited this place
452 m
The Villa Montfeld is an historic residence in the El Biar district of Algiers, Algeria, which serves as the residence of the Ambassador of the United States to Algeria. The villa was built in the mid-19th century and was reconstructed in a Moorish Revival style by the English architect Benjamin Bucknall between 1878 and 1895. In 1947 the villa was bought by the United States government for use as an ambassadorial residence. In 1981 Villa Montfeld hosted negotiations leading to the Algiers Accords, which ended the Iran hostage crisis.
503 m
The National Museum of Antiquities and Islamic Art is an art museum in Algiers, Algeria.
520 m
The Bardo National Museum of Prehistory and Ethnography is a national museum located in Algiers, Algeria.
The edifice is a former Moorish villa. It was opened as a museum in 1927.
Nothing specific is known about this residence, formerly in the countryside and now encompassed in the modern city. H. Klein tells us that the palace was built in the eighteenth century and that it would have been the property of Prince Omar before the French conquest. A document, in the form of a drawing signed by Captain Longuemare, specifies that it was Mustapha ben Omar who was a very rich Tunisian. In 1926, the Bardo Palace was ceded to the Domains by Mrs Frémont, sister and heiress of Pierre Joret.
758 m
Cathédrale du Sacré-Cœur d'Alger is a Roman Catholic church located in Algiers, Algeria. Completed in 1956, it became the new cathedral in the capital after the Cathedral of Saint Philip of Algiers reconverted into a Muslim Ketchaoua Mosque. The Cathédrale du Sacré-Cœur d'Alger is the cathedral church of the Archdiocese of Algiers.
Construction of the church began after a wish of Bishop Leynaud in 1944. It was elevated to a cathedral in December 1962 and consecrated in 1963. The designers of the building, Paul Herbé and Jean Le Couteur, along with engineer René Sarger, were inspired by the Gospel of John. Its nave measures 52 metres long and 35 metres wide. The church is noted for its central tower.
At the entrance to the nave there are small organs offered by the parish of Boufarik opposite which is a mosaic. The mural dates to 324, from the first Roman basilica of Castellum Tingitanum. The altar is made of Carrara marble, and houses the relics of numerous African saints.
980 m
The Ministry of Justice is an Algerian government ministry. Its headquarters is in El-Biar, Algiers.