EditorialThe Caf? des Platanes on the road to Constantine, Coffeehouse near Algiers, signed: A. Otth des. Et lith, impr, chez J.F. Wagner ? Berne, Pl. XVI, Otth, Adolf (des. et lith.); Wagner, J. F. (impr.), Adolf Karl Otth: Esquisses Africaines. Berne: chez J....
EditorialThe coffeehouse, center of Austria's Fin-de-siecle life, home of politicians and literati, awoke to new life and fame after World War II. Playing cards in a Vienna coffeehouse. Vienna,1953.
EditorialThe coffeehouse, center of Austria's Fin-de-siecle life, home of politicians and literati, awoke to new life and fame after World War II. Billiard tables in a Vienna coffeehouse. Vienna,1953.
EditorialThe coffeehouse, center of Austria's Fin-de-siecle life, home of politicians, literati and chess players, rose to new life and fame after World War II. Vienna, 1953.
EditorialThe coffeehouse, center of Austria's Fin-de-siecle life, home of politicians, literati and chess players, rose to new life and fame after World War II. Vienna, 1953.
EditorialThe coffeehouse, center of Austria's Fin-de-siecle life, home of politicians and literati, awoke to new life and fame after World War II. Billiard tables in a Vienna coffeehouse. Vienna,1953.
EditorialBelgrade:The cafe Zara ,the historic coffeehouse in which the murder of Habsburg Archduke Franz Ferdinand was first conceived, is a cosy place and now no center for sinister plotting.
EditorialCafe Central in downtown Vienna, a center for fin-de-siecle literati and politicians. Trotzkij used to play chess at the Cafe Central, Victor Adler, leading socialist, writers Karl Kraus, Peter Altenberg and Elias Cabetti were among the regulars.
EditorialA Vienna coffeehouse at the beginning of the 19th. Patrons play chess, read newspapers, an Armenian merchant watches the chess players. Armenians seem to have made coffee popular in Vienna.