From the temples with their structures carved out of stone and found in Al-Khazneh (Petra - Jordan) to the human moai figures of Easter Island, and from the rock-cut Buddhist Ajanta caves (Maharashtra - India) to the Church of Saint George (Bete Giyorgis) in the Amhara region of Ethiopia, the stone was an essential element of culture. Besides, you can’t even imagine all the European history without Mediterranean stone. In Greece, it was also used in groundworks, for a steady base land, besides the standard of building walls of stacked Mediterranean stone without mortar. The Rupea Fortress in Brasov County, Romania, is a fine example of a partially stacked stone decoration.