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La cathédrale Saint-Sauveur,(Sint Salvatorskathedraal), bâtie au Xe siècle est la plus ancienne église paroissiale de Bruges. Elle devint le siège de l'évêché de Bruges au début du XIXe siècle, après la destruction de la cathédrale Saint-Donatien lors de l'occupation française en 1799. Elle est dédiée au saint Sauveur (Jésus-Christ).
L'orgue a été construit vers 1717-19 par le facteur Jacobus Van Eynde. En 1935, afin de permettre un agrandissement important, l'orgue est déménagé sur la tribune de la nef par la maison Klais de Bonn. Le buffet du grand orgue est alors flanqué de 2 imposantes tourelles de pédale et la console est remplacée. En 1988, le facteur Frans Loncke & fils de Zarren effectue une révision et une extension de l'orgue. Depuis, l'entretien est la responsabilité des facteurs Paul Andriessen & Anneessens. L'instrument comporte 60 jeux, 3 claviers manuels et un pédalier.
- Traitement photo normal cette fois-ci aucun traitement noir et blanc et aucunes photos avec effets en HDR (High dynamic range) n'ont été réalisées.
Famous for its two different spires
The one on the right-a plain pyramid 105 metres, dates from 1140
The one on the left 113 metres In the Flamboyant style dates from the early 16th Century
The first church on the site was completed in 1625. The main or central gateway is called the Portada del Perdón or the "door of forgiveness".
Brecon Cathedral started life in 1093 as the Benedictine Priory of St John the Evangelist, built by the Normans on the site of an earlier Celtic church. At the dissolution of the monasteries in 1537 it became Brecon's Parish Church. It became a Cathedral only in 1923, on the establishment of the Diocese of Swansea and Brecon.
Officially called the Cathedral Church of Christ in Liverpool, this is the longest cathedral in the world. It was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott and built in red sandstone and dominates the city from its site on St James' Mount. The first stone was laid in 1904 but building was not fully completed until 1978.
Lástima de andamio, con lo que me costó encuadrarla a pesar del puto escenario y camiones que habÃa en frente dela puerta. Aún asà la foto desprende mucha fuerza y grandiosidad
Carlisle's red brick built cathedral stands in the centre of the centre of Cumbria's main town, and is one of the smallest in England after Oxford's Christchurch.
The building started life as an Augustinian Priory and built in the Norman style in 1122, 10 years later it's status as a Cathedral was given.
In the 13th-Century the original Choir was taken down and rebuilt in the Gothic style and is a lot wider than the former. It is known for it's East window and decorated vaulted ceiling.
The Nave is a lot shorter due to most of it being demolished to use it's stones to reinforce the nearby Castle during the Civil War.
The tower originally had a small spire which later blew down damaging the tower and North Transept, today it holds a peal of 13 bells, all newly cast in 1999 for the then approaching Millennium.
Some shots of the very impressive Notre Dame Cathedtal in Reims. which dates to the 13th century. The cathedral has seen Joan of Arc, and coronations of French Kings were once held here. A lot of history has passed through these doors.
This Cathedral in Granada, Nicaragua is beautiful on the outside, but very plain on the inside. I perfer the old cathedral of Managua and the cathedral of Leon.