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Marina Bay Ilight Festival 2014

on Canon EOS 700D

50mm f/1.8

Blick von Westen entlang des Sandtorhafens auf die Bebauung um die Marco-Polo-Terrassen.

In 974, eskinivvach had its first documentary mention. This name stems from an old Germanic language and means “Settlement near the ash trees at the water”. This origin is noteworthy for showing that the town arose before Franks overran the area, which was some time between 500 and 700. As far back as Merovingian times, a Frankish royal court arose here, which kept watch as a border defence over the ford (crossing) on the Werra leading into Thuringia, and which still stood in the 10th and 11th centuries. At this time, Saint Denis was still the foremost saint, having been the Merovingians’ main saint, to whom the church in the Old Town is consecrated.

The first documentary mention is found in a document from Emperor Otto II, in which he bequeathed the royal court and the settlement to his wife Theophanu. Their daughter Sophia founded on the Cyriakusberg about 1000 a canonical foundation for women (in which women did not take vows, but nonetheless lived in a conventlike environment) consecrated to Saint Cyriacus, which existed until the introduction of the Reformation into Hesse in 1527. All that is left of it now, though, is the Karlsturm (tower). Market rights were granted about 1188, and town rights followed by 1249. It was in this time that the groundwork was laid for the cloth- and leathermaking that flourished on into modern times.

 

Beginning in 1264, as a result of the Thuringian-Hessian War of Succession, Eschwege belonged, under Henry I, Landgrave of Hesse, to Hesse. On 12 May 1292, he offered King Adolf of Germany the town of Eschwege as an Imperial fief and was given it straight back along with the Imperial castle Boyneburg as an hereditary Imperial fief, thereby raising Henry to Imperial Prince, greatly strengthening his power in Hesse.

 

In 1385, Landgrave Balthasar of Thuringia moved to town and in 1386 he built a castle. In 1433, the town passed back to the Landgraviate of Hesse. Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse, William IV, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel and Maurice, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel expanded the castle into a palatial residence. From 1627 to 1632, this was Maurice’s “old man’s seat” after he had abdicated, and from 1632 to 1655, Landgrave Frederick of Hesse-Eschwege, a sideline in the so-called Rotenburger Quart of the house of Hesse-Kassel, was resident here, although he did not actually live in the town until some time after 1646. In the Thirty Years' War, Eschwege was sacked and widely laid waste by fire in 1637 by Imperial Croats under General Johann von Götzen. After Frederick’s death in 1655, his (part-)landgraviate passed to his brother Ernst of Hesse-Rheinfels. After 1731, his grandson, Christian of Hesse-Wanfried transferred the residence of the Landgraviate of Hesse-Wanfried to Eschwege. After the Hesse-Wanfried male line died out in 1755, the landgraviate passed to the Hesse-Rotenburg line. Once their male line also died out in 1834, the whole Quart passed back to the main house of Hesse-Kassel.

 

The town acquired in 1875 a railway link when the line from Bebra to Eschwege was built. Niederhone station (as of 1938, Eschwege-West) was the junction of two lines, the Cannons railway and the Bebra–Göttingen line.

 

After the Second World War ended in 1945, Eschwege belonged to the United States Zone of Occupation. The US military administration set up a displaced persons camp to lodge Jewish citizens. This camp, in which up to 3,300 people lived at times, was dissolved in 1949.

Our final day in Brussels and we were back in the city center again. It rained and then we had blue skies again!

Rainy day at Silver Dollar City in Branson, Missouri

© By Photographer Linda Hoxie

Photos of an old mining town in Silver City, Idaho. Some call it a ghost town but it is hardle uninhabited. Many still live there and are very much "alive" today.

 

Visit: www.squidoo.com/silver-city-idaho for more details

 

Nicole Eisenman's sculpture "Fixed Crane" in Madison Square Park. I went to see it because it reminded me of the old, rusty crane my friends and I used to play on as kids.

 

From:

2024-11-23 Madison Square Park and Back

Taken from the balcony of my apartment.

River at Stockbridge, Edinburgh

A collection of photographs taken by Tom Donald of various venues taking part in Doors Open Day. All pictures are available for non-commercial use, under this creative commons license: creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/scotland/. Please credit Tom Donald if these are publically displayed. For more of his personal collections please see www.flickr.com/photos/clearwood/

This is my City Liverpool .

This fine instrument was made in Springfield, Ohio, once known as the Thermometer Capital of the World. I wonder how long it has been hanging on the wall of the greenhouse where I saw it. A long time, I guess. Back when I was growing up in Springfield, decades ago, its fame as Thermometer Capital was already fading.

View of downtown Toronto from the Bathurst Bridge

 

www.JackLandau.com

Taihe or Supreme Harmony Hall

10th July 2014, beautiful evening with lots of people in the streets

Thank you for stopping by !!

In the city avoiding Black Friday madness. I decided to shoot some black and whites.

 

Thanks for taking the time to view my photo

{flower district, nyc}

Saint-Lazare metro station, Paris (2009)

Kinda enjoy panorama... Keke...

 

This photo is shot in portrait format, a panorama of four shots.

18mm ISO100 13.0sec @ F9

 

View Large

 

Check out my Panorama set too!

Waiting to start our trip up the Wallace River

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