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This is the famous Castle in Norwich, built by the Normans after the Conquest in 1067 by William the Conqueror. It was to serve as his royal palace in the East of England. By the Middle Ages it was being used as a prison. It was clad in Bath stone in 1835 - 8 by Anthony Salvin.
It is now home to the Nowich Castle Museum and Art Gallery.
It sits a top of Norwich on a large mound.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwich_Castle
It is a Grade I listed building.
Castle now museum. Late C12 with 1833 refacing by Salvin, 1825
east extension by Wilkins and later C19 and C20 alterations, and
extensions. Bath stone refacing, stone extensions. The keep is a
square 4-bay plan: blind ground floor with 3 and 4 tiers of
arcading above. Scattered fenestration and wide, flat buttresses.
Crenellated parapet. One and 2 - storied extension with polygonal
plan to the north and east sides of the keep . Entry on south facade
with 'Tudor' moulded stone arch. 4-light frieze window above entry.
4-light frieze window and 5-light bay window to the right: 3 2-light
windows at first floor. Crenellated parapet with corner bastions.
The Norman keep only is scheduled as an Ancient Monument.
Norwich Castle - Heritage Gateway
Shots after we left the castle on Castle Meadow.
This is the famous Castle in Norwich, built by the Normans after the Conquest in 1067 by William the Conqueror. It was to serve as his royal palace in the East of England. By the Middle Ages it was being used as a prison. It was clad in Bath stone in 1835 - 8 by Anthony Salvin.
It is now home to the Nowich Castle Museum and Art Gallery.
It sits a top of Norwich on a large mound.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwich_Castle
It is a Grade I listed building.
Castle now museum. Late C12 with 1833 refacing by Salvin, 1825
east extension by Wilkins and later C19 and C20 alterations, and
extensions. Bath stone refacing, stone extensions. The keep is a
square 4-bay plan: blind ground floor with 3 and 4 tiers of
arcading above. Scattered fenestration and wide, flat buttresses.
Crenellated parapet. One and 2 - storied extension with polygonal
plan to the north and east sides of the keep . Entry on south facade
with 'Tudor' moulded stone arch. 4-light frieze window above entry.
4-light frieze window and 5-light bay window to the right: 3 2-light
windows at first floor. Crenellated parapet with corner bastions.
The Norman keep only is scheduled as an Ancient Monument.
A shot of one of the Flatirons in Boulder. If you look at the top of the rock, you can see two climbers who are just summitting.
Day 21 of A Photo A Day
"It is better to conquer yourself than to win a thousand battles. Then the victory is yours. It cannot be taken from you, not by angels or by demons, heaven or hell." ~ The Buddha
1st Regiment, Advanced Camp trains at the Rappel Course on Fort Knox, KY., June 5, 2024. | Photo Credit: Ayiana Andrella, Ohio University, CST Public Affairs Office
Ko'olaupoko, Kailua Bay, Island of O'ahu, Nation of Hawai'i
Lomo LC-A Russian version ЛОМО ЛК-А
Fujifilm PRO 160S 35mm 160 ISO
Although there is some debate as to the precise year of his birth, Hawaiian legends claimed that a great king would one day unite the islands, and that the sign of his birth would be a comet. Halley's comet was visible from Hawaiʻi in 1758 and it is likely Kamehameha was born shortly after its appearance. Other accounts state that he was born in November 1737.
According to legend, Kamehameha lifted the 5,000 pound Naha Stone at age 14, and was the only person to ever lift it. The legend that goes with this particular stone is that the man who lifted it was the legendary warrior who would unite all of the islands. The prophecy was meant to be with Kamehameha. The Naha Stone now rests in front of the Hilo Public Library on the island of Hawaiʻi.
One of my goals for our yearender shoot is to have a decent action shot of myself. Luckily, I was able to achieve that goal + theater lights & beautiful skylight on our first sunrise shoot in Halsema (the highest point in Philippine Railway System nearly 7,200 ft)
Large here: farm8.staticflickr.com/7016/6618368429_57666eb744_o.jpg
This is the famous Castle in Norwich, built by the Normans after the Conquest in 1067 by William the Conqueror. It was to serve as his royal palace in the East of England. By the Middle Ages it was being used as a prison. It was clad in Bath stone in 1835 - 8 by Anthony Salvin.
It is now home to the Nowich Castle Museum and Art Gallery.
It sits a top of Norwich on a large mound.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwich_Castle
It is a Grade I listed building.
Castle now museum. Late C12 with 1833 refacing by Salvin, 1825
east extension by Wilkins and later C19 and C20 alterations, and
extensions. Bath stone refacing, stone extensions. The keep is a
square 4-bay plan: blind ground floor with 3 and 4 tiers of
arcading above. Scattered fenestration and wide, flat buttresses.
Crenellated parapet. One and 2 - storied extension with polygonal
plan to the north and east sides of the keep . Entry on south facade
with 'Tudor' moulded stone arch. 4-light frieze window above entry.
4-light frieze window and 5-light bay window to the right: 3 2-light
windows at first floor. Crenellated parapet with corner bastions.
The Norman keep only is scheduled as an Ancient Monument.
Norwich Castle - Heritage Gateway
Shots after we left the castle on Castle Meadow.
Pickering Castle is situated on the southern edge of the North York Moors on a limestone bluff which formerly overlooked the meeting point of two of the main highways through the north of England: the east-west route along the Vale of Pickering and the north-south route through Newton Dale to Malton. The monument consists of a single area which includes the site of the 11th century motte and bailey castle and the 13th century shell keep castle. The former was built by William the Conqueror either during or shortly after the 'harrying of the north' in 1069-70. It consisted of an earth motte crowned by a timber palisade, flanked on the north-west side by a crescent-shaped inner bailey and, on the south-east side, by a contemporary or slightly later outer bailey. The inner bailey measured c.120m by c.35m and was bounded to the north by a steep natural slope surmounted by a palisade and to the south by deep 15m wide ditches linked to the ditch encircling the motte. The outer bailey, which measured c.185m by c.25m, was protected on the north side by these same ditches and, on the south side, by a 5-8m high palisaded bank with an outer ditch. To the immediate east of the outer bailey ditch a further earthwork bank may have provided additional defence on this side; alternatively it may be part of a medieval defence system associated with the adjacent settlement. The motte is c.20m high and has a base diameter of c.60m. It is not yet clear whether this is the original 11th century motte or a later medieval reconstruction. In the latter case, the earlier motte will have been preserved inside the later while, in addition, the buried remains of a wide range of domestic and service buildings will survive within the open areas of the baileys.
The reconstruction of the castle in stone largely took place between 1180 and 1236. There were three main phases to the work at this time, the earliest involving the late 12th century replacement of the palisade round the inner bailey with a curtain wall and also the probable construction of the first shell keep on the motte. In its present form the shell keep dates to the early 13th century but the foundations of the earlier wall will survive underneath. The remains of the early curtain wall still stand round the inner bailey, surviving best where the curtain was incorporated into later buildings. The earliest buildings so far identified are the early or mid- 12th century Old Hall, a free-standing residence whose surviving foundations show it to have been half-timbered, and the Coleman Tower, constructed at the same time as the inner curtain and an integral part of it. The Coleman Tower guarded the entry across the inner bailey ditch and was also a prison; hence its earlier name, the King's Prison. It was square in plan and had its entrance on the first floor, the level underneath being where the prisoners were kept. On the east side are the remains of a small building and also a stairway leading onto an adjacent wall. This wall, built across the motte ditch in the late 12th century, replaced an earlier palisade and provided access to the summit of the motte. A similar and contemporary length survives on the opposite side of the motte, crossing the ditch and joining the curtain alongside the later Rosamund's Tower. The keep consisted of a rubble wall enclosing a roughly circular area 20m wide. A wall walk would have lined the inside of the wall above a series of garrison buildings. The foundations of some of these buildings survive but it is not certain whether they date to the 13th or the 14th century. In some cases they will have replaced earlier timber structures whose buried remains will also survive. Also of uncertain date are the foundations of a number of buildings in the inner bailey, including a service range to the south-west and a group of buildings referred to as the Constable's Place in the accounts of the years 1441-43. The latter were half-timbered and some sections predate the inner curtain though others were clearly added later. A survey of 1537 lists a number of distinct structures, including the Constable's hall, a kitchen, buttery and pantry, and quarters for staff and servants. At the southern end of the group were a number of storage buildings, one of which is believed to have been the wool house. Two additional service buildings lay adjacent to the Old Hall and are thought, originally, to have been contemporary with it. To the south of these is the chantry-chapel which dates from c.1227 and is still complete though in a much altered state.
To the west of this is the early 14th century New Hall, initially built as a residence for Countess Alice, wife of Earl Thomas of Lancaster. This was later used as a courthouse which gave rise to it being named King's Hall or Motte (moot) Hall in later surveys. It was a penticed or lean-to building of two storeys which utilised the inner curtain for its outer wall. The inner walls were timber-framed and, as much of the surviving stonework is late 12th or early 13th century, it clearly replaced an earlier building. The upper chamber or solar of the 14th century hall was an elaborate plastered room with a decorated fireplace. The last major programme of building dates to 1324-26 when Edward II ordered extensive works to be carried out which included replacing the whole of the timber palisade round the outer bailey with a stone wall. This outer curtain included three projecting towers, a gatehouse with a drawbridge over the outer ditch and a postern gate which led from the north-east arm of the inner bailey ditch, underneath Rosamund's Tower and out onto the rampart. A second gate and drawbridge, built at this time alongside the Coleman Tower, had fallen out of use by the 16th century and can now no longer be seen. The three projecting towers, named from north-east to south-west, Rosamund's Tower, Diate Hill Tower and Mill Tower, are all square in plan and all would have led out onto the wall-walk along the inside of the curtain though, in the case of the Mill Tower, the curtain to either side has not survived sufficiently well to demonstrate this. The ground-floor entrance to the Mill Tower consisted of two doors linked by a short passage, in which the first door opened inwards and the second outwards indicating that the tower was built as a prison, a role it took over from the Coleman Tower. North of the Mill Tower, the outer curtain crossed the inner bailey ditch which can also be seen outside the castle walls on the west and north sides. This section of the ditch was part of the original 11th century defences and was quarried out of the rock on which the castle was built.
A levelled area alongside the inner edge indicates that quarrying of the rock-face continued after the ditch was cut. The quarried stone would have gone towards the construction of at least some of the castle buildings. Aside from its strategic and administrative roles, Pickering Castle had two other functions: to guard and manage the large forest which lay adjacent and to provide a court and place of detention for those found guilty of offences against it, such as poaching, unauthorised clearance and the theft of timber. The forest was an extremely important economic resource during the Middle Ages and its particular importance at Pickering can be seen in the great use made of wood in the castle buildings and also, most significantly, its continuous use in the defences down to the 14th century. Also important to the castle economy during the 14th century was the sale of wool, and it also had responsibility for managing the royal stud created by Edward II in c.1322. Possibly the stables known to have been located against the outer curtain at this time, between the gatehouse and Diate Hill tower, were connected with this. According to the Domesday Book, in 1086 the manor of Pickering was held by the king, that is, William the Conqueror. The castle established at this time as part of the subjugation of the rebellious North remained in royal hands until 1267 when it was conferred with the title Earl of Lancaster on Edmund Crouchback, younger son of Henry III. Edmund's son Thomas succeeded to both title and estates in 1296 but was executed for treason by Edward II in 1322, whereupon his estates reverted to the king. Following the unsuccessful Scottish campaign of the same year, and the ensuing retaliatory attacks on the north of England by Robert the Bruce, Edward ordered the building works noted above, clearly intending to keep Pickering a royal castle. However, in 1326 his son Edward III confirmed Henry, the younger brother of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, in his brother's titles and estates, and, in 1351, the castle became part of the Duchy of Lancaster when that title was created. Upon the elevation of the House of Lancaster to the throne in 1399, and in 1413, the succession of Henry V, the Duchy reverted to the Crown and Pickering became a royal castle once again. It has been in State care since 1926. A number of features within the protected area are excluded from the scheduling. These include the ticket office/sales point and its paved base and steps, all English Heritage fixtures and fittings such as bins, bridges, safety grilles, signs, railings and interpretation boards, the surfaces of all modern steps and paths inside and outside the castle walls, lighting and the modern walls and fences round the outside edge of the protected area but the ground beneath all these features is included.
...from the river
♥ Oriana wears a pirate hat, fish necklace, a white embroidered Regency dress and red ballet slippers by Leo COUTURE
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Have you ever watched ants busy gathering juices of peony buds? I have.. For a couples of days actually, I have spent some time watching them fight over drops of juice and busily crawling all over my peony. Both days quite windy and it was a challenge to take macro shots, but I have managed to get a few good ones (I hope) despite constantly changing light and wind moving my subjects and them moving all the time...
Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond imagination. It is our light more than our darkness which scares us. We ask ourselves – who are we to be brilliant, beautiful, talented, and fabulous. But honestly, who are you to not be so? You are a child of God, small games do not work in this world. For those around us to feel peace, it is not example to make ourselves small. We were born to express the glory of god that lives in us. It is not in some of us, it is in all of us. While we allow our light to shine, we unconsciously give permission for others to do the same. When we liberate ourselves from our own fears, simply our presence may liberate others.
-Marianne Williamson.
++bajillion comments.
We had loads of great shots today. I couldn't pick!
135/365.
The mausoleum of the parents of the very important Brazilian aviator Alberto Santos Dumont.
See LARGE.
São João Batista Cemitery, Botafogo's District, Rio de janeiro, Brazil.
Have a nice day. :¬)
I don't have a fear of heights but I do have a fear of falling. It's actually more irrational than that, I have a fear that I'm going to throw myself off the roof of a building or other equally high place. I would never ever do that but I'm afraid that one day I'll just override all my common sense and hurl myself over. Weird right?
We used to climb trees as kids. Well, in fact I didn't cause I was too scared to fall but Marco, the guy on the three, was the most agile and he still is. He just felt like he had to conquer this tree, a very old beech tree, the majesty of which you can see on other of my shots. He went all the way to the top. All I did is to change the color of the sky in Photoshop to make this more epic and surreal.