View allAll Photos Tagged metz
Cathédrale Saint-Etienne de Metz.
Vue au travers d'une des vitrines-façades du Centre Pompidou, Metz
(19052012-618)
... on m'interpellait parfois, me secouait ; je sursautais un instant pour retourner aussitôt dans cette forme
de s o m n a n b u l i s m e où je n'avais ni froid ni faim, à travers laquelle je n'éprouvais aucune peine, encore moins le besoin de m'en défaire.... (L'écrivain - Yasmina Khadra) ◕
OneUponATime,..a Metz, ville de lumière,...
The Cathedral of Metz, like many other buildings in the old town, are made with "pierre de Jaumont", a local yellow colored limestone
HDR from 3 exposures - f/8 - 1/360 - ISO 100 - 10mm
Nikon D80 with Sigma 10-20
#11 in explore interestingness
La BR 185 021-3 vue sur un Woippy Sarrebruck (operateur SNCF avec une machine DB) laissant la ville de Metz derrière elle; mai 2022
Saint-Étienne de Metz, also known as Metz Cathedral, is a historic Roman Catholic cathedral in Metz, capital of Lorraine, France. Saint-Étienne de Metz is the cathedral of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Metz and the seat of the Bishop of Metz. The cathedral treasury exhibits the millennium rich collection of the Bishopric of Metz, including paraments and items used for the Eucharist.
Saint-Stephen of Metz has one of the highest naves in the world. The cathedral is nicknamed the Good Lord's Lantern, displaying the largest expanse of stained glass in the world with 6,496 m2 (69,920 sq ft). Those stained glass windows include works by Gothic and Renaissance master glass makers Hermann von Münster, Theobald of Lixheim, and Valentin Bousch and romantic Charles-Laurent Maréchal, tachist Roger Bissière, cubist Jacques Villon, and modernist Marc Chagall.