View allAll Photos Tagged sendlingertor
During the UEFA Euro 2008 craziness that went up higher and higher throughout the last few weeks until the German national team lost the final against Spain yesterday night, it was sometimes quite difficult to avoid getting small German national flags painted on one’s cheeks. Of course, these happy girls on a billboard advertisement weren’t able to defend themselves against one of those attacks. (A cosmetics advertisement right next to this one underwent the same treatment.)
Chestnuts roasting on an open fire! They were a lot mealier and blander than I expected. Still, pretty good and very Christmas-y.
The Church of All Saints also known as Holy Cross Church is a cemetery church in Munich, southern Germany.
The church was built in 1478 by Jörg von Halsbach and was the first church with a cemetery in the St. Peter parish. It was once located at the crossing of four roads, whence the original suffix am Kreuz ("at the Cross").
It has unadorned brickwork walls, Gothicvaults and a tall bell tower. The interior was rebuilt from 1620 in Baroque style, the only remaining Gothic elements being the nave's vault, fragments of a fresco and a Crucifix by Hans Leinberger. The tomb of banker Gietz and the Apparition of the Virgin to St. Augustine (by Hans Rottenhammer) are in Mannerist style.
Filiale "Blaumann" (T-Shirt-Produktion), neben Filiale Münchner Freiheit. Mehr unter zum Thema Textildruck unter www.wenzel-muc.de/drucken/textildruck.html
Sendlinger Tor is a city gate at the southern extremity of the historic old town area of Munich, Germany. Photographed on 6 August 1987.
Digitised from a slide. The original slide, which is of higher quality, is held.
Munich subway station Sendlinger Tor (SU). Opened on October 18th, 1980.
Please change here for subway lines 3 and 6.
Next stations on line 1: Hauptbahnhof (905 meters northwestwards), Fraunhoferstraße (746 meters southeastwards).
Next stations on line 2: Hauptbahnhof (905 meters northwestwards), Fraunhoferstraße (746 meters southeastwards).