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#57 in Flickr Explore 06/02/2021

Hildesheim, Lower Saxony, Germany

 

Geo tag is not exact on the spot

Have the best weekend my amazing contacts. And happy holidays for those of you celebrating this weekend.

Here's to a wonderful weekend everyone!

Welcome to the beautiful city of Uzerche under the sun, pearl of Corrèze - New Aquitaine - France - Europe

 

Histoire d'Uzerche

 

Uzerche surnommée La " Perle du Limousin " est implantée sur la crête d'un escarpement rocheux entouré par une courbe serrée de la Vézère.

 

Les premiers, les Gaulois s'installèrent sur ce piton rocheux.

 

César, après avoir conquis la Gaule, choisit de laisser quelques garnisons dans la région, avec pour mission, à Uzarcba, de surveiller les passages de la Vézère.

 

Le site occupait une position stratégique. Il surplombait le col de Sainte-Eulalie où se trouvait un important carrefour routier antique, d'origine préromaine. L'une des routes joignait l'Armorique au Bassin Méditerranéen, une autre permettait de franchir la Vézère à gué.

 

Très tôt, ce col fut équipé d'un lieu de culte consacré à une martyre espagnole du 3ème siècle, Sainte-Eulalie de Mérida.

 

En 480, les Wisigoths pillent et détruisent Uzerche.

 

Pépin le Bref, conscient de l'intérêt du site, fait bâtir une forteresse et une église protégées par une haute muraille flanquée de dix-huit tours.

 

La ville se dote de portes, dont la Porte Bécharie qui subsiste encore. Trente an après leur défaite à Poitiers (732), les Sarrasins envahissent une seconde fois le Limousin.

 

Durant sept ans la ville résiste à leurs assauts et se libère du siège par un habile stratagème. Un blason symbolisant (selon la légende) cette victoire est sculptée sur la porte Bécharie.

 

En 909, les Normands saccagent la cité.

 

Au 10ème siècle, les Carolingiens décident d'y fonder un monastère sous la conduite de l'abbé Gaubert. Un incendie en 1028 met un terme à la prospérité que connaît la communauté.

 

Le 12ème siècle est une période faste, les grands de ce monde traversent la cité et s'arrêtent au monastère : Henry II d'Angleterre et Aliénor d'Aquitaine, leur fils, Richard Cœur de Lion.

 

La ville résiste à plusieurs sièges, dont celui des Anglais, méritant ainsi le surnom d'Uzerche-La-Pucelle, celle qui n'a jamais été prise.

 

Dès le 14ème siècle, son développement justifie l'adage " Qui a maison à Uzerche a château en Limousin ". La noblesse de robe va construire hôtels et maisons fortes jusqu'au 16ème siècle.

 

En 1575, le vicomte de Turenne, à la tête des Huguenots, saccage l'abbaye.

 

La puissance de son abbaye et la création d'une sénéchaussée royale firent d'elle une capitale du Bas-Limousin.

Source la Corrèze.com

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History of Uzerche

Uzerche, nicknamed the "Pearl of Limousin", is located on the crest of a rocky escarpment surrounded by a tight curve of the Vézère.

 

The first, the Gauls, settled on this rocky peak.

 

Caesar, after having conquered Gaul, chose to leave some garrisons in the region, with the mission, in Uzarcba, to monitor the passages of the Vézère.

 

The site occupied a strategic position. It overlooked the Sainte-Eulalie pass where there was an important ancient road junction, of pre-Roman origin. One of the roads joined Armorica to the Mediterranean Basin, another made it possible to ford the Vézère.

 

Very early on, this pass was equipped with a place of worship dedicated to a 3rd century Spanish martyr, Sainte-Eulalie de Mérida.

 

In 480, the Visigoths pillaged and destroyed Uzerche.

 

Pépin le Bref, aware of the interest of the site, had a fortress and a church built, protected by a high wall flanked by eighteen towers.

 

The city is equipped with gates, including the Porte Bécharie which still remains. Thirty years after their defeat at Poitiers (732), the Saracens invade Limousin a second time.

 

For seven years the city resisted their assaults and freed itself from the siege by a clever stratagem. A coat of arms symbolizing (according to legend) this victory is carved on the Porte Bécharie.

 

In 909, the Normans sacked the city.

 

In the 10th century, the Carolingians decided to found a monastery there under the leadership of Father Gaubert. A fire in 1028 put an end to the prosperity of the community.

 

The 12th century was a prosperous period, the great of this world crossed the city and stopped at the monastery: Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine, their son, Richard the Lionheart.

 

The city resisted several sieges, including that of the English, thus deserving the nickname of Uzerche-La-Pucelle, the one that was never taken.

 

From the 14th century, its development justifies the adage "Who has a house in Uzerche has a castle in Limousin". The nobility of the robe built hotels and fortified houses until the 16th century.

 

In 1575, the Vicomte de Turenne, at the head of the Huguenots, sacked the abbey.

 

The power of its abbey and the creation of a royal senechaussee made it a capital of Bas-Limousin.

Source la Corrèze.com

Have the best weekend you awesome people you!

La Machado is one of our very favourite destinations in Mazatlan. The beautiful plaza is surrounded by excellent restaurants and behind each of the 4 sides you can find art galleries and artisans.

 

mazatlantoday.net/mazatlan_plaza_machado.html

 

Please no group invites!!! Per favore no inviti a gruppi!!!

This is the last of the series. I would like to thank you all for your support and patience. :)

 

Have the best weekend folks!!

Montesquieu-Volvestre, Haute-Garonne, France

 

For more doors and windows see my album Doors & Windows.

For more from Midi-Pyrénées see my album Midi-Pyrénées.

For more from France see my album En France.

 

Collections · Albums · Maps · Photostream

 

© 2019-2020 Ivan van Nek

Please do not use any of my pictures on websites, blogs or in other media without my permission.

 

DSC_4677

Have a great weekend everyone. Enjoy the long weekend my fellow Canadians!

Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you: For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened.

(Matthew 7:7-8)

Open it for the new week?

I always liked these doors and windows on this old house. I took a picture last year and thank goodness I did because they renovated the house and although they left everything in place it looks just too nice now.

I applied a texture to go with he old walls

Old windows, old doors of Hudson, NY

Formerly Claverack Landing, Hudson was once a hub for the whaling industry — and it very nearly became New York’s capital city.

 

Of all the many cities and towns in our region, only one was named after Henry Hudson, the Valley’s first European visitor. How the designation came to be is, well, a whale of a tale.

 

Until 1784, the city of Hudson was known as Claverack Landing. It was a farming community of 10 or so families—around 150 people. But that was about to change.

 

In the years during and right after the Revolutionary War, the Royal Navy clamped down on American whaling— one of the biggest industries of the 18th century (especially in New England). In 1783, brothers Seth and Thomas Jenkins from Nantucket set sail for a new beginning. They found a home base in this unlikely locale—100 miles from the ocean— on a deep and safe harbor with plenty of land. Claverack Landing presented an opportunity to build a company town from scratch… which they did.

 

The Jenkins brothers and 28 other whalers, who became known as the Proprietors, formed a company and bought the land from Dutch families (who had previously purchased it from the native Mohicans). They laid out a city grid and put into place everything a whaling enterprise would need: ship builders, rope and sail makers, coopers, and more than a few saloons. Within three years, the city had several wharves, four warehouses, plus “a covered rope-walk, spermaceti-works, one hundred and fifty dwelling-houses, shops, barns, one of the best distilleries in America, and fifteen hundred souls,” according to the New York Journal.

 

On November 14, 1784, Claverack Landing became the first city to be incorporated in the brand-new United States of America. However, according to an 1862 chronicle, Historical Sketches of Hudson, the Proprietors wanted a new name. They unanimously agreed that “it should be called by the name of Hudson.” There is no record as to why they insisted on the name change, but according to the book, at least one person wasn’t happy: New York’s first governor George Clinton. He wanted Hudson named after himself.

 

In 1797, Hudson was one vote short of becoming the capital of New York State. Nevertheless, the city has survived and thrived, and today represents a true gem of the Hudson Valley.

  

At 16mm. This is making me a little dizzy.

( Please View Full Screen ... )

Weathered Garage, San Anselmo, Marin County, Northern California, USA.

lense used - helios 44-2 58mm

An alleyway in the old centre of Passau, Bavaria.

Position: Savona is a seaport and comune in the west part of the northern Italian region of Liguria, capital of the Province of Savona.

Green windows not up to date anylonger

Miami, Arizona

"And the party never ends."

www.youtube.com/watch?v=oe4NxjuI1G4

A playful piece of artwork on a dock in Stonehurst, Nova Scotia.

My husband put up a shelf over our entrance door, so Jeffrey can follow the life on the street outside.

He clearly wants to do so undisturbed :-)

For the Happy Caturday group theme "Windows and doors".

The entrance of thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple.

(Psalm 119:130)

open the church doors and step into the beautiful!

the colorful windows inside give a wonderful light.

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öffne die Kirchentüren und betrete das Schöne!

Die bunten Fenster innen geben ein wunderbares Licht.

  

"Into the Beautiful" is the topic for Sunday ~ September 19th, 2021

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