Châtel-Montagne - Notre-Dame
Châtel-Montagne - Notre-Dame
Trogir - Cathedral of St. Lawrence
Autun - Cathédrale Saint-Lazare
Milan - Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio
Monsempron - Saint-Géraud
Monsempron - Saint-Géraud
La Villedieu-du-Clain - Saint-Jean-Baptiste
Manfredonia - Abbazia di San Leonardo in Lama Vola…
Bari - Cattedrale di San Sabino
Saint-Nectaire - Notre-Dame-du-Mont-Cornadore
Fleury-la-Montagne
Saint-Gaultier - Saint-Gaultier
Arles - Saint-Trophime
Bareyo - Santa Maria
Aulnay - Saint-Pierre
Diusse - Saint-Jean-Baptiste
Later the donkey ate the flowers in Auvillar.
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Poitiers - Sainte-Radegonde
Radegonde (aka "Radegund", "Radegundis") was a princess, born in Thuringia around 520. She was married to Chlothar I but left her husband and founded the convent "Sainte-Marie-Hors-les-Murs" in Poitiers around 552. The nunnery was the first and became the most important in the Frankish Empire. After having received a fragment of the "True Cross" from the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I, the name of the abbey changed to "Abbaye Sainte-Croix". In 587 Radegonde was buried here. The first church was erected over her tomb.
Radegonde´s remains were exhumed in 1012 for public veneration, what triggered a major pilgrimage to Poitiers. After a major fire, the church was rebuilt. The church of today, constructed from the 11th to 12th centuries, was built in a combination of Romanesque and Gothic styles.
Sculptured corbels line both sides of the nave. A harp playing donkey can often be found in and around Romanesque churches, a very common icon.
Radegonde´s remains were exhumed in 1012 for public veneration, what triggered a major pilgrimage to Poitiers. After a major fire, the church was rebuilt. The church of today, constructed from the 11th to 12th centuries, was built in a combination of Romanesque and Gothic styles.
Sculptured corbels line both sides of the nave. A harp playing donkey can often be found in and around Romanesque churches, a very common icon.
, Jeanne chevillard have particularly liked this photo
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The donkey could well make it onto a CD-cover today.
Here are some collegues:
www.ipernity.com/doc/323415/27285391
www.ipernity.com/doc/323415/20483637
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