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Photo panoramique par
Carsten T. Rees
Pris 13:22, 14/10/2011
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Blick KaJo zum Münsterturm, Freiburg, BreisgauThe World > Europe > Germany > Baden-Wuerttemberg |
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A place where old and new meet: looking East from the Kajo and it's concrete-and-steel "architecture", the cathedral certainly draws earned attention.
This is right in the middle of Freiburg's most busy shopping street, "Kaiser-Joseph-Strasse", in shor...
St. Martin's Church is a Franciscan church dating back to the year 1246. Due to a house having been d...
One of the city's busiest spots, with on the one hand, the buzzling "Kaiser-Joseph-Strasse" and it'sc...
"Christianity's most beautiful tower", so some say and indeed one could be more than inclined to join...
The market around the Freiburger Muenster takes place each day but sunday. On the south side foreign ...
The seat of the local (i.e Südbaden's) governor, one of the very few buildings not to be completely d...
Eisenstrasse, Einkaufstrasse, Shopping Lane, Freiburg, Breisgau
The seat of the local (i.e Südbaden's) governor, one of the very few buildings not to be completely d...
Astonishingly, there aren't any potatoes sold anymore in this square. Not even theonce existing bric ...
The Freiburger Münster open-work spire is the only one that was finished in the Middle Ages - al...
Germany? Before the beginning there was Ginnungagap, an empty space of nothingness, filled with pure creative power. (Sort of like the inside of my head.)
And it ends with Ragnarok, the twilight of the Gods. In between is much fighting, betrayal and romance. Just as a good Godly story should be.
Heroes have their own graveyard called Valhalla. Unfortunately we cannot show you a panorama of it at this time, nor of the lovely Valkyries who are its escort service.
Hail Odin, wandering God wielding wisdom and wand! Hail Freya, hail Tyr, hail Thor!
Odin made the many lakes and the fish in them. In his traverses across the lands he caused there to be the Mulheim Bridge in Cologne, as did he make the Mercury fountain, Mercury being of his nature.
But it is to the mighty Thor that the Hammering Man gives service.
Between the time of the Nordic old ones and that of modern Frankfort there may have been a T.Rex or two on the scene. At least some mastodons for sure came through for lunch, then fell into tar pits to become fossils for us to find.
And there we must leave you, O my most pure and holy children.
Text by Steve Smith.