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Photo panoramique par
Carsten T. Rees
Pris 12:54, 18/10/2011
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Deutschordenskommende, Palais Sickingen, Freiburg, BreisgauThe World > Europe > Germany > Baden-Wuerttemberg |
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This impressive building was once the seat of the "Deutscher Orden", a gathering-place of the knights of the German Order. More ordinarily used today as court-rooms. The white building opposite is the Palais Sickingen. Nowadays used as a court-building too.
Once an abbey church, the "Augustiner" these days is a museum with an, even internationally, renowned...
Another concrete-and-steel building in medieval Freiburg that adds to it's distinctive mixture of old...
The "Shoemaker's Lane", in fact a prolongation of Town Hall Lane, indeed continues the former's tradi...
The place outside of the "Augustiner" is, in summertime, a favourite meeting-point of the town's popu...
Die Freiburger Altstadt menschenleer, gibt es wohl nur Sonntag morgens. Entweder sind alle im Münster...
A shopping street connecting Herrenstrasse and Kaiser-Joseph-Strasse, running in parallel to Salzstra...
Eisenstrasse, Einkaufstrasse, Shopping Lane, Freiburg, Breisgau
The south-side of Cathedral Square is, in comparison, quieter than the buzzling northside. This is th...
Die Portalhalle des Freiburger Münsters wurde von 1999-2004 restauriert. Zum Schutz vor Tauben wurde ...
The most central of the city's beer gardens: always difficult to find a seat after 16 o'clock in summ...
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.