Our next outing was a drive to Perigueux, capital of the Perigord, an hour from Sarlat, our main interests its Cathedral of St. Front and its Medieval quarter. We were impressed with Perigueux. We skipped the Roman bits since a) we were tired, and b) we saw lots of Roman bits in Rome in the spring. The drive to and from Perigueux was interesting as well, passing through some of the more scenic parts of Dordogne/Perigord.
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En route, much of which is lined with these huge limestone cliffs; the same as those containing Lascaux, other cave art; also a variety of cave/domiciles from yester-year/yester-aeon |
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The Cathedral of St. Front; once a beautiful 12th century Romanesque, re-done in the 19th by the same architect who did Montmartre, sort of a distorted faux-Byzantine disaster; generally regarded as one of the ugliest churches in France |
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Curious building on the outskirts of the old town; watch out for that first step... |
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Love the curvy alleys in the Medieval warren |
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Great signage; and in English too; sometimes |
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We got into the cathedral just minutes before its astonishingly early closing (4PM) |
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The tower is apparently the only Romanesque bit to have survived the 19th century re-do |
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Moving right along, outside a shoe repair shop |
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Bon Camino! |
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Some Renaissance structures... |
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Got cutlery? |
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Not suitable for heavy goods vehicles, as the Brits would say |
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Just outside the Medieval quarter, it looks a bit like Paris |
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Until you reach the Tour Mataguerre, the last of the 28 towers of Perigueux' 12th century ramparts |
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Luthier shop |
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Half-timbered all around too |
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Youngish personnes frolicking on the cathedral roof |
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On the drive back to Sarlat, a semi passes under a massive cliff overhang |
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More cliffs, more overhangs along the river highway |
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And chateaux |
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Including this apparently disused beauty |
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Built right onto the rock |
1 comment:
Perigueux is mentioned a lot in the "Bruno, Chief of Police" mysteries.
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