Thursday, August 27, 2009

Driving Around

Another abbey ruins--I've forgotten the name--they're all over;
before there were towns, there were abbeys 
View from one of our lay-by campsites in northern England 


The White Horse of Sutton Bank; they do these hill-side chalk
drawings (that is, scraping away vegetation and soil to reveal
the chalk underneath) all over the place; some are very, very old 

Another bucolic campsite view; this one had horses in the
pasture

But then every now and then you run into something like this 

Fountains Abbey

Fountains Abbey, church and part of abbey



Lay brothers' latrines; the river was diverted to run beneath
them 
 


























How to build an arch 




















More of abbey













Church nave 





















Lay brothers dorm area 


Cloisters




























Cellarium





The gardens are mostly huge water features, artificial lakes,
water courses, etc

























Only Americans, we were told, ask why this
is called the Anne Boleyn statue





























Fountains Abbey is mentioned prominently and favorably in the 1938 Adventures of Robin Hood film, so, being in the neighborhood, we had to see it.

The Abbey was begun in 1132, a splinter group from York, fell in with the Cistercians in 1135, and went on to become one of England's richest and most powerful abbeys. The Black Death laid it and similar abbeys low, and Henry VIII finished them off with the Dissolution Act in 1539. Fountains Abbey languished, particularly after the royal plundering, until bought by a rich 18th century family that saw it as the perfect "ruin" for its estate garden. It's all National Trust now, being taken care of, another UNESCO World Heritage site.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Let's Roll, Dude

Pannini's fresco of Earth, Castle Howard

Castle Howard


Grounds view of Castle Howard

The Hercules fountain

The Temple of the Four Winds. What? Your house doesn't have
a temple of the four winds? 

Model of this ramshackle 17th century house (with later
additions) 

Brueghel in the bedroom? Vicki and I are still skeptical 





































































The sculpture hall, mostly 2nd century AD
Roman


















Music room 














Dome in main building















Grounds; once a formal French garden affair, plowed under
when the late 19th century owners discovered what it cost to
maintain 

John Jackson painting of the grand hall 

200 years later 


Chapel; every great house has a chapel

York Minster

What can I say? The York Minster is the largest religious
building north of the Alps. No photo can convey its scale.
Above is a brass model in the yard outside the west doors 















Two towers





















North side and crossing tower 














Nave; we toured on a Sunday afternoon, bells
peeling; later, I thought the giant organ, in a
choir rehearsal, was going to bring the whole
place down 





















Nave from crossing




















The east window facsimile...it is undergoing
renovation, and will be out of view for some
years; it is the largest there is, the size of a
tennis court 





















West window, formerly largest, until the east 
window 




















South window


















South window rose














North window


















Crossing ceiling












Choir



















Love those Elizabethan memorials 


















Roster of bishops, starting with Ebarius in 324 














Favorite window


















And, if the sermon is boring, you can always review your
semaphor 





























York minster/cathedral is 12th century, the largest north of the Alps, the most and best stained glass in England. We lingered. I went back the next day for pix. ("Minster" derives from "minister/missionary," connoting the church's very long history).

York

York is a very foot-friendly old city


I have put a lot of money into bookstores; at this
one I finally found a bargain: Julian Copes' out-of-print
Modern Antiquarian for 13 quid.

Constantine was at York (don't ask me) when he was named Emperor
 

Street scene in old York
 

More sagging half-timber


Porta Principalis Dextra: the old Roman northwest gate;
York is what became of Jorvik, after the Vikings settled
here in the 10th century
 

Part of the old city wall, Roman in origin

River and wall

Sic transit gloria mondi: centuries ago, an important bridge toll-house;
today, a sandwich shoppe