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| We parked on a hill within sight of the house, but opted to walk around the point |
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Monday, August 3, 2015
A Walk Along The Coast At Plougrescant
Sometime in the 1980s, during a visit here, Vicki bought a poster of what has come to be known as "The House Between the Rocks." We've always thought it epitomized the Brittany coast, but never took the time nor the trouble to see exactly where it was nor to visit it. Too many other things to visit in Brittany; and most of this was long before searching on Google. The poster still hangs in the library at Sentinel High School in Missoula. We easily found "The House Between the Rocks" this time and were sure not to miss it. But first we took a walk along the coast en route.
Sunday, August 2, 2015
Saint-Tugdual Cathedral, Treguier
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| 13th century Gothic, mostly, although the oldest part, the so-called Hastings Tower, is 11th century, which is indeed way old |
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| Nave view |
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| One of the quirky things here, however, is the piers in the nave: look at them, right |
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| And left |
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| We've seen alternating piers/columns in some of the transition Gothics, in the Ile de France, but never anything like this: no two pairs are alike, at all |
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| Crossing |
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| Choir; nice carving, misericordia; enlarge the dude in the very center and you will see a fighting Uruk-hai from The Two Towers |
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| Apse ceiling, painted |
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| Nice person |
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| Killer Rabbit of Caenbannag (look it up) |
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| Anyhow, the capitals in the Hastings Tower are in part what you'd expect of a Norman-era church |
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| But then there is much I would describe as Celtic |
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| Thus |
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| And thus; and more |
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| Saint-Tugdual's three towers: Hastings, the 13th century Sanctus tower, and the 1785 bell-tower/spire |
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| Interesting old church |
Treguier
The Michelin descriptions of Treguier were not enticing, and we had pretty much decided to drive right through and on to our next stop...
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| And then I notice, across the highway, one of the grandest calvaires I have seen in Brittany, ever |
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| A really impressive and young one; a sign says only that it is there to mark the "Protests of 1903"--read on, read on... |
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| And then Vicki looks up the street and sees this interesting old tower |
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| And then, up that street, block after block of half-timbered beauties; another city of them; we are hooked |
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| "Kouign Amann" is Breton for "food of Satan" |
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| Family home of the great Biblical scholar, philologist, philosopher, social critic, Ernest Renan, born in Treguier, and a son of the place |
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| More halfies |
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| And some nice stone buildings to keep the halfies from falling over |
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| We visited the city's very interesting cathedral (next post) and then walked back down the hill past this remarkably disguised loo, actually a stone lean-to on an old city wall |
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| When we got back to the camper, the men were still doing what men must do |
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| Just down the hill from the cathedral was one of the prettiest aires we have stayed at yet, right on the tidal river, the Bois du Poete |
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| Thus; don't miss Treguier! |
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