Thaddeus73 said:
Notre Dame Cathedral Montreal - I never wanted to leave..Truly awesome..JPII said Holy Mass there...
I've been here before. Spectacular building.
Thaddeus73 said:
Notre Dame Cathedral Montreal - I never wanted to leave..Truly awesome..JPII said Holy Mass there...
Abandoned Gothic church in Portugal pic.twitter.com/WczyY8H42n
— Abandoned Places (@abandoned5paces) April 16, 2022
Jaydoug said:
Mine too
The interior of the Cathedral of Parma pic.twitter.com/PiSIt6hirE
— Stained Glass Zealot † (@glass_zealot) May 16, 2022
on a similar note, romanic churches used to have giant wheel chandeliers signifying the heavenly jerusalem pic.twitter.com/j70YG76K0s
— kartoshkA † (@aesthetici4n) March 9, 2022
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Headed to Italy this year for a vacation, will get to see lots of churches in Rome/Vatican City and Florence, looking forward to that!
Dear artists, what is preventing you from painting like this? pic.twitter.com/MMa1Z4mAgn
— Culture Critic (@Cult_Crit) February 1, 2023
That is impressive! the pictures of Sagrada all look like renderings and not like something real.jbryan10 said:
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East of the Turkish city of Kars lies a complex of lonely medieval churches. Octagonal towers, crumbling walls, and fallen columns lay scattered across vast grasslands. In the gorge that drops away to the Akhuryan Riverwhich forms Turkey's border with the modern state of Armeniais an ancient bridge, broken in the middle.
These ruins are all that remain of Ani, the cosmopolitan capital of medieval Armenia, one of the earliest kingdoms to adopt Christianity as its state religion in the early A.D. 300s. The site of a fifth-century fortification, Ani was chosen to be Armenia's capital in the 10th century. It became home to as many as 100,000 people, and was so richly endowed with sacred buildings that it came to be known as the "city of 1,001 churches."
Its strategic position along trade routes between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea made it an attractive possession, condemning it to centuries of invasionand eventually, a long period of abandonment.
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Ani's cathedral was completed in A.D. 1001 by Trdat the Architect (who also reconstructed the damaged dome of the Hagia Sophia cathedral in Constantinople). Its ribbed vaulting would not be seen in European cathedrals until at least two centuries later. During Ani's sacking by the Seljuks in 1064, it was converted into a mosque; but returned to Christian usage in 1124. Its dome was destroyed in the earthquake of 1319.
Imagine witnessing this and not wanting desperately to build more of it. pic.twitter.com/dtIBiCmqYp
— Culture Critic (@Culture_Crit) May 15, 2023