Museum De Lakenhal – Philips lightbulb
Alkmaar 2014 – Grote of Sint-Laurenskerk – Light
Dinan 2014 – Hellfire
Quimper 2014 – Flogging
Dinan 2014 – Beheading
Quimper 2014 – Beheading
Cologne 2014 – Daniel
Cologne 2014 – Stoning
Nationaal Glasmuseum 2015 – Stained glass
Nationaal Glasmuseum 2015 – Stained glass
England 2016 – V&A Museum – Jesus carried by the D…
Lisbon 2018 – Mosteiro dos Jerónimos
Oxford 2013 – The fishes
Former men's clothing store Jan van Hartevelt
Former men's clothing store Jan van Hartevelt
Former men's clothing store Jan van Hartevelt
Window with the Rod of Asclepius
Stained-glass window above a door in Leiden
„Gonzalez„ Port & Sherry
Whisky „Black & White„
A weekend in the Eifel (Germany): Monreal
A weekend in the Eifel (Germany): Monreal
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274 visits
Hereford Cathedral 2013 – Beheading
Bradshaw's Descriptive Railway Hand-Book of Great Britain and Ireland of 1863 describes the Cathedral as follows:
"The present Cathedral, lately restored, standing near the river, and dedicated to St. Mary, is the third on this site, the first one having been founded in the ninth century by King Offs, to atone for the murder of Ethelbert. It is a handsome cross, 325 feet long, begun by Bishop Herbert de Lozinga in 1079, when the Norman style prevailed, and finished by Bishop Borth in 1535, who built the beautiful north porch. The west front was spoiled by Wyatt, in restoring it after the fall of the tower above in 1786. There are two other Norman towers, and a great tower, which firmly support a tall spire. Some of the Gothic side chapels, and the monuments of Bishop Cantilupe, Bischop de Bethune &c., deserve notice. A curious Saxon map of the world is in the library. The college of the Vicars-Choral, and the grammar school are in the cloisters; the latter was founded in 1385."
"The present Cathedral, lately restored, standing near the river, and dedicated to St. Mary, is the third on this site, the first one having been founded in the ninth century by King Offs, to atone for the murder of Ethelbert. It is a handsome cross, 325 feet long, begun by Bishop Herbert de Lozinga in 1079, when the Norman style prevailed, and finished by Bishop Borth in 1535, who built the beautiful north porch. The west front was spoiled by Wyatt, in restoring it after the fall of the tower above in 1786. There are two other Norman towers, and a great tower, which firmly support a tall spire. Some of the Gothic side chapels, and the monuments of Bishop Cantilupe, Bischop de Bethune &c., deserve notice. A curious Saxon map of the world is in the library. The college of the Vicars-Choral, and the grammar school are in the cloisters; the latter was founded in 1385."
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