Matera - Cattedrale di Matera
Even mermaids begin...
Greding - St. Martin
Belleville - Abbatiale de l'Assomption
Oh ... to be a mermaid
Greifswald - Dom St. Nikolai
Sunken Leisure 7
Meerjungfrauenschwimmen
2 Fischschwänze
Freibad Steinenberg
Fünf bunte Fischschwänze
Geschenke! :-D
Dortmund - Marienkirche
Parma - Duomo
Modena - Duomo
Ancona - Santa Maria della Piazza
Bitonto - Duomo di Bitonto
Marseille - Canebière
Ripoll - Monastery of Santa Maria
Ripoll - Monastery of Santa Maria
La Seu d’Urgell - Cathedral of Santa Maria
La Seu d’Urgell - Cathedral of Santa Maria
Vienne - Abbaye de Saint-André-le-Bas
Lyon - Cathédrale Saint-Jean-Baptiste
Moudon - Saint-Étienne
IMG 9050-001-London International Paste-Up Festiva…
IMG 9290-001-Angela Burdett-Coutts Fountain 2
Underwater
León - Catedral de León
León - Basílica de San Isidoro
Teilzeitnixe Cameron - Ocean Arrow
Nettes Klo-Schild
Ávila - San Andrés
Auch Puppen wollen Meerjungfrauen sein
Unicorns and/or Mermaids
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Journet - Prieuré de Villesalem
Beaumont-du-Périgord - Saint-Laurent-et-Saint-Fron…
Laval-sur-Doulon - Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption
Saint-Julien-Chapteuil - Saint-Julien
Avignon - Palais des Papes
Vence - Cathédrale de la Nativité-de-Marie
Malvaglia - San Martino
Sleeping mermaids
Monreale - Duomo di Monreale
Monreale - Duomo di Monreale
Monreale - Duomo di Monreale
Welcome to Weymouth, a Resort in Need of a Statue
Be
Brilon - St. Petrus und Andreas (PiP)
Teilzeitnixe Cameron - Koi
Cambia - San Quilico
Aregno - Trinita e San Giovanni Battista
Fluke vom Walhai-Kostüm
Murato - San Michele de Murato
Marburg - Elisabethkirche
Belleville - Abbatiale de l'Assomption
Freundinnen :-)
Le Puy en Velay - Cathédrale Notre-Dame-de-l'Annon…
Meerjungfrauenzeug
Surgères - Notre-Dame
Tailflip II
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Otranto - Cattedrale di Otranto
Otranto occupies the site of an ancient Greek city. It gained importance in Roman times, as it was the nearest port to the eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea.
After the end of the Roman Empire, it was in the hands of the Byzantine emperors until it surrendered to the Norman troops of Robert Guiscard in 1068. The Normans fortified the city and built the cathedral, that got consecrated in 1088. When Henry VI., son of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, married Constanze of Sicily in 1186 Otranto came under the rule of the Hohenstaufen and later in the hands of Ferdinand I of Aragón, King of Naples.
Between 1480 and 1481 the "Ottoman invasion" took place here. Troops of the Ottoman Empire invaded and laid siege to the city and its citadel. Legends tell that more than 800 inhabitants were beheaded after the city was captured. The "Martyrs of Otranto" are still celebrated in Italy, their skulls are on display in the cathedral. A year later the Ottoman garrison surrendered the city following a siege by Christian forces and the intervention of Papal forces.
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Otranto had been one of the last Byzantine strongholds in Apulia, but finally Robert Guiscard could take it. It had probably been such a stronghold, as Otranto had hosted an autocephalous bishopric, only dependent of the patriarchal see of Byzantium since 968. So (Roman) Catholicism had to perform something "convincing" for the so long (Byzantine) Orthodox christians. One was to erect a huge church. The Otranto Cathedral was erected, over ruins of a Paleo-christian church from 1080 on and was consecrated in 1088. It is 54 metres long by 25 metres wide and is built on 42 monolithic granite and marble columns.
I had come to Otranto, to see the mosaic. I had planned to stay one night in Otranto, I spent three nights - and still had not seen all the details. I was so overwhelmed, that I took hundreds of photos, but the mosaic is "endless". I will upload only a couple.
It was created by a monk named Pantaleon and his workshop between 1163 and 1165. Pantaleon lived at the monastery San Nicola di Casole, located a few kilometres south of Otranto.
The mosaic covers the nave, both aisles, the apse and the presbytery. This sums up to a total of 1596 m². About 10 000000 (10 million!) "tesserae" were used.
There are scholars, who have counted up to 700 different "stories", that are told here. Though, these "stories" are often disputed, as today's interpretations are mostly very "vague". German historian Carl Arnold Willemsen published the most important book about the mosaic in Italian " L'enigma di Otranto", that since the 1970s is translated in many languages. I followed his theories.
As the church is a parish church, there are benches placed on the mosaic floor. Only for the Sunday service, the ropes are open so that the parishioners can reach the benches. I stayed up to Sunday to mix with the locals.
A mermaid
After the end of the Roman Empire, it was in the hands of the Byzantine emperors until it surrendered to the Norman troops of Robert Guiscard in 1068. The Normans fortified the city and built the cathedral, that got consecrated in 1088. When Henry VI., son of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, married Constanze of Sicily in 1186 Otranto came under the rule of the Hohenstaufen and later in the hands of Ferdinand I of Aragón, King of Naples.
Between 1480 and 1481 the "Ottoman invasion" took place here. Troops of the Ottoman Empire invaded and laid siege to the city and its citadel. Legends tell that more than 800 inhabitants were beheaded after the city was captured. The "Martyrs of Otranto" are still celebrated in Italy, their skulls are on display in the cathedral. A year later the Ottoman garrison surrendered the city following a siege by Christian forces and the intervention of Papal forces.
-
Otranto had been one of the last Byzantine strongholds in Apulia, but finally Robert Guiscard could take it. It had probably been such a stronghold, as Otranto had hosted an autocephalous bishopric, only dependent of the patriarchal see of Byzantium since 968. So (Roman) Catholicism had to perform something "convincing" for the so long (Byzantine) Orthodox christians. One was to erect a huge church. The Otranto Cathedral was erected, over ruins of a Paleo-christian church from 1080 on and was consecrated in 1088. It is 54 metres long by 25 metres wide and is built on 42 monolithic granite and marble columns.
I had come to Otranto, to see the mosaic. I had planned to stay one night in Otranto, I spent three nights - and still had not seen all the details. I was so overwhelmed, that I took hundreds of photos, but the mosaic is "endless". I will upload only a couple.
It was created by a monk named Pantaleon and his workshop between 1163 and 1165. Pantaleon lived at the monastery San Nicola di Casole, located a few kilometres south of Otranto.
The mosaic covers the nave, both aisles, the apse and the presbytery. This sums up to a total of 1596 m². About 10 000000 (10 million!) "tesserae" were used.
There are scholars, who have counted up to 700 different "stories", that are told here. Though, these "stories" are often disputed, as today's interpretations are mostly very "vague". German historian Carl Arnold Willemsen published the most important book about the mosaic in Italian " L'enigma di Otranto", that since the 1970s is translated in many languages. I followed his theories.
As the church is a parish church, there are benches placed on the mosaic floor. Only for the Sunday service, the ropes are open so that the parishioners can reach the benches. I stayed up to Sunday to mix with the locals.
A mermaid
Ernest CH, Alexander Prolygin have particularly liked this photo
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