Rodez - Musée Denys-Puech
Rodez - Musée Soulages
Rodez - Musée Soulages
Rodez - Musée Soulages
Rodez - Musée Soulages
Rodez - Musée Soulages
Rodez - Musée Soulages
Garidech - Saint-Jean-Baptiste
Toulouse - Couvent des Jacobins
Toulouse - Saint Jerome
Toulouse
Toulouse - Ma Biche sur le toit
Toulouse - Ma Biche sur le toit
Toulouse - Musée Saint-Raymond
Toulouse - Musée Saint-Raymond
Toulouse - Musée Saint-Raymond
Toulouse - Musée Saint-Raymond
Toulouse - Musée Saint-Raymond
Toulouse - Musée Saint-Raymond
Toulouse - Musée Saint-Raymond
Toulouse - Musée Saint-Raymond
Toulouse - Musée Saint-Raymond
Toulouse - Musée Saint-Raymond
Rodez - Cathédrale Notre-Dame
Rodez - Cathédrale Notre-Dame
Rodez - Cathédrale Notre-Dame
Rodez - Cathédrale Notre-Dame
Rodez - Paul Fraysse
Rodez - Les Halles
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
Rodez - Musée Fenaille
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Rodez - Cathédrale Notre-Dame
With about 25,000 inhabitants, Rodez is today the economic and cultural center of the Aveyron department.
The city has a history spanning over 2,000 years and was known as Segodunum under the Romans. After the Romans, Rodez was occupied by the Visigoths, the Franks, the armies of the Dukes of Aquitaine and the Counts of Toulouse, and by the Moors, who besieged the city in 725 and destroyed the old church. Several centuries later, the English besieged the city during the Hundred Years' War.
Today there two universities here, whose more than 3000 students bring life to the city.
The area was Christianized in the 4th/5th century by Saints Martial and Amantius: There is no mention of a bishop's church until the 6th century; however, it was enlarged and rebuilt several times over the following centuries. After the collapse of the bell tower of the previous building in 1276, the decision was made to completely rebuild it, which, like the old cathedral, was located outside the existing city walls. Construction work dragged on until 1531 due to the Hundred Years' War and several plague epidemics. The building was thus completed shortly before the outbreak of the Huguenot Wars (1562–1598).
These murals date back to the 15th century and were rediscovered during restoration work in 1974. They adorn the back wall of an altarpiece.
The depictions include the Annunciation, the Birth of Christ, and the Adoration of the Magi.
The city has a history spanning over 2,000 years and was known as Segodunum under the Romans. After the Romans, Rodez was occupied by the Visigoths, the Franks, the armies of the Dukes of Aquitaine and the Counts of Toulouse, and by the Moors, who besieged the city in 725 and destroyed the old church. Several centuries later, the English besieged the city during the Hundred Years' War.
Today there two universities here, whose more than 3000 students bring life to the city.
The area was Christianized in the 4th/5th century by Saints Martial and Amantius: There is no mention of a bishop's church until the 6th century; however, it was enlarged and rebuilt several times over the following centuries. After the collapse of the bell tower of the previous building in 1276, the decision was made to completely rebuild it, which, like the old cathedral, was located outside the existing city walls. Construction work dragged on until 1531 due to the Hundred Years' War and several plague epidemics. The building was thus completed shortly before the outbreak of the Huguenot Wars (1562–1598).
These murals date back to the 15th century and were rediscovered during restoration work in 1974. They adorn the back wall of an altarpiece.
The depictions include the Annunciation, the Birth of Christ, and the Adoration of the Magi.
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