France
Arrondissement de Chartres

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    • Day 9

      En we zijn weer op de camping!

      July 16, 2020 in France ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

      Na bijna 5 uur rondgedwaald te hebben in het grote mooie Chartres, heb ik de camping weer teruggevonden. Wat een fantastische onvergetelijke dag! Ik duik vast m'n tentje in. Morgen weer een nieuwe dag👌🏼Read more

    • Day 10

      Église St Pierre

      September 21, 2019 in France ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

      Another cathedral - or just an old church? Just an old church of would seem. Why you would build an enormous church here when there was an even more enormous cathedral just up the hill is beyond our limited understanding - maybe to give a whole other group of people headaches trying to figure out how to restore /keep it from falling down. It was a good find for us though, a cool resting spot along the way of our day's wandering.Read more

    • Day 10

      Chenonceau and Chartres, France

      June 20, 2023 in France ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

      Tuesday, June 20th. We woke up with the most amazing view of the chateau. Mikel asked what I was doing for the next 30 years and if would I spend it with him. He proposed and asked me to marry him! Of course, I said YES. I went to Anya's room to tell her and that is when she told me she already knew and he had told her at Mont St Michel!

      We toured Chambord early and enjoyed seeing the interior of the chateau. They hid a lot of Paris art here during WWII.

      We drove to Chenonceau and it is my favorite. It is on the river Cher and we enjoyed lunch on the grounds.

      The history of the Château de Chenonceau is defined by an almost uninterrupted succession of women who built, embellished, protected, restored, and saved it. The first château was a medieval château dating from the 12th and 13th centuries.

      In 1535, King Francis I incorporated it into the Crown Estate as part of a debt settlement. Later, King Henry II decided to offer it not to the Queen, but to his Favorite, Diane de Poitiers, “in full right of ownership, seisin and possession, completely, peacefully and perpetually, to dispose of as her own and true patrimony.” This artificial exit of Chenonceau from Crown Lands meant that it was saved, two centuries later, from the French Revolution.

      On 10 July 1559, Queen Catherine de Medici, widow of Henry II, quickly deposed Diane de Poitiers and installed the authority of the young king, her son, at Chenonceau, amidst Italian pomp and splendor. Amongst the festivities she held here, she managed the Kingdom of France from her study, the Green Cabinet. Her daughter-in-law, Louise de Lorraine, wife of King Henry III, became a widow in turn and moved into the château in her mourning.

      In the 18th century, after the château was purchased by her husband, it was Louise Dupin, lady of the Enlightenment, who welcomed to Chenonceau the greatest scholars, philosophers, and academicians in France to her famous literary salon. This exceptional woman was the first to draft a Code of Women’s Rights.

      Chenonceau was transformed into a military hospital during the Great War.

      During the Second World War, the Grand Gallery at Chenonceau became the sole point of access to the free zone, and the Menier family helped to smuggle out people fleeing the Nazi tyranny. The US president, Harry Truman, visited the château on his first trip to France.

      When we left Chenonceau, we stopped at a Cave and tasted wine. Mikel wasn't thrilled with that stop. We got a few bottles for the road and had a great time learning about the family's wine business.

      We drove to Chartres. We had a wonderful B&B apartment. We toured the church and had dinner right across from the cathedral. We went back to the B&B and took a nap. After the nap, we went back to the cathedral and watched the light show that they did ON the church. It was OUTSTANDING. It didn't start until 10:30 pm because it didn't get dark until then. We walked home from another amazing day.

      Chartres Cathedral is also known as the Cathedral of Our Lady of Chartres and was mostly constructed between 1194 and 1220. On August 16, 1944, the Chartres Cathedral was saved from destruction thanks to the American colonel Welborn Barton Griffith Jr., who questioned the order he was given to target the cathedral. The Americans believed that the steeples and towers were being used as an observation post for German artillery.

      Griffith, accompanied by a volunteer soldier, instead decided to go and verify whether or not the Germans were using the cathedral. Griffith could see that the cathedral was empty, so he had the cathedral bells ring as a signal for the Americans not to shoot. Upon hearing the bells, the American command rescinded the order to fire. Colonel Griffith died in combat action that same day near Chartres.
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    • Day 9

      Bon Appétit!

      July 16, 2020 in France ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

      Bon Appétit! Kaartjes schrijven en uiteten op een terras vlakbij de prachtige kathedraal. Aan de ene kant heel apart om hier alleen te zitten. Aan de andere kant heb ik het gevoel dat ik de hele wereld aan kan haha! Eet smakelijk🤗Read more

    • Day 6

      Chartres Cathedral

      October 18, 2023 in France ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F

      Chartres Cathedral, also known as the Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Chartres, was constructed between 1194-1220. Four earlier cathedrals, the first of which dates to the 4th century, were all destroyed by fire.

      Legend has it that in the 800s the church acquired the Sancta Camisa, the tunic said to have been worn by Mary at the time of Jesus's birth. Because of this holy relic, the church became a popular pilgrimage site.

      The 167 stained glass windows of Chartres Cathedral are the most complete group surviving anywhere from the Middle Ages. Several windows date to the mid-12th century while over 150 survive from the early 13th century.
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    • Day 10

      Chartres Cathedral

      September 21, 2019 in France ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

      As cathedrals go this one rates pretty well on the Douglas' cathedral rating scheme. It was free (big one), they provided a bit of interesting background (but not too much), beautiful windows not too crowded and some interesting restoration work in progress. We happily mosied about finding interesting odds and sods for quite a while.Read more

    • Day 335

      Twin towers still standing

      September 27, 2019 in France ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

      OK so there is one other reason to visit Chartres: Notre-Dame de Chartres. The cathedral is UNESCO World Heritage listed rightly because it is a well preserved example of High Gothic style building.
      It was built following a fire that destroyed most of the previous Merovingian church in 1194, the new choir being complete by 1221 and the whole building consecrated in 1260.
      Everyone takes the same photo of the West façade built around the middle of the 12th century and its 2 asymmetric towers, but I couldn't resist yet another copy.
      A taste of the rest is provided, but judging by the half a dozen photo-tourists following me around to take the same shots from exactly the spot where I took mine, I suspect that they are no more unique than the tower shot.
      Like the priests house - you would expect no les for a Bishop.
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    • Day 335

      Cowspiracy?

      September 27, 2019 in France ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

      The trend nowadays is to vegetarianism and an up-to-date town council doesn't declare itself to be a 'Nuclear Free Zone' but a 'Beef Free Zone'.
      Or maybe its just that this has been and continues to be a major sheep farming area.

      Churches everywhere in Normandy. St Leonards (built 1520-1540) at La Pyle is one such example. Note to campers: there is a tap in the yard which actually works so you can fill your water bottles.
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    • Day 2

      Kathedrale von Chartres

      September 9, 2023 in France ⋅ ☀️ 32 °C

      Das riesige gotische Bauwerk stammt aus dem 12. Jahrhundert und die umfangreichen Renovierungsarbeiten sind weitestgehend abgeschlossen. Ein Teil der Kirche ist inklusive der Fenster noch unrenoviert in eine dunkle Patina gehüllt, der überwiegende Teil jedoch ist ganz wunderbar restauriert und präsentiert sich in strahlendem Glanz, die herrlichen Fenster in klaren Farben. Zu seinen architektonischen Highlights gehören die beiden ungleichen Kirchtürme, einer im romanischen, der andere im gotischen Stil. In der Kathedrale ist übrigens auch die Tunika ausgestellt, die Maria bei der Geburt Jesu getragen haben soll.

      Das Anfang des 13. Jahrhunderts gefertigte Labyrinth aus schwarzen und grauen Steinplatten ist im Fußboden der Kathedrale eingearbeitet. Es misst über 12 Meter im Durchmesser und ist ein 261,50 m langer Weg, der sich durch 11 konzentrische Kreise und 34 Kehren zum Zentrum windet. Die Anzahl der Steinplatten, die den Weg bilden, wird nach offizieller Darstellung der örtlichen Bauhütte mit 273 angegeben. Leider kann man den Weg nicht gehen, weil die Kirchenbestuhlung darauf steht.

      Vom nördlichen Turm aus hätte man übrigens einen atemberaubenden Blick über die Stadt und darüber hinaus.
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    • Day 5

      Chartres

      July 24, 2023 in France ⋅ ☁️ 22 °C

      To Chartres for the day to see the cathedral and its famous stained glass windows. We prayed Holy Mass in the crypt first and then had a tour of the cathedral. This place also houses a relic of the Blessed Virgin Mary, which is believed to be the veil she wore when she gave birth to Jesus.Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Arrondissement de Chartres

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