Monday, November 7, 2011

Franch (Visit Collioure, Languedoc-Roussillon)


 Visit Collioure, Languedoc-Roussillon

Collioure is found on the Languedoc coast, just north of the border with Spain on the 'Vermeille Coast', and was historically a small fishing village.
After time as an an important military centre, Collioure began to attract the artistic community in the early 20th century including such renowned artists as Matisse and Derain, and is now a very popular destination with tourists. Collioure has a lively town centre with some interesting historical monuments to discover and a popular local beach. With the castle and church creating an impressive backdrop, the beach and harbour are among the most scenic in Languedoc-Roussillon.

Exploring Collioure

Collioure is by far the most attractive town on this stretch of the Mediterranean coast and is definitely not to be missed. Walking round the sea-front there are the wonderful sights of the castle and the church of Notre Dame des Anges to admire and as you wander along the Boulevard du Boramar between the two there are lots of lovely seaside bars and restaurants to tempt you. Head uphill into the town itself and the narrow streets are charming. The houses are painted in lovely pastel shades with painted shutters and many are bedecked with trailing bougainvillea and vibrant blue plumbagos.
Out of season the market days are particularly nice days to visit the town. These are on Wednesday and Saturday mornings. In peak season it is very difficult to find a parking space in Collioure on a non-market day and even harder on market days.

For those of you looking for nightlife a little different to the UK scene there is an outdoor disco, L'Indigo, from mid May to mid Sept from 11pm to 4.30am.
The Church of Notre-Dame-des-Anges stands on a small peninsula in the sea. The belltower of the church was the town lighthouse in medieval times, with a church then built next to it in the 17th century.
Later, when the harbour was no longer used as a port, the lighthouse was incorporated as the church belltower. The domed cupola (in an Italian style) was added early in the 19th century.
The interior of the church has a huge carved wooden altarpiece covered in gold leaf.
The Royal Castle of Collioure, Le Chateau Royal, dominates the seafront at the southern end of the harbour. The site has had a castle since as early as the 7th century, but the building we see today was constructed in the 13th century, with additions until the 17th century.
Once occupied by the templars, the castle then became a royal household for the Kings of Majorca (Collioure was not yet part of France at this time) before being transformed into an important Spanish border fortress at the end of the 15th century.
In the 17th century the French military engineer Vauban added further substantial fortifications, resulting in the castle that we see today. These extensive works required a substantial increase in space, and much of the original medieval town of Collioure was destroyed in 1671 to make way for the expanded castle.
Le More is the old fishing village whose narrow cobbled streets and pretty pastel-painted houses  are a pleasure to explore.


Another way to explore the town is to pick up a leaflet with the 'path of fauvism' which leads you around 20 sites in the village where Henri Matisse and André Derain painted whilst staying in Collioure. At each of these places there is a reproduction of the painting so that you can compare the painting with the scene in the painting.
Matisse and Derain were not the only painters to spend time in Collioure; Picasso, Dufy, Marquet and many others have also painted here and Collioure remains an artists town with around thirty different artists currently living and painting in the town. The Museum of Modern Art (Musée Peské) in Collioure contains many modern and contemporary works including works by Cocteau, Descossy and  Pignon. The museum is on the Route de Port Vendres and charges only a small sum for entry.
Fans of Patrick O'Brien's sea-faring novels will be interested to know that he wrote almost all of his books whilst living in Colliour. He lived here from 1949 untill his death in 2000 (apart from a couple of winters in Dublin where he died) and is buried in Collioure.
Above the town is the Fort Miradou, built in the 15th century, destroyed and rebuilt by Vauban. It is now occupied by the army and not open to the public. Further out of town facing the sea are these two fortresses built in the 18th century - Fort Carré and Fort Rond.
Le Couvent et le Cloitre des Dominicains
On the southern edge of town the monastery was built in the 13th century. In recent years the cloister has had a chequered history. It became the home of a co-operative wine seller but was sold in an illegal art sale to the Atlantic town of Anglet. When this was discovered it was bought back in 1992 and rebuilt in the gardens of the Modern Art Mueum.
Anchovies has been a one of Collioure's key industries for centuries.  Because of the importance of anchovies in the local commerce and the local cuisine Collioure has been awarded the 'site remarquable du gout', or' award of culinary excellence'. The anchovies are prepared in lots of different ways and you can sample them in various different shops in Collioure.
After exploring the town return to the seafront to try one of the seafood restaurants along the waterfront in Collioure - their anchovies are especially recommended.


 
Collioure has been a trading port since 673 and the village began to develop more fully in the 10th century. Between 1276 and 1344 it was a summer residence for the court of Majorca. Later in the 13th century it was visited by crusaders ranging from the Knights Templars to the Dominicans. Though Collioure spent some time as a Spanish town it was French in the mid 17th century and at this time Vauban added to the defenses of Colliure.

To visit near Collioure

A popular local site is the 13th century Madeloc Tower that stands high (650 metres) on the hill directly behind Collioure, and has lovely views down across the town and coastline. There are several other forts along the headlands around the town that are also of interest, such as Fort Saint Elme to the south and the Massane Tower and Fort Carré towards the north.
The oldest windmill in the region, built in the 14th century and recently fully restored, is the Moulin de la Cortina a little to the south of Collioure. This has been transformed into a mill for making oil.
The Ermitage de Notre Dame de Consolation is a pleasant 4km walk from Collioure. The chapel dates from the 15th century.
Further inland the vineyards and mountains of the region offer innumerable activities and scenic highlights.
Photos of Collioure (click any picture to start the gallery)


Suggested places to visit near Collioure
Eglise de Saint Michel (Saint-Genis-des-fontaines) - religious monument (13km) : Chapel Saint-Martin de Fenollar (Maureillas-las-Illas) - religious monument (21km) : Eglise de Notre Dame des Anges (Cabestany) - religious monument (21km) : Eglise de Trinité d'Aregno (Aregno) - religious monument (41km) : Chapelle de Casenoves (Ille-sur-tet) - religious monument (41km) : Orgued d'Ille-sur-Tet - site of natural beauty (41km) : Prieuré de Serrabone (Boule-d'Amont) - religious monument (42km) : Eglise de Sainte Marie de Marcevol (Arboussols) - religious monument (50km) :


Sunday, November 6, 2011

Taj Mahal


The Taj Mahal was built by the fifth Mughal emperor Shah Jahan in the memory of his beloved wife Mumtaz Mahal. She died in childbirth while accompanying her husband to Burhanpur to control a rebellion. The Taj Mahal was the outcome of the one of the four promises that Mumtaz Mahal extracted from Shah Jahan while she was alive. Taj Mahal symbolizes eternal love of a man for his wife. The body of the queen was buried temporarily in the Zainabadi Garden in Burhanpur and moved to Agra after six months.
The land on which the Taj Mahal was built was acquired from Raja Jai Singh. The construction began in 1631 AD and completed in 22 years. 20,000 labors and artisans were employed for the work. The material for the mausoleum was brought from all over India and central Asia. The Iranian architect Ustad Isa designed the structure.
Visit these Sites for update Information

 

Historical places in Maharashtra, Mumbai city


These Buddhist, Jain, and Hindu cave temples are marvels of Indian architecture, carved out of rock in the hills. Apart from all these historical places in Maharashtra, Mumbai city also has a rich history. The city has some remarkable colonial architecture and monuments including the Victoria Terminus. The city was originally inhabited by Koli fishermen and was later handed over to Britishers. Hyderabad, the imperial capital of the Nizams, is one of the known India historical places including the grand monuments of Charminar, Golconda Fort, the Qutab Shahi Tombs, and the Falaknuma Palace. History and modernity coexist in this city, where a mixture of religions, cultures, and architectural styles come together to create one of the most interesting historical places in India.
Among the other historical places in India, the temples of Khajuraho in Madhya Pradesh, Konarak in Orissa and Meenakshi temples in Madurai have their own significance. The Khajuraho Temples were built during the reign of the Chandella dynasty in the years 950 and 1050 A.D. The temples are recognized worldwide for the excellence of their sculptures and for the erotic carvings on the temple walls. The Khajuraho temples are one of the most visited and studied historical places in India. The magnificent sun temple of Konarak in Orissa was built in the 13th century. This historical monument is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and an architectural marvel, in this historical place in Eastern India. The popular Meenashi Temple is situated in Madurai, which was at one time a busy port under Chola, Pandya, and Nayaka rulers. The city continues to be an important town in Tamil Nadu and one of the most fascinating historical places in India.Mahabalipuram is also an important historical place in South India, the city flourished as an artistic center of the Pallava dynasty. The main highlights of the city are the five chariot shaped temples or rathas, the shore temple and the carved depictions of episodes from the Mahabharata.Varanasi, one of the oldest cities in India is famous for its ceremonial Ghats, archaeological museum, and the many temples which make it a unique city where history is very much a part of daily life. Varanasi is one of the most important religious and historical places in India. Bodhagaya in Bihar is one of the known historical places in India, which has close association with Gautama Buddha, the founder of Buddhism. Buddhist pilgrims from around the world, travel to the historical places in India associated with Buddha's life, including Bodhagaya, the site where Buddha gained enlightenment.

Historical Places in India


India is a land with a rich and varied history. Many different rulers, dynasties, and empires have fought over and controlled different parts of the Indian subcontinent during its eventful history. The various rulers and dynasties left behind their legacy in the form of grand monuments and buildings, in different historical places in India.
Most of India's cities have a history worth exploring, for the tales of the past are truly fascinating. The various monuments including palaces, forts, victory pillars and tombs in different historical places in India, tell glorious stories of India's fascinating history.
The capital city of Delhi was originally the capital of the Tomara clan in the 11th century A.D and later it became the capital of the Mughals. The city has some of the famous historical monuments; out of which some were built by the Mughals and the Britishers. Red Fort, Jama Masjid, Humayun's Tomb, Rashtrapati Bhawan, and Parliament House are the main monuments in Delhi, depicting its ancient history. Monuments of Prithviraj Chauhan, the Lodi Tombs, and the Siri Fort of Allauddin Khilji are some of the other monuments that you can see on your tour to Delhi.Neighboring Delhi is the city of Agra well known as the imperial capital of the Mughal Empire. City of Agra got its real grace during the reign of Shah Jahan. In 1631,the Mughal ruler built the beautiful mausoleum of Taj Mahal, in the memory of his consort Mumtaz Mahal. The monument is still an inspiration for true lovers. The historical city of Agra also has many other Mughal monuments like the Agra Fort, the tomb of Itimad-ud-Daulah, and Akbar's fort at Sikandra.
The Royal state of Rajasthan offers many grand palaces and forts, which are part of the heritage of India. The capital city of Jaipur is one of the most visited historical places in India. The pink city was built by the astronomer King Sawaii Jai Singh in 1727 and endowed with grand palaces and magnificent forts. The Hawa Mahal, City Palace, Amber Fort and Jantar Mantar make Jaipur a must visit historical destination in India. The city of Jaisalmer is dotted with many magnificent golden fortresses, historic carved havelis, windswept sand dunes, and desert festivals, which depict the traditional culture of Rajasthan.Udaipur is popular for its lake palaces which are historic and architectural gems of Rajasthan.The city is a popular historical place in India. The majestic Mehrangarh Fort and Umaid Bhawan Palace represent the city of Jodhpur, which is known for its magnificent palaces. The city was previously the princely state of Marwar. Jodhpur is one of the historical places in India where history can be seen even today. Another city in Rajasthan famous for its history and unequalled sacrifice is the city of Chittorgarh; this historical place in India has seen many battles and acts of heroic sacrifice.
Aurangabad, located in Maharashtra on India's west coast was known for being the capital of the Tughlaq Empire during the reign of Muhammed-bin-Tughlaq.Devagiri Fort is a known historical monument situated in Aurangabad.The city is close to the cave temples of Ajanta and Ellora which form very important historical places in India.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

In Greek


In Greek mythology, Delphi was the home of the Delphic oracle. It was also a major site for the worship of Apollo after he slew the Python. The Temple of Apollo is one of the most recognizable ruins at Delphi (and is shown in multiple photos below). Delphi was also the site of the Pythian Games, one of the precursors of the Modern Olympics.

Santorini


Santorini is a circular archipelago of volcanic islands in the Aegean Sea. It’s what’s left of a giant volcanic explosion that destroyed the earliest settlements. Originally, Santorini was a single island, but the volcano left a giant caldera that is now open to the Aegean Sea. There are no rivers on the islands and water has traditionally come from rain runoff collected in cisterns (though there’s now a desalinization plant on the island).

Athens


Athens is the capital of Greece and its largest city. It’s also one of the oldest cities in the world, with a recorded history of roughly 3400 years. Classically, Athens was a very powerful city-state within the Greek empire and is credited as the birthplace of democracy and the cradle of Western civilization. It was host to the first modern-day Olympic games and had previously been host to the ancient games.

Greece


Greece is one of the most beautiful countries in the world. Greece was one of the first places civilization took hold in Europe and is therefore the birthplace of many things we’re familiar with, including the Olympic Games, Western philosophy, democracy, political science, and Western literature and drama. Surrounded by the Aegean Sea on the East, the Mediterranean on the South and the Ionian Sea to the West, it’s made up of a mainland and more than a thousand islands (227 of which are inhabited).
Obviously, the sea has a huge influence on Greek life and culture, but Greece is also one of the most mountainous countries in Europe, with 80% of its land area covered by mountains. The climate of Greece is varied, with Alpine, Mediterranean and temperate zones. It’s a breathtakingly beautiful country, with varied terrain and plenty of photo-worthy features
Below are collection of beautiful places and photos of Greece, covering its architecture, mountains, cities, ruins, and seas. There’s plenty of material there to inspire your designs and get your creative gears turning.

(European) Mission Andrew Eagle

The only tourists, a European couple and I, found ourselves completing a two-hundred-and-thirty-eight year late mission to the mission. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, we had the ruins of the Jesuit mission, and the atmosphere at least of their later master, the brave jungle, all to ourselves.
Argentine coaches run on luxury and faith: seats recline bedlike, there's onboard service, coffee and dinner; and we played bingo at a ludicrously unsafe speed. The Virgin guides, neatly cut in plastic and dangling in the middle of the windscreen or three dimensional and blue-tacked, dashboard-centre. When dangling she leans through curves and she stands steadfast when blue-tacked.

The only thing Argentine coach-people don't do is lift your luggage in and out of the undercarriage, as there are, what might be called in Spanish, bagpickerupistas for that. Self-appointed, they cluster in fluorescent red vests, when they can be bothered, wait for a bus to pull up or prepare to depart and swoop, broad-shouldered and luggage threatening, like vultures smelling carrion. They covet pesos, focus on your worldly possessions and the attendants who serve the Virgin above are fearful.
'I cannot be held responsible for your luggage,' a pickerupista said as I was caught loading it myself, at least it's what I understood from the Spanish sentence with responsibilidad in its midst. Whatever the exact translation, it was half-warning, half-threat and quite possibly a self-enacted prophecy.
Several hours later, exhausted at five a.m. the Virgin left me in village San Ignacio with no luggage mafia in sight. To celebrate I would have put on my own fluorescent vest, had I had one, and given myself a peso but it was probably enough my luggage was still with me. There was nothing to do but sit on hotel steps in the misty rainy pre-morning silence, feeling oddly secure and trusting dawn to eventually and safely arrive. Argentina is a country where it's easy to feel relaxed.
With daylight barely having dimmed the darkness, teenagers glided by on bicycles and called to each other; while a dog in the gutter raised its head to signal the arrival of morning. Then a car pulled up beside me. I was ready for anything: alone, incompetent in Spanish, barely awake and yet I had the hope of the Virgin of the plastic with me and the ease of Argentina. Still, if that driver wanted trouble then trouble he'd find. He walked up, threw a buenos dias my way and audaciously slipped a newspaper under the hotel door, which was just as well for at best I had not more than bravado and a lack of a plan. The car drove away and Argentina returned.
By mid-morning I was settled and the heavens were being kind: the rain had stopped. I wandered, searching, up the small hill to where ordinary village became souvenir central, with woven cloth, wooden animals, crucifixes and sets of those cups and metal straws for that Argentine alternative to coffee and tea called yerba maté, for which many Argentines spend their days carrying around a thermos flask, periodically adding hot water to refresh the brew. There were belts too, made from the leather of the world's largest rodents, called capybaras. Shoddily clad children sought alms amidst the vendors as it was Sunday and school was out.
The Ruins of San Ignacio Mini Jesuit Mission.
The World's largest rodent, the capybara is suitable for leather goods, Photos: Courtesy.
With the conquistadors had come Jesuits, purse-lipped and self-assured, to South America to convert heathens: that's the history. They set up thirty-odd missions in the tri-border area, Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and while many indigenous peoples were hostile the peaceful Guaraní were found to be conversion ripe. Thousands were herded from traditional lives, escaping Spanish and Portuguese slavers but not European diseases, with the survivors taught handicraft and work skills: all things Christian all things good. Over time the Jesuits grew wealthy, which concerned the local Spanish and Portuguese, and, with the resulting admixture of economics and politics, the Order was ultimately expelled from the South American continent in 1768, when the missions disappeared into jungle, a hundred years forgotten.
The Europeans picked up a guide but I preferred imagination, as facts can have a habit of obscuring atmosphere and would add little if they were in Spanish. The site was large, roofless brick and sandstone rot with tropical trees, grass lawns and cleared-jungle red soil. Strangler figs swallowed the ruins: the ferns, moss, orchids and countless other plants in that sombre stone garden were still taking benefit from long ago Guaraní toil. At the cathedral were angels, logos carved into the sandstone doorway arch that kept me dry as reborn drizzle grew into rain. There were colonnaded courtyards, rows of simpler dwellings where Guaraní must have lived and a storage cellar for supplies.
A policeman patrolled, either protecting the ruins from me and the two Europeans or protecting us from the ruins. Whatever the objective, it was achieved by carrying a gun and plucking fruit from wild citrus trees, sampling Jesuit lemons and oranges. It was the sort of duty that would make a Dhaka traffic cop weep for joy. In that quiet place, he had all the ease of Argentina.
As I observed my first living yerba maté tree I considered pinching an old stone Buddha head from somewhere in Thailand and transplanting it there.
Somewhere in the mossy bricks was a story about how humans used to think, still do, a story of Jesuit tragedy. They must have at least partially believed they were civilising the Guaraní by displacing culture and identity, the things that really civilise. There's Guaraní tragedy too, seduced by fancy European inventions and Jesuit words, probably they sacrificed culture willingly, understanding little of the sacrifice and less what would replace it; and knowing nothing of measles or pox, those diseases to which they had no prior immunity.
It is not unlike that global process of homogenisation still rampant in large swathes of the world: production and consumerism, modernity, anything to be western, whatever that means; how to be still more western. At least those were the thoughts the site conjured in my mind.
And there was nature's rawness. However impressive man's obsessions, constructions and plans, eventually it all returns to the jungle, with logic lines recast into nature's curves by a strangler fig and a patch of moss, beginning a new past, with maps redrawn.

( Bangladesh) Ada Chai forest station looked forlorn in this deep forest

The temple at last


Ada Chai forest station looked forlorn in this deep forest -- an outstation with a pale existence. We walked down a long wooden pier that had developed gaping holes through its rotten wood planks. At the end of it was the wooden station its planks blacked by continuous rain, damp, musty smell hanging in the air. The lanterns could hardly beat the gloom of the gathering dusk as we entered the ramshackle station. The dampness enters your inside and you feel dizzy. I was taken aback by the unbelievably sorry living condition of the foresters.

(Bangladesh) Naturally Narail

Naturally Narail


WE were supposed to visit Narail months ago. But then many moons moaned by and all our plans collapsed one after another for one reason or another. Finally when we found time, it began with a disaster.

Bangladesh visit (Cambodia by Bicycle)

Cambodia by Bicycle

"Whenever you see three Cambodians, remember the fourth one who was killed by the Khmer Rouge.” A friend shared this sobering thought on the eve of a special adventure I was about to embark on: a bicycling trip from Bangkok to Angkor Wat in Cambodia. While this undercurrent of sadness was a part of the trip, my adventure was also filled with unexpected challenges, friendly people, and awe at seeing the magnificent ruins at Angkor.
After spending our first day (March 14) cycling in Thailand, we reached the Cambodian border at Prum at noon of the second day. We bicycled onward 17 km to Pailin and stopped there for the night. Pailin is famous for two things: sapphire mines nearby and several retired Khmer Rouge officials. Luckily I did not run into the latter while exploring the town in the afternoon. The streets of Pailin were torn up for installing sewage pipes and it was dusty and hot. Many more children than I had seen in Thailand played in the streets. The market reminded me of the bazaars of the smaller towns of Bangladesh, with the vendors waiting with their offerings while their children entertained.
The next day was our most difficult: 92km from Pailin to Battambang, the second largest town of Cambodia. Expecting another hot day (mid-30s) we started bicycling at 7am. Having braved Dhaka's traffic and shattered roads for many years, riding through Pailin's potholes was easy for me. But just outside the town I ran into trouble. That's because we started climbing the foothills of the Cardamom Mountains.

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