Sicily is known for “the Mafia”. I read the term “Mafia” came from Garibaldi in the 1860`s when he entered Sicily near Marsala. He saw these fighters not happy with the unification with Italy in a cave who were ferocious fighters. The term means “bold men”. That was the story anyway. Do some more walking around Palermo and you will find the Anti-Mafia memorial. It highlights the famous bandit Giuliano who, according to the son of Conte Federico, kidnapped his father and grandfather, returning the 4 year old father in 4 days and keeping the grandfather, the current Conte Federico for a few months for ransom which was paid. Now the anti-mafia movement is so strong young people feel they are able to manage businesses without interference from gangsters. There are now so many tourists in Palermo there seems to be no indication of safety issues. I feel more safe here than in San Francisco.
These are the brave people who worked to rid Italians of the MafiaThe bandit Giuliano proposed to President Roosevelt making Sicily a US state. This is the translator’s`s summary of the proposal.People carrying caskets of those murdered by Giulianoworking conditions in mines operated by gangstersNarrow local streetsinteresting facadeBeautiful buildingSicily cathedralCathedral frontLyceum of the previous King. I could not enter, told it was fullIt means *sanitary”
The following are on a wall celebrating the brave people who opposed the Mafia.
An old kioskIt was a tobacco kioskPalermo theaterSome local attractions Do you recognize this actress? Hint: “roman holiday”a very delicious pasta lunchturtles in the pondThe ancient temple in PalermoInteresting to see the Jewish candelabraEtruscan urnAn information plaque on an outside wallThe massive post and telegraph office. We know where the money was.Limoncello is the italian specialty. It is often offered to “preferred” customers at restaurants after the meal. I was offered 2 times.
Hopping around Paris you will see really interesting things and experience many interesting people. Remember to always greet people every time you meet them and to leave with a greeting as well. You can find many interesting museums to visit at one which I recommend. It explains the Dreyfus affair.
Watch out for the deadly anglesYou can take a trip on the river SeineWhat do you think would be hiding in the blanket. Actually it’s a miniature pincer that wants to keep warm in the cool of ParisWe see something hiding here too It’s a Jack Russell with a head cone to keep it from licking a woundA typical arcade with a café outsideAn old Peugeot where everybody can take photosA tower of somebody famous Enjoying a large space looking at the Concorde Hopping around Paris managing the dogA great portraitA famous clock chimeHawaiian Poké bowl is even a thing in Paris The two dogs on a walk but I can’t reject ice creamStreet Art is not allowed Lady liberty Fresh fruit and vegetables everywhere Typical Paris CaféI had to have tiramisuI just liked this paintingDreyfus was accused of treason, and easy target to be framed partly because he was Jewish. But after five years the person who framed him confessed. You can visit this museum which has many artifacts of the Jewish presence in France.The front of the Dreyfus museum One piece of street art which is all over the city Notre Dame is now complete and available for visits free of chargea very impressive pulpit an interesting design for pipe organit was very crowded inside my friend noted that before the fire the inside of Notre Dame was very dark due to dirt and suit and hundreds of years of aging. Now it is clean and brightSome priests were gathered a beautiful design with the ceilings in the Royal French blueThe place is huge I’m not French so I guess I am not a bastard. This is a famous French bakeryThe Jack Russell stancea wonderful dessert thoroughly aged in BrandyMy first croissant in France. It is so much different than what a croissant in the US taste like. A beautiful park with a bridge whose foundation is crumbling and needs reconstruction Roast duck whiz cheese mashed potatoes. The best mashed potatoes I ever hada great restaurant. I highly recommend it a nice wine With King you could pile on all the blankets and pillows and she wouldn’t minda dog made of sandDog parking outside the storePicasso Museum an interesting interpretation I found this very interesting. It reminds me of the day of the dead in MexicoLooking out the Picasso Museum Picasso worked in many genres. He was more versatile than I had ever imagined. You should visit this museum to get a good perspective of his versatility.The famous goat
the Palermo Royal Palace is definitely a “must see” place in the city. You should make time to spend a couple hours there. There might be a different exhibit going on when you visit. I noticed that in many of the palaces which were given up by the owners for financial reasons have been turned into exhibition places, a great chance for the public to see all different kinds of interesting things.
MATERIALS. wood, metal, leather, textiles (among them velvet and damask), stucco, gold and silver foil. On April 3r’, 1766 the Golden Carriage of the Prince of Butera, 1st Peer of the Kingdom of Sicily, opens the sumptuous procession of the 120 Peers of the Kingdom, for the inauguration of the oldest Parliament in the world. The carriage, on the occasion of the “gallery with dance party” organized in the halls of the Royal Palace, parades through the city streets. In the 19th century its restoration is commissioned by Pietro Lanza e Branciforte, Prince of Trabia and of Butera; it is then abandoned, dismantled and stored in the Palazzo Butera warehouses. In 1952 it is reassembled by the production of Panaria Film on the occasion of the realization of the film “La Carrozza d’Oro” (“The Golden Carriage”) by Jean Renoir, with Anna Magnani, a great actress and unsurpassable performer and Rossano Brazzi; the film, produced by the Sicilian film company, is the first ever made in Technicolor. In the same year the carriage, taken to the Venice Festival, is used by Anna Magnani to inaugurate the event, giving great European and international visibility to the city of Palermo. The Carriage was never placed in and exhibited in a city museum. In 1968 the Golden Carriage is purchased, according to the wish of then President of the Sicilian Regional Assembly Rosario Lanza, from a group of antique dealers, who had previously bought it from the heirs of Pietro Lanza e Branciforte.
this reminded me of the large Bodie trees in India and Southeast Asia.Palermo Royal Palace Garden
The urban fortifications underneath the Duke of Montalto Halls. The huge defensive structures, visible here, were discovered in 1984 during an emergency intervention carried out by the Superintendence fe Archaeology of Palermo, under the direction of Rosalia Camerate Scovazzo. They pertain to three different phases concerning the fortifications o Palermo and include a gate to the town connecting the urban road network to the peri-urban territory and, in ancient times, to the area where the necropolis stood. This extraordinary concentration of defensive works can be explained by the fact that this area was of great importance in the control of Palermo as it was the most exposed and accessible side compared to the other sides protected by the rivers Kemonia and Papireto The oldest fortifications were built using a very regular technique of carefully squared blocks, and placed without the use of mortar. Along them is the town gate, 5.18 m wide, flanked by two towers, and a poster, 0.90 m wide, flanked by a small tower. They are a segment of the Punic Panormos fortifications, dating back, according to some scholars, to the middle of the V century B.C., or to the IV/III century according to some others comparing it to the walls of Selinunte’s first Hellenistic age Later, the defences were strengthened through the construction of a new wall, leant over the previous one and made of big irregular blocks (up to 1.80 m), placed, as in the previous case, without the use of mortar and stuffed with stones. The town gate was made smaller (2.50 m) and covered by an arch; the postern was closed. These works have been dated back to the first half of the Ill century B.C., that is, during the decades preceding the First Punic war (264-241 B.C.) and they are explained by the need to adapt the town defences to the new siege techniques and to the use of war machines. These new walls protected the town for a long time, until the Islamic age; according to some scholars this town gate can be identified as one of Balarm’s gates the Arab geographers talk about, the Bab Ibn Qurhub (Gate of Ibn Qurhub) or the Bãb al-Riyad (Gate to the Gardens). During the late Islamic age or during the Norman age, between the late XI and the first half of the XII century, major transformations were carried out: the gate was closed, so modifying the access routes into the town, and a new defensive line was built running parallel with the previous ones, to which it was connected through some section walls, probably counterforts. The new fortifications were made of medium sized ashlars cemented by abundant lime mortar. Elena Pezzini
a decorated cart probably for ceremonies I just found this painting very interestingThe Royal entrance
The King Roger’s Hall is a rectangular hall covered with a cross vault supported by arcs and marble pillars, with re-used Corinthian capitals. There were originally two double lancet windows on the east side and three lancet windows on the north side. Using high 3D technol-ogy, recent studies confirmed this plan. All the walls are covered by white marble slabs, with a frame in the middle, and gold ground mosaics on the top. The mosaics may be contemporary with the ones from the Palatine Chapel, but they represent pagan themes without any reference to Christian allegories. The mosaics all represent the Genoard, the Zisa’s big garden, full of trees, animals, and hunting scenes. At the centre of the vault there is an eagle, symbol of power and nobility, killing with its claws a rabbit, symbol of cowardice. All these images are inspired by middle-east models. The floor was replaced manyfold times through the centuries, but it contains some original parts in porphyry. It is difficult to conjecture how it originally was used: the room was built by the first Norman king, Roger II, and it may have been destined for his leisure activities or as a bedroom or dining room. G.B. Scaduto Traduzione a cura di Giulia Rullo e Paola Torre
Ceiling decorations The skylight The Chinese room Sterilized calligraphy I was told by the future conte Federico that the eagle is from German heritage
The Pisan Tower is to be considered as the core of the Norman power within the Royal Palace, and the manifesto of the monarchs’ political success in the town. The tower considerable size is probably due to the fact that it served as a donjon, a military role it played from the Norman period to the times when it was called “turri mastra” (master tower) by the architect Ferramolino in the XVI century. The Pisan Tower was probably built under the reign of Roger II of Hauteville, and definitely before the construction of the Palatine Chapel. Its “double shell” structure was inspired by some northern Africa buildings like the XI century Qasr al-Manãr at the Qal’a of Beni Hammad. Inside, the Pisan Tower central room, more than 15 meters high, with its large window and its surmounting porthole, inspired deference in those who went to meet the king. In fact, the mosaics covering the walls (of which only some fragments full of gaps remain today) narrated of battles glorifying the Hautevilles and the king. This repertory of figures was supplemented by phytomorphic elements, which can be compared with others in Roger Il’s Hall. It is probable that, at the time of Frederick II, in this solemn place, used as throne room by the Norman and Swabian kings, where Eastern and Western Mediterranean cultures met, important verses were written which contributed to the spreading of the Italian language through the Sicilian School of Poetry.
The dining hall This is obviously used for a community official meeting room
The Norman and Swabian pottery. Norman pottery in Sicily is linked to the Islamic age production, their common features being, for example, the technique used or the persistence of some shapes. The similarities between the artefacts of the two periods show that the Muslim potters still worked even under the Norman rule, and as a consequence, the knowledge and expertise of the Islamic artisanal tradition were handed down to the pottery production of the following age; but, compared to the variety of the Islamic age, the shapes and decorations were simpler. Between the late XI and the early XII century A.D., the typical shape is a deep hemispherical glazed bowl with a short brim’s edge that, according to some scholars, was already produced during the Islamic age, between the late X and the first half of the XI century A.D., alongside the more numerous open and carinated shapes. These vases show a transparent or green glaze of modest quality, and few brown elements; or they are colourless, with or without a surface discolouration. During the Norman age the bowls sides and brims get thicker and thicker and they show a recurring decoration, a plait or leaf pattern. Moreover, during the late Norman age, there is a production of green glazes with a furrow decoration performed before the firing. The. spreading of this kind of products over various areas, mainly along the. Tyrrhenian coasts, is supported by documentary evidence. In Sicily, the connections with the Byzantine Empire are attested by the rare presence of yellow, on engobe, glazed pottery, with a graffiti decoration. Starting from the late XII century A.D. and during the first three quarters of the XIII, brown and green pottery decorated with spirals arrives from Campania, later imitated by the Sicilian potters whose products only show green decorations. From Tunisia comes the “cobalt and manganese” pottery, painted in brown and blue over a white enamel, and from Liguria comes the so-called “graffita arcaica tirrenica” pottery. Carla Aleo Nero, Monica Chiovaro
Beautiful ceiling Three styles of carriages at the Palermo Royal PalaceThe foundation to preserve this palace is named after the Norman Kings
Palermo’s fortifications. during the Norman-Swabian age. On January 10, 1072 the Normans, after a six-month siege, conquered Madinat Sigilliya. The conquest accounts seem to indicate that «high walls» closed in a single defensive line the whole town perimeter and that a further defence were Balarm’s huge fortifications. Yet, some scholars date Palermo’s wide outer walls circumference to the Norman age. However, Norman Palermo had a complex fortified system that was the result of various interventions and which was made up of several defensive structures: a wide surrounding outer wall; Balarm’s walls that kept their defensive function and helped maintain the control over the territory and that had also a function of internal barrage in a town where conflicts were common; a further fortified area within Balarm, called Galka, probably the Norman kings’ palatine town; two castles, the Castrum superius, corresponding to the Royal Palace, and the Castrum inferius or Castello a Mare. The large outer town wall surrounded the whole urban area, which included Panormos-Balarm, called al-Qasr (the “castle”, “palace” or “fortress”) al-qadim (old”), and what the Norman age writers call the village, corresponding to the Khãlisa and to some quarters that developed during the Islamic age. The external wall measured little less than it measured in 1493 when it was «Surrounded […] by a string […] and it measured 3,253 canne» (that is 6.5 kms). In fact, it underwent several reconstructions, but its course was not changed, until the XVI century A.D. We know from al-Idrisi’s Book of Roger. (1154), that the town walls were «equipped with a wall, a moat and a shelter», and so, apart from the high wall, there were a moat and a rampart. Its average height was of 10 metres, it was strengthened by towers and along it opened at least 10 gates, placed where the main road axes were. The wall remains belong to different periods. Those ascribed to the Norman age seem to have been built with a double face made up of small squared blocks, bound by lime mortar and stuffed with shapeless stones and lime mortar and they are a little more than 2 metres thick. In the course of the centuries, the outer wall underwent important restoration works, the curtains were repaired and new towers were built. The wall made up of small blocks bound by lime mortar preserved in the archaeological area of the Royal Palace (stage Ill) has been related to the construction of the outer wall or to the construction of the Normans’ Castle. As it seems, the Swabians did not make any important changes to this fortified system. Traces of interventions dating back to Frederick Il’s age can be located on the so-called Master Tower and on the Castello a Mare. Elena Pezzini
Entrance to the chapel a long line waiting to get into the chapelInside the chapel Chapel ceiling Just to prove I was there Middle courtyard typical of many Italian PalazoDecorated cart The palace entrance were the poster promoting Erwitt photography exhibit Entrance gate
Erwitt what’s famous for his photo of Marilyn Monroe standing over the draft from the air vent below, probably the subway, which blew up her dress. The photo below is not the exact photo that’s famous but it shows a little bit more action than the more famous one. It was interesting to see his exhibition in the Palermo Royal Palace.
There is another more famous photo of Nixon talking with Khrushchev over some kitchen related equipment and dubbed the “kitchen debate”. This photo I don’t specifically remember. of course you recognize HitchcockThe last movie for Clark Gable and I think also for Marilyn MonroeThis photo I remember will Who is driving? Is it the lion?Andy WarholTypically French in the 1950sThe lady is not impressed Twins? The leap of faith? The most modern of art? Where is the beef? Where is the painting? Where’s the …. anything?
What amazed me about the city is when you’re walking around Palermo you see a lot of things that you probably don’t expect to see. Sicily has been left behind economically in comparison to other places in Italy and the tourism has not been that robust. But I see a big change in that and a great improvement and many new building projects and renovations going on. You will see some poorer parts of the city right next to a newly renovated and beautiful church or a very nicely decorated Trattoria or bar. This is a great city to walk around and to just go around the backstreet to see what you can find. You need at least three days in the center to start to see some of the interesting attractions. Here are some of them.
This is a statue being renovated at the Royal Palace a back alley restaurant with food already prepared. This is a Sicilian eggplant dish and a Limoncello with very fresh bread. The people sitting next to me were from England and we had an interesting discussion. This looks like a duk duk but the driver was playing Randy Travis country music which I found refreshing.The New gate Some well-known fellow who is dressed like a medieval Viking but it seems it might be King Philip the fifth of SpainHis crest One of the interesting Piazza with a few churches of Norman and Arabic architecture. I took a shot when the Carabinieri (national police) were driving through.Santa Catarina ChurchA good picture menu I went to a local café and they had homemade deep-fried rice balls with other stuff inside. It was a good little breakfast Street Art very close to my apartment Not much much thickness to the topping but very tasty and the crust was crunchy so deliciousThis narrow alleyway is where I often eat, near the apartment A small Piazza near my apartment These pathways became roads hundreds of years after the buildings had a foundationThis spaghetti vongole which delicious. It had a buttery tasteThis kid with the sunglasses just looked like a mover and shakerGood prices and the food is pretty goodYou can find better food somewhere in the city but for the price performance and the closeness to the apartment this has been a good choice and they are serving me well as a repeat customer Calamari with a Campari spritzI don’t think this place is open anymore. I would’ve liked to at least look at the menu Walking around Palermo I found this is my favorite café with different kinds of morning bread with coffee. I usually order café Lungo which means “long coffee”. So it’s just espresso with a little more water.This is a café LungoThe different pastry offerings at my coffee shopThis is a statue in front of the church at Piazza San DomenicoThis is a church in this Piazza which is getting a new façade it seems Trying to look more distinguished with face hair. I wonder if I will get more respect?
In Palermo you have many fascinating things to see which I never would have imagined. The last time I visited the city i was trying to enter with a rental smart car. As I got towards the entrance to the city and found a small coffee shop I stopped and walked a little bit and saw cars parked every which way on the street and the sidewalk. Not one car was free of scratches or dents. I decided I didn’t want to have a problem smashing up my rental car so I decided after the coffee not to spend time in Palermo. One very interesting tour I decided to take was the Palazzo conte Federico, the Royal palace of Count Frederick. I highly recommend this tour to you since you might get the chance to meet the prince, which is just one of his titles. You can even book to stay at the palace since it has 25 rooms including many bedrooms.
Plaque on the wall The entrance is very unassuming and looks slightly rundownThe 1930s race car often driven by Conte Federico. You can see the many sponsors of his racesYou see his name on the side of the car You can see this hubcap is clearly marked for the right sideAnd this one is marked for the left side The Federico family crest The princes mother is an equestrian and a performing professional singer this is the future count. His father is still alive and at 87 he is hoping to do some more racing. The future count has many titles depending upon the areas of land they used to own. But in the 1950s with land reform under the republic the king was exiled and the royalty had their land distributed. So the titles reflect no more land ownership except for the Palazzo. He gave us his tour.The family still lives in the palace. Here you can see some of the original but redecorated wooden ceiling. Much of the building was destroyed during the bombing of World War II.The original kitchen with the pizza oven, of course, during World War II a lot of the contents disappeared and we were told a significant amount was hidden in different places and when they went back they found nothing.This is from the original Norman Tower. The family is with origins dating back to Barbarossa and the Viking king Roger from the 900s. This tower was built in the 1100s and is one of the corners of the palace. You have to walk about 1 mile to get to the ocean now but when this tower was built the ocean came up right next to the tower and it was used for defensive purposes. here is some later decoration on the outside of the tower which is now inside the house created by Arabs and Spaniards who occupied the city at one time.
this is in Turkey not too far from Ankara. I recommend visiting here to see the history of the Hittites that would be good to hire one of the local tourist guides waiting at the place where you pay for entrance.
This town in the Champagne area is a really cute town to visit and they have a nice champagne winery to visit. Enjoy the photos with Bill Smale Adventures.
Our guy is showing us the different bottle sizes. He confirmed that the largest bottle size is not the one used to celebrate at the races.Down in the caves you can see how these bottles are stored in order to get the yeast to settle so they can extract it. Sometimes the extraction is done by hand.The shows a bottle with yeast that still needs to settle. Yeast venting As with all wine caves this one is nice and cool. It was pretty warm outside. These are the three types of grapes used for their champagne at Châlons en Champagne. Only the Chardonnay grape is used for the Blanc de Blanc.This shows their vineyards throughout the champagne area. The front entrance A parking mushroom Old houses on the river Beautiful old churchA Chinese restaurant named Angkor . I wonder if they’re playing with the Cambodian Temple complex name.Typical French perfume shop Beautiful old buildings in Châlons en ChampagneI think this lights up in the evening Making sure this building doesn’t fall while they are putting up a new building beside it.Pipe organ in Eglise Collégiale Notre-Dame-en-VauxBeautiful stained glass window The original remains from the church One of the original stone panels A memorial for war dead the map of the canal and locksThe different locks in the canals in France allow boats to travel all over the country a boat travels up to the lockThere is a control light indicating whether they should enter or waitThe boat passes the first lock and up to the administration window The boat owner ties the boat to the stanchions to make sure it’s not moving too muchWhen the lock is filled she can then untie the boat and proceed through the next lock This is the front lock gate Why not go fishing? a beautiful old building
After 10 days in Paris staying with a friendit was time to move on. I had this idea to see a number of castles and this town, Blois, France, seem to have a number of castles in the area so off I went. But when I got downtown the bus schedule seemed to be sparse for the castles. By 11:30 the buses had already left and there wouldn’t be any others until the afternoon at about four or five so I decided to spend the day walking around town. What I found was very interesting. There is a castle here built and occupied by many of the kings of France for the past 800 years and there are different kinds of architecture depending upon when the structures were built to serve the king of the time. And of course there are some interesting churches and a beautiful town with a Tudor like architecture of plaster between wooden beams and supports. So I highly recommend visiting this small and very interesting town.
Here is the explanation of the fleur-de-lis usage by the French royaltyThis is the whitest station I have seen in a long timeThis is a memorial to the 1901 to 1906 conflict possibly concerning the movement to separate church from the operations of government. In 1905 France became a secular country.I think this is the statue of the goddess Diana of wild animals and the Hunt.St. Vincent de Paul Church. I liked the Romanesque statue presentations in various parts of the church. This was a very interesting way to present figuresYou can see the preferred light blue color of the ceiling which was often used by royalty This altar was also very interesting with the various statues and the framing of the portrait in the middleThe church from the outside When you look at the hotel name “Hotel de France” it is reassuring to note that there is a hotel in France Château Royale de Blois
Blois royal château, built on a promontory high above the River Loire, forms the heart of the urban community. Around it is a bustling old town shaped by its history as a 16th-century royal town. There are several ways of getting to know Blois, a town of artistic and historic interest. You can follow itineraries indicated by brass studs on the ground, take a guided tour, or simply stroll along the streets or up and down the steps. Its diverse heritage spanning a period from the 12t to 20mh centuries, its links with. the Loire that is listed as a World Heritage site, its wide range of museums to suit all tastes, and its gardens with their breathtaking views constantly give visitors and locals alike a chance to see the town from a different angle.
The castle entrance The beautiful castle entrance decorations with a king on a horse this structure was built by François I In Blois, France and occupied by Catherine Medici. Catherine left Italy, Florence, to become a queen of France and I believe one of the Strozzi family also went to France with her. My interest in this is that my great grandmother was a Strotz from Luxembourg and my great aunt claimed they were descendants of the Strozzi family of Italy, closely tied to the Medici family. No one has proven either way the veracity of this claim by my great aunt so I am spending time here and there trying to uncover the truth.This is a really beautiful staircase The farthest structure was built by Gaston of Orleans as he laid claim to the title of King after the death of the current king. However, his nephew was born and it was decided he would become the future King, Louis the 14th, the one who built Versailles.You can see the porcupine emblem above the door which it seems indicates the ability to shoot quills and conquer any adversary. in the chapel you see this beautiful ceiling with the light blue of the French royaltyThis medieval structure as a defense battery remainsHey beautiful view of the town The square corner building is left from the medieval times. The structure was built by Louis XIIThe staircase was built recently but the inside decorations were finished before the building was suspended due to the inability of Gaston to become king and inherited enough money to finish the project
Gaston d’Orléans, the son of Henri IV and Marie de’ Medici, commissioned one of the greatest transformations that the Château underwent in the 17th century. King Louis XIII’s brother and for a long time heir to the throne, he became Count of Blois in 1626 and lived there from 1634, when he launched the construction of a huge palace. The works were directed by the architect François Mansart. In 1635, a new main building was constructed at the rear of the courtyard, taking the place of the “Perche aux Bretons” building. But in 1638 the works were brought to a halt. The birth of the Dauphin Louis (the future Louis XIV) put paid to Gaston’s status as heir to the crown and to a large proportion of the financial resources granted to him by the King. Although incomplete, the new wing is a manifesto for French Classicism. It has a projecting central pavilion, a colonnade, perfect symmetry, three storeys, each with a different classical order, and two superposed pediments, all emphasising the sense of verticality. If the project had been completed, the Louis XII and François I wings would have been razed to the ground and replaced by new buildings. Gaston set up his apartments in the François I wing rather than finish the works. He died there in 1660. The Gaston wing remained an empty shell until the Château was turned into barracks at the beginning of the 19th century.
The beautiful fireplace on the ground floor of the François structure Some remaining artifacts are displayed here but the explanation says there are not many left since quite a few if not most were badly damaged since the king had to move here and there to remain control of his realm, stashing many objects in trunks and carried by carriages.One of the remaining trunks Day to day life followed a rhythm of daily prayers. The fervently Christian King and Queen attended daily public masses in the chapel and also had an oratory in their residence to allow them to pray in private. The windows of this oratory, commissioned in 1858 by Duban from the master glassmaker Claudius Lavergne, were inspired by Michel Dumas’ sketches. The Saints shown with their symbols all had a link to Catherine de’ Medici and the Valois familv.The King’s bedroom where he used to accept visitors A beautiful view of the town A porcelain violin A very old town A former main street Church of Saint Nicholas under repair The main altar I really love this windowEach of the different alcoves had different color themes for the stained glass windows which I found to be very beautiful and creativeA display of the varying window concepts