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Date: 2008-11-01 05:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-01 05:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-01 06:36 pm (UTC):)
I love that first picture. What fantastic stone work and the arches and windows are special. Who takes care of the property?
Thanks for posting these, Tony. Looks like my kind of place.
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Date: 2008-11-01 06:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-01 08:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-01 08:44 pm (UTC)We met the on-the-spot custodians- a very friendly couple.
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Date: 2008-11-01 08:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-01 08:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-01 09:00 pm (UTC)But there's no way I would have wanted to actually live in the 15th century, fabulous dinner parties or no.
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Date: 2008-11-01 09:41 pm (UTC)I'm glad you like the photos.
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Date: 2008-11-01 09:53 pm (UTC)There's something real about the 15th century English art and architecture you photograph. Unfiltered. Authentic. Not dressed up.(A lot of French architecture is overdressed.)
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Date: 2008-11-01 10:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-01 10:46 pm (UTC)That's an interesting point you make. English castles of the period are certainly more "homely" than the average French chateau- maybe because we were further from the epicentre of the Renaissance. Scottish architecture is heavily indebted to the French- see my pictures of Falkland palace- but somehow manages to take the French forms and make them into something craggy and northern. Falkland Palace is a fairly tame example of Scottish renaissance architecture- probably because it's the earliest- but later examples of the style can be truly monstrous.
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Date: 2008-11-01 10:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-02 12:43 am (UTC)"Scottish renaissance" sounds like an oxymoron to me, but I am clearly pig-ignorant of that part of the world.
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Date: 2008-11-02 10:58 am (UTC)Wow.
Date: 2008-11-02 10:09 pm (UTC)Thank you for sharing.
Re: Wow.
Date: 2008-11-03 10:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-04 04:48 pm (UTC)There's something wonderfully creepy about those low arches; one can imagine how cold in winter--what are they? (The bottom photograph)
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Date: 2008-11-04 05:39 pm (UTC)Those are kitchen fireplaces. They're big enough to roast a whole ox or pig.
In another castle I visited there's a haunted kitchen- where a ghostly woman has been observed placing a baby in a fireplace very much like these.
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Date: 2008-11-04 05:54 pm (UTC)If one agrees with Jung's theory, that great emotional conflict leads to "markers" in terms of the archetypes, then maybe that's what happens with ghosts, too--when there's a moment of emotional upheaval, it's marked by energy-in-the-air, visible.