Milford sound with Mitre peak, South Island of New Zealand?
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Milford sound with Mitre peak, South Island of New Zealand?
Thank you, it was a feeling that tropical plants and snowy mountains could be New Zealand.
https://www.twcenter.net/forums/atta...9&d=1632925284
Well done, Morty. I considered that quite hard because the only thing I found to work on was the sharktooth shape in the mountain top. Now I know a lot about mountains shaped like that all around the world :D.
Yours is quite easy but not any less pleasureable to discover. It is Felsen-Kirche in Idar-Oberstein; a church built inside a rock. Too bad I have seen of that city only what you see through the window of a train when passing through.
It is Idar-Oberstein.
It is quite a interesting town:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idar-O...Schinderhannes
Your turn.
Thanks, Morty! Here's the next one.
https://i.postimg.cc/L8xZkz4R/conundrum68.jpg
Looks like the Moselle, one of her "Schleifen".
I was busy. :D
And now i must go to bed, as in 4 1/2 hours the stupid alarm clock rings.
Ok could be Moselle river loop of Bremm?
No, not that one. This one emblematic in a sense to the state it is located in.
Hmm the Saarschleife?
Yes, that's it! Right outside Orscholz in Saarland.
Thank you :)
This will be interesting, as i had some labor to make it impossible to find the location with picture search. ^^
https://www.twcenter.net/forums/atta...3&d=1633081792
This looks like some sort of cave church. The style of the arches and bas-reliefs of knights looks more romanesque/early medieval than gothic or anything later. The Latin cross on the the upper left points to a western location rather than anything in the area of orthodox or eastern Christianity. The site looks somewhat extraordinary, though, so it may even defy these simple classifications.
Another church? I am starting to think that in despite of all that goth thing going on on the surface, Morty is a closet Christian. Or a cave Christian, if that is a thing. :tongue:
You are in the right track Indy Iskar, its a extraordinary place, on which were worshipped first the old gods, then it was an Mithraeum, then a christian place.
@Sept: Goths love buildings and places, which breathe old history, romantic decay and "magic". I love the place, not necessary because it was christian. ;)
The Felsen-Eremitage near Bad Kreuznach, the only (former) cave monastery north of the Alps.
Indeed it is the Felsen-Eremitage, but not near Bad Kreuznach, near Bretzenheim, where my paternal grandfather was born.
Felseneremitage
Among the wealth of architectural witnesses to Bretzenheim's history, the Felseneremitage (or simply Eremitage, meaning “Hermitage”; Felsen means “cliff”), a place of worship wholly hewn out of a cliff that might even date from antiquity, and that underwent a conversion in early Christian times, is held to be the greatest sightseeing feature, and to be unique north of the Alps. It is believed that its origins lie in a prehistoric place of worship or tribunal site, and that the Romans took over the site in that same function. Its Christian character was supposedly acquired by the 6th or 7th century, even if the first documentary mention of a church there dates from 1043. This and all subsequent churches were partly made of chambers hewn into the cliff, and their remnants can still be seen today. The same is so for the rooms that served as hermits’ cells or a monastic convent, which were wholly hewn out of the stone. The one such dwelling that can still be visited now (90 mē) was for a time home to several hermits or a convent of a cliffside monastery. The last dwellers, between 1716 and 1827, were hermits, who after a long vacancy had once again created here a pilgrimage place known far beyond the borders. The last hermit died in 1827, after 51 “years of service” at the age of 82. The complex can be visited throughout the year without the need of a guided tour.[13][14]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bretzenheim
Your turn.