Martin M. Miles' photos with the keyword: stained-glass

Walsrode - Kloster Walsrode

26 May 2021 93
There is a legend around the foundation of the Walsrode Monastery by Count Wale. When the count had to leave his nearby castle he got stuck in the swamp with his wagon in the area of today's Walsrode. He saw this as a divine sign to buy the place and to found a canonesses monastery together with his wife Odelinth in the mid of the 10th century. The first abbess was probably their daughter Mechthildis. The Benedictine Rule was introduced in 1255. Due to a lightning strike the monastery burnt down in 1482 In 1528 Duke Ernst "The Confessor of Brunswick" introduced the Lutheran Reformation, but the convent refused to accept the new confession for a long time. It took up to 1570, before the convent was Lutheran throughout. In contrast to other monasteries, the monastic positions in Walsrode were reserved for the daughters of the nobility (the first "bourgeois" abbess was introduced in 1980). In 1812 Napoleon´s soldiers occupied the convent, expelled the convent ladies and sold furniture and art objects. After a year, the ladies returned to the looted convent. Today, women who have a professional and family life behind them live here as convent ladies. Prerequisites for admission to the convent are active membership in a Protestant church, the status "single" also in the sense of widowed or divorced, an own supply of food, the willingness to fit into a community and the interest in bringing the convent and its art treasures closer to the visitors. The chapel´s stained-glass windows were produced in Lueneburg in 1483.

Bourges - Cathédrale Saint-Étienne

10 May 2020 1 177
The "Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges" was erected as a replacement for an 11th-century structure. The construction started probably in the last quarter of the 12th century, around the same time when the builders and bricklayers started in Chartres. The choir of the cathedral was in use by 1214, the nave was finished 1255. The cathedral was consecrated in 1324. The cathedral covers a surface of 5,900 m². The nave is 15 metres wide and 37 metres high, the inner aisle is 21.3 metres high. There are no transepts, but two aisles on either side forming a double ambulatory around the choir. The cathedral retains many of its original stained-glass windows, which dates from about 1215, but as well "younger" ones. The stained glass window of the Magi is dated 1467. On the left, the donors Jean and Martin de Breuil are presented by Saint Jean-Baptiste. The face of the Virgin in the fourth lancet was redone in the 19th century.

Bourges - Cathédrale Saint-Étienne

10 May 2020 189
The "Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges" was erected as a replacement for an 11th-century structure. The construction started probably in the last quarter of the 12th century, around the same time when the builders and bricklayers started in Chartres. The choir of the cathedral was in use by 1214, the nave was finished 1255. The cathedral was consecrated in 1324. The cathedral covers a surface of 5,900 m². The nave is 15 metres wide and 37 metres high, the inner aisle is 21.3 metres high. There are no transepts, but two aisles on either side forming a double ambulatory around the choir. The cathedral retains many of its original stained-glass windows, which dates from about 1215.

Bourges - Cathédrale Saint-Étienne

10 May 2020 1 1 221
The "Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges" was erected as a replacement for an 11th-century structure. The construction started probably in the last quarter of the 12th century, around the same time when the builders and bricklayers started in Chartres. The choir of the cathedral was in use by 1214, the nave was finished 1255. The cathedral was consecrated in 1324. The cathedral covers a surface of 5,900 m². The nave is 15 metres wide and 37 metres high, the inner aisle is 21.3 metres high. There are no transepts, but two aisles on either side forming a double ambulatory around the choir. The cathedral retains many of its original stained-glass windows, which dates from about 1215. A detail of the window depicting the parable of the rich man and Lazarus.

Bourges - Cathédrale Saint-Étienne

10 May 2020 1 169
The "Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges" was erected as a replacement for an 11th-century structure. The construction started probably in the last quarter of the 12th century, around the same time when the builders and bricklayers started in Chartres. The choir of the cathedral was in use by 1214, the nave was finished 1255. The cathedral was consecrated in 1324. The cathedral covers a surface of 5,900 m². The nave is 15 metres wide and 37 metres high, the inner aisle is 21.3 metres high. There are no transepts, but two aisles on either side forming a double ambulatory around the choir. The cathedral retains many of its original stained-glass windows, which dates from about 1215. This window depicts the parable of the "Good Samaritan" and has to be "read" from top to bottom. On the sides are scenes from the old testament (eg Adam and Eve). Note the small icons on sides of the very bottom. Small men riding geese? Maybe the ancestors of Nils Holgersson.

Bourges - Cathédrale Saint-Étienne

10 May 2020 1 156
The "Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges" was erected as a replacement for an 11th-century structure. The construction started probably in the last quarter of the 12th century, around the same time when the builders and bricklayers started in Chartres. The choir of the cathedral was in use by 1214, the nave was finished 1255. The cathedral was consecrated in 1324. The cathedral covers a surface of 5,900 m². The nave is 15 metres wide and 37 metres high, the inner aisle is 21.3 metres high. There are no transepts, but two aisles on either side forming a double ambulatory around the choir. The cathedral retains many of its original stained-glass windows, which dates from about 1215. This window depicts the "Last Judgement".

Bourges - Cathédrale Saint-Étienne

09 May 2020 1 1 145
The "Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges" was erected as a replacement for an 11th-century structure. The construction started probably in the last quarter of the 12th century, around the same time when the builders and bricklayers started in Chartres. The choir of the cathedral was in use by 1214, the nave was finished 1255. The cathedral was consecrated in 1324. The cathedral covers a surface of 5,900 m². The nave is 15 metres wide and 37 metres high, the inner aisle is 21.3 metres high. There are no transepts, but two aisles on either side forming a double ambulatory around the choir. The cathedral retains many of its original stained-glass windows, which dates from about 1215. This window depicts the "Passion" from the "Last Supper" to the "Resurrection of Jesus"

Bourges - Cathédrale Saint-Étienne

09 May 2020 150
The "Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges" was erected as a replacement for an 11th-century structure. The construction started probably in the last quarter of the 12th century, around the same time when the builders and bricklayers started in Chartres. The choir of the cathedral was in use by 1214, the nave was finished 1255. The cathedral was consecrated in 1324. The cathedral covers a surface of 5,900 m². The nave is 15 metres wide and 37 metres high, the inner aisle is 21.3 metres high. There are no transepts, but two aisles on either side forming a double ambulatory around the choir. The cathedral retains many of its original stained-glass windows, which dates from about 1215. This window depicts the "Apocalypse" - the "Book of Revelation". The prophetic vision of John on the Isle of Patmos.

Bourges - Cathédrale Saint-Étienne

09 May 2020 140
The "Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges" was erected as a replacement for an 11th-century structure. The construction started probably in the last quarter of the 12th century, around the same time when the builders and bricklayers started in Chartres. The choir of the cathedral was in use by 1214, the nave was finished 1255. The cathedral was consecrated in 1324. The cathedral covers a surface of 5,900 m². The nave is 15 metres wide and 37 metres high, the inner aisle is 21.3 metres high. There are no transepts, but two aisles on either side forming a double ambulatory around the choir. The cathedral retains many of its original stained-glass windows, which dates from about 1215. This window depicts the life of Joseph, who was sold into slavery by his jealous brothers, and rose to become the second most powerful man in Egypt. (Genesis 37)

Bourges - Cathédrale Saint-Étienne

09 May 2020 1 149
The "Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges" was erected as a replacement for an 11th-century structure. The construction started probably in the last quarter of the 12th century, around the same time when the builders and bricklayers started in Chartres. The choir of the cathedral was in use by 1214, the nave was finished 1255. The cathedral was consecrated in 1324. The cathedral covers a surface of 5,900 m². The nave is 15 metres wide and 37 metres high, the inner aisle is 21.3 metres high. There are no transepts, but two aisles on either side forming a double ambulatory around the choir. The cathedral retains many of its original stained-glass windows, which dates from about 1215. This window depicts the "Parable of the Prodigal Son" (Luke 15:11–32). In the story, a father has two sons. The younger son asks the father for his inheritance, and the father grants his son's request. However, the younger son is wasteful and squanders his fortune, eventually becoming destitute. He is forced to return home empty-handed and intends to beg his father to accept him back as a servant. To the son's surprise, he is not scorned by his father but is welcomed back with celebration. Envious, the older son refuses to participate in the festivities. The father tells the older son "you are ever with me, and all that I have is yours, but thy younger brother was lost and now he is