Martin M. Miles' photos with the keyword: mailbox

Ávila - Mailbox

09 Oct 2023 2 65
Under the Visigoths, Ávila was one of the most important cities in the kingdom due to its proximity to the capital Toledo. From the 8th to the 11th centuries, Ávila was Moorish. The situation in the contested borderland between the Muslim and Christian worlds prevented prosperity, which only began in the 15th century when the fighting moved further south. The city experienced its heyday in the 16th century. The plague, the expulsion of the Moriscos (baptized Moors), and the emigration of many people to America caused Ávila's gradual decline, from which the city has only slowly recovered since the 19th century. Today the population is around 60,000. The Church of San Andrés is considered the oldest Romanesque church building in the city. The church was probably built at the end of the 11th century - at the same time as the construction of the city walls of Ávila. San Andrés is north of the city walls. Two lions guard the mailbox

Montagudet - Saint-Sulpice

20 Mar 2014 172
I love churches in small villages like Montagudet (pop 200). Saint Sulpice, seen here, is not only the parish church. There is the mailbox near the entrance - and further to the right the structure is altered to a residential house. The full (impressive) name of the church is "Église Saint-Sulpice-de-Bourges de Montagudet". Unfortunately it was locked.