Martin M. Miles' photos with the keyword: Bull
Écija - Museo Histórico
23 Jul 2024 |
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During Roman times the settlement was known as Astigi. Caesar ordered the town's fortification and refounded it as a Julian colony. According to Pliny the Elder who wrote in the 1st century AD, it was the rival of Cordova and Seville.
After the Romans, it was ruled by successively by Suevs and Visigoths. It was also from an early date the seat of a diocese. St. Fulgentius (died before 633), was named to the see by his brother Isidore of Seville.
In 711, Écija was conquered by an Islamic army on its way to Córdoba. Capital of an extensive Kūra, Écija preserved its condition as a centre of high agricultural productivity.
The place was seized by Christians in 1240. The proximity to the Nasrid Kingdom of Granada turned Écija into a border town. Most of the mudéjar population was expelled in 1263. The Jewish population suffered the antisemitic revolt initiated after the assault on the jewry of Seville in June 1391, that spread across Andalusia. During the 15th century, Écija was the third most important urban centre of the Kingdom of Seville after Seville and Jerez. Estimations for the 15th century yield a population of about 18,000 (today 40.000).
The effects of the 1755 earthquake (Lisbon) forced a deep urban renewal.
Although Astigi was one of the most completely discovered Roman cities, the city council decided against all odds in 1998 to bulldoze the Roman ruins of Écija, including a forum, a bathhouse, a gymnasium and a temple, as well as dozens of private houses, and replace them with a car park.
But at least, there is the museum housed in the "Palacio de Benamejí"
Sculpture of a bull. Limestone. Iberian/pre-Roman period
The Beast de Aubrac
03 Sep 2009 |
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... - - immediately - slowly - cautiously - and - cowardly - I climbed back over the electric fence, when the father of all calves in the Aubrac got obviously pretty interested in me. A beast of a bull. As soon, as I was over the fence, he calmed down and I could get my camera out....
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In summer 2010, I saw his even bigger brother, but then, the distance between him and me, was much bigger.
www.flickr.com/photos/martin-m-miles/4986870734/in/pool-s...
St.-Germain-Laprade
03 Sep 2009 |
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.... found with the help of my little torchlight this mysterious head of a bull in the dark church...
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