Martin M. Miles' photos with the keyword: jacquemart

Plasencia - Town Hall

02 Sep 2024 38
Today, Plasencia is a city with more than 40,000 inhabitants. The city was founded in 1186 by Alfonso VIII of Castile during the reconquest of the Moorish-occupied territories from the 10th century onwards and was elevated to the status of a bishop's see by Pope Clement III just three years later. However, the conflicts between Christians and the Almohads, who were dominant at the time, continued until 1212, when the city finally came under Christian rule after the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa. The old town hall on the Plaza Mayor has a very interesting clock, whith this huge jacquemart (aka "quarter-jack").

Dijon - Notre-Dame

01 Oct 2021 3 109
Dijon, today a city with a population of about 150.000, was a Roman settlement named Divio, located on the road from Lyon to Paris. Saint Benignus, the city's patron saint, is said to have introduced Christianity to the area before being martyred. The province was home to the Dukes of Burgundy from the early 11th until the late 15th centuries, and Dijon was a place of wealth and power. In 1513, Swiss and Imperial armies invaded Burgundy and besieged Dijon. The siege was extremely violent, but after long negotiations, Louis II de la Trémoille managed to persuade the armies to withdraw. During the siege, the population called on the Virgin Mary for help and saw the withdrawal of the invaders as a miracle. For those reasons, in the years following the siege the inhabitants began to venerate Notre-Dame de Bon-Espoir (Our Lady of Good Hope). Before the second half of the 12th century, the site of today's Notre-Dame was occupied by a simple chapel, which was outside the city walls. Beginning around 1220 the erection of the Gothic church of today started. Sunset in Dijon. Note Notre Dame´s clock with its jacquemart. It has four automatons. Two of them, called Jacquemart and Jacqueline, sound the hours by striking a large bell with a hammer. The other two, their "children", Jacquelinet and Jacquelinette, strike the quarter hours, each on a small bell. The Jacquemart was brought from Kortrijk in Belgium, after the looting of the town by the armies of Philip the Bold in 1382. At that time, only the male figure existed. A second automaton, depicting a woman, was added in 1651 to alternate with Jacquemart in sounding the hours. In 1714 the couple got the first kid (a boy) and in 1884 the second kid (a girl) joined the family.

Dijon - Notre-Dame

10 Jan 2019 2 173
Notre-Dame, erected 1230 - 1251, is considered a jewel of 13th-century Gothic architecture in France. The planar western façade is quite unique - as it opens like a large screen to the spectator. Seen over that "screen" is a jacquemart. It was brought to Dijon from Kortrijk (Belgium), after the looting of Kortrijk by the armies of Philip the Bold (Duke Philippe II of Burgundy) in 1382.

Nivelles - Jean de Nivelles

14 Sep 2018 1 105
Jean de Nivelles is a more than 500 years old jacquemart (aka "quarter-jack"), who works high on the tower of the Collegiate Church of Saint Gertrude. During the 2018 FIFA World Cup he obviously supported the Belgian Team (aka "Red Devils"), who finished third in Russia.