Combi31

By Combi31

Angry skies

What a day for some superb skies - in this shot, it looks like an apocalyptic storm is about to happen - but no, the sun came out shortly after.

See it larger here

This is Saint Antonin Noble Val, in the Tarn et Garonne département of south west France.
There is an abbey here founded in the 9th century - it is a really beautiful little town right in the middle of the deep gorges of the Aveyron river.

Here are a few more photos of my travels today

The Benedictines started rebuilding the abbey in the 11th century, and it was finished around 1150 or later.
By the end of the 12th century it passed into the control of Augustinian Canons Regular.
It must have been a very fine and prestigious building, perhaps - to judge from the quality of the carving and the stone of the surviving fragments - one to mention in the same breath as Moissac to the south of the same département.
The old town hall (even as controversially restored by Viollet-le-Duc) is also of very high quality - as shown by the exquisite carving of Adam, Eve, the Serpent and the Tree of Knowledge.
The troubadour Raimon Jordan was the viscount of Saint-Antonin in the late twelfth century, on the eve of the Albigensian Crusade.
The town, however, was taken by Simon de Montfort in 1212 during the Crusade. The Albigensian castle of Penne a few kilometres downstream was burned by de Montfort and survives now only as a romantic ruin overlooking the river Aveyron.
In 1227 St Louis occupied Saint-Antonin which at this point enjoyed great wealth. The town was besieged and taken by the English in the 14th century, and subsequently suffered considerable damage in the Wars of Religion in the late 16th and again in the early 17th century (former Cathar lands tending towards a Protestantism which survives to this day, for there is a Protestant 'temple' in Saint-Antonin), when the collegiate church and the saintly relics were destroyed by anti-Catholic mobs.
It was presumably after the restoration of Catholicism in the town that the corbels were placed on houses without risk of destruction.
It was at this time that Louis XIV renamed the town Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val and financed important improvements. Wikipaedia

I hope your Sunday was a good one

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