Posts tagged France

Posts tagged France
(via ckerky)
Alley Cat, Mont St Michel, France
photo via magicalnaturetour
(via froybot)
More wonderfully whimsical street art by French artist OaKoAK (previously featured here), who likes to play with existing elements of the urban landscape, often making surprisingly small alterations or enhancements to achieve striking results, enabling us to see the world through his eyes.
“Using simple means and materials, OakOak undermines his neighborhood with playful results. He uses a minimal amount of actual original artwork, instead re-purposing signs, facades, cement blocks, chipping paint, and more. OakOak transforms a neighborhood’s imperfections into its own adornments. “
He says of his interventions:
“The less I intervene on the wall or the road, the better, especially if I can totally change the sense of the urban environment.”
[via Beautiful Decay]
(via wilwheaton)
(via alfheimrbones)
The UMP, one of the biggest political groups in France, has launched its anti gay, anti same sex adoption campaign.
Let me tell you how it has a been a fucking ugly ride so far and how France is so behind, and so unable to deal with LGBT issues since it has been announced gay marriage and adoption were to be debated and laws to be created.It says “Don’t mess with my mom and my dad” or literally “You can’t touch my heteronormative parents structure”.
Worse, they’re using a famous anti-racism association logo idea as well.
Fuck you, assholes. Fuck you kindly. You homophobic, conservative bigots.
I literally don’t know what to say.
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Paris, photograph by Rheintochter
1 note &
Streetart in Pairs (2011)
photograph by Rheintochter
Lavender, Provence, France by dharmabum90 on Flickr.
(Source: fashionflicks, via little-secret-garden)
Joyeuse (pronounced zhwa-OOS, in French), was the name of Charlemagne’s personal sword. The name translates as “joyful”.
Joyesue in Legend
Some legends claim that it was forged to contain the Lance of Longinus within its pommel; others state it was smithed from the same materials as Roland’s Durendal and Ogier’s Curtana.The 11th century Song of Roland describes the sword:
[Charlemagne] was wearing his fine white coat of mail and his helmet with gold-studded stones; by his side hung Joyeuse, and never was there a sword to match it; its colour changed thirty times a day.
Some seven hundred years later, Bulfinch’s Mythology described Charlemagne using Joyeuse to behead the Saracen commander Corsuble as well as to knight his comrade Ogier the Dane.The town of Joyeuse, in Ardèche, is supposedly named after the sword: Joyeuse was allegedly lost in a battle and retrieved by one of the knights of Charlemagne; to thank him, Charlemagne granted him an appanage named Joyeuse. Baligant, a general of the Saracens in The Song of Roland, named his sword Précieuse, in order not to seem inferior to Charlemagne.
Coronation sword of the French kings
A sword identified with Charlemagne’s Joyeuse was carried in front of the Coronation processionals for French kings, for the first time in 1270 (Philip III), and for the last time in 1824 (Charles X). The sword was kept in the Saint Denis Basilica since at least 1505, and it was moved to the Louvre in 1793.
This Joyeuse as preserved today is a composite of various parts added over the centuries of use as coronation sword. But at the core, it consists of a medieval blade of Oakeshott type XII, mostly dated to about the 10th century. Martin Conway argued the blade might date to the early 9th century, opening the possibility that it was indeed the sword of Charlemagne, while Guy Laking dated it to the early 13th century. Some authors have even argued that the medieval blade may have been replaced by a modern replica in 1804 when the sword was prepared for the coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte. The Louvre’s official website dates the pommel to the 10th to 11th centuries, the cross to the second half of the 12th, and the grip to the 13th century
No mention of Joan of Arc using the sword? :/
Also, Charlemagne was a royal prick.
(via frouwelinde)
26/100 films with beautiful cinematography (in no particular order)
amélie (2001)
directed by jean-pierre jeunet