Sunday, 30 April 2017

Bordeaux by night and a visit to Saint Emilion


We passed by a seafood restaurant yesterday and last night decided to return there for dinner. A very good move.




We wandered around the old town, 
it looked really beautiful by night.




The Water Mirror ( Miroir d’eau) provided spectacular reflections 
and the fog effect was rather impressive.




Today we explored Saint Emilion,
about 35km northeast of Bordeaux.
The Romans planted vineyards there in the 2nd Century
and at that time the town was called Ascumbas.
Then in the 8th century it was renamed after a traveling monk,
Émilion whose followers began producing
commercial wine here in the 8th Century.
It’s now a UNESCO World Heritage site,
built on a beautiful spot overlooking the Dordogne valley.
The steep cobblestone streets are lined with charming houses,
fascinating Romanqesue ruins,
and an underground Monolithic church
carved into the limestone.

We explored the town,






...enjoyed a delicious lunch
and took an 'Underground Saint-Emilion' tour,
during which we learnt the story of the monk Emilion
and the carving of the surprising monolithic church.

The guide led us through four monuments:
The cave Emilion took refuge in and then
became his home for the last 17 years of his life,
from 750 and 767.
Inside the cave you can see the spring,
used for baptismal water,
his bed carved out of rock
and a meditation chair carved out of rock.
This is reputed to be a fertility chair
and is apparently well known for its efficacy!

The Trinity Chapel, with remarkable medieval paintings.


The Monolithic church is entirely hewn out of the rock and is the biggest church of this kind in Europe. It is 38m long, 20m wide and 11m high.
There are some carvings in the stone to see
as well as four altars added in the 15 to 18th centuries.


The Catacombs are graves carved into the rock
next to the monolithic church.
A cupola was carved out to let light in
and show the way to heaven.
(no photography allowed)

Today we only walked  11.4k's.