manuel cohen

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Door of Tour Bouillon, castle of Chateau-Thierry, Picardy, France

Narrow arched doorway in the Tour Bouillon, the pedestrian entrance gate for the villagers, 13th century, at the medieval castle of Chateau-Thierry, Picardy, France. The first fortifications on this spur over the river Marne date from the 4th century and the first castle was built in the 9th century Merovingian period by the counts of Vermandois. Thibaud II enlarged the castle in the 12th century and built the Tour Thibaud, and Thibaud IV expanded it significantly in the 13th century to include 17 defensive towers in the walls and an East and South gate. The castle was largely destroyed in the French Revolution after having been a royal palace since 1285. In 1814 it was used as a citadel for Napoleonic troops. Picture by Manuel Cohen

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Filename
LC14_France_MC212.jpg
Copyright
Manuel Cohen
Image Size
3744x5616 / 7.2MB
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13th century Aisne arch archaeological archaeology archeological archeology architecture building castle chateau Chateau Thierry Chateau-Thierry color color image colour colour image defence defensive door doorway entrance Europe European exterior fort fortress France French gate Gothic arch grass heritage history image Marne medieval middle ages narrow outdoors outside pedestrian photograph photography Picardy ramparts ruined ruins tour bouillon tourism tourist attraction tower travel vertical wall Western Europe Western European
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Château-Thierry, Picardy, France
Narrow arched doorway in the Tour Bouillon, the pedestrian entrance gate for the villagers, 13th century, at the medieval castle of Chateau-Thierry, Picardy, France. The first fortifications on this spur over the river Marne date from the 4th century and the first castle was built in the 9th century Merovingian period by the counts of Vermandois. Thibaud II enlarged the castle in the 12th century and built the Tour Thibaud, and Thibaud IV expanded it significantly in the 13th century to include 17 defensive towers in the walls and an East and South gate. The castle was largely destroyed in the French Revolution after having been a royal palace since 1285. In 1814 it was used as a citadel for Napoleonic troops. Picture by Manuel Cohen