manuel cohen

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  • Well of the Dead, a headstone marking the spot where the chief of the MacGillivray clan fell, at the Culloden Battlefield, site of the final Jacobite Rising, when Charles Edward Stuart, or Bonnie Prince Charlie, 1720-88, was defeated by loyalist troops led by the Duke of Cumberland on 16th April 1746, at Culloden, in the Highlands of Scotland. The site is now run by the National Trust for Scotland. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_SCOTLAND_MC_145.jpg
  • Cimetiere de Montrouge or Montrouge Cemetery, on the Avenue de la Porte de Montrouge, in the quartier Petit Montrouge in the 14th arrondissement of Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1448.jpg
  • St Materiana's Church, on the cliffs between Trevena and Tintagel Castle, Tintagel, Cornwall, England. The church was built 1080-1150 although a church has stood here since the 6th century. It is Norman in design with some Saxon features, and a 13th or 15th century tower. The church and churchyard sit in King Arthur's country, an area steeped in the mysteries of Arthurian Legend. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_071.jpg
  • St Materiana's Church, on the cliffs between Trevena and Tintagel Castle, Tintagel, Cornwall, England. The church was built 1080-1150 although a church has stood here since the 6th century. It is Norman in design with some Saxon features, and a 13th or 15th century tower. The church and churchyard sit in King Arthur's country, an area steeped in the mysteries of Arthurian Legend. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_070.jpg
  • St Materiana's Church, on the cliffs between Trevena and Tintagel Castle, Tintagel, Cornwall, England. The church was built 1080-1150 although a church has stood here since the 6th century. It is Norman in design with some Saxon features, and a 13th or 15th century tower. The church and churchyard sit in King Arthur's country, an area steeped in the mysteries of Arthurian Legend. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_073.jpg
  • Stained glass window of St Symphorian, in St Materiana's Church, on the cliffs between Trevena and Tintagel Castle, Tintagel, Cornwall, England. St Symphorian was an early Christian martyr of the 5th century who is said to have links with King Arthur. The church was built 1080-1150 although a church has stood here since the 6th century. It is Norman in design with some Saxon features, and a 13th or 15th century tower. The church and churchyard sit in King Arthur's country, an area steeped in the mysteries of Arthurian Legend. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_072.jpg
  • Cemetery, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_Sarajevo_MC075.jpg
  • Alifacovac Cemetery, dating to before the Ottoman empire, in the Alifacovac district, one of the oldest parts of the city, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_Sarajevo_MC076.jpg
  • Sehidsko Kovaci cemetery, where Bosnian soldiers who died in the 1990s Yugoslav War are buried, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_Sarajevo_MC060.jpg
  • Sehidsko Kovaci cemetery, where Bosnian soldiers who died in the 1990s Yugoslav War are buried, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_Sarajevo_MC061.jpg
  • Sehidsko Kovaci cemetery, where Bosnian soldiers who died in the 1990s Yugoslav War are buried, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_Sarajevo_MC058.jpg
  • Tombstones in an overgrown cemetery in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_Sarajevo_MC057.jpg
  • Grave of Wolfgang Langhoff, 1901-66, German actor and director, and his wife Renate and son Thomas, with sculpture of a mourning woman, in the Dorotheenstadt Cemetery, a late 18th century Protestant burial ground, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0584.jpg
  • Tombstone of Bertolt Brecht, 1898-1956, German Marxist poet and playwright, in the Dorotheenstadt Cemetery, a late 18th century Protestant burial ground, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The cemetery is situated next to the Brecht House, where Bertolt Brecht and his wife Helene Weigel spent their last years, at 125 Chaussee Strasse. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0582.jpg
  • Tombstones of Bertolt Brecht, 1898-1956, German Marxist poet and playwright, and his wife Helene Weigel-Brecht, in the Dorotheenstadt Cemetery, a late 18th century Protestant burial ground, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The cemetery is situated next to the Brecht House, where Bertolt Brecht and his wife Helene Weigel spent their last years, at 125 Chaussee Strasse. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0581.jpg
  • Gravestone of Gustav Trampe, 1932-2006, German journalist, in the Franzosischer Friedhof or French Cemetery, opened 1780 for the descendants of Huguenots and Protestants living in Berlin, Oranienburg, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0579.jpg
  • Cimetiere de Montrouge or Montrouge Cemetery, on the Avenue de la Porte de Montrouge, in the quartier Petit Montrouge in the 14th arrondissement of Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1447.jpg
  • St Materiana's Church, on the cliffs between Trevena and Tintagel Castle, Tintagel, Cornwall, England. The church was built 1080-1150 although a church has stood here since the 6th century. It is Norman in design with some Saxon features, and a 13th or 15th century tower. The church and churchyard sit in King Arthur's country, an area steeped in the mysteries of Arthurian Legend. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ENGLAND_MC_069.jpg
  • Cemetery, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_Sarajevo_MC074.jpg
  • Graves in the Dorotheenstadt Cemetery, a late 18th century Protestant burial ground, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC1012.jpg
  • Tombstones overgrown with ivy in the Dorotheenstadt Cemetery, a late 18th century Protestant burial ground, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0589.jpg
  • Tombs in the Alifacovac Cemetery, dating to before the Ottoman empire, in the Alifacovac district, one of the oldest parts of the city, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_Sarajevo_MC078.jpg
  • Church of St Radegonde, built 1094 in Romanesque style, and its cemetery, in Talmont sur Gironde, Aquitaine, France. The church overlooks the Gironde Estuary and is on the Via Turonensis pilgrimage route on the way to Santiago de Compostela. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_FRANCE_MC0207.jpg
  • Graves in the Invalidenfriedhof or Invalid's Cemetery, established 1748 for veterans of the Prussian Army, at Scharnhorststrasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC1019.jpg
  • Tomb of Otto Nuschke, 1883-1957, German politician, in the Dorotheenstadt Cemetery, a late 18th century Protestant burial ground, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0583.jpg
  • Stone base of a cross-slab (headstone is lost), detail, sandstone, 13th century, used to cover a grave, with carving depicting scissors or shears, which may represent cutting the thread of life, at Dumbarton Castle, Dumbarton Rock, at Dumbarton, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland. The castle site has been occupied and defended since the Iron Age, playing an important role in Scottish history throughout the centuries. The castle was last rebuilt in the 18th century, when the Governor's House, and fortifications were added. Dumbarton Rock is listed as a scheduled ancient monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_SCOTLAND_MC_169.jpg
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