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Originally posted by DrSpike
I can only presume Modo was talking about the statue.
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Originally posted by DrSpike
I can only presume Modo was talking about the statue.
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Originally posted by DrSpike
Well you are ok on this score but all Zoid's pics are of boats.
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Only on this page we have, what, 5 pics of architecture and one of his friends?
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Originally posted by DrSpike
Well you are ok on this score but all Zoid's pics are of boats.
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Originally posted by Nikolai
Oh yeah, you're into it too Spikie.And post/pics ratio you're really in a messy state compared to Zoidie and me.
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On a related note, between the Ouzo and Dunkel Bier days of my U S Army stay in Crailsheim West Germany in 1970's, I did have the opportunity to see some beautiful structures, unfortunatley Crailsheim was almost leveled during the war, but some old parts were still standing with bullet holes in them.
To me Europe is such a beautiful area of the world
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Originally posted by Zoid
Ehrm
And post/pics ratio you're really in a messy state compared to Zoidie and me.
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The Marienkirche (St Marys) was constructed between 1250 and 1350.
St. Mary's, the church of the Council of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck, is the third-largest church building in Germany. Its construction took some 100 years. It serves as a model for countless Gothic style brick churches in the entire Baltic region.
Many works of art are found at St. Mary's, such as, for example, Gerhard Marcks' "The Cross of Triumph" of 1495, on the high choir above the Swarte altar. It is also home to the world's largest mechanical organ. From 1667 to 1707, the well-known church musician and composer Dietrich Buxtehude was St. Mary's organist and work master. The church bells that fell during the air raids in 1942 are reminders of the horrors of war.
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