Avignon, France
June 2
A medieval wall completely encircles the old city of Avignon, once the center of the Roman Catholic world when it was the home of seven successive popes between 1309 and 1377. The Palais des Papes (Palace of the Popes), the papal home during this period known as the Avignon Papacy, is the largest gothic structure in the world and even though its enormous stone rooms are filled with not much more than frescoes, it looms over the city imposing and dignified.
Stone walls surrounding the city
Square in front of the Palais des Papes
Avignon Cathedral (Notre Dame des Doms)
Avignon is a charming place to explore with its winding streets and tree-lined squares, religious sanctuaries, and architectural treasures. Having become a mecca for tourists with the annual art Festival d’Avignon, this historic town has boutiques and restaurants aplenty and, because it is still a home for about 90,000 people, there are the local cafés perfect for a beer, a glass of wine, or for my café au lait and a flaky warm croissant...the simple pleasures of a "petit déjeuner" in "la belle France."
Clock Tower
Synagogue
Trompe l'oeil - Place Daniel Sorane
And not to forget the picturesque Saint-Bénezet bridge that spans half the river. Built in 1180 to connect Avignon with Villeneuve-les-Avignon on the west side of the Rhône, it was destroyed forty years later during the Albigensian Crusade. Rebuilt with 22 stone arches which frequently collapsed due to the river’s flooding, the city finally gave up trying to restore the bridge in the 17th century. Also known as Pont d’Avignon and familiar to many because of the French children’s song written about it, it is another of the delightful highlights of the town.
Arles, France
Sitting on a low hill with a history dating back to the 7th century BC, Arles is a Provençal jewel. Roman treasures, narrow and winding medieval streets, 16th and 17th century mansions, colorful, sun-bleached houses, shaded squares, and the “spirit” of Van Gogh, whose 14 months here produced over 200 paintings, give this capital of the Camargue a seductive quality…a sense of wanting more because there is clearly more.
Roman Colosseum
Place de la République -Town Hall (Hôtel de Ville) is at the far end
Hôtel-Dieu-Saint-Espirit (
The Old Hospital of Arles) built in the 16th and 17th centuries
"Service du travail obligatoire (S-T-O) was the forced enlistment and deportation of hundreds of thousands of French workers to Nazi Germany to work as forced labour for the German war effort during World War II" (Wikipedia)
A final opportunity to shop...
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