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დასაწყისი 104
ნახვა:
რიცხვი
გადაღების დრო / 2007 / ოქტომბერი
- IMG_8983
Santa Fe dates from the early 1600s, and is the oldest continually occupied capitol in the US. This church is the oldest shrine to Our Lady of Guadalupe in the US. The altarpiece consists of a large painting that was done in Mexico and carried to the church across hundreds of miles of what was then wilderness. - IMG_8984
- IMG_8985
The beams just inside the entrance had carving on them. - IMG_8989
- IMG_8994
This is the altarpiece painting from Mexico. - IMG_8999
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This gate caught my eye as we were walking to another church. Santa Fe architecture is filled with elements like this one. - IMG_9006
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The Seret & Sons Indian imports store covers several storefronts and a back lot stuffed with carved wood and other Indian architecture. - IMG_9013
This is the Loretto Chapel, which is no longer a consecrated church. It was built in 1873. Inside is the "miracle" spiral staircase, made from wood with hand tools. - IMG_9017
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The handrails were added later. Originally the spiral staircase was just open stairs. - IMG_9030
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The "marble" altar and this fence are painted wood, as shown by the wood peeking through the worn out paint on these doors. - IMG_9047
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Next to the chapel is the Inn and Spa at Loretto, a hotel built in 1975 and designed to look like Taos Pueblo. - IMG_9062
Just down the street is the St. Francis Cathedral, built in the 1860s by Archbishop Lamy. Inside is a famous 17th century wooden Madonna. The Archbishop was the inspiration for Willa Cather's classic novel: "Death Comes to the Archbishop" - IMG_9066
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- IMG_9083
This wooden icon set in a niche in the north chapel of the cathedral is the oldest representation of the Madonna in the US. Rescued from the older church during the Pueblo Rebellion in 1680, it was returned during the reconquest 12 years later, and called Our Lady of Peace.