2
Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 6,346/77 Given: 3,478/110 |
Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 34,742/3,772 Given: 61,128/7,007 |
Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 6,346/77 Given: 3,478/110 |
Could be Maremma also.
Envoyé de mon ALE-L21 en utilisant Tapatalk
"Allobroges vaillants ! Dans vos vertes campagnes,
Accordez-moi toujours asile et sûreté,
Car j'aime à respirer l'air pur de vos montagnes,
Je suis la Liberté ! la Liberté !"
Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 34,742/3,772 Given: 61,128/7,007 |
Wake up and smell the coffee.
Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 34,742/3,772 Given: 61,128/7,007 |
Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 34,742/3,772 Given: 61,128/7,007 |
Pete isn't too bad but I think it's a bit overdone. It's trying too hard to be beautiful. Cities like Amsterdam, Stockholm or Venice just are because they've grown organically. They don't have to pretend. And, yes, I find Amsterdam's old mediaeval inner core to be much more beautiful than the 17th century canal ring.
Wake up and smell the coffee.
Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 34,742/3,772 Given: 61,128/7,007 |
It's the same in the Netherlands. Amsterdam started off as a mediaeval village which got lucky because some dike broke, flooding the whole area north of the city and creating the current IJsselmeer and IJ and because the county of Holland deemed it wise to give it market rights. They built a dam and became a trading town that got city rights and the rest is organic history. It's not like Pete who just got dragged from the mud using slave labour in a land recently seized from the Swedes.
Wake up and smell the coffee.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks