An extremely quaint, albeit chi-chi French cobblestoned town overrun with tourists and the requisite things that bring people to Provence- lots of good food and lots of lavender. And so for three days we ambled up and down the streets, popping into restaurants to try the Provencale food, a fair bit of shopping (seriously cheaper than London).
The main reason I was there was for a cousin’s wedding and the base was very handy for both the Monaco Grand Prix that was running the same weekend and for the hordes of “farangs” coming out to celebrate. The surrounding regions were jammed full of gorgeous chateauxs and gardens (one of which was hosting the wedding) and littered with built up developments all the way along the coast until Italy- which was roughly only a four hour drive away and rather tempting in my little Avis rent-a-car.
Anyhow it is a tiny town with some 140,000 inhabitants, blessed with almost continuous sunshine throughout the year, a surprising array of festivals to attract more farangs and even better- every day there is markets!! The flower market was superb, the food one sublime, the fish one smelly but inspirational, the clothing one cheeeeep, the bric – a brac a source of inspiration for the house.
Didn’t take that many photos as not much really to photograph once you get over cobbled streets. Hard to know if this belongs in the book 1000 places to see before you die. I think I need to see a few more towns in southern France yet to decide if this is stupendous enough that you have to see it before you cark it…or whether it is just in there as there is some nice brickwork, some cute markets and some lovely restaurants. So back to the car I go
....
Postscript: no..shouldnt belong in the 1000 places to see before you die
Readers Suggestions
I'm enjoying visiting as many of the '1000 Places to See Before You Die' as I can, but I'm aware there must be loads of other fantastic places to visit, that aren't in the book. Please make comments at the end of each posting with your recommendations!
Tuesday, 31 May 2011
Saturday, 7 May 2011
191: Terracotta Warriors
A true case of Humpty Dumpty being incorrect…with a little bit of resin, all the king’s horses and all the king’s men (well in this case actually the President of China) could put him together again!!
And so, in a remote field an hour outside of Xian, China, a team of Chinese archaeologists are painstakingly putting together pieces of pottery- some as small as your little finger, back together again to rebuild the smashed and vandalised terracotta army. To date, some 1800 have had their broken bodies glued back together to stand proud for the 3 million tourists a year that fly to this pollution smogged industrial town for the day to get their photos taken alongside a warrior or ride the chariot (all replicas of course).
Little Qin Shi Huang, the very first Emperor of China, started this project of his after unifying China for the first time when he was 12 years old. Some 720,000 workers took 38 years to assemble this incredible cast from foot soldiers to horses and chariots, archers and workers, acrobats to musicians.
All replicating what lies nearby- the Emperor’s actual mausoleum filled with human bodies of the soldiers, archers, musicians, acrobats, horses and generals he wanted in his afterlife….not to mention a rumoured 20,000 concubines and his wife. Gruesome!!! No wonder the mausoleum is actually a rather large hill to cover all those bones.
Dating from 210 BC, the army was found by a farmer in 1974 when digging for a well and 5 metres down hit terracotta fragments and called in the Government. Now this is one country where treasure hunting does not pay. The poor soul was given 30RMB by the Government for this discovery- that’s £3-which at that time was one month’s salary of a worker. Now the find would be worth 3000 RMB (£30)…still the monthly salary of a worker.
My guide told me (and she really was being straight) that “this was good- because all the ground belongs to the Government. And he is now rich from signing autographs.” When I queried just how many RMB it needed in order to be deemed “rich” in China she obliquely replied with an explanation that there is many ways to be rich. “With money you never have enough, so it is better to be rich with life.” Mmmm. Anyhow, I later witnessed the farmer signing books for the tourists…..Im in the wrong country really to say “he had a gold Rolex, raybans and was wearing Gucci loafers so must be doing well for himself.” Suffice to say the Government now has him on a salary to sign books and he’s upgraded his farmer’s overalls for a black suit and shirt and sunglasses on indoors. A celebrity!! Presumably when he passes away, his son then inherits the mantle and continues the signing tradition.
Anyhow, back to the Army.
A large number stay entombed awaiting excavation as well as the technology to better restore them given that the local unbaked clay cant be used and thus they are relying on developments in epoxy resin to put their humpty dumpty bodies together again.
No amount of epoxy however can hide the fact that a number of the soldiers do not look that happy. Turns out the Emperor demanded no two were to be alike so after the bodies and blank faces were made they were all personalised. Initials of the artist were put in the foot of the soldiers and any statue the Emperor wasn’t happy with….well…”off with his head.” Not exactly the best environment to work in never knowing if you’d be the next bag of bones consigned to “Mausoleum Hill.”
And then there is the issue that a century after the mausoleum was completed, a Chinese poet wrote about it talking of “palaces, riches and 100 rivers fashioned in mercury”. Poor misguided workers pouring that stuff in thinking they were safe from ending up in the mausoleum pile- not realising of course that they were destined to die shortly anyhow from mercury poisoning. Interestingly test work has shown high levels of mercury in the soil on and around Mount Lishan, underwhich lies the mausoleum,which remains unopened…apparently for fear of damage to the valuables buried with the Emperor. More likely no sucker wants to excavate and breathe the fumes given that mercury is completely non-biodegradable, is the most potent free radical known to humans and can only leache away. More bodies for the Emperor’s afterlife!
His afterlife of a huge army to maintain his empire proved to be a waste of time, money and energy anyhow. Shortly after he was buried vandals broke in, stole all the bronze CHECK weapons from the warriers, torched the place causing the wooden beams above their heads to burn away and bring tons of soil on their heads smashing them to smithereens.
It’s rather eerie when you first enter and look down to see an entire army- in precise military formation according to rank and duty- some in lines, some facing outwards looking for threats, in full battle regalia according to their roles. While Im sure the travelling exhibition that is currently going around the world is worth seeing on account of most people never getting to Xian….but all I can say is seeing some 20 warriors in a museum pales into significance when looking at thousands, line after line, of the real thing.
Life size, full uniform, all with different faces and exact replicas of mankind down to fingerprints. Sadly due to the fire when it was vandalised, the colours on their uniforms also disappeared and they are now a chalky and black soot covered bunch of men.
There are three main areas to see- the first being the army- some 8000 figures (about 2/3 still not excavated and glued together) stretching about 230 metres long with 11 corridors over 3 metres wide each.
The second pit a short walk away contains the chariots and cavalry riders.
And the third is the command post room with people standing around and four horses ready to gallop up a chute.
Described as the greatest archaeological find of the 20th century (and found for the price of a Big Mac meal in Beijing) it is now a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Talking of which, I’m off to investigate visiting another UNESCO Cultural Heritage site and a fitting tribute I think to compare to my blog on Christ the Redeemer in Brazil…….the Leshan Giant Buddha. This is the world’s tallest and largest Buddha standing at 71 meters high and 24 meters wide with a head over 14 meters long and 10 meters wide. To put this into a perspective you can understand- his toenail alone can accommodate a seated person, 100 people can fit in his instep and a dining table can be placed on one of his toes alone.
As the local saying says, "The Mountain is a Buddha and the Buddha is a Mountain."
And so, in a remote field an hour outside of Xian, China, a team of Chinese archaeologists are painstakingly putting together pieces of pottery- some as small as your little finger, back together again to rebuild the smashed and vandalised terracotta army. To date, some 1800 have had their broken bodies glued back together to stand proud for the 3 million tourists a year that fly to this pollution smogged industrial town for the day to get their photos taken alongside a warrior or ride the chariot (all replicas of course).
Little Qin Shi Huang, the very first Emperor of China, started this project of his after unifying China for the first time when he was 12 years old. Some 720,000 workers took 38 years to assemble this incredible cast from foot soldiers to horses and chariots, archers and workers, acrobats to musicians.
All replicating what lies nearby- the Emperor’s actual mausoleum filled with human bodies of the soldiers, archers, musicians, acrobats, horses and generals he wanted in his afterlife….not to mention a rumoured 20,000 concubines and his wife. Gruesome!!! No wonder the mausoleum is actually a rather large hill to cover all those bones.
Dating from 210 BC, the army was found by a farmer in 1974 when digging for a well and 5 metres down hit terracotta fragments and called in the Government. Now this is one country where treasure hunting does not pay. The poor soul was given 30RMB by the Government for this discovery- that’s £3-which at that time was one month’s salary of a worker. Now the find would be worth 3000 RMB (£30)…still the monthly salary of a worker.
My guide told me (and she really was being straight) that “this was good- because all the ground belongs to the Government. And he is now rich from signing autographs.” When I queried just how many RMB it needed in order to be deemed “rich” in China she obliquely replied with an explanation that there is many ways to be rich. “With money you never have enough, so it is better to be rich with life.” Mmmm. Anyhow, I later witnessed the farmer signing books for the tourists…..Im in the wrong country really to say “he had a gold Rolex, raybans and was wearing Gucci loafers so must be doing well for himself.” Suffice to say the Government now has him on a salary to sign books and he’s upgraded his farmer’s overalls for a black suit and shirt and sunglasses on indoors. A celebrity!! Presumably when he passes away, his son then inherits the mantle and continues the signing tradition.
Anyhow, back to the Army.
A large number stay entombed awaiting excavation as well as the technology to better restore them given that the local unbaked clay cant be used and thus they are relying on developments in epoxy resin to put their humpty dumpty bodies together again.
No amount of epoxy however can hide the fact that a number of the soldiers do not look that happy. Turns out the Emperor demanded no two were to be alike so after the bodies and blank faces were made they were all personalised. Initials of the artist were put in the foot of the soldiers and any statue the Emperor wasn’t happy with….well…”off with his head.” Not exactly the best environment to work in never knowing if you’d be the next bag of bones consigned to “Mausoleum Hill.”
And then there is the issue that a century after the mausoleum was completed, a Chinese poet wrote about it talking of “palaces, riches and 100 rivers fashioned in mercury”. Poor misguided workers pouring that stuff in thinking they were safe from ending up in the mausoleum pile- not realising of course that they were destined to die shortly anyhow from mercury poisoning. Interestingly test work has shown high levels of mercury in the soil on and around Mount Lishan, underwhich lies the mausoleum,which remains unopened…apparently for fear of damage to the valuables buried with the Emperor. More likely no sucker wants to excavate and breathe the fumes given that mercury is completely non-biodegradable, is the most potent free radical known to humans and can only leache away. More bodies for the Emperor’s afterlife!
His afterlife of a huge army to maintain his empire proved to be a waste of time, money and energy anyhow. Shortly after he was buried vandals broke in, stole all the bronze CHECK weapons from the warriers, torched the place causing the wooden beams above their heads to burn away and bring tons of soil on their heads smashing them to smithereens.
It’s rather eerie when you first enter and look down to see an entire army- in precise military formation according to rank and duty- some in lines, some facing outwards looking for threats, in full battle regalia according to their roles. While Im sure the travelling exhibition that is currently going around the world is worth seeing on account of most people never getting to Xian….but all I can say is seeing some 20 warriors in a museum pales into significance when looking at thousands, line after line, of the real thing.
Life size, full uniform, all with different faces and exact replicas of mankind down to fingerprints. Sadly due to the fire when it was vandalised, the colours on their uniforms also disappeared and they are now a chalky and black soot covered bunch of men.
There are three main areas to see- the first being the army- some 8000 figures (about 2/3 still not excavated and glued together) stretching about 230 metres long with 11 corridors over 3 metres wide each.
The second pit a short walk away contains the chariots and cavalry riders.
And the third is the command post room with people standing around and four horses ready to gallop up a chute.
Described as the greatest archaeological find of the 20th century (and found for the price of a Big Mac meal in Beijing) it is now a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Talking of which, I’m off to investigate visiting another UNESCO Cultural Heritage site and a fitting tribute I think to compare to my blog on Christ the Redeemer in Brazil…….the Leshan Giant Buddha. This is the world’s tallest and largest Buddha standing at 71 meters high and 24 meters wide with a head over 14 meters long and 10 meters wide. To put this into a perspective you can understand- his toenail alone can accommodate a seated person, 100 people can fit in his instep and a dining table can be placed on one of his toes alone.
As the local saying says, "The Mountain is a Buddha and the Buddha is a Mountain."
Wednesday, 4 May 2011
190: Intercontinental Hotel, Hong Kong
Well, oddly enough as Ive slammed other 5 star hotels in the book, I could see how this one made its entrance.
The views at the Intercontinental Hotel were magnificent, easily the best place to go and view the falling nightlights of Hong Kong and Victoria Harbour.
The best is watching not only the tower block lights come on- but also the light show from a number of the towers. Add some absolutely divine martinis.....and array of lovely nibblies..and its the perfect place to settle in for a night in a bar.
I wont go into the rest of it of the hotel (albeit their website lists some 495 rooms with BOSE DVD/CD home entertainment sound systems, iPod docking station, 24-hour butler service and in-room dining as well as concierge services- all pretty standard nowadays for 5 star hotels)…nor did I have the time to sample the restaurants by Nobu or Alain Ducasse.
This hotel is in here for its lobby lounge with its views.
Interestingly , when in China a few weeks later, I read about the opening in March 2011 of the world’s tallest hotel, the Ritz Carlton in Hong Kong.
Now it will be interesting to go back and see the view from there- the Intercontinental is ground level with the beauty of huge seamless glass windows stretching up what appears to be a good 30 odd metres high giving you an unparalleled…but ground view of the lights over the harbour. The Ritz on the other hand is at some 1600 feet high in the International Commerce Centre, the fourth highest building in the world, and thus looks down at the lights. Not one for those prone to vertigo Id suggest!!
The views at the Intercontinental Hotel were magnificent, easily the best place to go and view the falling nightlights of Hong Kong and Victoria Harbour.
The best is watching not only the tower block lights come on- but also the light show from a number of the towers. Add some absolutely divine martinis.....and array of lovely nibblies..and its the perfect place to settle in for a night in a bar.
I wont go into the rest of it of the hotel (albeit their website lists some 495 rooms with BOSE DVD/CD home entertainment sound systems, iPod docking station, 24-hour butler service and in-room dining as well as concierge services- all pretty standard nowadays for 5 star hotels)…nor did I have the time to sample the restaurants by Nobu or Alain Ducasse.
This hotel is in here for its lobby lounge with its views.
Interestingly , when in China a few weeks later, I read about the opening in March 2011 of the world’s tallest hotel, the Ritz Carlton in Hong Kong.
Now it will be interesting to go back and see the view from there- the Intercontinental is ground level with the beauty of huge seamless glass windows stretching up what appears to be a good 30 odd metres high giving you an unparalleled…but ground view of the lights over the harbour. The Ritz on the other hand is at some 1600 feet high in the International Commerce Centre, the fourth highest building in the world, and thus looks down at the lights. Not one for those prone to vertigo Id suggest!!
Location:
central District, Hong Kong
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