Medieval streets in Edinburgh 🏴
scotland.co
‘There is something at work in my soul, which I do not understand’
Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
City clock in Auxerre, Burgundy region of France
French vintage postcard
ig credit: fieldnotesbyfi
Scotland’s World Heritage Sites span millennia—etched in stone, cast in iron, and rooted deep in the land.
On #WorldHeritageDay, we honour the places that carry history forward.
🏛️ Scotland’s UNESCO World Heritage Sites:
St Kilda — A remote archipelago in the Outer Hebrides, notable for its dramatic landscapes, seabird colonies, and 4,000 years of human history. It holds dual status for both natural and cultural heritage.
Old and New Towns of Edinburgh — A unique urban landscape where medieval alleyways meet Georgian elegance, showcasing centuries of architectural and civic development.
Heart of Neolithic Orkney — A collection of prehistoric monuments, including Skara Brae, Maeshowe, the Stones of Stenness, and the Ring of Brodgar, offering insight into Neolithic life.
New Lanark — An 18th-century mill village on the River Clyde, renowned for its role in social reform and industrial innovation under Robert Owen.
The Antonine Wall — The northernmost frontier of the Roman Empire in Britain, representing Roman military engineering and imperial ambition.
The Forth Bridge — A 19th-century cantilever railway bridge spanning the Firth of Forth, celebrated as a masterpiece of engineering and design.
The Flow Country — Designated in 2024, this vast peatland in Caithness and Sutherland is the world’s largest blanket bog, recognised for its ecological importance and role in carbon storage.
some portraits :)
Le Mont Aiguille, majestueux et solitaire, incarne la beauté brute de la nature, un lieu où l’amour et la tendresse se mêlent à la grandeur du monde. Comme la montagne, la femme est forte et douce, mystérieuse et sereine, portant en elle la sagesse et la passion de la terre. Dans ce cadre sauvage, elle trouve l’harmonie, un écho d’amour pur, un lien profond avec l’infini.
Mont Aiguille / France 🇫🇷
PhoTo ©️ LM
The Russian Metro Stations by David Burdeny
Old things are always in good repute, present things in disfavor. Tacitus
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