Home of Airbus, Toulouse, is also a university town. Unlike everywhere else we visited in France on this trip, Toulouse is at its best self. In fact, they must be doing really well, because they have a thing going on with Occitanie, not unlike the Basques or Catalans.
At the end of our travels, a little worn out, we took it easy and took our time walking around the historical center. On our wedding anniversary, May 18, International Museum Day, there was nothing going on. Instead, the first Saturday evening after May 18, it is EU's Museum Night. All the public museums were having open houses and special events, some until 1am. The event was very popular. It was really good to see people of all ages going about town late at night and standing in line.
Our 5th floor apartment in Toulouse overlooked the National Theater which naturally was built with local brick.
The Garonne River runs through Toulouse. Here you see the New Bridge (16th century) and the spires of Église Notre-Dame la Dalbade.
Looking across the Garonne to the old hydroelectric plant, still in use and also a museum.
Place du Capitole is the main square and heart of the city. Our apartment was a 5 minute walk to the east.
The Town Hall has some beautiful murals by local artist Henri Martin.
The hallways of our apartment were strangely dark. Hmmmm.
The left transept of Cathedral of Saint-Etienne was enlarged to be a huge ornate choir giving the building interior an unbalanced look.
Toulouse has loads of green space. This is one of the wide boulevards leading to the Grand Rond (below) and Jaridin des Plantes.
We celebrated our 27th wedding anniversary tucking into the buffet at Le Faim Harricot Vert (The Hungry Bean) Vegetarian Restaurant.
Like Montpellier, Toulouse had tons of bicycle delivery. Here some Uber Eats guys have a chat.
There are at least two Art Deco Post Offices in Toulouse. Brick of course.
Fav Art Deco facade.
Art Deco Library - La Bibliothèque d'Étude et du Patrimoine.
The Basilica of Saint-Sernin. Said to be the largest Romanesque church in Europe.
The spires of Notre-Dame du Taur show Toulousian brick work at its finest. We later attended an organ concert there.
The interior of the deconsecrated Church of the Jacobins was beautiful with its line of slender central pillars.
Evening street scenes.
The church Notre-Dame de la Daurade, built on the site of a pagan temple, was very atmospheric with its Black Madonna.
Random cyclists on bridges.
Hôtel-Dieu Saint-Jacques, once the largest hospital in Toulouse.
The evening of May 19th was free museum night; most of the public museums were open and free from 7pm to 1pm with special programs. We first headed to the very impressive Musée des Augustins (formerly a convent).
The story of Salome and John the Baptist.
Here's some video of the Romanesque column capitals.
And if the video does not play, click here.
Then to the City Museum where there was a group singing in the Occitan dialect.
Then through the darkening but busy streets to Musée Saint-Raymond, the Archaeology Museum.
On our final full day we walked along the Garonne River to the old power plant. Then followed the Canal de Brienne to the Port de l'Embouchure, where the Canal du Midi starts towards the Mediterranean Sea and the Canal to Garonne heads towards the Atlantic Ocean. Cool! Here you can see the fish ladder at the power plant (The Bazacle).
The brick power plant.
After 1.25 kms of shady greenness on the Canal de Brienne foot path, we arrived at the Port de l'Embouchure, the basin where the Canal du Midi and Canal de Garrone start.
This is the start of the Canal du Midi at its western end.
We walked the CdM for a few kilometers, generating the spark of an idea to return and bike the canal path ourselves, before heading to the city center.
On our final night we headed out to the Garonne riverbank to watch the sunset and the lights come on.
See all the Toulouse photos on flickr here.
Sun-Ling and John have been traveling the earth since 2008 while blogging, eating vegetarian and vegan, and riding public transportation. We love uphill day hikes, 20th-century architecture, Roman ruins, all bodies of water, local markets, shopping for groceries, aqueducts, miradors, trip planning, blablacar, and more.
Search This Blog
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Most Recent Post
Qatar: Doha
Doha is another bonus visit for us. We picked a long itinerary that gave us 18 hours in Doha, then Qatar Airways canceled the original fligh...
Most Popular Posts of Last 30 Days
-
Chaozhou By John and Sun-Ling Meckley Copyright 2006 In search of warmer weather after a very chilly December in Shanghai, we headed to ...
-
"Are you from Norway?" asked the breakfast buffet hostess at our hotel. "No" I replied. Sun-Ling and I both thought it ...
-
Wuxi, situated just 26 miles from Suzhou, is another ancient city boasting a written history dating back 3000 years. It is also the cradle o...
-
Sapa first got on our radar when we were in Hanoi in 2002. Since then we had traveled much in the area in China , right north of Sapa. I was...
-
John: We left Subotica, Serbia heading north to Hungary on an antiquated self-propelled one-coach train that barely made more than 20kms...
-
From Rimini we rode the train south along the coast of the Adriatic Sea to Barletta. For more than 5 hours we watched the rainy, blustery sa...
-
On our second full day in Aviles, we made a day trip to the fishing village of Cudillero. There must be hundreds of villages like it on the...
No comments:
Post a Comment