<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>  <rss xmlns:admin="http://webns.net/mvcb/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:foaf="http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/" xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:rdfs="http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss" xmlns:creativeCommons="http://backend.userland.com/creativeCommonsRssModule" version="2.0"> <channel>  <title>Fotothing photos tagged with cathedral</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/tag/cathedral/</link>   <description>The latest photos on Fotothing tagged with the keyword cathedral</description>   <pubDate>Sun, 07 Sep 2008 02:58:44 +0000</pubDate>   <lastBuildDate>Sun, 07 Sep 2008 02:58:44 +0000</lastBuildDate>   <generator>http://www.fotothing.com/</generator>  <image>  <url>http://static.fotothing.com/images/smalllogo.gif</url>   <title>Fotothing photos tagged with cathedral</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/tag/cathedral/</link>   </image> <item>  <title>Jaimy / September 2 11:45am</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/Jaimy/photo/a66ae3f91662a0abaeb976f9af99e406/</link>   <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.fotothing.com/Jaimy/photo/a66ae3f91662a0abaeb976f9af99e406/" target="_top"><img src="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/a66/a66ae3f91662a0abaeb976f9af99e406.jpg" width="120" height="120" border="0" /></a><br />The candle-stand in the Barcelona cathedral.]]></description>   <pubDate>Tue, 02 Sep 2008 11:45:46 +0000</pubDate>   <author>nobody@fotothing.com (Jaimy)</author>   <enclosure url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/a66/a66ae3f91662a0abaeb976f9af99e406.jpg" length="6328" type="image/jpeg" /> <media:content url="http://www.fotothing.com/photos/a66/a66ae3f91662a0abaeb976f9af99e406.jpg" type="image/jpeg" width="550" height="367" fileSize="36337" expression="full"></media:content> <media:thumbnail width="120" height="120" url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/a66/a66ae3f91662a0abaeb976f9af99e406.jpg" />  <media:text type="html"><![CDATA[The candle-stand in the Barcelona cathedral.]]></media:text>  <media:credit role="photographer">Jaimy</media:credit> </item> <item>  <title>superJoan / August 30 10:37am</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/superJoan/photo/ec63f87bea2facdb51a6bf0bdfbb2700/</link>   <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.fotothing.com/superJoan/photo/ec63f87bea2facdb51a6bf0bdfbb2700/" target="_top"><img src="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/ec6/ec63f87bea2facdb51a6bf0bdfbb2700.jpg" width="120" height="120" border="0" /></a><br />]]></description>   <pubDate>Sat, 30 Aug 2008 10:37:24 +0000</pubDate>   <author>nobody@fotothing.com (superJoan)</author>   <enclosure url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/ec6/ec63f87bea2facdb51a6bf0bdfbb2700.jpg" length="7382" type="image/jpeg" /> <media:content url="http://www.fotothing.com/photos/ec6/ec63f87bea2facdb51a6bf0bdfbb2700.jpg" type="image/jpeg" width="413" height="550" fileSize="66190" expression="full"></media:content> <media:thumbnail width="120" height="120" url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/ec6/ec63f87bea2facdb51a6bf0bdfbb2700.jpg" />  <media:text type="html"><![CDATA[]]></media:text>  <media:credit role="photographer">superJoan</media:credit> </item> <item>  <title>jomoud / August 27 8:55pm</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/d4fcfd425d22479fb1de7f9623ee0ff6/</link>   <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/d4fcfd425d22479fb1de7f9623ee0ff6/" target="_top"><img src="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/d4f/d4fcfd425d22479fb1de7f9623ee0ff6.jpg" width="120" height="120" border="0" /></a><br />ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></description>   <pubDate>Wed, 27 Aug 2008 20:55:49 +0000</pubDate>   <author>nobody@fotothing.com (jomoud)</author>   <enclosure url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/d4f/d4fcfd425d22479fb1de7f9623ee0ff6.jpg" length="8310" type="image/jpeg" /> <media:content url="http://www.fotothing.com/photos/d4f/d4fcfd425d22479fb1de7f9623ee0ff6.jpg" type="image/jpeg" width="550" height="363" fileSize="78221" expression="full"></media:content> <media:thumbnail width="120" height="120" url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/d4f/d4fcfd425d22479fb1de7f9623ee0ff6.jpg" />  <media:text type="html"><![CDATA[ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></media:text>  <media:credit role="photographer">jomoud</media:credit> </item> <item>  <title>jomoud / August 27 8:55pm</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/f51889f38640fff1def3f07852720af4/</link>   <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/f51889f38640fff1def3f07852720af4/" target="_top"><img src="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/f51/f51889f38640fff1def3f07852720af4.jpg" width="120" height="120" border="0" /></a><br />ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></description>   <pubDate>Wed, 27 Aug 2008 20:55:49 +0000</pubDate>   <author>nobody@fotothing.com (jomoud)</author>   <enclosure url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/f51/f51889f38640fff1def3f07852720af4.jpg" length="7810" type="image/jpeg" /> <media:content url="http://www.fotothing.com/photos/f51/f51889f38640fff1def3f07852720af4.jpg" type="image/jpeg" width="550" height="364" fileSize="64191" expression="full"></media:content> <media:thumbnail width="120" height="120" url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/f51/f51889f38640fff1def3f07852720af4.jpg" />  <media:text type="html"><![CDATA[ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></media:text>  <media:credit role="photographer">jomoud</media:credit> </item> <item>  <title>jomoud / August 27 8:55pm</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/47da2118957ad05071bf1cad1910f9c8/</link>   <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/47da2118957ad05071bf1cad1910f9c8/" target="_top"><img src="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/47d/47da2118957ad05071bf1cad1910f9c8.jpg" width="120" height="120" border="0" /></a><br />ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></description>   <pubDate>Wed, 27 Aug 2008 20:55:49 +0000</pubDate>   <author>nobody@fotothing.com (jomoud)</author>   <enclosure url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/47d/47da2118957ad05071bf1cad1910f9c8.jpg" length="4700" type="image/jpeg" /> <media:content url="http://www.fotothing.com/photos/47d/47da2118957ad05071bf1cad1910f9c8.jpg" type="image/jpeg" width="354" height="550" fileSize="39436" expression="full"></media:content> <media:thumbnail width="120" height="120" url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/47d/47da2118957ad05071bf1cad1910f9c8.jpg" />  <media:text type="html"><![CDATA[ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></media:text>  <media:credit role="photographer">jomoud</media:credit> </item> <item>  <title>capcorse / August 27 1:05pm</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/capcorse/photo/8acef0896a100330c6f7faf74ec3c940/</link>   <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.fotothing.com/capcorse/photo/8acef0896a100330c6f7faf74ec3c940/" target="_top"><img src="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/8ac/8acef0896a100330c6f7faf74ec3c940.jpg" width="120" height="120" border="0" /></a><br />Granada cathedral, moonrise.]]></description>   <pubDate>Wed, 27 Aug 2008 13:05:35 +0000</pubDate>   <author>nobody@fotothing.com (capcorse)</author>   <enclosure url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/8ac/8acef0896a100330c6f7faf74ec3c940.jpg" length="9255" type="image/jpeg" /> <media:content url="http://www.fotothing.com/photos/8ac/8acef0896a100330c6f7faf74ec3c940.jpg" type="image/jpeg" width="550" height="413" fileSize="69550" expression="full"></media:content> <media:thumbnail width="120" height="120" url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/8ac/8acef0896a100330c6f7faf74ec3c940.jpg" />  <media:text type="html"><![CDATA[Granada cathedral, moonrise.]]></media:text>  <media:credit role="photographer">capcorse</media:credit> </item> <item>  <title>jomoud / August 27 3:39am</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/efe14e1d9e416dea239b80635eec5846/</link>   <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/efe14e1d9e416dea239b80635eec5846/" target="_top"><img src="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/efe/efe14e1d9e416dea239b80635eec5846.jpg" width="120" height="120" border="0" /></a><br />ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></description>   <pubDate>Wed, 27 Aug 2008 03:39:39 +0000</pubDate>   <author>nobody@fotothing.com (jomoud)</author>   <enclosure url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/efe/efe14e1d9e416dea239b80635eec5846.jpg" length="7781" type="image/jpeg" /> <media:content url="http://www.fotothing.com/photos/efe/efe14e1d9e416dea239b80635eec5846.jpg" type="image/jpeg" width="550" height="358" fileSize="88042" expression="full"></media:content> <media:thumbnail width="120" height="120" url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/efe/efe14e1d9e416dea239b80635eec5846.jpg" />  <media:text type="html"><![CDATA[ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></media:text>  <media:credit role="photographer">jomoud</media:credit> </item> <item>  <title>jomoud / August 27 3:39am</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/7b79a16bc35ec0f46d06f6833e9bd0d3/</link>   <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/7b79a16bc35ec0f46d06f6833e9bd0d3/" target="_top"><img src="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/7b7/7b79a16bc35ec0f46d06f6833e9bd0d3.jpg" width="120" height="120" border="0" /></a><br />ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></description>   <pubDate>Wed, 27 Aug 2008 03:39:39 +0000</pubDate>   <author>nobody@fotothing.com (jomoud)</author>   <enclosure url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/7b7/7b79a16bc35ec0f46d06f6833e9bd0d3.jpg" length="6835" type="image/jpeg" /> <media:content url="http://www.fotothing.com/photos/7b7/7b79a16bc35ec0f46d06f6833e9bd0d3.jpg" type="image/jpeg" width="550" height="367" fileSize="65144" expression="full"></media:content> <media:thumbnail width="120" height="120" url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/7b7/7b79a16bc35ec0f46d06f6833e9bd0d3.jpg" />  <media:text type="html"><![CDATA[ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></media:text>  <media:credit role="photographer">jomoud</media:credit> </item> <item>  <title>jomoud / August 27 3:39am</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/c9475d83a1f22a5e48df7d35185afa4c/</link>   <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/c9475d83a1f22a5e48df7d35185afa4c/" target="_top"><img src="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/c94/c9475d83a1f22a5e48df7d35185afa4c.jpg" width="120" height="120" border="0" /></a><br />ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></description>   <pubDate>Wed, 27 Aug 2008 03:39:39 +0000</pubDate>   <author>nobody@fotothing.com (jomoud)</author>   <enclosure url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/c94/c9475d83a1f22a5e48df7d35185afa4c.jpg" length="6015" type="image/jpeg" /> <media:content url="http://www.fotothing.com/photos/c94/c9475d83a1f22a5e48df7d35185afa4c.jpg" type="image/jpeg" width="550" height="353" fileSize="56194" expression="full"></media:content> <media:thumbnail width="120" height="120" url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/c94/c9475d83a1f22a5e48df7d35185afa4c.jpg" />  <media:text type="html"><![CDATA[ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></media:text>  <media:credit role="photographer">jomoud</media:credit> </item> <item>  <title>jomoud / August 26 3:10am</title>   <link>http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/639d95ef98bb66e1b18ce7981fbadf24/</link>   <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.fotothing.com/jomoud/photo/639d95ef98bb66e1b18ce7981fbadf24/" target="_top"><img src="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/639/639d95ef98bb66e1b18ce7981fbadf24.jpg" width="120" height="120" border="0" /></a><br />ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></description>   <pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2008 03:10:58 +0000</pubDate>   <author>nobody@fotothing.com (jomoud)</author>   <enclosure url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/639/639d95ef98bb66e1b18ce7981fbadf24.jpg" length="8498" type="image/jpeg" /> <media:content url="http://www.fotothing.com/photos/639/639d95ef98bb66e1b18ce7981fbadf24.jpg" type="image/jpeg" width="550" height="361" fileSize="98076" expression="full"></media:content> <media:thumbnail width="120" height="120" url="http://www.fotothing.com/thumbs/639/639d95ef98bb66e1b18ce7981fbadf24.jpg" />  <media:text type="html"><![CDATA[ST.BONIFACE CATHEDRAL, Winnipeg, Canada. <br /><br />Across the Provencher Bridge over the Red River is Winnipeg’s French neighbourhood of St. Boniface. This is one of the oldest French communities in Canada, founded as Fort Rouge in 1783. It became an important fur-trading outpost for the North West Company. <br /><br />Viewed from downtown Winnipeg, the imposing stone facade of St. Boniface Cathedral with its huge empty rose window dominates the far bank of the historic Red River. <br />The Roman Byzantine style ruin, fourth church on the site, was built in 1908. Its name honours the eighth century "apostle of Germany" and veterans of the Swiss Des Meurons Regiment who settled here. Since the first bishop, Joseph-Norbert Provencher (his name graces a bridge and boulevard here) celebrated the Eucharist in a log church in 1819, the diocese has had a close relationship with the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. The order, whose members were in the vanguard of 19th century missionary endeavours in the Canadian West, contributed three archbishops from St. Boniface. <br />In 1968, a disastrous fire seemed certain to end the church's position as the cultural centre of the old francophone district. Salvation came in the form of a new, smaller church, designed by award-winning local architect, Etienne Gaboury to fit inside the limestone ruins. (The award-winning Provencher Bridge was also designed by Etienne Gaboury.) <br />An open-air atrium behind the facade gives access to the hidden, 1,000-seat cathedral. A self-rusting steel roof adds colour and contrasts with the grey Tyndal limestone walls. <br />Four bishops and a number of missionary priests are interred in the old cathedral crypt, which, along with some church furnishings, survived the fire. <br />Pleasant, park-like grounds of the cathedral offer visitors a variety of historic sites. Early missionaries, explorers and settlers in the cemetery include Louis Riel and other participants in the rebellion of 1869. Monuments honor the Blessed Virgin and the La Verendrye family of explorers. The former Grey Nuns log hospital/convent, now a museum, is said to be Winnipeg's oldest surviving building. <br />]]></media:text>  <media:credit role="photographer">jomoud</media:credit> </item></channel></rss>