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Category Archives: Architecture
Underground Europe
Regular visitors to Travel Between The Pages are well aware of my public transit fandom. Although I grew up riding the New York City subways, I never appreciated how good an urban rail system could be until I spent four … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Europe, Photography, Public Transport, Tourism
Tagged Athens, Berlin, Brussels, London
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Not your usual guidebook for NYC
Filmmaker and social media maven Nicolas Heller, also known as New York Nico, boasts more than a million people followers on his eponymous Instagram account where he chronicles the characters of New York City. Heller platforms ordinary New Yorkers along … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Books, Maps, Public Transport, Restaurants, Tourism, Uncategorized, USA
Tagged Brooklyn, Manhattan, NYC, Travel Guidebooks
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“Renaissance Baedeker”
I first learned about the 15th century incunabula Mirabilia Romae while I was researching a magazine article on the history of the travel guidebook. One of the earliest European printed guidebooks, the Mirabilia Urbis Romaea is a geographically arranged inventory of … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Books, Europe, History, Museums, Tourism, Travel Writing
Tagged Incunabula, Rome
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Magic Lantern
These days Prague is another victim of European over-tourism, but 30 years ago it still was a place of history and mystery. I recently saw the marvelous 1993 documentary below that has had me waxing nostalgic for the Prague that … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Books, Europe, Film, History, Libraries, Museums, Theater, Tourism
Tagged Czech Republic, Czechoslovakia, Franz Kafka, Prague
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signs, signs, everywhere signs
An animation built from road signs is a whirlwind study of flash communication Warning: this film features rapidly flashing images that can be distressing to photosensitive viewers. “The UK filmmaker Daniel McKee is known for videos in which he arranges … Continue reading
Leave the gun, take the cannoli
The historic southern Sicilian city of Agrigento is preparing to be Italy’s 2025 Capital of Culture and has taken a controversial stance against its infamous Mafia past. In a bid to reclaim its cultural identity, the city has banned the … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Europe, History, movies, Tourism
Tagged Cosa Nostra, Italy, Mafia, Sicily
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Walk This Way
The ancient Roman Appian Way road network has become Italy’s newest UNESCO World Heritage Site. The Via Appia Antica, or Appian Way, the oldest and most significant road built by the ancient Romans, has been named a Unesco world heritage … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Europe, History, Maps, Public Transport, Tourism
Tagged ancient Rome, Italy
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Literary London
As a great international capital, once at the hub of an enormous colonial Empire, London has long attracted visits by writers, artists and intellectuals from around the world. University College London is curating how London has been seen through the … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Europe, History, Maps, Theater, Tourism, Writing
Tagged London, United Kingdom
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Beautiful Bruges
I count my self lucky to have seen the beautiful Belgian town of Bruges nearly five decades ago before it became overtouristed and Disneyfied. Still, when I have return over the years, I still am enchanted. This charming tilt-shift video … Continue reading
Omnimappus Europeus
I’m always tickled when the wonderfully cheeky cartoon pops up on the net. The comic website about travel and language by filmmaker Malachi Rempen is still offering witty takes on modern life.
