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Rheinfelden, 2025
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Vincenzo Carducci (Italian, 1576-1638) Expugnación de Rheinfelden, 1634 Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid In 1633, a Spanish army under Don Gómez Suárez de Figueroa, 3rd Duke of Feria, took the Swiss city of Rheinfelden, in a plan to link the Spanish territories of Milan and the Spanish Netherlands.
There is nothing in machinery, there is nothing in embankments and railways and iron bridges and engineering devices to oblige them to be ugly. Ugliness is the measure of imperfection.
-- H. G. Wells

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Auf dem Weg. #Rheinfelden(Baden) #Germany #BadenWürttemberg #light #road #landscape #tree #street #dark #shadow #people #backlit #carporn #instacar #cargram #travel #traveling #visiting #instatravel #instago #guidance #motion #fog #rain #locomotive #track #vehicle (hier: Rheinfelden, Germany) https://www.instagram.com/p/BpfMGOnnqJs/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=gxpsxv1z6fo2
Rheinfelden with the Oneplus Open xpan bw
Vincenzo Carducci (Italian, 1576-1638) Socorro de la plaza de Constanza, 1634 Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid This painting celebrates the liberation of the Swiss square of Constance from the siege to which it was being subjected by the Swedish troops of General Horn, who sought to cut off the communication of the imperial troops with the Spanish troops of Valtellina and Milanese. On the canvas, the Spanish nobleman, diplomat and army commander Don Gómez Suárez de Figueroa, 3rd Duke of Feria appears in the foreground, on horseback, on an elevation of land, practically occupying the left half of the canvas. A lance page runs at his side, and behind him appears a group of armored knights among whom Lieutenant General Geraldo Gambacurta, who commanded the cavalry, may be represented.