GALERÍA:
MUSEO // Temporary exhibitions // Year 2020 // Bell-ringing by hand
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Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
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Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
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The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
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Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
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Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
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The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
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The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
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Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
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Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
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Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
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Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
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The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
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Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
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Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
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Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
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The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
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Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
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Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
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Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
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The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
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Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
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Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
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Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
-
Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
-
The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
-
The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
-
Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
-
Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
-
Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
-
The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
-
Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Testigos de los cambios de población Iglesia de San Esteban, Moradillo de Sedano (Burgos) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and population Quintanilla de Somoza, Maragatería, León (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
Identity and territory In Segovia (Spain) the bell-towers highlight and mark out neighbourhoods with the Cathedral in the pre-eminent spot © Paz CabelloSee in detail
-
The bell-tower Image from 'Beato de Tábara (979) (left) © Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain). San Esteban towers (12th C) and the Cathedral —right— (16th C), Segovia (Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Instruments of complex metallurgic societies (1) Campana donada por el abad Sansón, año 930 © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba. (2) Escrito en caracteres cúficos, «Campana donaóda por Omar Ben Zakaria, siglo XI» © Museo Arqueolgico de Huelva. (3) Campana donada por Rodrigo Gundisalvo en 1085 © San Isidoro (León)See in detail
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Cultural continuity: ‘Tintinabulum’, the procession bell in use since Roman times (1) The Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek, in Bruges (Belgium). (2) Church of Cáqueza, Cundinamarca (Colombia). Source: ‘Carolus’See in detail
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The Marquis of Li’s Chinese bells Marquis of Li’s 'Bianzhong' (China). Source 'Revista del Instituto Confucio de Madrid', n.38, V, September 2006 © Instituto Confucio de Madrid (Spain)See in detail
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The oldest bells (1) Bell donated by Abbot Sansón, 930 AD © Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba (Spain) (2) Bell donated by Omar Ben Zakaria, 11th century, in Kufic characters © Museo Arqueológico de Huelva (Spain) (3) Bell donated by Rodrigo Gundisalvo in 1085 © San Isidoro, León (Spain)See in detail
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Bells, the loudspeakers of the human voice Sedano church (Burgos, Spain) © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Bell-ringing by hand From left to right: Albaida bell-tower (Valencia, Spain) during the manual bell-ringing on 21st April 2018 © Luis Pablo Martínez. Sedano bell-tower (Burgos, Spain) on 8th June 2019, the day when all the bell-towers in Las Lorcas Geopark rang out © Paz Cabello. Queen Leticia in El Burgo de Osma (Soria, Spain), 12th June 2019, sponsoring the bell-ringing by handSee in detail
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Protection by the manual bell-ringing Santiago de Compostela Cathedral (Spain) ©Paz CabelloSee in detail
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Electrification: bells with a gag Seville (Spain), Resurrection Sunday (21st April 2019). The bells of 'La Giralda' swing moved by electricity: they repeat the same ring but people seem unaware of it © Pilar CabelloSee in detail
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Bell-ringers Bell-ringers from Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Luis Pablo MartínezSee in detail
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The bell-tower is the resonance chamber and together with the bells constitutes a single instrument with a unique and unrepeatable sonority Bell-tower at Albaida, Valencia (Spain) © Campaners d’AlbaidaSee in detail
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Instrumento de comunicación Campanarios accesibles desde el exterior de la iglesia usados por el vecindario, (1) Rabanal del Camino y (2) Turienzo de los Caballeros, ambos en la provincia de León © Paz CabelloSee in detail
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