Showing posts with label Joaquín Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joaquín Jones. Show all posts

Friday, 18 May 2018

GEISHAS, NINJAS, HAIKUS AND ORIGAMIS IN MYORYUJI

Kanazawa District: samuaris, ninjas and geishas
Today, The Jones have visited Myōryū-ji in Kanazawa. They wanted to discover the world of ninjas and geishas, two of the most famous icons in the Japanese culture.

The family has visited this wonderful temple and have had enough time to revised the Second Conditional and talk about very interesting themes that affects the whole planet. Joaquín Jones have been talking about the smart green cities in Sweden and how this country is working in a sustainable model betting on renewable green energies. Marta Jones have explained the Spanish fraud with the renewable energies and how it has ruined hundreds of little investors and has affected the global public debt of this country.


 More information: Second Conditional

Finally, the family has read another chapter of Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray and they received the visit of some Japanese friends and altogether, they have written some haikus and have made some origamis before talking about an interesting theme: dinosaurs and its difficult names.


Some Jones at Myōryū-ji
Myōryū-ji, commonly known as Ninja-dera or Ninja Temple, is a Buddhist temple belonging to Nichiren sect located in the city of Kanazawa, Ishikawa. While not actually associated with ninjas, the temple earned its nickname because of its many deceptive defences.

Myoryuji is located in the Teramachi District in the south of the city. Populated by numerous temples, this area was originally located outside of the city limits as were the entertainment districts.

In 1585 Maeda Toshiie, the founding daimyō of Kaga Domain, built a chapel within Kanazawa Castle as a prayer place of Kaga Domain. In 1643, Maeda Toshitsune, the third daimyō of Kaga Domain, relocated the chapel to a new site in the Tera-machi district to the south of the castle, and ordered the construction of a full temple. The temple layout and location were part of the domain's defensive plans against a possible attack by the central government, Tokugawa shogunate.


More information: Myoryuji Temple

Since the Edo period Tokugawa shogunate imposed strict building restrictions as one way of weakening his regional lords, Myōryū-ji was designed to circumvent the restrictions and serve as a disguised military outpost. It was supplemented with considerable defensive features and escape routes, so that its defenders could alert the castle in the event of an attack. These iincluded hidden tunnels, secret rooms, traps, and a labyrinth of corridors and staircases.


Some Jones at Myōryū-ji
The Tokugawa shogunate prohibited construction of buildings higher than three stories. Viewed from the outside, the temple appears to be a two-story building, but actually it is a four-story building with seven-layer internal structure.

The temple is built around a central water well which is approximately 25 m deep; the bottom of the well is said to connect to a tunnel to Kanazawa Castle. The main building has a complicated layout which includes a middle floor and middle-middle floor, and contains 23 rooms and 29 staircases. There are different contrivances to fool the enemy such as hidden chambers and stairs, completely unexpected and reversible trap-like doors and floors, secret tunnels, escape pits. The lookout on the top affords a view of the surrounding area. In addition, the temple walls and roof are very strong and durable enough to withstand typhoons and heavy snow.


More information: Taiken

Since the shogun imposed strict building restrictions as one way of weakening his regional lords, Myoryuji was designed to circumvent the restrictions and serve as a disguised military outpost. It was built with considerable defences and escape routes, so that its defenders could alert the castle in the event of an attack.

The temple's defences aimed to guard against intruders or attack, and include hidden tunnels, secret rooms, traps, and a labyrinth of corridors and staircases.


More information: Hub Japan


 Fall down seven times, stand up eight.

Japanese Proverb


A ninja or shinobi was a covert agent or mercenary in feudal Japan. The functions of the ninja included espionage, sabotage, infiltration, assassination and guerrilla warfare. 

Their covert methods of waging irregular warfare were deemed dishonorable and beneath the samurai, who observed strict rules about honor and combat. The shinobi proper, a specially trained group of spies and mercenaries, appeared in the 15th century during the Sengoku period, but antecedents may have existed as early as the 12th century.

Ninja warriors
In the unrest of the Sengoku period (15th–17th centuries), mercenaries and spies for hire became active in the Iga Province and the adjacent area around the village of Kōga, and it is from the area's clans that much of our knowledge of the ninja is drawn. 

Following the unification of Japan under the Tokugawa shogunate (17th century), the ninja faded into obscurity. A number of shinobi manuals, often based on Chinese military philosophy, were written in the 17th and 18th centuries, most notably the Bansenshukai (1676).

By the time of the Meiji Restoration (1868), the tradition of the shinobi had become a topic of popular imagination and mystery in Japan. Ninja figured prominently in legend and folklore, where they were associated with legendary abilities such as invisibility, walking on water and control over the natural elements. As a consequence, their perception in popular culture is often based more on such legend and folklore than on the historically accurate spies of the Sengoku period.


More information: Thoughco


After the rain, earth hardens.

Ninja Proverb


Geisha are traditional Japanese female entertainers who act as hostesses. Their wide skills include performing various arts such as Japanese classical music and traditional dance, witty games and conversation, traditionally to entertain male customers, but also female customers today.

Some geishas
In the early stages of Japanese history, there were female entertainers: Saburuko, serving girls, were mostly wandering girls whose families were displaced from struggles in the late 600s. 

Some of these saburuko girls sold sexual services, while others with a better education made a living by entertaining at high-class social gatherings. 

After the imperial court moved the capital to Heian-kyō, Kyoto, in 794 the conditions that would form geisha culture began to emerge, as it became the home of a beauty-obsessed elite. Skilled female performers, such as Shirabyōshi dancers, thrived.

Traditional Japan embraced sexual delights, it is not a Shinto taboo, and men were not constrained to be faithful to their wives. The ideal wife was a modest mother and manager of the home; by Confucian custom love had secondary importance. 


More information: Toki Tojyo

For sexual enjoyment and romantic attachment, men did not go to their wives, but to courtesans. Walled-in pleasure quarters known as yūkaku  were built in the 16th century, and in 1617 the shogunate designated pleasure quarters, outside of which prostitution would be illegal, and within which yūjo, play women, would be classified and licensed. 

The highest yūjo class was the geisha's predecessor, called tayuu, a combination of actress and prostitute, originally playing on stages set in the dry Kamo riverbed in Kyoto. They performed erotic dances and skits, and this new art was dubbed kabuku, meaning to be wild and outrageous. The dances were called kabuki, and this was the beginning of kabuki theater.

More information: Historical Honey


Martial arts is just practice. Being a geisha requires complete control. 

Michelle Yeoh


Origami, from ori meaning folding, and kami meaning paper is the art of paper folding, which is often associated with Japanese culture. In modern usage, the word origami is used as an inclusive term for all folding practices, regardless of their culture of origin. 

The Jones & Kokeshis ready to make origamis
The goal is to transform a flat square sheet of paper into a finished sculpture through folding and sculpting techniques. Modern origami practitioners generally discourage the use of cuts, glue, or markings on the paper.  

Origami folders often use the Japanese word kirigami to refer to designs which use cuts, although cutting is more characteristic of Chinese papercrafts.

The small number of basic origami folds can be combined in a variety of ways to make intricate designs. The best-known origami model is the Japanese paper crane. In general, these designs begin with a square sheet of paper whose sides may be of different colors, prints, or patterns.


Traditional Japanese origami, which has been practiced since the Edo period (1603–1867), has often been less strict about these conventions, sometimes cutting the paper or using nonsquare shapes to start with. The principles of origami are also used in stents, packaging and other engineering applications.

More information: My Modern MET

Distinct paperfolding traditions arose in Europe, China, and Japan which have been well-documented by historians. These seem to have been mostly separate traditions, until the 20th century.

In Japan, the earliest unambiguous reference to a paper model is in a short poem by Ihara Saikaku in 1680 which mentions a traditional butterfly design used during Shinto weddings. Folding filled some ceremonial functions in Edo period Japanese culture; noshi were attached to gifts, much like greeting cards are used today. This developed into a form of entertainment; the first two instructional books published in Japan are clearly recreational.


More information: Smithsonian


My origami creations, in accordance with the laws of nature, require the use of geometry, science, and physics. They also encompass religion, philosophy, and biochemistry. Overall, I want you to discover 
the joy of creation by your own handthe possibility of creation 
from paper is infinite.
 
Akira Yoshizawa


The Jones have written some haikus dedicated to some members of the family for Ana Bean-Jones to wish a soon recovering; Silvia Jones to wish a great success in her exams; and Félix Jones and Rubén Jones to congratulate them for their successes in athletics and gymnastics.

To Ana Bean Jones:

Ana's very strong
She overcomes all bad things
She is our winner 

Haiku is a very short form of Japanese poetry.In Japanese haiku a kireji, or cutting word, typically appears at the end of one of the verse's three phrases. A kireji fills a role somewhat analogous to a caesura in classical western poetry or to a volta in sonnets. 

The Jones have written some dedicated haikus
Depending on which cutting word is chosen, and its position within the verse, it may briefly cut the stream of thought, suggesting a parallel between the preceding and following phrases, or it may provide a dignified ending, concluding the verse with a heightened sense of closure.

To Silvia Jones:

Silvia works hard
Tomorrow a great proof has
Good luck she will have

The fundamental aesthetic quality of both hokku and haiku is that it is internally sufficient, independent of context, and will bear consideration as a complete work. The kireji lends the verse structural support, allowing it to stand as an independent poem. 

The use of kireji distinguishes haiku and hokku from second and subsequent verses of renku; which may employ semantic and syntactic disjuncture, even to the point of occasionally end-stopping a phrase with a sentence-ending particle. However, renku typically employ kireji.

To Félix Jones:

He is the winner
Félix the happy boy is
The best runner is

In English, since kireji have no direct equivalent, poets sometimes use punctuation such as a dash or ellipsis, or an implied break to create a juxtaposition intended to prompt the reader to reflect on the relationship between the two parts.


To Rubén Jones:
 Rubén was training
to be a great champion
Now he is the best

The first haiku written in English was by Ezra Pound, In a Station of the Metro, published in 1913. Since then, the haiku has become a fairly popular form among English-speaking poets. English haiku can follow the traditional Japanese rules, but are frequently less strict, particularly concerning the number of syllables and subject matter.

More information: Web Exhibits


In eternity
We live. Come from.
Life is one Series of footprints.
 
Shashi

Wednesday, 16 May 2018

JOAQUÍN JONES: GERMAN WINDS TO BUILD FUTURE

Joaquín Jones with his boat in Bremen, Germany
Joaquín Jones. Sailor. Germany.

I'm Joaquín Jones. I was born in Berlin when the city was divided in four parts: The American, the British, the French and the Russian one. I'm from the German Democratic Republic, a country that doesn't exist today. Living under the URSS was difficult because we hadn't got anything and we lived under a big poverty. I'm a sailor, a person who sails across seas and oceans. I like sea and the sound of silence.


-Good morning, Joaquín Jones and thanks to attend us.

-Good morning. It's an honour.

-How was life in the GDR?

-Difficult. It was very difficult. I think that this age influenced me a lot and, perhaps, this is the main reason about my job.

-Why?

-Because in the GDR you worked thousands of hours and you didn't earn a lot of money. When the wall fell, capitalism arrived to us and, although it isn't a perfect economic system and creates a lot of differences, it's better than living under the communism. 

-Do you miss anything about the GDR?

-Well, people were very educated and polite but I don't know if it was because of the control of the system over the citizens or because of the idiosyncrasy of the East German people.

-When did you decide to be a sailor?

-Since the moment I had enough conscience to realize I was living under a dictatorship in a city divided in four parts and separated by a long and high wall. I neede to feel freedom and being a sailor was a way to escape. Sea makes me happy and free.

-Sea is beautiful but very dangerous, isn't it?

-Nature is impossible to control even to predict. We can try to understand it but it isn't under our hands. It's powerful and dangerous but all has a meaning in it. This is dangerous but also wonderful. You must love it because if you love nature, you respect yourself as a part of it.

-Which is the best wind?

-The wind of change.

-Which is it?

-It's the wind that announces changes for the future that will improve our lives.

-It's beautiful.

-It's one of the most amazing songs of Scorpions, the German group from Hannover.

-How do you define yourself?

-I'm a person with an open mind who likes learning things and travelling around the world. We were prisoners too much time and we need open our mind and know other cultures and other people. We can learn a lot and offer our knowledge at the same time.

-Which is your favourite country?

-All of them. Every country has something to offer but if I have to choose, I like the USA because I'm in love with New York City and Ireland, because all the country is a fairy tale, but I also like Peru and the Pacific Islands.

-Have you visited these countries, then?

-Yes, all of them and every one has something special to remember. I have lots of memories and it's impossible to only talk about one.

-Which is the most dangerous sea animal for you?

-Well, it's difficult to choose only one but because I'm a sailor and I read Moby Dick dozens of times I agree with Captain Ahab. The White Whale is a kind of animal that impress me much.

-And sharks?

-When I remember the Pacific Ocean I think in sharks, especially in the whale shark which is in danger of extinction but also in the 250 other types which live in this ocean and eat fish, seals and crabs. I have respect for them.

-Are you proud of being German?

-It's a strange situation. We need at least two more generations to forget this terrible fact. The role of Germany in the WWII was terrible and we lived the consequences during many years.

-But now, Germany is the most powerful European country...

-I don't agree. I think that Norway, Luxembourg, Vatican City, Netherlands or even Andorra are better than us. Working on TV has showed me how important is marketing to promote your ideas. I think Germany is a big marketing campaign. Germany is a great industry for Europe but other countries have more power than us.

-Are you a sceptic?

-Yes, in some things that people accept without thinking twice, I often have other opinion.

-Why do you think people accept the official version so easily?

-I don't know. The influence of mass media over the population is huge. You can't trust on newspapers, TV or radio because they explain the reality that they want and they're interested in. If you say one lie thousands of times, finally, people will accept it like a truth.

-Which is the solution to fight against this?

-It's difficult. You can't live without trusting in anything or anybody but you can try to be critic and observe as things as you can before giving your opinion about something. You must listen to all versions and try to extract the real information which is hidden. We must be proactive citizens.

-How do you feel being a member of The Jones?

-Very well. It's an incredible experience. They are funny and we can talk about whatever we want without any kind of censorship and this create an open environment of trust and freedom.

-How is a normal day with The Jones?

-We haven't got similar days. Every day is different and this is something very important because it offers to you the possibility of living fantastic experiences every day and enjoy them with all your heart because you know that next day you're going to put the score to zero and we're going to start again. It's a non-stopping life.

-Which is your best memory with The Jones?

-It’s difficult to choose only one but I like every birthday and special day that we have celebrated.

-Which is your favourite colour?

-There’s a colour for every moment but if I had to choose one, perhaps blue, because is the sea colour.

-How long have you been studying English?

-I never studied English in the school. It was forbidden. We studied Russian and Spanish because we only could travel to the URSS and to Cuba. I started to learn English when the wall fell and I had the chance to travel.

-Was English difficult to learn?

-Not a lot. English and German have a lot of things in common. They're from the same linguistic family. Learning English wasn't necessary until we had the opportunity of travelling and have business with foreign enterprises.

-You like travelling. Recommend me a country...

-Peru. It's an amazing country full of kind people and ancient places where time seems to stop. One country that has more than 3,000 kinds of potatoes deserves all my respect. It's incredible.

-Do you like potatoes?

-Yes, I do. Although they aren't my favourite food, it's fantastic to eat some potatoes while you're drinking one of the best German beers.

-Which one?

-Whatever you want. All of them are good beers.

-And about food?

-Without any kind of doubt Ana Bean-Jones' cakes. They are delicious.

-Thank you very much, Joaquín Jones.

-You're welcome.


The wind of change
blows straight into the face of time
like a stormwind that will ring the freedom bell
for peace of mind.

Scorpions

Monday, 30 April 2018

MAY GOOD FORTUNE BE WITH NEW JONES' INVESTMENTS

Paqui Jones at Hotel Des Bains in Aix-Les-Bains
Today, The Jones have revised some aspects of English grammar and they have talked about new ones like May / May Not and Countable & Uncountable

More information: May

The family has created a little post taking information thanks to the question words and they have decided where they want to travel after leaving Paris, next May 2, and about which new houses they want to buy around the world to use them as their residences. 

More information: A Few / A Little 

After some deliberations, the family has decided to travel to Japan first, and to Galapagos Island later. They have decided to buy some new residences in France: a hotel to refurbish in Aix-Les-Bains in Savoie named Hotel Des Bains; a Templar Castle in Chinon in The Loire Valley; and a classic house in Paris

Joaquín Jones at Villa Las Tronas, Sardinia
They have also bought a new summer residence in Sardinia named Villa Las Tronas, which has been a hotel until The Grandma has decided to buy it.

Finally, The Jones have bought a Renaissance palace named Corte Sconta detta Arcana in Venice to live between canals in this dreamed city which has special memories for The Grandma and her great lost lover, Corto Maltese, who share their lives to Venice to search for an emerald known as the Clavicle of Solomon.


Ana Bean Jones in Corte Sconta detta Arcana, Venice
Ana Bean-Jones loves Venice, its canals, its palaces, its people, its food, its art and especially its carnivale and its masks. She also has a great friend who lives in this wonderful city, Maria Callas, and both of them are always happy to share as moments as they can.

A few investments to move the funds, a little money to spend now thinking in the future. May The Grandma be able to enjoy these new homes with her family. May she remain forever young.


Château de Chinon is a castle located on the bank of the Vienne river in Chinon. It was founded by Theobald I, Count of Blois. In the 11th century the castle became the property of the counts of Anjou. In 1156 Henry II of England, a member of the House of Anjou, took the castle from his brother Geoffrey after Geoffrey had rebelled for a second time. Henry favoured the Château de Chinon as a residence. Most of the standing structure can be attributed to his reign and he died there in 1189.

Some Jones have decided to live in Paris
Early in the 13th century, King Philip II of France harassed the English lands in France and in 1205 he captured Chinon after a siege that lasted several months. When King Philip IV accused the Knights Templar of heresy during the first decade of the 14th century, several leading members of the order were imprisoned there.

The settlement of Chinon is on the bank of the Vienne river about 10 kilometres from where it joins the Loire. From prehistoric times, when the settlement of Chinon originated, rivers formed the major trade routes, and the Vienne joins the fertile southern plains of the Poitou and the city of Limoges to the thoroughfare of the Loire. The site was fortified early on, and by the 5th century a Gallo-Roman castrum had been established.

More information: Experience Loire

Claudia Jones in Chinon Castle, The Loire Valley
Theobald I, Count of Blois built the earliest known castle on the mount of Chinon in the 10th century. He fortified it for use as a stronghold. After Odo II, Count of Blois died in battle in 1037, Fulk III, Count of Anjou marched into Touraine to capture Château de Langeais and then Chinon, some 22 km  away. When Fulk arrived at Chinon the castle's garrison immediately sought terms and surrendered. 

In 1044, Geoffrey, the count of Anjou, captured Theobald of Blois-Chartres. In exchange for his release, Theobald agreed to recognise Geoffrey's ownership of Chinon, Langeais, and Tours. From then until the early 13th century, Château de Chinon descended through his heirs.

More information: Travel France Online

The Hundred Years' War in the 14th and 15th centuries was fought between the kings of England and France over the succession to the French throne. The war ended in 1453 when the English were finally ejected from France, but in the early 15th century the English under King Henry V made significant territorial gains. 

Víctor Jones in Chinon Castle, The Loire Valley
The Treaty of Troyes in 1420 made Henry V the heir apparent to the French throne but when the French king, Charles VI, and Henry V died in the space of two months in 1422 the issue of succession was again uncertain. 

The English supported Henry V's son, Henry VI who was still a child, while the French supported recognised Charles VII, the Dauphin of France. Between 1427 and 1450 Château de Chinon was the residence of Charles, when Touraine was virtually the only territory left to him in France, the rest being occupied by the Burgundians or the English.

On 6 March 1429 Joan of Arc arrived at Château de Chinon. She claimed to hear heavenly voices that said Charles would grant her an army to relieve the siege of Orléans. While staying at the castle she resided in the Tour du Coudray. Charles met with her two days after her arrival and then sent her to Poitiers so that she could be cross-examined to ensure she was telling the truth. Joan returned to Chinon in April where Charles granted her supplies and sent her to join the army at Orléans.

More information: Loire Valley France

In 1562 the château came briefly into the possession of the Huguenots and was turned into a state prison by Henry IV of France. Cardinal Richelieu was given the castle to prevent it from coming under the control of unfriendly forces, though he allowed it to fall into ruin. Château de Chinon was abandoned until 1793 when, during the Reign of Terror, the castle was temporarily occupied by royalist Vendeans. Soon after, the castle lapsed back into decay.


May the good Lord be with you down every road you roam.
May sunshine and happiness surround you when you're far from home.
May you grow to be proud, dignified and true.
May good fortune be with you.
May your guiding light be strong.
May you never love in vain.

 Rod Stewart

Friday, 27 April 2018

VERSAILLES, THE 'ANCIENT RÉGIME' HAS COME BACK

Merche Jones climbs Vermell del Xincarró, Montserrat
Today, The Jones have revised Countable & Uncountable before visiting the Palace of Versailles. The family has visited this amazing palace and has rested in its gardens sharing personal experiences and talking about their preferences in literature, music and places.

More info: Uncountable List

The Grandma has remembered that today, April 27, is the festivity of our Mary of Montserrat, patron of Catalonia, a black virgin very adored and respected by its populations, believers or not, that represents more than a religious symbol. Montserrat is also a symbol of cultural resistance during the darkest years of prosecutions and disctatorships.


More information: Abbey of Montserrat

If you didn't visit Montserrat, The Jones would recommended to do it. You will enjoy of one of the most incredible natural landscapes, full of activities to do; one of the most libraries around the world; and a spiritual place to rest for believers. Montserrat is much more than a mountain, it's the spiritual symbol of a whole culture which has resisted and survived along the history and which is alive and showing its black virgin to the world.

More information: Alpinist

Joaquín Jones and Ildefons Cerdà's Plan
Versailles is a place of contrasts. For one hand you can visit the Palace but for other hand, in the same city stands up one of the biggest banlieues of Paris.

The family has been talking about last French colonies in North Africa and its results nowadays in architecture, urbanism, immigration, social policies and human rights.

Joaquín Jones has offered his knowledge about Ildefons Cerdà's Urbanistic Plan in l'Eixample in Barcelona, an incredible plan which searched the convivence between all the social classes offering the possibility of living together, offering facilities to everyone and avoiding social exclusion.

More information: Failed Architecture & The Guardian

The Jones have decided to rest in Versailles gardens and talked about their preferences and wishes. They have recommended some books. Ana Bean-Jones has chosen, Banana Yoshimoto's books and Claudia Jones has proposed Màxim Huertas with No me dejes-Ne me quitte pas

Some members of The Jones and their preferences
Moreover, Merche Jones has talked about Fernando Aramburu's Patria and Michelle Jones about Masterchef's books. 

Finally, Joaquín Jones has recommended Eduardo Mendoza's No word from Gurb and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World while The Grandma has chosen Herman Melville's Moby Dick and Faïza Guène's Kiffe kiffe demain.

The family has also talked about places to visit. Next week, they're going to leave Paris and their destination is unknown. Paqui Jones has recommended Aix-Les-Bains, a commune in the Savoie department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in south-eastern France. It's as a beautiful place to visit although the family has talked about other interesting places like China.


Joaquín Jones is very interested in laboural conditions in this Asian country, especially now when May, 1st is arriving, and The Grandma, who is a great fan of human towers, has expressed her surprised about Chinese culture and its capacity to adapt to new goals without any kind of problems explaining the case of the Xiquets of Hanzghou as a example.



Ne me quitte pas. Il faut oublier tout 
peut s'oublier qui s'enfuit déjà.

If you go away on this summer day, 
then you might as well take the sun away.

Jacques Brel / Barbra Streisand 


The Palace of Versailles, in French Château de Versailles, is a royal château in Versailles in the Île-de-France. It is now open as a museum and is a very popular tourist attraction.

King Louis XIV in the Palace of Versailles
When the château was built, the community of Versailles was a small village dating from the 11th century. Today, however, it is a wealthy suburb of Paris.

Versailles was the seat of political power in the Kingdom of France from 1682, when King Louis XIV moved the royal court from Paris, until the royal family was forced to return to the capital in October 1789, within three months after the beginning of the French Revolution. 

Versailles is therefore famous not only as a building, but as a symbol of the system of absolute monarchy of the Ancien Régime.

More information: Château Versailles

Especially under Louis XIV, the senior nobility were pressured to spend large amounts of time at Versailles, as a form of political control. Louis XIV evolved a rigid routine of court life as a performance, much of which took place in front of large groups of people, at some points in the day including tourists. 

Château de Versailles and its gardens
Building the château and maintaining the court there was phenomenally expensive, but did a good deal to establish the dominance of French style and taste in the whole of Europe, giving French luxury manufacturing advantages that long outlasted the fall of the Ancien Régime.

Louis XIV's expansion of the building was begun around 1661, with Louis Le Vau as architect. 

It was not completed until about 1715, having been worked on by architects including François d'Orbay, Charles Le Brun, interiors especially, Jules Hardouin-Mansart and Robert de Cotte

André Le Nôtre began the gardens and structures in them. There were a range of satellite buildings around the grounds. While the main château building remains essentially intact, though without much of its contents, some of these other buildings have been destroyed.



It is legal because I wish it. I am the state. 

Louis XIV

Sunday, 8 April 2018

THE JONES PARTICIPATE IN THE 116th PARIS-ROUBAIX

Joaquín, Silvia, Claudia, Merche, Victor & Noelia Jones
The Jones have participated in the 116th Edition of the Paris-Roubaix road. This year, the organization has made an exception and the inscriptions have been opened to women. All the members of the family, except Eli Jones who is still missing in Loch Ness although is present in our memories, have participated in this fantastic race full of danger and emotions.

Víctor Jones has arrived in the fourth position being the best
classified Jones and Claudia, Joaquín, Merche, Noelia and Silvia Jones have arrived in the top 20. The Grandma is still cycling, although the race has been closed some hours ago but, as you know, the most important is participating, enjoying and arriving.

More information: Paris-Roubaix

The Paris–Roubaix is a one-day professional men's bicycle road race in northern France, starting north of Paris and finishing in Roubaix, at the border with Belgium. It is one of cycling's oldest races, and is one of the Monuments or classics of the European calendar, and contributes points towards the UCI World Ranking.

The Paris–Roubaix is famous for rough terrain and cobblestones, or pavé, setts,being, with the Tour of Flanders, E3 Harelbeke and Gent–Wevelgem, one of the cobbled classics. It has been called the Hell of the North, a Sunday in Hell, also the title of a film about the 1976 race, the Queen of the Classics or la Pascale: the Easter race. Since 1977, the winner of Paris–Roubaix has received a sett, cobble stone, as part of his prize.


Eddy Merckx and The Grandma, 1973
The terrain has led to the development of specialised frames, wheels and tyres. Punctures and other mechanical problems are common and often influence the result. Despite the esteem of the race, some cyclists dismiss it because of its difficult conditions. The race has also seen several controversies, with winners disqualified.

From its beginning in 1896 until 1967 it started in Paris and ended in Roubaix; in 1966 the start moved to Chantilly; and since 1977 it has started in Compiègne, about 85 kilometres north-east of the centre of Paris. The finish is still in Roubaix. The race is organised by the media group Amaury Sport Organisation annually in mid-April.

The course is maintained by Les Amis de Paris–Roubaix, a group of fans of the race formed in 1983. The forçats du pavé seek to keep the course safe for riders while maintaining its difficulty.

More information: Cycling Tips

Paris–Roubaix is one of the oldest races of professional road cycling. It was first run in 1896 and has stopped only for the two world wars. The race was created by two Roubaix textile manufacturers, Théodore Vienne, born 28 July 1864, and Maurice Perez. They had been behind the building of a velodrome on 46,000 square metres at the corner of the rue Verte and the route d'Hempempont, which opened on 9 June 1895.

Víctor Jones (centre) and other participants
Vienne and Perez held several meetings on the track, one including the first appearance in France by the American sprinter Major Taylor, and then looked for further ideas. In February 1896 they hit on the idea of holding a race from Paris to their track. This presented two problems. The first was that the biggest races started or ended in Paris and that Roubaix might be too provincial a destination. The second was that they could organize the start or finish but not both.

The race usually leaves riders caked in mud and grit, from the cobbled roads and rutted tracks of northern France's former coal-mining region. However, this is not how this race earned the name l'enfer du Nord, or Hell of the North. The term was used to describe the route of the race after World War I. Organisers and journalists set off from Paris in 1919 to see how much of the route had survived four years of shelling and trench warfare.


More information: Cycling Weekly

Originally, the race was from Paris to Roubaix, but in 1966 the start moved to Chantilly, 50 km north, then in 1977 to Compiègne, 80 km north. From Compiègne it now follows a 260 km winding route north to Roubaix, hitting the first cobbles after 100 km.

During the last 150 km the cobbles extend more than 50 km. The race culminates with 750m on the smooth concrete of the large outdoor Vélodrome André-Pétrieux in Roubaix. The route is adjusted from year to year as older roads are resurfaced and the organisers seek more cobbles to maintain the character of the race, in 2005, for example, the race included 54.7 km of cobbles.

More information: Eurosport


Everyday there's something that reminds me why I love this sport.

Bernard Hinault