Photos by sébillet jean charle… : on the map, in Google Earth (KML)
|
Viewed 1 time
|
Viewed 1 time
|
Viewed 3 times
|
Viewed 2 times
|
|
Viewed 3 times
|
Viewed 3 times
|
Viewed 2 times
|
Viewed 2 times
|
|
Viewed 2 times
|
Viewed 2 times
|
Viewed 2 times
|
Viewed 3 times
|
|
Viewed 3 times
|
Viewed 2 times
|
Viewed 2 times
|
Viewed 2 times
|
|
Viewed 94 times
|
Viewed 72 times
|
Viewed 58 times
|
Viewed 74 times
|
|
Viewed 48 times
|
Viewed 47 times
|
Viewed 54 times
|
Viewed 81 times
|
|
Viewed 55 times
|
Viewed 39 times
|
Viewed 74 times
|
Viewed 67 times
|
|
Viewed 75 times
|
Viewed 76 times
|
Viewed 84 times
|
Viewed 75 times
|
sébillet jean charle…'s conversations
This comment cannot be displayed.
more »
This comment cannot be displayed.
more »
This comment cannot be displayed.
more »
This comment cannot be displayed.
more »
...i like ""la marsa"" so so much..
more »
C'est ma 206 HDI lol
more »
Merci christian ! Amitiés,
more »
Many thanks Ismail and barboon for your kind comment.
Greetings, Yves.
more »
A fine photograph of the lovely city which, when Algeria was part of France - Algérie française - was called "Bône". Its population was at that time not much short of being 50% of European descent. The streets, squares and esplanades of the Annaba of today, and much else besides, if they could speak, would speak in French, the language of the pieds noirs who lived here, and who did so much to create a modern thriving port city here in this location in North Africa. That they felt driven to leave, in 1962, during the collapse of Algeria as part of France, is an abiding tragedy of the 20th Century, and an eternal stain on the honour of De Gaulle, who abandoned the pieds noirs - people of European descent for whom Algeria was home - en masse.
more »
Très belle photo , l'accord des formes est super
more »