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A Medieval Day in Angers

We had promised Mark a medieval castle, but the first sight of interest we noticed was a statue of a butt-naked woman.

“Could it get any more French?” Feng asked.

“I see her bum!” Mark laughed.

“Which one is the wife and which one is the mistress?” my mother wondered.

“Meh. Not that great from an artistic perspective… oh, is that a Niki de Saint Phalle sculpture over there?” my dad added.

At 11:11 a.m., my parents and the three of us had taken the train to Angers, our day-trip destination. Like last year, I bought the SNCF’s “Tribu” deal—for €45, up to five people get unlimited travel on regional TER lines for 48 hours. Considering the price of a train ticket these days, it’s a steal. Never mind that it was warm but stormy and that Angers probably isn’t on most international travellers’ lists—we had rain jackets and our eyes set on visiting the castle.

The TER was older than me but the ride was smooth and the train was on time.

“So, what do we do? Château first? City first?”

As usual, no one could make a decision—it’s apparently a constant in my family.

“Alright, let’s explore, then. It’s not raining.”

We followed the boulevard du Roi René, the rue Toussaint (where we stepped into the lovely Jardin des beaux-arts) and we ended up in the Jardin du Mail, a park with plenty of naked female butts sculpted into stone and a big fountain.

Angers is only about 100 kilometres from Nantes, so I wasn’t expecting a major difference between both cities. Indeed, I could easily find my way around—the streets, the main squares, the stores, the rivers, and the tramway all looked familiar. Yet, unlike Nantes, Angers doesn’t have historical or geographical ties to Brittany—no crêpes or Breton folklore here, it’s all about medieval times and King René of Anjou, a historical figure virtually unknown around here.

The Château d’Angers is one of the masterpieces of the city and it looks incredibly massive compared to Nantes’ Château des ducs de Bretagne. We spent time trying to decipher the large Apocalypse Tapestry—just the fact it was produced between 1377 and 1382 and survived to today amazed me.

The city looked lovely from the fortifications, under a stormy sky—the weather matched what I imagined the Middle Ages atmosphere could be. As Feng said, it felt like being in Game of Thrones.

After the castle, we let my parents “binge-arting,” visiting the art museum, while we explored the neighbourhoods on the other side of La Maine river. We made it back in Nantes by 6 p.m. with one question: where would we go the following day?

Nantes train station
The old TER train to Angers
Angers train station
Boulevard du Roi René
Médiathèque Municipale Toussaint
Jardin des Beaux-Arts
Jardin des Beaux-Arts
Jardin des Beaux-Arts
Le jardin du Mail
Le jardin du Mail
Le jardin du Mail
Le jardin du Mail
Le jardin du Mail
Galeries Lafayettes
Rue Toussaint
Château d’Angers
Château d’Angers
Château d’Angers
The Apocalypse Tapestry at the Château d’Angers
The Apocalypse Tapestry at the Château d’Angers
The Apocalypse Tapestry at the Château d’Angers
The Apocalypse Tapestry at the Château d’Angers
Château d’Angers
Château d’Angers
Château d’Angers
Château d’Angers
Château d’Angers
Angers from the castle’s towers
Angers from the castle’s towers
Angers from the castle’s fortifications
Angers from the castle’s fortifications
Angers from the castle’s fortifications
Angers from the castle’s fortifications
Angers from the castle’s fortifications
Château d’Angers
Rue d’Alsace
Graffiti in Angers
Place du Ralliement
Downtown Angers
Downtown Angers
Place du Ralliement
Pont de la Haute Chaîne
Pont de Verdun
Downtown Angers, across La Maine
Downtown Angers, across La Maine
Downtown Angers, across La Maine
Lady sheltering from the rain, Angers
La Maine
Back in Nantes
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Zhu

French woman in English Canada.

Exploring the world with my camera since 1999, translating sentences for a living, writing stories that may or may not get attention.

Firm believer that nobody is normal... and it’s better this way.

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