- Château de Chenonceau
16th century door leading into Salle des gardes, saying: "S'il vient à point, me souviendra". Basically - if I ever finish building this castle, I will be remembered. But I forgot who wrote it :-) - Roman Temple in Olympos
Second half of the second century AD, erected in the honour of Marcus Aurelius. The height of the doors is almost 5 m! - Phaselis
- Termessos, Hadrian's Gate, the Temple of Artemis
Termessos is a Psidian city, built at an altitude of around 1000m. - Termessos, Gymnasium
- Hadrian's Gate or Üçkapılar in Antalya (130 AD)
- Doggo!
Another old barn transformed into a new house. Is that a dog-shaped opening? - Window shutters
I love the precise cuts of the window shutters! - Contrada Uberti, Cesena
- Medieval streets in Todi
- Via dell'Arringo, Spoleto
- Via Fontesecca, Spoleto
- Doors on Via Palazzo dei Duchi, Spoleto
- The Monserrato Sanctuary
Highly popular in XVII and XVIII century. Built by a Spanish governor for surviving a storm. - Portoferraio
You must enter another dimension behind these doors, otherwise I cannot imagine how these are separate apartments/houses. - Rosslyn Chapel
View of the South Door and Aisle, Rosslyn Chapel (~1830) by William Dyce. The chapel has been associated with the quest for the Holy Grail, the Knights Templar and the origins of Scottish Freemasonry. - Peephole in Teviot Row House
Now this is an interesting peephole. You can see from the outside whether the room is occupied or not. - Rio nell'Elba
I still don't understand how TWO apartments can fit into such a small house. - Glasswork in Biot
One of the many glassworks/galleries in Biot. - Place de l'Église in Biot
- Rue Vieille Boucherie in Biot
One of the many pretty little streets in Biot. - Impasse le Redon in Biot
Another lovely detail in Biot. - La Légende des siècles
I wonder what is behind these doors... Maybe just a huge Hugo fan? Place des Arcades in Biot. - Rue du Haut Castelet in Antibes
And yet another magical street in the old Antibes. - Biot
- Valbonne
More doors from Valbonne - Chambre d'Amour in Valbonne
- Valbonne
Super-cute doors in Valbonne. The world would be a friendlier place with more doors like this. - Montanuniversität Leoben
Well... I don't quite understand what's saying, but the google translate surely is wrong: "every time you surrendered to the six months old muse" :-) - Doors in one of the cloister
I don't quite get these doors, to be honest. - Gallery in Monserrate
- Levico Terme
An interesting old entrance. - A closed bar
A closed bar, opposite the Powder Tower. - Capilla Real
Royal Chapel portal. - Palacio de la Madraza
The madrasa was founded in 1349 by Yusuf I, Most of the building (now part of University of Granada) was replaced with a baroque building. These (I think) are the doors of Saints Caecilius and Gregory of Elvira. With pomegranate underneath, the symbol of Granada. - Alcaicería
Super lively during day, super lonely otherwise. This part has been a shopping centre since the 11th century. - Puerta de la Justicia
The southern entrance to Alhambra palace, built in 1348 by Yusuf I. - Puerta de la Justicia
This massive entrance surely kept all the enemies out. - Alcazaba
What lovely patterns! - Derrière une porte
I once had to write a story "Derrière une porte" being given an image similar to this one. I probably could write another one for this door as well. - Bayeux Cathedral
The portal of Saint Thomas Becket, showing the assembly of Northampton (1164) and the Assembly of Ambosus (1170); crossing of the English Channel and his martyrdom; and the veneration of his tomb. - Cairn of Barnenez
The tumulus contains 11 chambers entered by separate passages. - Manoir de Kervaudu
I get the door. I get the open upper part for ventilation or light. I even get the cat door. But why do you need two cat doors? - Santo Spirito
The entrance to (now) Santo Spirito. Built by Theodoric around 500 as an Arian cathedral. Around 560 it became the Orthodox St Theodor and in 15th century Santo Spirito.