Bavaria and Middle Rhine

août - septembre 2022
Une aventure de 22 jours par Wolpertinger Wanderings En savoir plus

Liste des pays

  • Allemagne
  • Autriche
  • États Unis
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Couple, Randonnée
  • 8,9kmiles parcourus
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  • 110empreintes
  • 22jours
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  • 0j’aime
  • Marksburg Castle

    18 septembre 2022, Allemagne ⋅ ☁️ 50 °F

    Another day, another castle. I was torn on what the plans were for this day. Originally, I was going to wake us up early, take the train up to Koblenz, then switch there to go down the Mosel and visit Burg Eltz (this castle is an Instagram Star), and the town of Cochem. Maybe take a boat trip (yes, another one) down to Beilstein, a super cute village of less than 100 full time residents.

    But when it came to it, I was so tired. We opted for Marksburg in the Rhine town of Braubach instead. Now I could have been less than honest and said "We chose Marksburg because it's the only castle along the Rhine never to have been destroyed. It's completely 100% Medieval." That was a draw, but Burg Eltz is also really old, and much cuter.

    But Marksburg it was, and we set off on this rainy morning for our last day along the Rhine. Trains were running a bit behind. This meant that we missed our connection in Koblenz, but didn't have enough time to run out to the Deutsche Ecke-- another place where two rivers join together (in this corner, the Rhine and Mosel).

    When we finally got on the next train, we crossed to the east bank of the Rhine and made our way to Braubach. It was early Sunday morning and the town was dead. We didn't see one person on our way from the train station up through the town to the castle. It was a steep climb, and while I understand there were strategic reasons for putting castles at the highest point (yes, that whole "high ground" thing that everyone in military tactics knows about except apparently the French at Agincourt and Annakin Skywalker), but it's really inconvenient when you're tired of walking.

    A brief word about Marksburg. Oh no, she said brief, you're thinking, I'll still be reading this in an hour... As I mentioned, it's the only surviving castle from the Middle Ages. It's gone through a succession of owners, as all of them have. This one came up in the world though: first a Freiherr, than a Graf, than a Margraf. It managed to survive intact through all the back and forth among the German nobility, and even Napoleon. In the early 1900s, it was bought by the German Castle Association, and they still run the place today.

    We were hours too early for the English tour, once a day at 1:00. Since we had read up about the place online, we decided to tag along on the first tour of the day. There were only two other people, a couple who spoke Russian. She only spoke Russian, he spoke German. The guide asked if he could do it in English, as we outnumbered them, but we said don't worry about it. There was a guide pamphlet in English, and we were good with that.

    This was a great castle. Even with my years of reading and teaching Medieval history, I've never actually been in a castle which has been kept in its more or less pristine Medieval condition. There were a lot of rough areas where the stone wasn't level, for example. Of course, all I could think of was stubbed toes and broken legs, running over that mess in the heat of battle, or the heat of being yelled out by Graf or Grafin Whoever when they wanted some hot water or something.

    There was a small museum of arms, armor, and torture devices. The chapel and the garden, a replica of the kitchen/ medicinal garden the lady of the castle would have kept were my favorite parts. If you could walk freely through the place (you can't, have to stay with the tour), I could have spent a lot more time in both places. I have to say, I did manage to catch a good bit of the German tour, but of course I understood the context, and had read the pamphlet, so I wouldn't say my A2 Level German proved itself here.

    That said: Marksburg pictures. Highly recommend this castle if you're along the Middle Rhine, even if you can't make it for the English tour.
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  • Marksburg: Tapestries and Torture

    18 septembre 2022, Allemagne ⋅ ☁️ 55 °F

    More pictures, now that my picture allowance has been raised from ten to twenty per post...

    The main salon, with tapestries, a chess board, and musical instruments. Some really nice looking armor and weapons. Shots of the chapel. Herr Hai wanted the picture of the rack and the various torture implements (I would say I wonder about him, but he's always been this way). Also the blacksmith shop, which no castle would be complete without. Finally, a view of the castle from below.En savoir plus

  • Abtei Sankt Hildegard

    18 septembre 2022, Allemagne ⋅ ☁️ 55 °F

    Of course you know I couldn't pass this place up: the abbey of Saint Hildegard von Bingen. She was pretty famous, back in her day and more recently, sometime in the early 2000s. In her lifetime in the early 1100s she was a renowned mystic, writer, and apothecary. She scolded both popes, and the emperors (I'm looking at you, Frederick Barbarossa) who appointed and supported anti-popes. She had her monastery closed down for disobeying her bishop in the matter of burying a young man who had been excommunicated in holy ground because she claimed he had recanted and et cetera... She also wrote music, and that's why she became a thing outside Catholic circles in the late 1990s- early 2000s, when so many people went through that Medieval Chant stage...

    Anyway, her abbey is outside Rudesheim. It was dissolved once (that thing with her bishop), and then again by the French when they were secularizing everything to fit their Revolutionary World Order (and needing money for wars). It was rebuilt in 1904, which accounts for its blending of styles. Two of my favorites: Romanesque and Art Nouveau. What could possibly go wrong with that combination?

    We rode the train down from Braubach to Rudesheim, and had some lunch before beginning the walk up through the vineyards to the church. Finally, I had Sauerbraten. It was good, about what I thought it would be. Then we walked through the fields. The church is very nice, the photos not as good as I had hoped. I do like the one of St Hildegard telling off Emperor Freddi B, and of course Saint Cunigunde. We missed the feast day by just a day or so, but just as well. We practically had the place to ourselves.
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  • Niederwalddenkmal

    18 septembre 2022, Allemagne ⋅ ☁️ 57 °F

    So that great big statue we saw from the boat trip down the Rhine, well we finally got to it. We could have walked, but Herr Hai said, "Let's ride up in this rickety metal bucket thing on sketchy looking wires..." Yeah sure. That seems safe...

    And then, when we got on. Not happy. It wasn't quick and smooth like the one in Mittenwald, but rather kind of clanky and jerky and if you moved just the slightest bit, it swayed...

    But we survived. I even took video. At the top, we walked the rest of the way to the monument. It was built to commemorate the founding of the German Empire (and remember folks, Germany wasn't one country until 1871) and the defeat of the French in German-French War (known to us in the US as the Franco-Prussian War). Some of my favorite things about the monument: the Saint Michael Archangel with his trumpet, and the words to one of my favorite German marching songs: Die Wacht am Rhein inscribed on front. (Yes, I do have favorite German marches, I'm weird, sorry) The thirty-four foot statue of Germania holding aloft a crown is also a winner.

    There's also some nice hiking up here, and if I wasn't so tired, the weather wasn't so meh, and we had another day, it would have been nice to spend more time here.

    Die Wacht am Rhein, courtesy of Dr. Ludwig on you tube:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kEmdXYk89c
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  • Cologne

    19 septembre 2022, Allemagne ⋅ ☁️ 50 °F

    Cologne was another of those Roman settlements along the Rhine, Colonia Agrippina, founded in the First Century. It was taken by the Franks in 462, ending Roman domination in the area. In the Middle Ages, it sat smack dab on one of the major East-West trading routes, and had a good position along the Rhine. It was a Free Imperial City of the Holy Roman Empire with all the rights, privileges and liberties that entailed, and a member of the Hanseatic League. We're talking some big money here...

    The Archbishop of Cologne was one of the Electors of the Holy Roman Emperor, endowed with this other secular powers in 953 by Otto I. No surprise, the archbishop was his brother. However, by the 1200s the merchants in Cologne had driven the archbishops out. Still the Elector, the archbishops moved upstream towards Bonn.

    Despite being a powerhouse in its day, Cologne was occupied by the French during the Jacobin and Napoleonic periods. All of the lands west of the Rhine were folded into France. You can see why the Germans were so salty with the French. After the overthrow of Napoleon, Cologne became part of Prussia in 1815 (thank you Chancellor Metternich et al). It was occupied by the British from 1918-1926. One of the most bombed cities in World War II, over eighty percent of the historic center was destroyed, and the population reduced by 90%, though mostly through evacuation.

    Today, it's the fourth most populous city in Germany. Lots of museums, restored buildings, amazing churches. They have their own sort of beer, and a few specialty dishes. A chocolate museum and restaurant... Just this one day here, though, before we board a fast train to catch our flight to Frankfurt.

    So some street scenes before we get to the churches and food, including a lot of pictures of the famous Heinzelmännchen Fountain. The heinzelmännchen are little pixies. The legend is, they used to help the artisans of Cologne do their work at night, so the men didn't have to work so hard at their crafts. One night, the curious wife of a tailor stayed up to spy out the secret, and the Heinzelmännchen disappeared. We can analyze this story many different ways, but meh. My brain is too tired to do much deconstructing right now. Great fountain though, built in 1899, marking the 100th birthday of the author of a famous poem about the pixies.
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  • Saint Andrew's Cologne

    19 septembre 2022, Allemagne ⋅ ⛅ 57 °F

    This one wasn't on our list. Honestly, we weren't sure what we would be doing today. We just found this church when we couldn't go into the cathedral because something was going on-- Mass? But this one was open, so I did some quick reading as we went in.

    Originally consecrated by Saint Gero in the 900s, it was rebuilt after 1220 in Romanesque style. The highlight of this church: the tomb of Saint Albertus Magnus, the famous Thirteenth Century philosopher and scientist. There were also two reliquaries, but in a quick look online, I didn't find anything on them, so... They had some very interesting stained glass, modern, obviously, but nice. Also, someone was in here playing the organ. We must have come in just as Mass ended. Good timing. Saint Albertus Magnus' tomb is the fourth picture from the end.

    Again, sorry for the less than great, ok, poor, video quality, but the organist was good.
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  • Kölner Dom

    19 septembre 2022, Allemagne ⋅ ⛅ 61 °F

    Now this is what we came to see, the Cologne Cathedral, also known as the Cathedral Church of Saint Peter. It was begun in 1248 to house the relics of the Three Kings, which had been taken by Frederick Barbarossa after conquering Milan. He left them to the Archbishop Rainald, who brought them to Cologne in 11 64. A shrine was forged-- a big blingy gold thing that looks like a church-- for the relics sometime after 1190.

    Building on it stopped in 1473, with intermittent work being done until the Sixteenth Century when it stopped completely. In the Nineteenth Century, the new Protestant Prussian rulers, both out of their desire to make nice with the Catholic hierarchy, the cultural and dynastic interest in the Middle Ages, and wanting to connect themselves to the long history of German kings and the cathedral, began the work again. Most of it was paid for by private donations, with the Prussians kicking in the rest. Finally finished in 1880, nine years after German unification, Kaiser Wilhelm I attended the opening. It was the world's largest building for four years, until the Washington Monument was completed.

    It didn't fare so well in World War II. Besides being used as a landmark by Allied pilots to navigate to bombing targets, it suffered a great deal of damage itself. Hit fourteen times by aerial bombardment, the towers still stood, but the roof and insides were quite damaged. It became the backdrop for a tank battle on March 6, 1945 between a German Panther and tanks from the US Third Armored Division. You can watch film of it on you tube though it contains actual battle footage so just a head's up. Will link down below.

    The war damage was mostly repaired by 1956, but it's again undergoing some sort of renovation. Seems like a lot of German churches we've seen are covered in scaffolding, so we'll have to come back.

    We took so many pictures here. There are two of the reliquary of the Three Kings near the end, and the the fifth one in is one of the finials from the roof. This was a very beautiful church, inside and out. It had those amazing Medieval gargoyles and a lot of very nice statuary outside, so two posts of pictures incoming, and of course, more on the facebook page.

    Speaking of incoming: here's the tank battle.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NBI9d0-IfEM&amp…
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  • Statutes of Cologne Cathedral

    19 septembre 2022, Allemagne ⋅ ⛅ 61 °F

    I'm more of a stained glass and icon kind of gal, but I really liked the statuary here. If they had been running the tour of the roof, I'd have gotten a lot more, I'm sure.

  • Food Time

    19 septembre 2022, Allemagne ⋅ ⛅ 59 °F

    We had a late lunch (for us), at Peters Brauhaus. We wanted to have local food and beer, so this was the place. The restaurant itself was really nice, so some pictures of that. When we first seated ourselves in the nice room by the stained glass, the waiter was a little bit salty, "Are you eating, or just drinking. If drinking, those tables..." The less good ones. But when we told him we were eating lunch, he was much nicer. After we knew to order Kölsch and not ask for beer and Brotzeit like the ladies with the Rick Steves book from the river cruise ship (to which German waiter said, "This isn't Bavaria, we don't have that..."), he was friendly. He even hung out (after yelling at some hipsters who just wanted beer and took up an eight top even though there were two of them) to talk to us about dialectal differences in Cologne versus the rest of Germany. See, my trying to speak German paid off. Of course I claimed to be speaking Bavarian, so it didn't matter if what I said made no sense to him. He even smiled when Herr Hai trotted out his, "Ich sprechen (sic) nur ein bisschen Deutsch".

    I wanted to order Himmel und Äd, which translates to Heaven and Earth. It's black pudding made from pork blood, oatmeal and spices with baked apples and mashed potatoes. Yeah, I chickened out. If Herr Hai hadn't said he wasn't going eat THAT if I didn't like it, I decided to go with the Cologne version of pork knuckle. It was really different than what I had had in Bavaria, with a sweet, tangy, almost barbecue like sauce. Herr Hai got whatever local wurst (I know, shocker, no schnitzel) and slathered it with the Cologne spicy mustard. When Herr Kellner came over to check on us (something they don't do, we must have made a great impression), he said, "Put the mustard on, oh, you already did. Good job." Score one for the American urban rednecks.

    The beer was okay. I know it's their thing there, Kolsch in little glasses. Herr Hai was not a fan. Not dark and weighty enough for him. I felt bad only having one glass. It almost felt insulting. Apparently they keep 'em coming until you surrender.

    We walked around some more after lunch. Our ultimate goal in this was the Chocolate Museum on a little land spur sticking out into the Rhine. Not the museum per se, but rather the cafe and shop. Like we needed to eat anything else after that, but we managed. We both had waffles with different things on them. Herr Hai had some chocolate drink, and I had hot chocolate because I was feeling really cold. It came with two little pieces of chocolate-- like I needed more.

    The shop was nice some interesting truffles and the like. Lindt stuff, since Lindt owns it. I was hoping for more exotic things like you make in this chocolate maker game I have. Apparently I'm a more creative chocolatier than the chocolate scientists at Lindt. Of course they have their eye on marketability. I thought coriander and dark chocolate with cinnamon covered ant truffles sounded like a winner in the game. And they were.

    This more or less ended our day. We were going to go to the mustard museum, but I was just exhausted and it was starting to rain. Herr Hai was a good sport about going back to the hotel around four. We'd rest, go back out get a bite to eat. We plan to give döner another try, figuring it will be better here in a bigger city.

    So that's where we are, about to rest. Tomorrow, we leave fairly late for us, 9:50 ICE to the airport, for our trip home.
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  • Auf Wiedersehen, Deutschland

    20 septembre 2022, États Unis ⋅ ⛅ 81 °F

    Well, it's not September 20, 2022 for real, but rather sometime later. We never went out to eat that night in Cologne. Herr Hai wasn't hungry, and I was too tired. I had a miserable sleep, tired but unable to rest. Coughing. (Uh oh, in these plague times we know what that might mean).

    We ate breakfast at the buffet at the hotel, which cost extra. Nice buffet, unfortunately, on the way out of the room, I was sick. We picked up some sort of fish shaped pretzels in the train station, and when we got through security at Frankfurt, a Sprite.

    Terrible flight home, double masked with one of those duck bill N-95s. I felt so terrible, but unable to sleep, I managed to watch the entire Godfather movie (never saw it, just read the books), and doze. How I managed to get through immigration and etc, no idea. Went right to sleep when we got home.

    Tested next day. Yep, I had the Corona 19. No one else got it, and I was fine in a few days. One more day of moderate coughing, but mostly fatigue and inability to really sleep, with really bizarre and intense dreams.

    Overall, trip was a success. I wish we had spent more time in places, gone slower, but that wasn't possible. We also weren't sure if we'd even like Germany. I know I sound like a crazy Germanophile in the posts but I was a little meh on it to be honest when I started doing research for that Christmas Market trip, despite the family connection, my other writing, my research in college and teaching. Definitely want to return, and now there are a lot of places I found we'd like to visit.

    So get ready. Next time, definitely Christmas markets.
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