Mostly Saxon Christmas Markets

Kasım - Aralık 2024
Finally, the Christmas Market trip, but in a different part of Germany. Saxony, the home of German Christmas traditions, and Thuringia. Okumaya devam et

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  • Frauenkirche, Dresden

    3 Aralık 2024, Almanya ⋅ ☁️ 41 °F

    The Frauenkirche, perhaps more than any other structure, is what comes to mind when one thinks (okay, when I think) of the Dresden skyline. It's strange, because it wasn't built until the 1730s (1726 to 1743 to be accurate), and for over half of the Twentieth Century, it was little more than charred heap of rubble. But when I think of Dresden, this church is what I picture. All right, some people think of the onion dome-crown thing on top of the Zwinger Palace, but meh. Or the cigarette building that looks somewhat Moorish. Less meh.

    Frauenkirche was built on the site of previous churches. The original built in the Eleventh Century and falling under the control of the Meissen diocese. It went, like most of Saxony, Lutheran. The new church was built as a distinctly Evangelical (in US Lutheran) church by the citizens in response to Augustus the Strong's conversion to Catholicism so he could become King of Poland. Seeing how great an undertaking the construction was, it was a pretty big screw you to their anointed leader, and a demonstration of their intention to remain Protestant. Remember, a hundred years before the Europeans ended thirty years of slaughter with the idea that the rulers would pick the religion, no hard feelings. Augustus himself didn't have hard feelings about it, and supported the building. I'm not sure if he kicked in any money, though.

    There are a few notable things about the construction/ contents of the church. The original organ was built by Gottfried Silbermann, who was famous for his instruments (not just organs, but harpsichords, clavichords, the guy did it all), which you can find in several major churches. The altar, pulpit and baptismal font were placed directly front and center in view of the congregation, something Protestants take for granted now, but was not the norm in churches. It was down as a reflection of the liturgy, a demonstration that indeed, this was, and would remain, an Evangelical church. The dome, 12,000 tons of sandstone, has been compared to Michelangelo's dome for Saint Peter's in Rome. It was built so well, that it withstood the Prussian army's cannon fire (up to 100 shots) during the Seven Years War.

    It didn't survive its next time under fire as well.

    The Frauenkirche was mostly destroyed in the February 1945 fire bombing of Dresden. The structure, including the dome, withstood two days of bombing, but collapsed on the morning of February 15, when the temperature reached 1,830 degrees Fahrenheit. The pillars exploded, sending the dome crashing through the floor, killing the people who had taken refuge there. The chancel and parts of the altar survived.

    After the war, the locals began to salvage fragments from the church, some being numbered in the hopes that the church would be reconstructed. At one point, the Communist government planned to remove the rubble to built a parking lot, but strong popular sentiment against the plan caused them to name the rubble as a memorial against war. Nice pivot on the part of the authorities, and it gave them a site to hold acceptable demonstrations. However, the best laid plans and all of that, it didn't always work out that way. In the 1980s, the church became a site of protests against the DDR regime, with people massing with candles and flowers.

    The church was going to rebuilt by the Communist authorities after the historic secular structures had been rebuilt. It never happened. Instead, the rebuilding occurred mainly through private and corporate donations after Reunification. The actual building began in 1994 based on the original plans from 1720. They were finished, complete with all interior painting and seven new bells a year ahead of schedule in 2005.

    Stones (3,800) that had been salvaged and kept since 1945 were reincorporated into the structure. These are the darker ones that you see in the pictures.

    To replicate the original paint for the interior, they made egg-based paint, just as they would have in the Eighteenth Century. Side note: I remember making paint like this with kids for school and it has a beautiful light to it, just like in the church.

    The golden cross and orb for the top of the dome was made by a British goldsmith whose father had been in one of the air crews on the fire bombing mission. It was placed on top of the dome in June 2004, sixteen days after the sixtieth anniversary of D-Day. What's left of the cross that had been on the dome during the bombings now stands in the church by the altar.
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  • Views from the dome

    3 Aralık 2024, Almanya ⋅ ☁️ 43 °F

    We paid the money to climb up to the dome. There are 224 steps, then the ramp, then the straight up and down staircase, then the corkscrew. Or maybe those two are reversed. I can't remember. By that point, I was oxygen deprived and addled.

    Nice views though, and going down was a lot easier than going up.
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  • The Zwinger

    3 Aralık 2024, Almanya ⋅ ⛅ 43 °F

    The Zwinger Palace is the other structure so strongly identified with Dresden. On the outskirts of the old city, it was built as an orangerie and festival garden, in 1710. What there is of it today was meant to be the forecourt of a new castle Augustus the Strong was having built, that would stretch down to the Elbe River. It wasn't completed in his lifetime, and those plans would never come to fruition.

    It was destroyed in the firebombings along with the rest of Dresden. The Soviet military administration began the reconstruction as early as 1945, and by 1963 it had been almost completely restored.

    Today, the gardens and walkways are open for public enjoyment. Or would be, if they weren't under construction and completely ripped up. It also houses the Old Masters' Picture Gallery, the Dresden Porcelain Collection, and the Royal Cabinet of Mathematical and Physical Instruments. Today, we only walked around the outside. It's a very rich environment, a lot going on visually.

    In general, Dresden is like that and it can be very overwhelming.
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  • The Fürstenzug

    3 Aralık 2024, Almanya ⋅ ☁️ 41 °F

    The Fürstenzug, or the Procession of Princes, is a mural of the rulers of Saxony from 1127-1904. It's located on the outer wall of the Stallhof, and stretches 335. Made of 23,000 porcelain tiles, it's largest work of its kind in the world. It portrays thirty-five margraves, electors, dukes and kings of the Wettin family, and was commissioned in celebration of the 800th anniversary of the dynasty.

    It escaped damage during the February 1945 firebombing. We walked it backwards, twice. Once at night when we did a hand-shaky bad phone video, linked below at youtube because it's too long. We went back in the daytime to take stills, and again did it backwards, though we didn't take each of the thirty-five rulers.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eb-CeBugwQI
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  • Görlitz

    4 Aralık 2024, Almanya ⋅ ☁️ 37 °F

    Today, the eastern-most town in Germany. Not the eastern-most settled place, that's the village of Zentendorf. Görlitz began as a Sorbian settlement (Eleventh Century),and has been under German, Bohemian, Polish, Hungarian and Swedish control. It's part of Silesia: a German-Polish region that between 1815 (Metternich again) and the end of World War II was part of Prussia, then Germany. After the war, it was split at the Neisse River, with the eastern part going to Poland, today called Zgrozelec, (with the rest of Germany's former Sileseian holdings) and the western to the DDR.

    Culturally, it's Silesian-German rather than Sorbian, though it first came into German recorded history as a Sorbian settlement. Another town on the Via Regia (that east-west trade route we talked about back in Leipzig and Erfurt), the town prospered despite being shifted back and forth (sometimes violently) among various overlords. Today, it's known as Gorliwood, as the town has worked hard to attract film makers. You might have seen it in various German movies and series, or in “The Grand Hotel Budapest” or more up Herr Hai's alley, “Inglorious Basterds”. I'm not much of a movie watcher, so it'll be the first time I've seen the place except on you tube or google maps.

    In 2003-4 the bridge connecting the German and Polish sides of the town was rebuilt. Once Poland was admitted to the Schengen Zone, one can literally walk into Poland from Germany, or vice versa (thank you Boromir for that one).

    There are a few interesting things to do, but they're not open in winter. which were built by wealthy long distance merchants to serve as a place for their business, but also in which to live and demonstrate their growing wealth and influence.

    The city is home to the only synagogue in Saxony that survived Nazi rule, because on Kristallnacht, the firefighters wouldn't let the structure burn, despite orders to do so. Unfortunately, it's only open on Fridays for tours, so bad planning on my part. Looks beautiful in the pictures.

    No pictures in the churches without a 2.50 Euro fee, and honestly, they weren't that impressive inside.

    The suburbs, as I'd call the area, It housed subcamps of the concentration camp in Groß-Rosen, as well as sub-camps of Stalag VIII-A, which housed mainly soldiers from the British Commonwealth countries, Soviets (kept separately), and by the end of the war, some Americans. Didn't make it out there, far over on the Polish side.

    We did cross the bridge, thinking of Basil Fawlty all the way, "You started it! You invaded Poland!" John Cleese might be a bit of nudnik in his old age, but he was funny back then. After a brief walk, a few pictures, we came back to Germany and ate pierogi and bigos. We couldn't find an ATM and had been told not the exchange rates were really bad if you tried to pay with Euros, so since both sides are Silesian, and the people we bought the food from were definitely Polish, we were happy.

    It was, admittedly, a shortish day, better planning might have made it longer. Pictures are mainly of the various buildings that looked interesting, including the old department store used for Hotel Budapest. Still not reopened, which is disappointing. It's definitely a city in transition.
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  • Zgorzelec

    4 Aralık 2024, Polonya ⋅ ☁️ 39 °F

    So this is the Polish side. We walked around, visited the outside of the philosopher Jakob Böhme's house, took some pictures, and came back. A lot of Germans come over to buy tobacco products and liquor, apparently.

    So some pictures of the Polish side, the German side from Poland, a couple more of German Görlity including the Whispering Arch, the Christmas market, and two videos of our crossing into Poland, if I split them right.
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  • Bautzen

    5 Aralık 2024, Almanya ⋅ ⛅ 37 °F

    Bautzen is an impressive looking walled city east of Dresden, in the region of Lusatia. Settlement dates back to the Stone Age, with the first German settlement being in the Third Century CE. The Sorbs,a Slavic people with whom the region is now so closely identified, arrived in the Migration Period (remember from the last trip, what we called the “Barbarian Invasions” back in my day) in the Sixth Century.

    Again, like many of these towns and cities in Central Europe, Bautzen (in Upper Sorbian, Budysin) went back and forth between different ruling factions, countries, nobility, etc: the Kingdom of Poland, Margraviate of Meissen, the Holy Roman Empire, Duchy of Bohemia, Kingdom of Sweden, Saxony. It was besieged by the Hussites (not successful), the Swedes (successful, if you consider destroying the place a success), and was the site of yet another battle in the Napoleonic Wars.

    It was the site of two Nazi prisons, Bautzen I and II. After the war, these became Communist prisons, bearing the same names. Bautzen I was colloquially known as the Yellow Misery, due to its terrible conditions. Bautzen II was under the control of the DDR Ministry for State Security, and held high value political prisoners. Since I forgot my notes, we missed them.

    Bautzen became a center for the preservation of Sorbian culture in the 1830s. After the war, and Reunification these institutions were strengthened and flourished. Today they include the Sorbian Institute which sponsors research into Sorbian language, history and culture, a boarding school, museum, arts groups, radio station and the Foundation for Sorbian People.

    A note on the Sorbs, since I keep mentioning them. They're a Slavic ethnic group that lives in Saxony and Brandenburg, sometimes called Wends. Their languages: Upper and Lower Sorbian are now officially recognized minority languages in Germany. They controlled the lands in what is today called Lusatia in the Early Middle Ages, but were incorporated first into a larger western Slavic empire, then into east Francia, the eastern part of Charlemagne's Empire which became the core of the German possession of the Holy Roman Empire through the Salian Dynasty. They had a distinct language and culture from the Germans who moved into their territory during their early drive to the east. The territory went back and forth, with some very nasty behavior on the part of the Germans. Margrave Gero's murder of thirty Sorbian leaders at a feast is one such incident that springs to mind. Germanization continued on and off. Sometimes assimilation was voluntary, more often not. That's probably more than anyone wanted to know, and there's a lot more online if you want to pursue it further. For our part, we're going to the Sorbian museum, and hope to get up to Spreewald in Brandenburg on a future trip. Unfortunately the museum's photo fee is 8.50 Euros, and I'm too cheap. You'll have to look at Sorbian costumes and etc online. It's a nice museum.

    There are a lot of interesting things to see. Surprisingly, despite the best efforts of the Hussites, Swedes, French, and various armies in World War II, there's a good Medieval center in Bautzen. The city is ringed by a large defensive wall and many towers. There are two significant churches, and you know I can't get enough of Medieval towers and churches, so it'll be a busy a day.

    And a Christmas market, can't forget that, since Christmas markets are the reason for the trip.
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  • St Michael Church Bautzen

    5 Aralık 2024, Almanya ⋅ ⛅ 39 °F

    Saint Michael's is known as the Sorb church. It's the first one you find as you walk along the wall from the train station towards the Old Water Tower. The bell was rescued along with part of the church by the pastor during bombing at the end of the war. It was the only bell to survive, and the only they had to ring on Christmas 1945, and for some time after.

    Also included, on the topic of Sorbs, our Sorbian lunch at Restaurant Wjebik. He got a plate of five Sorbian dishes: duck breast, fish mousse, meat sulze (yes, he ate jellied meat), goat cheese, and chicken sausage. I had rouladen with veal and carrots inside, which is apparently Sorbian style. We shared a mustard with poached egg soup. Mustard is a huge thing in Bautzen. Pretty restaurant and good food.
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  • Cathedral of Saint Peter Bautzen

    5 Aralık 2024, Almanya ⋅ ☀️ 41 °F

    Another big, beautiful church. This one is unique in that it's been a shared Catholic-Lutheran church since 1524, containing a Catholic apse and a Protestant nave.

    After a fire in the 1620s, the church was redone from Gothic to Baroque style.Okumaya devam et

  • Walls, Cemeteries, and Jakobsweg

    5 Aralık 2024, Almanya ⋅ ☁️ 36 °F

    First the walls and cemetery, then the hunt for the spot on the map that beamed out, "Sachsen Sankt Jakobsweg". I was asked to look out for this, and I have been, and finally!

    Don't get too excited, despite the running up and down staircases, along the wall, near the cemetery in the dark, it was just a little sign. Might have been more, okay, but it was dark and I was tired.Okumaya devam et