Friday, 20 July 2012

Eisenach, Erfurt, Bittefeld


13/7 BIG BROTHER GREG’S BIRTHDAY - Oi! Oi! Oi! 

Soft rain has fallen all night.  No exercise or school this am, just a slow breakfast and over to the Castle on the Hill (Wartberg) as they reckon it is overrun with tourists by 1100.  We pass straight through Eisenach, it’s foothill town where JS Bach was born.  No doubt an accomplished mathematical musician but to me, he represents years of unmelodious torture as I practiced 4 bars at a time of his ‘studies’ or etudes, over & over again...often for an hour or so.  In contrast to Beethoven in Bonn…..
Spectacular Wartburg Schloss dates to the very early 1000s (the wooden beams have been accurately dated, the timber was felled in 1162 - how do they do that???)
1162AD??


This is Germany’s only UNESCO listed castle...and, like most of Europe, it has loads of them.  Not only were battles fought, but this medieval palace is also marked by peaceful events.  
fireplace

Ludwig the Leaper

Here Elizabeth of Hungary (taken at age 4 from her parents for a royal marriage in the future) performed the Miracle of Roses in the 12th century; ex-communicated Luther translated the bible from Greek into German whilst in hiding, allowing the  word of God to be accessible to the people & thus starting the Reformation in the 1500s;
Wagner wrote his Opera the Tannhauser and, in the 1800s, the student’s fraternity of Jena celebrated 300 years of Reformation and 4 years of the defeat of Napoleon with their red, black and gold flag, the colours of which became the flag of the Nation. 
We enjoyed a guided tour (in German but with an English brochure) and saw beautiful old frescos, chandeliers (or crown lights as they call them in German), intimate rooms with walls covered in mosaics and alluring grand fireplaces.  At the end, we were left to explore the small study in which Luther wrote his 95 thesis, translated the bible and designed the Luther Rose, the emblem of Wil’s school St Peters Lutheran College in Brisbane.  
Luther's desk, here the bible translated, for all to read!


Thoroughly educated, we chugged along the freeway for another hour to the city of Erfurt, Thuringia where Luther went to university and Goethe, Germany’s Shakespeare & last renaissance man, made his mark.  Our stop this time is adjacent to an athletics track and large sports ground.
On our bikes/feet, we explored another really pretty recently and ongoingly face-lifted altstadt with winding cobbled roads, a spiky skyline, wonderful aesthetic markts with flower gardens, remarkably comfortable chairs, fountains & play equipment, TWO enormous Doms side by side and a gargantuan hilltop citadel with views over it all. 




The zentrum is bisected by a wide, tannin-coloured pebbly bottomed shallow river that bends around corners, brushes willows and slithers under cute little stone bridges.  The fairest of them all is the Kramerbruck, each side comprised of rows of sweet 2 story half-timbered houses on a stone arch foundation that tightly squeeze a very narrow, cobbled, cafe lined pedestrian street. 


Kramerbruck Bridge

On the outskirts are bland, ugly dense concrete residential blocks, which together with street names like Karl Marx and Juri Gargarin, are reminders of a different time when this was East Germany.  Around that, like a plump velvety green ribbon, is the softening beauty of Germany’s gorgeous forests.
new Erfurt


Old Erfurt

Feeling lazy about dinner and the subsequent wash-up in our sports ground carpark stop, we opt for the $1 local specialty, grilled Thuringia Bratwurst smothered in mustard & tomato sauce.  The kids work it off on trampolines in a markt playground and then back on the bikes for writing homework, trip preparation and bed.

Around us, a colourful bunch of Masters Athletes have gathered with their skinny legs & medals hanging from their motorhome rear vision mirrors.
14/7 Sad morning, happy afternoon

Despite threatening skies, J+J wiggle out for a 10BX before the pregnant black clouds disgorge, just as we are getting back into Eddie.  The wind howls and swirls so that the rain is pelted horizontally at us from several directions, all while we sit in the comfort of Ed enjoying breakfast and smashing some school work.  
The clouds seem to have emptied by the time school is out and we make for the Buchenwald Concentration Camp, just near Weimar, situated on a hill fringed by forest, one of the largest camps on German soil (not as big as Auschwitz in Poland).  

This camp was set up in 1937 and originally held Hitler’s political opponents, then when the war got underway it welcomed Jews, Gypsies, homosexuals, other misfits (disabled, lazy, naughty, mentally unwell, different, not befitting the master race).  It was not intended to be an extermination camp, nevertheless countless deaths resulted from overwork, malnutrition, disease and of course hanging, strangling, and shooting.  There was extensive medical experimentation including trials for a typhoid vaccine that managed to kill nearly 1/3 of it’s subjects.  Up to 400 people/night were killed in a room the prisoners thought was for medical checks - they entered and were told to stand under a beam to have height checked, not knowing that in a room adjacent an SS “human” shot them through a narrow slit, through the neck while loud music was playing to disguise the shot.  The bodies were piled up and taken immediately to the crematorium. 




Inevitably some arrived alive, talking, even sitting up at which stage they were lynched and strangled on the many hooks around the room we visited - you just couldn’t stay there in that room for long.  Adjoining the crematorium is a dissection room.  It’s one thing to wonder at how so many SS staff could be enlisted to do such evil deeds, another thing for us to fathom the doctors’ involvement.   The camp acted as a conduit to nearby camps and of course to the extermination camps to the east.
The entry gait has a sign that says “Jeden Das Seine“ which means “to each his own.”  Que??
"To each his own?!?"

The clock above the entry gate reads 3:15 pm, the time the Americans entered in April 1945, after most of the SS dogs had fled with tails between their legs.  Can’t imagine the impact the place must have had on those soldiers.

There is a large museum but we were advised the kids were a bit young and to be honest the adults were not up for any more portrayals of the evils humans can perpetrate on themselves.  It is interesting for us to note the impact on the German visitors.  Most of the cars in the park have German plates, everyone we saw in the camp was deeply affected.  There are a few large dormitory style buildings for kids camps - they clearly don’t shy away from the reality of the atrocities committed by this regime of their forebears.   Fantastic, may it remain in perpetuity for all the world to see the results of racism and prejudice.
A quiet but pleasant drive to the small town of Bittefeld which is the start of a scenic drive north to Berlin.  As it was getting late we intended to lay up somewhere on that road rather than get into the big smoke and find the site full.

Low and behold there’s a lake and a crowd and lots of rowing boats - a German club regatta in full swing.  Only 8’s, lots of them (esp the nice yellow ones), great standard of rowing (like Aus nationals, but there are no national athletes here, the B’s are in Lithuania, the A’s are 2 weeks from the Olympics).  The races are 500m sprints, 1 on1 knockout, in quick succession, doof doof music thumping, the commentator makes it sound like a football game, stalls abound selling wurst and beers.  No wonder they are so bloody good at this sport.






Decide to stay the night parked up by the lake, finish some writing for the kids, a sandwich for dinner followed by Happy Feet 2 - sweet!!!

Tuesday, 17 July 2012

Aachen



10/7
As much as I wish I could roll over, I’ve an extended bike ride planned with my boyfriend, up and over yesterday’s hill...and some.  We open Ed’s door and emerge from our cozy cocoon into cold air, low clouds in the valley, a threatening sky and quiet mist on the water.  But, as usual, we’re so pleased to have ventured out because the ride was magic and thoroughly different from yesterday with all the moody fog and lonely fields always made so pretty with the odd defiant blood red poppy squeezed in amongst the dense wheat crops.

We scrape Kel from her warm bed to farewell her dear little Belgian friend, Femke and then settle to our familiar satisfying breakfast and school routine. 

Kelly and Femke


Jeff and I often blog and savour a second coffee whilst school is in but this morning we’ve plans for our last Luxembourg attraction further north.
A pretty drive through forested undulations and farmed plateaus preludes our arrival at Clervaux for the Intangible UNESCO Family of Man black & white photograph exhibition which is housed in a white turreted castle on the hillside beneath threatening black skies.

Grey now

5 min later







Sherman tank

We are VERY disappointed to find the building closed for renovations until mid next year.  We are content to simply view the impressive street facade of the St Maurice monastery up the road where Gregorian monks chant twice daily.  We’ve missed the morning mass and the next one is at 1800 (outside, we do our own chanting and imagine the life of a monk!).
Before leaving the town, we withdraw money and, feeling very European, buy fresh bread for lunch. Set for a 2 hour cruise to Aachen over the border, we recollect the pleasures of Luxembourg - such a pretty, uncluttered, cheap and inviting place for us. Jeff and I talk about a future cycling tour, imagining the equipment we’d need (credit card in pocket; iPhone TomTom navigation on the handle bars; 2 x kindles; ipad; camera in a waterproof pouch next to the iPhone; saddle bags with small tent; trangia and just the day’s breakfast & dinner with plans for eating our main meal at midday.  We’d charge our appliances whilst feasting.  We even talked about quick dry socks and undies to complete the set of quick dry other clothing we’ve accumulated……..ahhh!  Then Wil pipes in, ‘that sounds great and what tent would we need’!?!)
Without any ceremony, we cross, the Luxembourg-Germany border.  Seems strange and I’m disappointed to not accumulating a whole pile of stamps in the passport.  It’s only minutes from our communal park.  Our childish humour is tickled by the German ‘ausfahrt’ or exit signs again along the highways. 
After a feast of gorgeous bread, ham, cheese and salads, we mount the iPhone and ride, the long way, to the zentrum, centre of Charlemagne’s Carolingian Empire in the 800’s.
I still can’t get over the incredible patience & kind consideration of motorists towards cyclists in Europe, especially all their thoughtful anticipation of Kel’s less predictable riding.  I also continually revel in the pleasure of meandering through suburbs, smelling pockets of home-cooking & piquant herb gardens, looking into people’s living rooms and yards whilst making all sorts of profound stories about what makes them German and drawing all sorts of convoluted conclusions about everything.
We all imagine Uncle Benno hanging out here doing horsey things.  Where would he eat, play, dance, shop?
The spires of Charlemagne’s cathedral mark our destination where, after a bumpy stretch along the altstadt’s cobbled narrowed streets, things open into a large markt where Karl the Great (Charlemagne) stands in front of the enormous Rathaus, his sceptre adorned with an empty beer bottle. 
Charlemagne

Just past enormous horse statues, we tie up the bikes and trickle around the beautiful old town following a trail of quirky bronze fountains (the puppet fountain whose moving figures depict aspect’s of Aachen life &  the Circle of Money whose surrounding figures symbolise different things like Greed) and Charlemagne’s  golden imperial seal on the pavements. 
Circle of Money

puppets!


Near the information centre is the Elisa Fountain where warm sulphurous spring waters flow into big black granite basins.  Aachen’s spa culture essentially put it on the map for the Holy Roman Emperors & is one of the reasons why Charles 1 made this the town where he held court. 

Elise Fountain (H2S pong)
Printen 

Wil is determined to sample the town’s specialty, printen,a soft gingerbread biscuit,often in the shape of things horsey but we string him out for tomorrow and instead choose an odd dinner of ice-cream sundays.
Dinner

Kel is now quite relaxed on the bike as we make our way home in peak hour traffic along main roads..uphill. Go Kib!  
11/7
Jeff & I do a short run along the ‘wegs’ near the campground this time deeply inhaling the smells of horse manure (Aachen a major horsey town, the town of uncle Benno, hosts the annual CHIO world equestrian festival).  We whizz through school, all keen to get back into the atmospheric town and learn more about the impressive Charlemagne and see the Dom.
This morning the sun is shining on the Klenkes monument making it a whole lot more appealing. Apparently it symbolizes the Aachen greeting of raising the small finger of one hand.




After a few errands, we lose ourselves in the utterly spectacular Cathedral, Germany’s first building to be included on the UNESCO list.  It’s exterior is so complex that the wee bronze model sitting at the entrance portal, originally created to give the blind a feeling for this important site, helps one orient around it’s beautiful proportions.  The inside is quite remarkable with an imposing central octagon of blue, white & red marble worn into smooth depressions in places where it has been rubbed over the centuries. 
The Dom


Mosaic!



Every other remaining space including the ceilings, is adorned with endless exquisite glittering mosaics in a variety of beautiful patterns like leaves and flowers. Finally, right in the middle beneath the gorgeous dome, is an ancient golden chandelier.
Charlemagne's Chandelier



Church floor??



We all slump, dumbstruck, into pulpits to drink in the extraordinary beauty.
As is often typical for Europe, a brief downpour of torrential rain and blasting winds followed, driving us into a 3 story book store before it was fine enough for our journey home.


12/7
10BX & brisk walk in the park, then maths tests before we say ‘Goodbye’ to marvelous Aachen.  Kel has crowned herself “The Maths Cookie” with a cone fashioned from a paper circular coffee doylie.  
En route across the country, 
German Industry

Back across the Rhine

Salt?

Wil reads up on & then leads vigorous discussions about Charlemagne and Martin Luther.  Two incredible men. Yes, Charlemagne conquered in bloody battles forming his vast empire but he was a greatly liked leader who walked the walk and talked the talk of his people. He did all sorts of amazing things to create ‘One Europe’ (the Carolingian Empire) like establishing rules of commerce, encouraging one language, spreading knowledge and education about a fair Christianity, embracing the arts and inviting scholars of learning to record their learnings in ‘illuminated manuscripts.’  He saved Pope Leo from a rebellion and was crowned Holy Roman Empire in return.  Somehow also managed to have 18 kids with 10 wives - they wouldn’t let Henry do that 600 years later.
The kids read Harry Potter (again) and have some IT time and the wonderful undulating countryside dotted with quaint ‘dorfs’ entertain the olds.  A few breaks & a grocery stop later, we’ve crossed back over the massive Rhine, zoomed past the twin spires of Germany’s largest Dom in Koln,taken MORE photos of golden wheat fields & beautiful clouds to finally arrive in Eisenach. 

We ease Eddie into a small hill top park over looking tomorrow’s adventure - The Wartburg castle, the birth place of JS BACH and the hideout of the excommunicated Martin Luther.




Jeff and Kel, Orval sunset

Wartberg Castle



A warm bowl of green soup with black bread and a short bit of Happy Feet 2 gets everyone ready for bed. Wil’s lids get heavier as he gazes out his bedside window which frames the lit up imposing castle twinkling in the distance.