Monday, May 14, 2012

Say hi to Heidelberg

Last month Karen and I were visiting a good friend in Frankfurt when we struck upon the idea of taking a day trip South to the town of Heidelberg.  People have remarked how charming the city was, and I had been reading the Mark Twain's A Tramp Abroad with much delight, so it was an easy choice to take the hour long train ride.

Heidelberg is a town of 150,000 and it houses Germany's oldest and most prestigious university that makes up a fifth of the population.  Twain spends chapters of his book describing the bloody, yet structured fencing duels that took place here a century ago, and I was surprised to learn about the depths of this violent and honored pastime between the fraternities of the school.  Thankfully, these matches that would lead to dismemberment and death no longer take place.  Another relic of the bygone era was the Studentenkarzer, or Student Jail.  Misbehaving students would spent at least three days in their spartan cell fitted with little more than a bed, chair, desk and lots of paint.  Floor to ceiling is covered in two hundred years worth of graffiti - silhouettes, dirty poems and charred initials jockey for space as inmates brag or lament about the deeds that landed them confinement.



 The Student Jail stands in University Square where grand old school buildings mingle with a Jesuit church and impressive library.  Underground is the foundations of the Augustinian monastery where Martin Luther defended his revolutionary "95 theses" in 1518.  We took a pause here to sit in the warm sun with many of the tourist and indulged in a local treat called a Schneebällen, fried dough rolled into balls and dusted with powdered sugar to resemble snowballs.



We continued through Market Square with it's imposing Gothic church and the Hercules fountain, where medieval criminals were placed in stocks to suffer the ridicule of the mobs.  Not far from here was the Old Bridge that spans the Neckar River.  After dutifully touching the brass monkey's mirror for good luck and wealth we paid homage to the statue of Karl Theodor, who is rumored to have fathered 200 illegitimate children as prince.  We did not rub anything on this memorial, but it proved to be a great vantage point for the Philosopher's Way on the North bank and the grand Castle to the South.


When we completed the steep walk up to the castle grounds, the three of us were greeted with a lively atmosphere of musicians, clowns and hordes of tourists laying siege to the crumbling Schloss.  Mark Twain described the place perfectly when he wrote, "Out of a billowy upheaval of vivid green foliage, a rifle-shot removed, rises the huge ruin of Heidelberg Castle, with empty window arches, ivy-mailed battlements, moldering towers — the Lear of inanimate nature — deserted, discrowned, beaten by the storms, but royal still, and beautiful."  The courtyard is true ravaged by time, but not neglect as scaffolding attest to slow improvements on the Eastern walls. The Schloss also hosts an interesting pharmacy museum where we can see many approaches to medicine over the ages, as well as the Grosses Fass.  Claiming to be the worlds' largest wine cask, it took 130 oak trees to create and holds more liters than there are people in the city.  Again I will turn to Twain, who was less impressed than I at the sight of this behemoth, "Everybody has heard of the great Heidelberg Tun, and most people have seen it, no doubt. It is a wine-cask as big as a cottage, and some traditions say it holds eighteen hundred thousand bottles, and other traditions say it holds eighteen hundred million barrels. I think it likely that one of these statements is a mistake, and the other is a lie. However, the mere matter of capacity is a thing of no sort of consequence, since the cask is empty, and indeed has always been empty, history says. An empty cask the size of a cathedral could excite but little emotion in me. I do not see any wisdom in building a monster cask to hoard up emptiness in, when you can get a better quality, outside, any day, free of expense."

We took his advice and after a quick lap of the wine cask we heading outside and made our way back to the train station.  Not embracing emptiness, but full of appreciation for this storied city.

~Kyle

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Luxurious weekend in Luxembourg


A little while ago, we decided to take a train down to the tiny country of Luxembourg.  Nestled between Germany, France and Belgium we have skipped over this Grand Duchy in many of our travels.  With only a half million residents you can drive the width of the country in under two hours.  As luck would have it, Karen had some family living in the capital, Luxembourg City that graciously hosted us for the two days.  We met Corley and Bob (her 1st cousin, once removed) after a pleasant trip along the Rhine river through sloping vineyards and medieval villages.  Despite the rainy weather we walked through the charming center complete with local markets and ancient ruins and along the fortifications that ringed the city.  It was here that we learned about the legend of Count Siegfried and Melusina.

"Melusina is said to have been the wife of the founder of Luxembourg, Count Siegfried. When they married, she had one particular request, namely that Siegfried must leave her alone for one full day and night every month, and that he should not ask or try to find out what she was doing. Of course, Melusina was such a beautiful girl that Siegfried could not refuse her this one small wish, and all went well for years and years, when on the first Wednesday of the month, Melusina would retire into her chambers in the "Casemates", a network of caverns hewn into solid rock underneath the city, not to be seen again until early light on Thursday.

But one day, Siegfried's curiosity got the better of him. Wondering what on Earth she might be doing alone all the time, he peeped through the keyhole, and was shocked to see that Melusina was lying in the bathtub, with a fishtail hanging over the rim. As you all know, mermaids like Melusina, have a very keen sixth sense, which tells them instantly that they are being watched, and thus she recognised her husband through the door, and jumped out of the window into the river Alzette below, never to be seen again ... except every now and then, some people say they saw a beautiful girl's head pop out of the river, and a fishtail rippling the calm waters of the river Alzette."


After hearing the story, I looked hard into the River Alzette but never saw even a swish of a flipper.  

The next day we traveled to the Northern part of the country to the beautiful Vianden .  The weather was foul again as we toured the grounds of the picturesque castle and walked along the same narrow streets traversed by Victor Hugo.  Soon our weekend had wound down and Karen and I made our way back to Bonn, our bellies full of great food and drink and our heads swimming with the history and legends of this cute city.

~Kyle