Monday, June 30, 2008

Tag 14

In the morning, we were woken up around 7am by loud children. We got up around 8am for breakfast which was cereal, bread, cheese, coffee, cookies, etc. Then we walked past a lake by the hostel and through this absurdly long and hot path that Ashley tricked me into going on... I was schvitzing and it was a bit uncomfortable but eventually we made it to the Bahnhof after going down through part of the forest. 

We put our stuff in lockers in the Bahnhof and went to get a snack at a cafe. The streets were pretty much deserted compared to the day before. There were a bunch of infants and little kids on their bikes and other toy vehicles. There was one asian guy playing hide and go seek with his infant and an old man that was staring at me from about 3 feet away. At the cafe I got some pasta and accidentally asked for a bag of coffee (I said 'tasche' instead of 'tasse'). 

After all that, we took a train back to Bebra where we waited for about an hour and finally took the train back to Göttingen. That night was the final game of the Euro 2008 soccer tournament where Germany lost to Spain 0-1. Sehr schlecht.

By the way, the dates above the blog post titles (like 'June 30') are not correlated with the actual days which are shown by the titles ('Tag 1' 'Tag 2' etc.). They are simply the days I posted to the blog.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Tag 13 (Thüringen Tag 2)

Our day started at 8:15am with some guy making breakfast for us. It was already laid out when we got downstairs...

A breakfast with orange juice, coffee, a basket of breads, two hard-boiled eggs, marmalade & gnutella

In Germany, they have egg-holders and little things you put over the eggs to keep them warm; here Ashley can be seen wearing this egg warmer as a little turquoise hat

We then went to Eisenach from Ilmenau, through the transfer station of Bebra.


Eisenach Bahnhof (train-station)

 The town of Eisenach is famous for Martin Luther just like Ilmenau is famous for Goethe.

A large statue of Martin Luther holding the Bible


An opening in the tower... the Martin Luther statue is in the area behind this opening

Das Rathaus des Eisenachs (the city hall of Eisenach), as seen from the main courtyard

The courtyard filled with people and merchants

There was a competition going on, complete with a makeshift stage for live music where a band played old American 50's songs like Elvis Presley. The competition involved picking things up in little forklifts - it was called StaplerCup and it apparently drew a lot of people.


Here is one of the areas where a guy was lifting barrels and stacking them as fast & accurately as he could

After this, we decided to visit the famous Wartburg Fortress. Ashley convinced me to walk up the whole way, even though the beginning was a gigantic hill (and the fortress is on top of the highest hill in Eisenach). It was a nice, green path through the forest and we saw a cool abandoned building.

Near the top of the hill, there is a small area with a bus-stop, a Thüringer wurst (famous sausage) kiosk, and a station where one can ride a donkey the rest of the way up to the fortress...

Der Eselstation (the donkey station)... you can see their names on the white strip near the ceiling, and they also had red tags with their names (like Susi, Lötte, Peter, Julios, Bjorn, etc.)

Eventually, we reached the top of the hill and looked back over the town of Eisenach...




Wartburg Fortress (the tower was having work done on it)


Wartburg Fortress #2, from the perspective of this small look-out

From this small look-out one could see this gigantic 'M' on a far hillside

I learned later that it was 7 meters tall and put there to commemorate some Arch Duke that came to Eisenach with a lot of wealth and turned it into a thriving cultural center.

Some birds chilling on a ledge, with one puffing out its chest 

A metal dragon-like fountain
 
A view of one of the Wartburg towers


The courtyard of Wartburg fortress, with a coy pond at the bottom of the picture and Thüringen Wald on all sides in the distance

We got to Wartburg just in time for the English tour. You can only go on the inside with a tour so it was cool...

The family crest of the Thüringen counts which owned the fortress. The fortress was founded in 1067 by the Frankonian Ludwig der Springer (Louis the Jumper)

Ludwig climbed to the top of this mountain and (according to legend) found it to be so beautiful that he proclaimed, "Warte, Berg. Du sollst mir eine Burg werden," which means "Wait, Mountain. Thou shalt become a castle for me." The first part of this phrase, "Wart, Berg" became the name of the fortress.

Unfortunately for Louis the Jumper, the mountain wasn't on his land so he devised an ingenious plot. One foggy night, he climbed up the hill with a bunch of his knights, carrying bags of soil from his land. They spread the soil out all over the hill and then started to build, claiming that the fortress was indeed build on his own land. Apparently, it worked because it still exists.
Inside, there was a room holding old artifacts first, which was the oldest room in the fortress. Then we went into a somewhat plain room with a central pillar which supposedly housed some men/knights. Then we went into the dining hall where there was also a central pillar and some furniture, which was more contemporary. The ceiling, though, had the original oak rafters which they dated with dendrochronology to about 1161. Then, we went into the women's room which commemorates Saint Elizabeth. It is extremely ornate and, if you look closely, every single design is made up of tiny bits of glass, making the room a gigantic mosaic of just under4 million glass pieces.


On the wall were depictions of parts of St. Elizabeth's life, all done in glass mosaic form

This was an intricate and coool design by the window, also made up of thousands of glass pieces

This is a cross called the Jerusalem Cross and/or the Crusader's Cross... its in the location because it is under St. Elizabeth's husband who attempted to sail to Jerusalem, the holy land, but died at age 27 of a feverish illness


After that, we were led into this more modern room which had a big organ in it where music is still played. It serves as a chapel for Lutheran services and also a Catholic service one time a year to commemorate St. Elizabeth. The Jesus figure on the cross is extremely old and unique because he is wearing a crown instead of the normal crown of thorns


After that, we were led down a passageway which contained more modern murals depicting scenes from St. Elizabeth's life. She was canonized only 3 years after she died which was rare. She had been born a wealthy princess and died in voluntary poverty, helping the poor. Since you need to have performed a miracle to be a saint in the eyes of the Church, the most famous story is of St. Elizabeth carrying bread through the forest under her garment to the poor (which wasn't allowed). Her husband found her in the forest and asked what was under her cloak to which she replied that she was only holding roses. She opened up her sleeve and the bread all transformed into roses, getting her off the hook. Although it is a nice story, I am sure the sick were hungry as roses aren't very nutritious.

Jesus chillin' in a Vesica

St. Elizabeth helping the poor and sick

Some cool pillar with writing on the way with famous poems & songs from early Germany

A very Buddhist-like symbol on the door

In this room that the last 2 pictures were also in (called the Sängersaal), there was a large mural depicting an old singing competition (Sängerkrieg). The story goes that five singers gathered for a competition and agreed among themselves that the worst singer would be executed. They all sang and some guy was chosen as the worst, but he cried out to St. Elizabeth's mother-in-law, the Queen, for help. She suggested that they return a year later to try the competition again. The loser took this time to find the famous Klingsor who would be an objective referee. He can be seen in the picture below floating on clouds because he was a magician. When they came together the next year, the same guy won the competition but the other four were said to sing in an equally poor manner so they were all spared. Consequently, they all sat down and ate some dinner.

Sängerkrieg in der Sängersaal (Hall of Minstrels)

A cool dresser in the room

The biggest room in the Fortress is this gigantic hall (Festsaal) where a bunch of German fraternities famously gathered for what is called the first democratic movement in Germany in 1817. King Ludwig loved the hall so much that he copied it in his own castle, Neuschwanstein.

Festsaal

This is where the guided tour ended, although there were still a few rooms with exhibits to walk through.

14th century musical instruments - a harp & lute

Jesus chilling amongst the four elements... errr evangelists depicted as they are in Ezekiel's vision: an eagle, a bull, a lion, and a man.

Martin Luther's room where he translated the New Testament

Above is the exact room where Martin Luther self-imprisoned himself after being declared an outlaw by authorities, meaning he could be killed on the street without any repercussions. Here he famously translated the New Testament from Greek into German so commoners could read it for themselves. It coincided nicely with Gutenberg's invention of the printing press.

After all this, we walked back through a different path in the forest. We stopped and Ashley  had chai tea and we shared Pommes (french fries). Then we went to the Hostel and hung out.

Tag 12 (Thüringen Tag 1)

Today we went to the town of Ilmenau in Thüringen. Our transfer station was in Neudietendorf...


The train platform at our transfer station, Neudietendorf

A view over the tracks at the Neudietendorf station

After transferring from there, we arrived in Ilmenau, a small town by the Thüringer Wald. 


It is famous for Johannes Wolfgang von Goethe having stayed there and wandered through the forest on the outside of town. We walked through town at first, looking for the address Ashley had written down. This was on a building that had turned into a store...

The sign says, "Here lived Goethe... In this house, Johannes Wolgang von Goethe celebrated his birthday on August 28, 1821"

The biggest building in Ilmenau was probably this Eishalle (ice-skating rink) by the train station


Ashley had written down the address, and we found the street she had written down, but the address number was 14. We started following the road but it turned into a highway around 9 or 10. We kept walking and passed a few places we thought would be the place we were supposed to stay but none were right. 


A bridge over a river on the way to our Gästehaus (guest-house)

We passed by a group of houses, past a sports field, past a little country club with a water slide, and then gave up thinking we wrote down the wrong address. 


A view of the Thüringer Wald behind the sports field we passed

We looked up the number in the Germany handbook Ashley had and called the number but no one picked up. We eventually got back into town and found the office for the housing but no one answered the door or the phone, so we went to get food at this Ali Baba place. We both got pizza and by the time we were done, the people picked up their phone. We eventually figured it all out after wasting a bunch of coins on the pay-phone. Apparently we did have the right address, we just didn't walk far enough (about 2.8km to be exact), so we took a taxi with a jubilant taxi-driver. He complimented Ashley on her German and asked where she was from. She said Kalifornien and he mentioned that we had an actor as our governer (Arnold Schwarzenegger, of course). 
 

The front of our Gästehaus



A rock and sign in front of the Gästehaus. The sign says, "Genuine Thuringian Weatherstation... If there is sunshine under the rock, there is sun. If the rock is wet, its raining. If the rock is swinging, its windy. If the rock is white, its snowing. If the rock is not there, its foggy or someone has stolen the rock."

The side of the Gästehaus

A swing at the Gästehaus

Unsere Raum (our room) #1

Unsere Raum #2

After finally getting to the room, we decided to walk on the Goethe Wanderweg (Goethe Wander-path) which Goethe famously wandered on...


A sign for the Goethe Wanderweg

A bench on the Goethe Wanderweg... It says "Auguste Gotze's dream-song" for some reason...



Another sign for the Goethe Wanderweg, with directions for different paths

Ashley walking on the Goethe Wanderweg with some sunshine


Die Stadt Ilmenau (the city of Ilmenau) from the Goethe Wanderweg

We took the 2.8km-long path back into town and looked around there.


Das Rathaus (city hall)

A caduceus-wielding woman on the corner of a bookstore called Buchhandlung Grimm (named after the Grimm Brothers who are famous for collecting German folk-tales and systematizing the German language in various ways)

After that we went to the small market in town and bought some fruit, cheese, and bread. We eventually walked all the way back to the Gästehaus and passed out.