Skip to content

Watching

18 Feb 2012

Dusseldorf in Mono

 

 

4 Feb 2012

Boppard

One Day in the Rhineland  ::  Part IV – Boppard

Boppard is a very nice town full of charming hotels and restaurants coaxing you to relax and stay a while.  Once called Baudobriga, the city was a Celtic settlement until it was swallowed by the Roman empire.  In the 4th century the Romans replaced the citadel with a rectangular fortress made of 28 towers connected by 30-foot high stone walls, some of which are still standing.

http://www.boppard-tourismus.de/48-1-home.html

1 Feb 2012

Rheinfels Castle

One Day in the Rhineland  ::  Part III – Burg Rheinfels & St Goar

Construction of the main Rheinfels castle began in 1245, and it grew to become the most powerful and impenetrable fortress along the Rhine until it was surrendered by a weak commander to the French in 1794.  The French blew up the fortifications and castle in 1797, and later the stones were used in the reconstruction of the Ehrenbreitstein fortress to the north.  The Prince of Prussia purchased the ruins in 1843 to save it from complete decay.

St Goar, a quaint little village catering to tourists, sits below the castle along the river.

 

http://www.ricksteves.com/plan/destinations/germany/rheinfels.htm

28 Jan 2012

Factory Windows

A long row of windows on a fabricating shop, with a long row of houses on the other side of the street.

24 Jan 2012

Stolzenfels Castle

One Day in the Rhineland  ::  Part II – Stolzenfels

On the western side of the Rhine, across from Lahnstein, Stolzenfels Castle (Schloss Stolzenfels) sits on a rocky peak.  Originally built from 1242-1259 by the Archbishop of Trier, Arnold II of Isenburg, it was burned to the ground by the French in 1689.  The city of Koblenz gave it to Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia in 1823, who rebuilt it and used it as a summer residence when he became king (IV).

22 Jan 2012