Showing posts with label austria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label austria. Show all posts

Thursday, August 8, 2019

Danube River Cruise #45: Arrival in Engelhartszell, Austria

Rob and Tom walking Engelhartszell, Germany
In today's blog about our May 2019 trip up the Danube River on a beautiful Viking Cruise ship, we'll tell you why we never got to the last stop and wound up in Engelhartszell, Austria!  We'll also share some info about what this quaint little Austria town is about.


the Abbey
WHY DID WE DOCK THERE? The Danube was experiencing flooding from constant heavy rains in western Europe. We were supposed to dock in Passau, our final stop. However, because the river was so high and swollen, the Viking River Cruise ship could not get under the bridge to get to Passau! So, Englehartszell was a 30 minute bus ride to the city of Passau, Germany - our last stop! 

ABOUT ENGLEHARTSZELL-  In 1293 the market town of Engelhartszell, founded by the famous Bishop Wernhard von Prabach from Passau ("Cella Angelorum" means angel´s monastery). There are only 998 residents!! It's situated along the Danube River, of course, which is why the ship docked there.

THINGS WE NOTICED - This was a very, very small town, and the first thing we noticed was a large dog park, but no dogs in it! As we walked around this town of 998 people, we noticed a LOT of fences around every property and wondered how such a small town could have privacy issues. There was also a church, gas station and one restaurant. We did notice that a lot of the homes seemed very expensive and thought wealthy people lived there.  
a big house in Englehartszell, Germany


 
NEXT: Finally, Passau, Germany!





Friday, July 26, 2019

Danube Cruise Blog #37: Gottweig Abbey's Attic, Ancient Tiles

steel support structure holding up the fresco over the monumental stair.
In this final blog Danube Cruise Blog about Krems, Austria's Gottweig Abbey, we'll climb into the attic and tell you about the architecture (well, because Tom is an architect). We'll tell you about the funny situation with the guide, Fresco support, show you ancient tiles and tell you what a Terracotta roof means.   Read on!


FUNNY - After the tour guide finished giving the general tour of about 40 people, he asked (reluctantly) if anyone had purchased tickets for the attic tour. Of course, we did, and we convinced our friends Mary Margaret and Don to accompany us, so there were 4 of us. I could almost sense a heavy sigh from the tour guide..

FRESCO SUPPORT - In a previous blog we showed you the giant Fresco over a grand stair case. Well, in the attic we saw the steel support structure holding up that fresco ! It was really long and impressive.

>terracotta roof tiles
IN THE ATTIC - There was a narrow set of wooden planks that allowed people to walk the periphery of the attic, so we did. The number of beams in that attic holding up the ceiling below and keeping the roof on, was amazing.
UNESCO Steel beams

UNESCO COMMISSIONED STEEL - When the Abbey became a UNESCO world site, the organization paid for steel beams to better support the 300 year old (rebuilt) abbey attic.

ANCIENT TILES - Terracotta can last a long time on a roof. In the attic, there was  an easel displaing the original 300 year old terra cotta roof tiles!



A view from the attic
WHAT ARE TERRACOTTA ROOF TILES? - Terracotta, which literally means 'baked earth' in Italian, is a type of clay-based ceramic which is used to create roof tiles. Tiles made from terracotta are a very commonly used roofing material in Australia and around the world, and they've been widely used on roofs for a very long time.;

NEXT: AN AUSTRIAN MEAL TO REMEMBER

Friday, July 19, 2019

Danube River Cruise #33: Schonbrunn Palace Part 4: Ghost of Napoleon Room

In this 33rd blog about the Viking River Cruise on the Danube, we are still in Austria, and the Schonbrunn Palace where you will now meet the 4th ghosts we encountered. The Ghost of Napoleon Room !

Napolean Room
THE NAPOLEON ROOM - This room has quite a history. French Emperor Napoleon had visited the Schonbrunn Palace and stayed there. He later offered his daughter, Maria Louise's hand in marriage to one of the Habsburg men after he conquered the territory. So, in 1810, Maria Louise married into the Habsburg family.

ABOUT THE NAPOLEON ROOM - Today known as the Napoleon Room, this was previously the bedroom shared by Franz Stephan and Maria Theresa from 1746. During the nineteenth century it was refurbished several times, as revealed by restoration work carried out in 2007.

 FLASH FORWARD - Napoleon was defeated at Waterloo in 1850.

THE GHOST - As I walked in the Napoleon Room, I experienced a very heavy feeling pressing down on my chest. There was also a dull pain in my chest, as if it were difficult to breathe.
Napoleon II, Portrait by Moritz Daffinger
WHO IS THE GHOST? I learned the Napoleon's son stayed in Vienna, and this was his room. He contracted tuberculosis and died in that very room at age 21. The bed he died on still remains in that room today and there is a marble sculpture of him . Napoleon's son continues to haunt the very room he stayed in during his visits, and the room in which he died.

ABOUT NAPOLEON II- Napoléon François Charles Joseph Bonaparte (20 March 1811 – 22 July 1832), Prince Imperial, King of Rome, known in the Austrian court as Franz from 1814 onward, Duke of Reichstadt from 1818, was the son of Napoleon I, Emperor of the French, and his second wife, Archduchess Marie Louise of Austria. In 1832, he caught pneumonia and was bedridden for several months. His poor health eventually overtook him and on 22 July 1832 Franz died of tuberculosis at Schönbrunn Palace in Vienna.[8] He left no issue; thus the Napoleonic claim to the throne of France passed to his cousin, Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, who later successfully restored the empire as Napoleon III.

WEIRD FACT- Some of Napoleon II's organs REMAIN in the Schonbrunn Palace. The rest of his remains were transferred to Paris, but his heart and intestines remained in Schonbrunn, which is traditional for members of the Habsburg house. They are in Urn 42 in the "Heart Crypt" (Herzgruft) and his viscera are in Urn 76 of the Ducal Crypt.
**THAT'S why he's here. He wants all of his remains put in the same place next to his father's remains.""

NEXT: TO KREBS, AUSTRIA


Thursday, July 18, 2019

Danube River Cruise #32: Vienna's Schönbrunn Palace Part 3: Stallions Room Ghost

Stallions Room
In today's blog, Danube River Cruise #32:, we're going to introduce you to two more ghosts we encountered in Vienna's Schönbrunn Palace. These ghosts were in the Stallion Room and the Napoleon Room and I was able to determine their identities!


THE STALLIONS ROOM
The Stallions Room was used as a dining room during the nineteenth century. Displayed here today is the so-called Marshal’s Table, a festively decorated table set for a dinner of the highest-ranking military officers and court officials, who dined without the emperor, as was customary in Franz Joseph’s time.

Franz Joseph
THE GHOST - It was when I walked into this room ,that I experienced a sharp pain in my heart, and realized that it was a male ghost who was telling me he died here of a heart attack. I also heard the ghost call out the name "Franz!" I didn't know who Franz was until later. Then I learned that he was rule Maria Theresa's husband! What's more, I also learned that Franz died of a heart attack... so he was sharing his pain of death with me to prove his identity and told me his name.  I'm unsure why he's in the Stallions room,but it was a room where he and his wife entertained a lot- and perhaps it was his favorite room.

WHO WAS FRANZ JOSEPH? - Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary (ruled 1848–1916)
Born 18 August 1830 Vienna (Schönbrunn Palace)
Died 21 November 1916 Vienna (Schönbrunn Palace)
Franz Joseph ascended the throne of the Austrian Empire in 1848. His concept of rulership was informed by a great sense of duty and mission. After the upheavals of the 1848 revolution he endeavoured to re-establish the legitimacy of monarchical rule and to hold together the multinational state that was threatening to break apart. He was forced to make far-reaching concessions, notably in the creation of the dual monarchy through the Compromise with Hungary in 1867 and in consenting to a constitution.


NEXT: THE GHOST IN THE NAPOLEON ROOM

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Danube River Cruise #31: Vienna's Schönbrunn Palace- Part 2: Two Ghosts

The Lantern Room - filled with residual anxiety
In today's blog about our Viking River Cruise, we're still in the Schonbrunn Palace in Austria. Since the palace prevents photography, I had to use photos from the Palace website to show you the rooms in which there was either a ghost or residual energy.
  For those who don't know, we both belong to a paranormal investigation group. I've been able to sense people and pets who have passed since I was a teenager, and there were definitely earth-bound ghosts in this palace.  In today's blog you'll visit the Lantern Room and the Carousel Room where I met one of those ghosts.  

Lantern Room- Residual Energy of Anxiety
ABOUT THE ROOM: Before electric lighting was installed in the palace the lantern-bearers used to wait in this room. Their task was to light the way of the imperial family or members of the court household after dark. The room is also remarkable for the marble door panelling dating from the time of Joseph I.
The Carousel Room
THE ENERGY: Upon entering the room, I (Rob) felt a lot of anxiety (the previous room had no energy). I learned that servants had to light candles in this room for residents. The anxiety those servants experienced was likely impressed upon the walls, and that's what I felt.

Carousel Room
ABOUT THE ROOM:  The Carousel Room served as the antechamber to the apartments of Maria Theresa and Franz Stephan of Lorraine in the East Wing of the palace.  This room has a mural of the 1720s with Spanish horses. 
WHAT HAPPENED IN THIS ROOM? - Maria Theresa's father died in this room in 1790. He had eaten mushrooms that
turned out to be poisonous.
Charlex VI
WHO WAS HER FATHER? Charles VI (1 October 1685 – 20 October 1740;) succeeded his elder brother, Joseph I, as Holy Roman Emperor, King of Bohemia (as Charles II), King of Hungary and Croatia, Serbia and Archduke of Austria (as Charles III) in 1711.

THE GHOST IN THE ROOM - As I entered this large room, I suddenly got very, very dizzy to the point where I felt like I was going to fall over. They I experienced a pain in my heart. I realized that it was the pain that Maria Theresa's father experienced from the poisoning, and felt that he was still there.

NEXT: Ghosts in the Stallion and Napoleon Rooms





Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Daunbe Cruise #20: Welcome to Vienna, Austria: Danube Tower and Wheel

The Danube Tower in the rain
Welcome back to our vacation blogs- and this is blog #20of our Viking River Cruise down
the Danube River. We left Slovakia behind and in today's blog we take you to Vienna, Austria! 
NOTE:  We were actually on the cruise in May, and May 22nd was the date we arrived in Vienna, so this is NOT real-time blogging. Today you'll learn about 2 famous city landmarks we drove by on the bus tour: the Danube Tower and the Vienna Wheel! Read on!


ABOUT VIENNA - Vienna, Austria’s capital, lies in the country’s east on the Danube River. Its artistic and intellectual legacy was shaped by residents including Mozart, Beethoven and Sigmund Freud. The city is also known for its Imperial palaces, including Schönbrunn, the Habsburgs’ summer residence. In the MuseumsQuartier district, historic and contemporary buildings display works by Egon Schiele, Gustav Klimt and other artists.

THE DANUBE TOWER - The Danube Tower is the tallest building in Austria. In fact, it is used for recreational bungee jumping!
   It now stands in a stylish reinterpretation of the 1960s. The express lift will take you to a viewing terrace 150 meters (492 feet) up in the air, with an unforgettable 360° panoramic view. There is a Tower Restaurant, Tower Café and an observation deck. It's rented out for birthdays, weddings and other functions.Website: https://www.donauturm.at/en
The Vienna Ferris Wheel

THE VIENNA FERRIS WHEEL - The Giant Ferris Wheel in the Prater park is one of the city's symbols. The Prater is a large public park in Vienna's 2nd district. Almost 65 meters (213 feet) tall, it offers a breathtaking view of the city on the Danube.

WHEN BUILT? It was erected in 1897 to mark the 50th year of Emperor Franz Joseph's accession to the throne. It has been an enduring feature of the city's skyline ever since. Situated right near the entrance to the Wurstelprater amusement park, its cabins offer a wonderful view of the city and the Prater. The diameter of the wheel is almost 61 meters (200 feet), the entire iron structure weighs 430 metric tons (474 U.S. tons). The wheel turns at a speed of 2.7 kph (1.6 mph).

FERRIS WHEEL FILM FACT - The Giant Ferris Wheel has also played the "lead role" in several Hollywood films, such as "The Third Man" with Orson Wells or in the James Bond adventure "The Living Daylights" starring Timothy Dalton. That's why it was also placed on the list of Treasures of European Film Culture by the European Film Academy in June 2016.

NEXT: A Look at the Habsburg Ruling Family of Austria

Who I am

I'm a simple guy who enjoys the simple things in life, especially our dogs. I volunteer for dog rescues, enjoy exercising, blogging, politics, helping friends and neighbors, participating in ghost investigations, coffee, weather, superheroes, comic books, mystery novels, traveling, 70s and 80s music, classic country music,writing books on ghosts and spirits, cooking simply and keeping in shape. You'll find tidbits of all of these things on this blog and more. EMAIL me at Rgutro@gmail.com - Rob

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