Oppenau - Kloster Allerheiligen
Allerheiligen 2017. Kapelle. ©UdoSm
Kraak, Altar der Johanniterkirche, Heilige Frau mi…
Kraak, Altar der Johanniterkirche, Heilige Frau mi…
Kraak, Altar der Johanniterkirche, Heilige Frau mi…
Allerheiligenstimmung mit November-Blues, siehe 3.…
Der "November-Blues" .•♫•♬• •♬•♫•.
Allerseelen - All Souls' Day
Herbstlich verwandelter Wald
Goldener Herbst
Alle Heiligen
All Saints' Day in Tyrol (2)
1. November am Bach
Allerheiligenfeier mit einigen nicht zu eiligen He…
Sonnenblumen ...
... herausgehoben
... in die Mitte gesetzt
... einzeln stehend
Blatt-Gold
DSC 9843
la descente aux enfer ........
Allerheiligen (cloitre)
Allerheiligen (cloitre)
Allerheiligen (cloitre)
Allerheiligen (cloitre)
Allerheiligen (cloitre)
Allerheiligen (cloitre)
Allerheiligen,cloitre
Allerheiligen,cloitre
Allerheiligen,cloitre
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Oppenau - Kloster Allerheiligen
Kloster Allerheiligen ("All Saints' Abbey") was a Premonstratensian monastery founded in 1192 by the regional nobilty. It had a long history as an abbey, even survived the Reformation, but in 1802 Margrave Karl Friedrich of Baden dissolved the abbey and took its possessions. All monks had to leave, and after a factory, that had been established here, failed, the whole complex fell into ruins and got sold as a quarry.
Meanwhile, British aristocracy had invented tourism, sailed the Rhine up and down and climbed onto swiss mountains. The Romantic Period started in Germany and painters like Caspar David Friedrich made "lonely ruins in fog" a theme of many works of art. Printer Karl Baedeker opened a publishing house in Koblenz. The title of his first bestseller was "Rheinreise von Mainz bis Koeln" ("Travelling the Rhine from Mainz to Cologne"). From then on Mr. Baedecker focussed very sucessfully on guidebooks.
First tourists hiked up the valley to see the ruins and about 1840 a guesthouse was opened, to offer beer and limonade... In 1853 Mr. Baedecker himself visited the place - and wrote about the romantic ruins and the wonderful waterfalls nearby.
In 1871 the guesthouse got rebuilt into a posh hotel. Samuel Langhorne Clemens (aka "Mark Twain"), traveling through Europe, probably read Baedecker´s guidebook and so visited the ruins in 1878. He wrote about it in "A Tramp Abroad" (part of this book is the essay "The Awful German Language").
Today the place seems a little forgotten again, though as in so many ruins and as in front of so many Romanesque churches - during summer there is a stage here.
Meanwhile, British aristocracy had invented tourism, sailed the Rhine up and down and climbed onto swiss mountains. The Romantic Period started in Germany and painters like Caspar David Friedrich made "lonely ruins in fog" a theme of many works of art. Printer Karl Baedeker opened a publishing house in Koblenz. The title of his first bestseller was "Rheinreise von Mainz bis Koeln" ("Travelling the Rhine from Mainz to Cologne"). From then on Mr. Baedecker focussed very sucessfully on guidebooks.
First tourists hiked up the valley to see the ruins and about 1840 a guesthouse was opened, to offer beer and limonade... In 1853 Mr. Baedecker himself visited the place - and wrote about the romantic ruins and the wonderful waterfalls nearby.
In 1871 the guesthouse got rebuilt into a posh hotel. Samuel Langhorne Clemens (aka "Mark Twain"), traveling through Europe, probably read Baedecker´s guidebook and so visited the ruins in 1878. He wrote about it in "A Tramp Abroad" (part of this book is the essay "The Awful German Language").
Today the place seems a little forgotten again, though as in so many ruins and as in front of so many Romanesque churches - during summer there is a stage here.
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