Monday, December 30, 2013

Liechtenstein

Time for another day trip. This one to Liechtenstein.  I had a good breakfast and was ready to go.  A scenic train ride along the lake and a short bus ride to the city of Vaduz. The sun was out so I was in much better spirits.
Upon my arrival, I got my passport stamped for a couple of Euro. Walked around a bit, stopped in a cafe  and took some photos of the Castle. I did not visit or go up to the Castle because it was private and occupied.






Zurich Sites

I have to be honest, the rain and lack of sunlight is getting me down.  I decided to visit a few close to the hotel sites. I was just not in the mood for walking and getting wet. The Church of Charlemagne






Zurich.....

 A quick flight, then hopped the train to Zurich central. I was given excellent directions from the hotel so I got on the tram for 4 stops and after a block walk was at the hotel. yes, it was raining again. Zurich is an expensive but I was able to find a place in the old part for $138 a night.  That is not budget but for a major city and at its center, plus Zurich is an expensive city, it was pretty good. A quirky hotel called Hotel California.




Saturday, December 28, 2013

Lujubana Night Walk

By now the drizzle is a part of this trip.  I have a great hat that is water resistant so I am fine. I walk along the river and stop at the tourist information booth. Here I meet a couple and 3 kinds from Austria in for the weekend and looking for a place. Wow, how cool, with so many people and doing it on the fly. we chat a bit and I wish her luck as she and her family go off with a room listing. 
I ramble on just checking out the night seen. it is quiet and the rain seems to have keep people out of doors. On trying to get back, I got lost but can across a sex shop so I had a great photo opportunity.





Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Ljubinana Castle

 Ljubljana Castle
Like most European cities, Ljubljana can trace its past back into the mists of time. Indeed, there is evidence of human settlement in the Ljubljana marshes dating back to 3900 BC. On the site where Ljubljana castle now stands, there is evidence of a pre-historic hill fort.
Ancient History
The site provides a great vantage point over the city, so it was a natural position for a defensive installation. There is some evidence that the Romans also built a fort on the site. Over time, the castle site has been built and demolished several times. The structure that can be seen today dates from 1335 AD. The castle is mentioned in records dating to 1144 AD, when it was the seat of the Counts of Spanheim, but it was probably constructed two centuries earlier. The castle became an hereditary property of the Hapsburgs in 1335 AD and controlled the Duchy of Carnolia. Duke Frederick III of Hapsburg oversaw the construction of a larger, circular structure in the later part of the 15th century. Most of the structure visible today dates from the 16th and 17th centuries, but Kapela sv. Jurija (The Chapel of St. George) is earlier, being consecrated in 1489.
Recent History
The castle served as a garrison until 1814 and was subsequently uses as a provincial prison. The outlook tower (Razgledni stolp) dates from 1841. A guard stationed there was responsible for firing a cannon which was used to herald important events or visitors and also served as a fire alarm. The castle was taken over by the Municipality of Ljubljana in 1905, principally to be used for cultural events, but it was also used as residential accommodation until 1964. Currently, the castle is administered by an event management company, Festival Ljubljana. It provides the backdrop to concerts, theatrical performances, exhibitions and some official functions.
In 2006, a funicular railway was constructed to take tourist up castle hill from the old town.



 The ride up to the castle

 the inner courtyard
 the view below and I struggle to keep nt hat on my head....




Saturday, December 21, 2013

The Dragon: History

The Ljubljana dragon is part of the City of Ljubljana’s coat of arms. It symbolises strength, courage and might. It is depicted on the Dragon Bridge and on top of the castle tower on Ljubljana’s coat of arms.
The Ljubljana dragon may have its origins in the legend of Jason and the Argonauts. Once upon a time, Greek hero Jason and his Argonaut comrades stole a golden fleece, the coat of a golden ram, from the King of Colchis on the Black Sea. On board the Argo they fled their pursuers and found themselves at the mouth of the River Danube instead of going south towards the Aegean Sea and their Greek homeland. There was no way back, so they went on, up the Danube and then along the River Ljubljanica. They had to stop at the source of the Ljubljanica and overwintered here. They then took the Argo apart and in the spring carried it on their shoulders to the Adriatic coast, where they put it back together again and went on their way. According to the legend, on their arrival between what is now Vrhnika and Ljubljana, the Argonauts came across a large lake with a marsh alongside. Here lived a terrible marsh dragon that Jason killed after a heroic struggle. The monster would have been the Ljubljana dragon. It is said that Jason should have been the first real Ljubljana citizen.

There are two more realistic versions of the dragon story. According to the first, it was taken from St George, the patron saint of the castle chapel. On frescoes and statues George is often seen standing or riding while killing the dragon with a spear. The dragon in the legends of St George represents the ancient ancestral beliefs that the new Semitic religion – Christianity – defeated. Castle Hill was in ancient times a sacred place, where the bearers of a culture of cremation funerals had a stronghold and worshiped their god. When in the Middle Ages the foundations of today’s castle were put down, they also wanted to symbolically overcome the ancient beliefs, so they also dedicated the castle chapel to St George. Alternatively, in Slavic mythology the dragon represents the god Veles, opponent of the supreme thunder god Perun, the highest of the Slavic gods. In the Slavic religion, Perun was usually worshiped on a hill; Veles lower down, usually near a market place.
The first explanation is related to the second, that the dragon evolved from the decoration on the medieval city coat of arms that initially represented just the city walls or gates. The small animal, a decorative addition above the coat of arms, moved into the coat of arms in the Baroque period with the emergence of the tower and other symbolism in the 19th and especially the 20th centuries. The dragon was used as part of the coat of arms on numerous buildings owned by the city, and after the Second World War was used by various companies, from labels on beer bottles to the name of a torch factory or as a prize for achievements in fashion. It was even used on the packet of the well-known Ljubljana cigarettes Filter 57.


Ljubljana Hotel Allego Review

Pros:
Center of town
Excellent service
great breakfast
quiet
great block
good WiFi because I think it was my ipad that has been having problem
good price


Cons:
I did not like the idea of selling umbrellas. I felt that should make them available to the quest which is a nice touch.