Showing posts with label visit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label visit. Show all posts
Wednesday, 18 March 2015
Spotting Czech Castles
The Czechs proudly boast that their country has more castles per square mile than any other country. Of course that is partly explained by the Czech Republic's rather violent history - there are so many castles because they were needed.
As you drive around the country, you will frequently see signs to a hrad (castle), or zamek (manor house or palace) or occasionally to a tvrz (translated in my dictionary as stronghold but more often in my experience it is a fortified manor). And if you follow those signs you may come to just a pile of rubble barely recognizable as a castle or you may come to a hugely impressive structure heaving with visitors. Either way this is a country for castle spotters.
It is even a country for castle collectors, as the authorities sometimes offer dilapidated castles at cut-down prices. However such deals come with lots of strings attached - you have to get certain repairs done within a specified timescale or forfeit your ownership. One hears of poor castle owners hardly managing to get the necessary permissions before their time runs out and their castle reverts to the former owner.
But back to castle spotting. Given the sheer number of castles in the country it is surprising that so few are visited by tourists. There are certain castles that are on the tourist's radar: Prague of course, Český Krumlov, Karlštejn, Hluboka Nad Vltavou, and Křivoklát: all castles that are visitable on a day trip from Prague. But there are hundreds more. Some of these are equally impressive, all will be less touristy, and many will give you an insight into the history of the country.
I recently looked through my previous blogposts and was surprised that I had only written posts about Sloup Castle in Czech Switzerland, the massive castle at Jindřichův Hradec and Český Krumlov castle, even though I have visited many Czech castles over the years. Over the next year or so, I intend to rectify this and write a series of occasional posts about some of my favourite castles. Watch this space.
Saturday, 7 March 2015
Villa Primavesi, Olomouc
Olomouc is surprisingly
absent from most tourists' must-see list. But then I suppose so are
many wonderful places in the Czech Republic. Now that flights from
the UK come into nearby Ostrava and Brno, let us hope that changes.
For that matter, Olomouc is also relatively easy to get to from Prague.
I recently visited
Olomouc as part of a holiday I had with my husband.
We did it as a day trip from Brno, but next time we will stay there.
As I have said before on this blog, my husband is a lover of
architecture. He even has his own blog dedicated to English
buildings. And so the historical centre of Olomouc with its stunning
collection of historic buildings went down a storm. Whilst he
wandered the streets and squares of the city, I headed off to check
out a restaurant where I can take him as a surprise.
The restaurant I was looking for is in a very different kind of
historic building from the renaissance and baroque town houses Phil
was photographing on the main square and surrounding streets.
The Primavesi Villa
stands on the edge of the old town near the Italianate church of St
Michal, overlooking one of the parks that circle the old town. The
Villa was built by the Primavesi family, who were to be important
sponsors of the Vienna Werkstätte. According to my old Rough Guide, it
was in a parlous state – it is no longer. The Villa has been lovingly
restored. Although the top floors
are used as offices, it is possible to visit the architecturally
important first floor where there is a gallery that is open Tuesdays-Saturdays; downstairs is a restaurant. The visitor can also wander through the
garden, gazing up at this important secessionist building, admiring
both its design and decoration.
The decoration is at
its most intense in the mosaic-covered entrance porch. But as I
looked around I saw decoration everywhere, from iron brackets curling
like pea shoots to the curving dragon-back of the garden wall. The
house was designed by the architects Franz von Krause and Josef Tokla
and its interiors were designed and furnished by designer Josef
Hoffmann, sculptor Anton Hanak and painter Gustav Klimt. The latter's
portrait of Mäda Primavesi can be seen in the Metropolitan Museum.
Sadly during the dereliction of the communist era most of the artwork
and furniture was dispersed, although some non-moveable elements are
still in situ. And it is possible to see furniture by Hoffmann in the
Olomouc Museum of Art.
I took a coffee at the
restaurant and
rejoined my husband in the town square.
Sunday, 22 February 2015
Brno
Spilberk castle, Brno
I am a great fan of the Czech Republic's second city. Indeed at times I think I prefer it to Prague. The two are very different in their feel. Prague to my mind feels like a Northern European city, whilst Brno has more of the Mediterranean about it. In Prague everyone seems to be going somewhere, whereas Brno has more of a relaxed cafe culture. It helps that the climate is milder there, and also that the historic centre is pedestrianized. As a result people sit at tables outside the city's many cafes and restaurants and chat to friends over coffee or maybe the local wine.
I have visited the city many times over the years and each time I find something new to do. Brno's most famous building is Villa Tugendhat, and it certainly should be on any visitor's to-do list, but there is much more to see. The Villa isn't even the only major modernist building in the city. If you are interested in the architecture of previous periods, you will find Gothic and Baroque churches, Renaissance palaces, Art Deco villas and Art Nouveau apartment buildings and shops within easy walking distance of the city centre.
Called the "Moravian Manchester", Brno boomed in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries on the back of a vibrant textile industry. As in Manchester the industrialists invested in the best architects and artists to create the buildings and institutions appropriate to their city's status. These included the Moravian Museum of Applied Arts. The permanent collection of this excellent museum has free entry and features some stunning examples not only of textiles but of furniture (including pieces designed by locally-born Josef Hoffmann), glass, graphics (Alfons Mucha was also a local) and other objects.There is currently a temporary exhibition on display at the museum entitled Brno - Moravian Manchester. 250 years of the capital of the textile industry. Frustratingly the exhibition closes a month before I bring a textiles tour to the city, but so it goes. My suspicion is that the exhibition is actually the one that will eventually be permanently installed in the Loew Beer Villa, which is due to open a month after the tour.
Sunday, 10 June 2012
Kutna Hora St Barbara Cathedral
I've now visited this
cathedral three times. No doubt I will visit it again and will rejoice to
do so, because this building must be one of the great medieval
ecclesiastical buildings of Europe.
Many people visit Kutna
Hora as a daytrip from Prague. Some take one of the many minibus
tours that speed between Prague and Kutna Hora and the more canny
take the train and save themselves money. The best way to approach St
Barbara's is to walk up the hill from the train station and turn left
to go past the Vlassky Dvur and St Jakub church and so come on a
viewing platform, from which you will get the best view of the
cathedral with its extraordinary roof line (above). Then follow the
lane up to the Hradek and approach the cathedral along a walk lined
on one side by statues and beyond them vines and on the other by the
Jesuit Seminary now an important art gallery.
Inside the cathedral
lives up to the expectations raised by its spectacular exterior. The
vaulting is utterly unlike any you will have seen in the west, a pure
example of the style known as Bohemian gothic, with the ribs flowing
from the columns. Along the gallery huge wooden sculptures look down
on the nave. If you get a chance pay the small fee and go up to the
gallery to see the statues and ribbing up close.
That this is a
cathedral for the silver workers of medieval Kutna Hora is evident
throughout the building. Miners in their regulation white coats
appear as statues and in frescos, minters sit striking coins and
others are counting. In fact the cathedral's frescos merit repeated
inspection: I was still finding new elements on my third visit. The
frescos are remarkably realistic and human. But then the building is
human too, as large in footprint as a large church, which makes its
wonders all the more impactful.
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