Monday 20 October 2008

The Hills


Out for a bit of a hike with some American students, showing them a bit of the other side of Dublin.
 
Odd watercourse, beside the Chemserve building on Edmondstown Road - slows the water down. Just before it is what appears to be a mill race, but modern. No idea what the overall purpose is though.

 
Archway in the old Kilakee gardens in Lord Massey's.

 
Hellfire Club overlooking the city.

 
Pink ribbon fluttering in the woods of Tibradden. There was a second one nearer the summit, out among the heather on the bog.

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Saturday 11 October 2008

Glendalough


 
Slightly over exposed, taken on my phone you see. Eastern end of the upper lake.

 
Lunch among the ruins of miners' village at the other end of the lake.

 
Ascending the waterfall that feeds down into the lake, looking back east.

 
Fun with position - lying on my back looking up.

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Friday 10 October 2008

Dollymount House


 
"A building popularly known as "The Long House," originally called "Dollymount," and at a subsequent period "Mount Pelier House" - a name which has caused it to be confounded wit the ruin on top of the hill. The original heavy gate pillars and stone walls along the avenue still remain, as also a couple of stiles constructed for the use of foot passengers when the approach was closed during the absence of the proprietors. The house is two storeys high in front, with six windows on each side, and over the hall-door are the arms of the Ely family, surmounted by a coronet. The rooms had marble chimney-pieces and stuccoed ceilings, some portions of which yet remain; and the windows commanded a beautiful view of the County Dublin, the city and bay, with Howth, Ireland's Eye and Lambay. On each side of the house was a large arched gateway, from which extended a long wing of out-offices, servants' apartments, stables, &c., terminating at each end in a square three-storied tower with embattled top and pointed windows. Over the door of the left hand tower was, formerly, the date 1763, inscribed on the keystone of the arch - probably the date of erection or commencement.

This establishment was built as a hunting residence by Henry Loftus, Earl of Ely, the Count Loftonzo figuring so Prominently in Baratariana, whose wife, Frances Munroe, was aunt of the celebrated beauty, Dolly Monroe, after whom the Place was called "Dollymount." It was originally surrounded and sheltered by a fine plantation of trees, some of which, mostly chestnuts, may still be seen to the left on approaching the building, and on the slope of the hill above it was a splendid wood of firs and larches, as dense as a tropical forest, not a trace of which now remains, the trees having been cut down and sold by a tenant who occupied the place after it had been abandoned as a residence by the owners."


From "The Neighbourhood of Dublin" by Weston St John Joyce, 1939.

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River travels


 
My very wonderful hostess in Germany brought me on a small tour of part of the Rhine-Mosel valley. Day one was Tag der Deutsches Einheit, or Day of German Unity, celebrating German re-unification in 1990. We took in the Germania, a monument to the creation of what was essentially the first 'German' nation, after the Franco-Prussian war in 1870. After that we visited the rock of the Loreley.

 
Spent the night in Koblenz, under the shadow of the Kaiser at the Deutsches Eck. In the morning I toured the Ehrenbreitstein, a Prussian fortress at the Rhine-Mosel confluence.

 
As we headed toward Trier, we stopped off in Cochem to visit the Reichsburg, an impressive castle. We didn't quite make it to Trier though, camping on a site in a village called Pünderich.

 
We did manage a lightning tour of Trier the next morning though, the highlight of which were the extensive Roman baths, the largest north of the Alps. Trier also boasts a basilica, an amphitheatre, a huge Dom, as well as a few more bath sites and the Porta Nigra.

Thursday 2 October 2008

Heidelberg


 
Heidelberg, famed for it's scenic castle. The whole town really is quite pretty, in a slightly unremarkable way. I think I this point I had become desensitised to Germanic beauty. The town is fabulous really, but we had only a few hours, so we concentrated on the Schloß.

 
This I thought was quite spectacular. I couldn't take a picture that did it justice really. One of the rear towers of the Schloß had split in half, probably due to subsidence. The broken off half sits on the ground, a little lower than the still attached half.

 
The sun setting was quite brilliant, blinding us as we retreated down the main street to the car.

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Wednesday 1 October 2008

Mainz


 
Mainz is a beautiful city.

 
The settlement dates from Roman times (Moguntiacum), with this nameless general standing not far from the original gate into the city, at the Kästrich. Other remains include the mausoleum of Drusus, a theatre, a temple to Isis, ruins of an aqueduct and some ships housed in their own museum.

 
Mainz is also the birthplace of Johannes Gutenberg, inventor of the printing press. There's a museum, several statues and sculptures - indeed, even the city theatre is known as the Gutenberg monument. Incidentally, the plaza onto which the theatre faces contains a strip marking exactly 50° north.


 
Throughout the middle ages, Mainz was powerful through its Archbishops. They were the archchancellors of the Holy Roman Empire, and helped to elect the German Emperor. Besides Rome, Mainz is today the only diocese in the world with an episcopal see that is called a Holy See. The Archbishops of Mainz traditionally were primas germaniae, the substitutes of the Pope north of the Alps.

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