Next morning, June 12th, we moved to the P&R and took the bus back into town, mostly to see the great cathedral (next posts), but also to do another Michelin walking tour of the old city.
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| The German occupation of Strasbourg following the Franco-Prussian war coincided pretty much with the
 years of Art Nouveau, so one doesn't see much of
 the beautiful architecture...but there are a few instances
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| La Place Broglie...the horse market in the Middle Ages, a central square in later times, with the grand opera at the end; origin of
 the term "horse opera" some say
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| The day's caryatids; not too many of these on the half-timbered beauties
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| Abbatoir of yore | 
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| Canal scene | 
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| The day's video-shoot; don't know who she was nor why five camera-persons were required
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| Love the curvy pink arcades | 
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| Another beautiful building | 
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| Europe's first iron bridge; so it said | 
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| We stopped for lunch as a restaurant by the adjacent Catholic and Protestant churches; my Alsatian sausages | 
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| Vicki's schnitzel | 
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| The meal was fine, but the main interest were the new-to-us golden ground cherries, physalis heterophylla,
 served as a side nibble
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| Theologian/musicologist/organist/doctor/missionary/polymath Albert Schweitzer was a native of the Alsace who did time
 studying medicine and other things in Strasbourg; authored
 The Quest for the Historical Jesus and Reverence for Life;
 received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1952
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| An approaching red ant threatened our moment together, so I smashed it; certain restrictions apply in
 my reverence for life
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| Chinese half-timbered look | 
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| The adjoining Catholic and Protestant churches; the latter was closed, the former not so interesting
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| Another Art Nouveau | 
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| Galeries Lafayette; used to be the Kaufhaus des Westens (😁) | 
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| And another Nouveau | 
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| And an Art Deco; why are they so often movie houses? | 
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| Place Gutenberg; Gutenberg did considerable time in Strasbourg, where he produced his first printing press; the rest is history, as
 they say, and Gutenberg is sometimes referred to as "the man of
 the millennium"; little in subsequent human history is imaginable
 without him
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| Sic transit, Gloria; there is his statue, on Place Gutenberg, tucked in between a hot dog stand and a merry-go-round
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| Last month's flavor of "Information Age" | 
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| More curvy streets | 
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| And one final monument I had to find...that of Strasbourg favorite son Roget de L'Isle, composer of "La Marseillaise,"
 which became the French national anthem, known to many
 non-Francophones by way of this great movie scene (Major
 Strasser and his German buddies, BTW, are singing "De
 Wacht am Rhein," which rather neatly ties things together)
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1 comment:
Ground cherries are new to me.
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