From Cracow we drove on, west and south, across much of industrial Silesia, and into Moravia, eastern Czech Republic, stopping for the night at the town of Hranice and its little campground. The woman at the reception office said they had never had American visitors before. We noticed several campers taking pix of our license plates, which are decidedly not EU.
One of the many off-the-beaten-path places popularized by Rickie Stevie is the city of Olomouc, an hour's drive east of Hranice. It is a medium-sized city, largely untouched by WWII, and, indeed, despite Rickie Stevie's attentions, not very touristy. It has a beautiful old city, two large old churches, the tallest "plague" monument in the Hapsburg Empire, and what attracted us, its very unusual astronomical clock.
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Beautiful old streets |
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And buildings |
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The St. Wenceslaus Church, foundation going to the 12th century, "updated" to Gothic in the 1880s |
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Interior, altar; this indeed is off-the-beaten-path, the first "working" church we have encountered in Europe, where worshippers clearly out-numbered the tourists; mass is over, they start turning off the lights and closing the doors... |
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The south (bell) tower is allegedly the Czech Republic's tallest |
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More beautiful buildings |
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Ditto; except, through some architectual blunder, this one was built on its side |
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Interior of the older St. Moritz church |
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Its beatiful organ |
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And, finally, the plague monument, now known as the Holy Trinity Monument; Empress Maria Therese came to worship at it sopening ceremonies (all the way from Vienna) |