Friday, October 28, 2011
Hamburg, Germany
HERE ARE SOME MORE PICTURES! < Click there to see the pictures. These are from my trip into the city of Hamburg in Northern Germany. The city is only about a 40 minute drive from my village without traffic.
The pictures include:
Shots of the Red Light District
The building with the green roof is the government building (Town Hall). The German name for a Town Hall is "Rathaus" Pronounced Rat House. I think the name fits! ;)
There are some pictures of an old burned church this is:
"The Gothic Revival Church of St. Nicholas (German: St.-Nikolai-Kirche) was formerly one of the five Lutheran Hauptkirchen (main churches) in the city of Hamburg. It is now in ruins, serving as a memorial and an important architectural landmark. When Hamburg residents mention theNikolaikirche, it is generally to this church that they are referring, and not the new Hauptkircheof St. Nicholas, which is located in the Harvestehude district.
The church was the tallest building in the world from 1874 to 1876 and is still the second-tallest building in Hamburg."
(Wikipedia)
The church was left standing after it was destroyed in the second world war as a reminder of what war can do and as a warning to future generations.
They installed an elevator in the church which is how I got the areal shots of the city.
You can probably see the Harbor in some of the pictures. Hamburg's harbor is the 3rd largest in Europe.
There are a couple pictures of another church, which is one of 5 of the mother churches in Hamburg.
The picture of a waterway and on either side a long line of brick building is what used to be the Old Harbor. The buildings are now used for, I believe the storage of carpets. There is also a Maritime Museum and a couple other things to see inside.
The picture of me with the guitar is taken in the Red Light district. It's actually a memorial to The Beatles, who made their start in Hamburg, not far from where I was standing. Looking down on the memorial it looks like a giant record. Then there are the statues of the 4 known Beatles and the 5th Beatle who left the band on good terms to peruse an education at a prestigious art school in the city. Not long after leave the band he died suddenly from natural causes. He was the one who gave the Beatles the "look" that we know today as belonging to the band.
The swans in the picture have the best life a swan could have. There is someone working for the government, who's job is to take care of them They live in the Alster, which is a right tributary of the Elbe River. During the winter months they are moved to another part of German to "vacation" in an ice free pond.
"After more than four months in their winter quarters, Hamburg's “swan father” Olaf Nieß lead several boats to move 120 birds to the port city’s outer Alster lake.
The animals will now be able to find sufficient food on their own, a spokesperson from the Hamburg-Nord district said.
At the end of the November the swans made their traditional trek to their winter retreat in the Eppendorf district’s mill pond, which is kept free of ice year round.
They have been a part of the city landscape since the 11th Century, under the care of a “swan father” - Hamburg’s oldest municipal post – since 1674.
The birds now grace the Hamburg city emblem, and their return to the Alster signals the start of spring each year. " (http://www.thelocal.de/society/20100412-26495.html)
There is one picture of an apartment building painted red with the word "OUT" on it. This is one of a few building which belonged to the government. They were unoccupied and a group of squatters moved in. Soon these squatters had families and turned these building into their homes. When the government went to sell the buildings the squatters refused to leave. After numerous arguments the squatters won. This is how I understood the story. Apparently the buildings are now owned privately and the apartments are leased to the people who live there.
"The Hafenstraße (Harbour street) is between Landungsbrücken, the most tourist crowded place in the city, and the fish market, which is open only on Sunday morning from 4:30AM-9:30AM. The street between was a place for squatters in the 1980s and was well known by the media when there were battles between the Autonomous movement and the police. Some houses still exist there, though the 80s-Myth is dead. You can go to the Punksbar onkel otto or eat at the vokü." (http://www.live-like-a-german.com/destinations/show/hamburg)
The black and white pictures are just old pic (that I took from a screen) of Hamburg. There is one of the St. Nicholas church.
I hope you enjoy the pictures!! I also hope all of my information is accurate. Some of you already got this stuff in an email. I will make a new post at some point to give you something new. :)
I took the pictures while giving a friend of mine, who lives in another part of Germany, a tour of Hamburg. I had confessed to the father of a friend that it was absurd for ME to be giving a tour of Hamburg when I know next to nothing about the city. He replied,
"In the kingdom of the blind the man with one eye is king"
Sounds good to me! :D
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