Viking European Sojourn River Cruise Day 24/27 - Koblenz, Germany
We were still sailing this morning. Right after breakfast, we passed through the final lock on the Main, made a right turn, and entered the Rhine River.
 |
Entering the Rhine at Mainz, Germany |
 |
Officially on the Rhine |
We started our Rhine sailing, headed toward the Middle Rhine for scenic sailing with commentary.
 |
Christuskirche is a Protestant church in Mainz |
 |
St. Peter's Church |
 |
Biebrich Palace in Wiesbaden |
 |
It was a brisk 63 degrees with a 20-25MPH breeze on the Sun Deck |
 |
Johannisberg Castle |
 |
Eibingen Abbey |

 |
Niederwald monument in the Rhine gorge at the entry to the Middle Rhine |
 |
Enrenfels Castle |
 |
Mouse Tower |
 |
Rheinstein Castle |
 |
St. Clemens Basilika |
 |
Reichenstein Castle |
 |
Sooneck Castle
|
 |
Heimburg Castle |
 |
Ruin "Fürstenberg Castle" |
 |
Fürstenberg Castle |
 |
St. Bonifatius |
 |
A herd of goats on the hill |
 |
Stahleck Castle |
 |
Gutenfels Castle |
 |
Pfalzgrafenstein Castle
|
 |
Schönburg Castle |
 |
Liebfrauenkirche |
 |
St. Martin's |
 |
Bull Tower |
 |
Some type of hawk was flying over us |
 |
The Loreley Rock - supposedly, Loreley sang and her song caused sailors to crash into this rock
|
 |
A statue of Loreley |
 |
Katz Castle
|
 |
Rheinfels Castle |
 |
Mouse Castle |
We ended our scenic sailing as lunch was ready. around 2:30, we made a technical stop so folks could disembark for the included tour of Marksburg Castle. Arlona wanted to take that tour so she left the ship here. I stayed on to Koblenz and took the tram to Ehrenbreitstein Fortress.
Arlona departed Lofn in Braubach for the short bus ride to Marksburg Castle.
 |
Marksburg Castle - nearly 800 years old and was never destroyed in battle |
 |
The castle entry - one of four gates |
 |
The view from the base of the castle |
 |
Ready to climb the castle |
 |
Stolzenfels Castle - visible from Marksburg |
 |
The key that opens the entry to the castle |
 |
The doorway that the horses used to use to enter the castle |
 |
The second of the four doors |
 |
Coats of arms of the different owners of the castle |
 |
The castle is now owned by the German Castle Association
|
 |
The canons could shoot across the river |
 |
They were mostly used for ceremony |
 |
Caretaker's residence - three people live here and currently care for the castle |
 |
The narrow slits were for archers |
 |
A view of the Rhine from the castle
|
 |
Another archer slit |
 |
The third doorway called the Iron Gate |
 |
They have made Riesling wine here since 691 |
 |
The wine was originally 4% alcohol |
 |
A wine press in the kitchen |
 |
The kitchen |
 |
Eat-in dining area in the kitchen - these walls were 12 feet thick for stability |
 |
Arlona - in the kitchen |
 |
Herbs drying up high so rats couldn't get to them |
 |
The ice box |
 |
Sink and bathroom outside the bedroom |
 |
This shows how the interior walls were constructed |
 |
A bedroom with a "king-sized" bed - they slept sitting up to not be confused with the dead |
 |
Bedroom fireplace |
 |
Tapestry in the formal dining room |
 |
Musical instruments in the dining area |
 |
Antler chandelier in the dining room |
 |
The chapel dedicated to St. Peter |
 |
Crude stone steps - a narrow stairway up from the chapel to the armament room |
 |
A small study along the way |
 |
In the armament room |
 |
Raising the protective visor was an early form of a salute |
 |
The central tower |
 |
Back in the kitchen |
 |
The ceiling in the torture area from the 1200s |
 |
The torture area - a rack |
 |
Stocks |
 |
The blacksmith's shop inside the castle rather than in an outside building |
 |
A fun manhole cover on the trip back to the ship |
I took the excursion with the cable car ride to Ehrenbreitstein Fortress. This area has been a defensive area since the fourth century B.C. and has been built and rebuilt over the centuries. The current fortress has been occupied by Germany, France, and the USA multiple times.
 |
The cable car from the west bank of the Rhine across the river to the fortress |
 |
Ehrenbreitstein Fortress is the second-largest fortress in Europe |
 |
Our guide played the part of an English agent in 1836 who was assigned to document the technological and architectural advances in the fortress - it made for an interesting tour |
 |
Outside the fortress - the yard area outside the fortress has a huge system of tunnels running under it to allow defenders to stop attackers from tunneling to gain access |
 |
The only gate to enter the fortress - one gate made it easy to defend |
 |
Inside the fortified walls |
 |
Note that the interior walls were built with architectural arches so that any failure in a wall from an attack wouldn't collapse as the weight would distribute along the arch |
 |
Note the obtuse angle of the wall on the right, making it hard for attackers to seek refuge |
 |
Memorial of the German Army |
 |
A construction mark on one of the interior walls |
 |
That bridge was originally a drawbridge, effectively separating internal structures, making them harder to breach |
 |
The small openings are rifleman windows |
 |
The two larger openings are canon openings - the gate was heavily defended on three sides |
 |
Prussian Eagle |
 |
Inside the outer defenses, they had style - curving stairways, arches, and windows |
 |
A defensive gap splitting the main fortress from the courtyard area |
 |
It was more palace-like inside the main structure even though this was a barracks for the troops |
 |
The offices of the commander |
 |
The courtyard was large enough that all the troops could gather and exercise |
The tour ended and I had time to take in the view from the fortress.
 |
Kaiser Wilhelm I statue |
 |
Another look at the massive internal courtyard |
 |
A look at some of the internal structural tunnels in the fortress |
 |
I took the cable car back down to the city |
 |
The cable car station |
We were docked near Deutsches Eck or German Corner where the Rhine and Moselle rivers join.
 |
Kaiser Wilhelm I statue |
 |
It is 37 meters high - 121 feet! |
Arlona got back to the ship a few minutes before I did. We headed up to the lounge for a pre-dinner cocktail. After dinner, we returned to the lounge for a classical music concert with a local oboeist and pianist. We will sail in the wee hours of the morning, around 2:00 for Cologne, Germany.
Loving it all!
ReplyDelete