Tag:munich
We travelled to the arctic circle, Cairns, Qld, NZ, Melbourne, Stonehenge, and Norway on the first part of our imaginary travel journey. Then, we left Norway and sailed across to Greenland, continuing our imaginary journey. Finally, with a white wolf as our guide and a nosey penguin demanding to know why we were breaking quarantine, we observed the passage of Jupiter and Saturn across a dawn sky.
Before leaving Greenland, we checked in on the polar bears we repatriated. Two of them were off hunting, but we spent a pleasant half-hour with Brutus. Unfortunately, he had stayed behind due to an injured toe (he’d stubbed it on the nosy penguin).
We said goodbye to Brutus, ducked out on the nosy penguin, and sailed to Paris. We planned to shoot a sunset from the top of the Eiffel tower during the annual migration of the Dodo bird. Being an imaginary travel journey, our planning and timing worked perfectly with no real-life nasty border problems, and we arrived just in time to catch them fly past.
From Paris, we took the train to Munich, just in time to catch the second wave of Dodo’s as they flew past. Our view from the top of the town hall clock tower was superb.
After a few beers in a German beer hall, we climbed the narrow staircase to the attic and went through the wardrobe to Wilsons Prom, where Aslan was waiting for us.
We strolled along the beach with Aslan and listened to how things were going in Melbourne (badly), but he felt the tide was turning, and it was time to go. With that, we hopped in our boat and made our way to Kangaroo Island. Our guide this time was Gandalf. He had just arrived via eagle express and, knowing the SA police would be on our tail for sneaking in a back way. He was anxious to be on our way.
We travelled around Kangaroo Island for a few days – trying to look like locals and keeping to the backroads. Our last stop on KI was Seal Bay – a fabulous spot and final landfall before Antarctica – which we weren’t going to. We had enough of the cold in the arctic circle. So we were heading home now. One night at a curiously named hotel and then back to Melbourne.
We did wonder, though – if Hotel Hell would live up to its name or it was just a tourist trap.
That’s the end of our journey… I hope you enjoyed travelling with us.
Much of the Residenz in Bavaria during the Second World War were destroyed. However, in 1945, the German Government gradually reconstructed and restored the Residenz. As a result, it is now one of the largest museum complexes in Bavaria, with over 130 rooms. However, only around 90 are open to the public, with the rest undergoing restoration.
The Munich Residence served as the seat of government and residence of the Bavarian dukes, electors and kings from 1508 to 1918. The residenz began in 1385 as a castle in the north-eastern corner of the city. The rulers transformed it into a magnificent palace over the following centuries. As the years passed its buildings and gardens extended further and further into the town.
Bavarian Palace Department
The Shell Foyer
We entered through the museum-treasury entrance and walked through the Grotto courtyard before coming to a sea shell-filled foyer. To clarify, I have never been a fan of shells in architecture. But, without a doubt, the entry strongly reinforced this view.
Wandering through the Residenz Bavaria following the one-way arrows took us a good couple of hours. The palace is immense. We would have been lost if not for the signs pointing the way. After the rather bizarre shell grotto, the first room you come to is the Antiquarium.
The Antiquarium
The Antiquarium is truly impressive. It is 66 metres long and is beyond amazing. The Antiquarium is also the oldest room in the Residenz and was constructed in 1568 to house the current ruler’s statues. Duke Wilhelm V transformed it into a hall in 1581 to hold “festivities and banquets”.
The Audience Room
The Elector received his guests and foreign envoys standing beneath a velvet canopy. The audience rooms were designed in the 1730s in the rococo style.
Green Gallery
I loved the Green Gallery. It was the setting for festivities for selected court members. Adorning the walls are over 70 paintings alternating with tall mirrors. Enormous crystal chandeliers hang from the ceiling casting gorgeous light.
State Bedroom
This room was never slept in and was purely for display. The state bedrooms use was symbolic. They were expressly designed to impress guests who walked through them en route to an audience with the Elector. The room followed the lead of the French royal court, where monarchs rising in the morning and retiring for the night took place in the presence of the courtiers. The bedroom’s furnishings were particularly lavish as a mark of its importance. They feature expensive lacquered furniture ordered from Paris cabinetmakers.
Ancestral Gallery
In 1726 Karl Albrecht became Elector and immediately commissioned an ancestral gallery. The stucco and gilt-covered walls had over 100 portraits of the Wittelsbach set into the panelling. With the gallery drawing attention to his rank and dynasty, he claimed the imperial throne. He successfully advanced in 1742.
Constructed in 1612 under the rule of Maximilian I, the Treves rooms was for the use of the visiting emperor and his family.
My favourite room would have had to be the Antiquarium – the opulence was beyond belief. I would have liked to see the treasury, but we ran out of time. If you are in Munich – the Residenz is a must-do!