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Tag Archives: Empire

final touches

02 Wednesday Sep 2020

Posted by larrymuffin in Berlin

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

art., culture, Empire, Germany, Hohenzollern, palace, Prussia

Daily I follow the changes around the final touches in the re-building of the Berlin City Palace now known as the Humboldt Forum which was set to open this September 2020, but now it has been postponed to October 2021. The Pandemic cut the working construction crews by 25% many unable to return to work after Easter. There is a lot of details to attend to in terms of landscaping and installing new central heating system which runs in huge pipes along the street on the South side of the Palace. On the North side facing the Lutheran Cathedral and the Museums, gardens and trees have been planted. The East facade looking at Alexander Platz across the Spree River is being completed. On the West facade which is the main gate of the Palace the last scaffolding is coming down on Portal III, one big element that is missing is the bronze cartouche at the top of the triple gate, which according to plans is in the making by the same group of artisans who made the lantern with the dancing angels for the dome of the palace. It is truly work requiring a lot of attention to detail and the artisans belong to another era. Lucky that such artists like Andreas Hoferick can still be found. He is responsible for all the baroque elements of the palace, the numerous statues and cartouche that can be seen. He has worked on many projects all over Germany involving historical reconstructions. www.hoferick.com

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The draft design on paper before the casting in bronze.

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the cartouche will be attached to the stone facade with hooks. Below is a photo of what it looked like in 1920.

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The final recreated cartouche will also be embellished with gold leaf. It is a fairly large element and is part of the 105 million Euros raised through public donations for the portion paid by the public. Total cost of this project is 750 million Euros.

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This Summer as the palace was approaching the final phase, a Court case made the headlines in newspapers in Germany. It turns out that the former Royal Family of Germany and it’s head, Prince Georg Frederich of Prussia are asking the German Government for the return of their palaces and art collections which includes art work in several German Museums some of which are just across the street from the Palace. In Potsdam alone there are 5 palaces of various sizes. In Berlin one is now the Presidential Palace, Bellevue, the other would be the Charlottenburg Palace. The City Palace was the main one but in its new incarnation it is a vast conference centre, library, museum and restaurant. The German Government have won the latest round in Court. The legal argument is in the German Constitution of May 1949 which establishes the new German Federal Republic and its basic Law. In it the text states that any claimant of former properties must prove that their family had no connection or did not belong to the NSDAP (Nazi Party). Though the Prince who was born in 1976 and his father had no links whatsoever, his grandfather the Crown Prince and his great grandfather the former Kaiser in exile, uncles and cousins had links or were members of the Nazi party until 1942. So the Court rejected his claim which was seen as an over reach by the public. The family is quite wealthy and has the ancestral Hohenzollern castle in Southern Germany including the Prussian Crown Jewels and many other assets.

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Castle Hohenzollern in Baden-Wurttenberg. It is open to the public https://www.burg-hohenzollern.com/startseite.html

More reading

16 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by larrymuffin in Uncategorized

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

Austria, Empire, Europe, Guapa, Middle East, Saleem Haddad, Stefan Zweig, Vienna

I have this old habit, in the evening before going to sleep I like to read a little. Most of my reading is done in bed at night, I find this soothing and it helps me to fall asleep. In the last few weeks I have read two books by Stefan Zweig, (1881-1942), born in Vienna in a wealthy privilege family and died in Petropolis, Brazil in a suicide pact with his second wife Lotte Altmann. He was a famous writer, journalist, biographer of the first part of the 20th century and his books remain to this day great to read and give the reader wonderful insight. He also knew and was friends with all the great intellectuals of that time and do not be surprise to see him associated with so many famous people it is head spinning, Sigmund Freud, Romain Rolland, Richard Strauss, Rainer Maria Rilke and many others.

The first book was the celebrated biography of Marie-Antoinette the ill-fated Queen of France. I have already written on it in a previous post and I recommend it if you want to go beyond the fiction and the Hollywood version of her life.

The other book is the last one ever written by Zweig, The World of Yesterday. He mailed the manuscript to his editor the day he and his second wife committed suicide in Brazil.

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Zweig describes himself as a European in the old world sense and at the same time a European of what we know today as the European Union. He is also an enigma for us who live at the end of the 20th and now in the 21 century. He was married for many years to Frederike Maria Von Winternitz but never mentions her in this book which covers the period from his birth in 1881 to 1925. The reader could be excused for thinking that Zweig was single, he divorced her in 1938 and she lived on until 1971.  Was he a very private man? I do not know, in The World of Yesterday he certainly speaks volume about himself and his famous friends, his work, the people he knew and frequented, his travels, about being an assimilated and integrated Jew in the Austro-Hungarian Empire and he describes and analyses in minute detail the society of the time, a society which has totally disappeared now and lives on in print. You have to imagine a world, Europe, the old Empires ruled for hundreds of years by Princes and Sovereigns and then the total collapse in 1919, everything changing forever in a radical  manner with the rise in Europe of Fascism and Bolchevism in Russia.

Zweig misses the old world, what he calls the Age of Golden Security assured by an aged Emperor (Franz-Joseph) over a vast Empire comprising dozen nationalities, languages and various religions. He explains the commercial reasons for the First World War, a war promoted by French and German Armament dealers and British and German competing merchant marine. Decades of Peace in Europe, the last war was in 1870 and lasted just over 3 weeks had lulled people into believing that not much would happen in 1914. No one could imagine that by November 1918 their world would no longer exist.

Zweig did spend part of the war in Zurich in neutral Switzerland, a land of plenty in a sea of wont. He describes a scene at the end of the war in 1918, the Kaiser in Germany has already gone into exile in Holland. Zweig stands on the platform of the Train Station at the Border with Switzerland on the Austrian side, everything around him is tattered and the people look tired and sad, the defeat and fall of the Austrian Empire is dawning on them. Zweig notices how the Station is becoming crowded with people, officials and Austrian soldiers though no trains is expected, he notices a beautiful black train of highly polished cars pulling slowly into the station, it’s the Imperial train, at the window stands Emperor Karl and his wife Empress Zita who are leaving Austria and going into exile, He refused to abdicate and simply left quietly, ending the 900 year rule of the Hapsburg dynasty, Zweig notices how everyone is silent and looks embarrassed, Zweig felt at that moment that this was truly the end. The end of it for him, for the world he had known, yes and how he then maybe went into a state of deep melancholy. The years that followed will see the rise of economic difficulties, Fascism in many European countries, the great depression, anti-semitism, nazism, the rise of Communism and then the Second World War. Of course for Zweig life goes on but on a different track, having the financial means he then travels abroad fleeing the chaos of the new and territorially small Republic of Austria, he will go to England as Freud did, to North America and finally to Brazil. Despite having a new young wife Lotte Altmann, he feels he cannot re-invent himself and fears aging, the past of Old Europe haunt him.

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Zweig’s Villa in Salzburg on Kapuzinerberg 5, it is a private house today.

I find Zweig to be a complex person, a highly educated, refined person, he seems to be several people at once, the great writer, the friend of the cognoscenti, living in a world at the top of the social pyramid but then the other person appears emotional, overly sentimental, detached, revealing little of his personal life, this may be simply his 19th century sensibilities, gentile upbringing of not burdening people with personal details, something unknown to us in our world of the selfie.

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The other book I read was just published by a first time author Saleem Haddad, a young thirty something man. Saleem Haddad is a writer and aid worker. He was born in Kuwait City to an Iraqi-German mother and a Palestinian-Lebanese father, and has lived in Jordan, Cyprus, Canada and the U.K. He has worked with Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) and other international organizations in Yemen, Syria, Iraq, Libya, Lebanon, and Egypt. He and his partner have a greyhound, Jack and live in London.

His book published in March is entitled Guapa, the name of a Gay underground bar. I found this novel after a friend of mine who owns a bookstore café in Jordan recommended it to me. I liked the book instantly, the story is fast moving and happens in an unnamed Arab country, I was convinced it was Damascus the Capital of Syria but the author Haddad based the city where the protagonist lives on several cities, Amman, Beirut, Cairo. He does this on purpose and it works very well, though the President Dictator reminded me of Bashar Al-Assad and his wife Asma in their description in this book, this is why I thought it might be Syria.

Guapa gives a very accurate portrait of Arab life, family and society, I recognized it instantly, I came to care about Rasa and the people around him.  Haddad says; Not naming the country also allows the story to take on a metaphorical nature: I really didn’t want to write a book that would be sold as an anthropological or political ‘study’ of one country. Instead I wanted to draw on common themes young Arabs across the region could relate to, regardless of their background. The book also shows in the narrative of the story that Arabs are not a monolithic group and the region is populated by many other people who are not Arabs.

The story of the book is about Rasa, a twenty-something-year-old gay man living in an unnamed Arab country, as he negotiates family, societal expectations, queerness, love, police brutality, authoritarianism, decorum, revolution, imperialist narratives, and Islamist extremism—all in the space of twenty-four hours. Throughout Rasa’s journey, the reader is thrown back into the losses, definitions, redefinitions, and rebellions that orbit his life. I would recommend reading this book for anyone who wishes to understand this part of the World and the people living in it. As they say, We are not in Kansas anymore.

 

 

 

archeology not disneyland

16 Wednesday Dec 2015

Posted by larrymuffin in Uncategorized

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Alaric, Antiquity, Archeology, Empire, Rome, Temples, Titus, Vandals, Visigoths

I continue to follow developments on the billion Euros construction of the Metropolitana line C in Rome, this is a new subway line which is several years late and at least 2 billion Euros in cost overrun.

Line C is a new subway line which will cross the Roman Forum under the Via dei Fori Imperiali and though the line is well buried below ground the archeologists, historians, academics of all stripes are up in arms about it. Though this is not the first line to cross the Roman Forum some 80 years ago Benito Mussolini had line B come right into the Forum area where the current Colosseum station is located and back then the equipment did not exist like today to dig very deep, so a few antiquities were sacrificed.

At the same time 7 columns of the Temple of Peace built by Emperor Vespasian and Domitian to celebrate the triumph of Titus, have been re-erected, they like most of all the temples and public buildings in the Roman Forum had been quarried for valuable materials after the two sack of Rome in 410 and then in 455 AD when Rome was no longer the Capital of the Empire and the Bishop of Rome (Pope) was running the show with a few barbarian chieftains and needed a lot of construction material for new Christian churches, so all the luxurious coloured marbles and bronze was looted.

The Temple of Peace housed many treasures taken by Titus after the final sack and demolition of all of Jerusalem in 70 AD this included the complete destruction of the Second Temple of Salomon. The treasures of the temple were brought back to Rome as war booty, including the Ark of the Covenant with the stone tablets of the Ten Commandments Moses brought down from Mount Sinai and the great Menorah of the Temple.

All was safe in the Temple of Peace in Rome until 455 AD when it all disappeared never to be seen again. Who took it and when, no one knows, was it the Visigoths or the Vandals?

Many archeologists have been against this project to re-erect the 7 columns but others point out that it gives a better idea to people visiting the Roman Forum where the temple was located. It is only a small fragment of this large temple most of which is under the street or under a monastery and church next to it, strangely enough dedicated to Saints that never existed and are no longer in the Christian pantheon.

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In this photo you can see the 7 columns and the ruins of the Temple of Peace. Line C is under construction just a few meters away, left of the photo.

Today computer enhanced photos have been published of the Temple of Rome and Venus, the largest temple ever built in the Roman Forum. There has been an idea floated for some 90 years that part of that temple should also be re-erected. All that remains today is the double cella which housed the Deities Rome and Venus, some columns and coloured marble floor with the actual platform on which the temple stood.  The temple is directly across from the Colosseum.

This is where the Disneyland concept comes in, many academics and historians see any attempt at rebuilding a temple some 1600 years after it vanished under the pick axe of looters as a form of cultural vandalism to please mass tourism.

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Temple of Rome and Venus today, on either side some columns, the impressive platform of the temple itself and the cella in the middle where the deity’s statue stood. Rome is the goddess protecting the City and Venus is the ancestor of the first Imperial family the Julii, thus Julius Cesar and his nephew Octavian Augustus could claim divine origins.

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If the temple still existed today this is how it would look, seen from the same spot as above. https://rometheimperialfora19952010.wordpress.com/2015/12/14/roma-archeologica-restauro-architettura-foro-della-pace-le-nuove-colonne-via-dei-fori-imperiali-nuove-prospettive-fonte-sandro-sciosci-facebook-1412205/

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Side view from the Metro station entrance. As you can see it is impressive and by giving it a modern computer enhanced setting in Rome today with tourists around and the sign of the Line C under construction it makes it all too real.

But I wonder if it would be right to re-built such noble temples just to please the mass tourism market.

Today the goddess Roma stands guard just down the street above the tomb of the unknown Italian soldier at the Altar to the Nation. Maybe it should stay that way.

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Puzzle solution

05 Monday Oct 2015

Posted by larrymuffin in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

art., Bernini, Codazzi, Empire, Rome, Vatican

Ok so last week I gave a short version of the building of the new St-Peter’s Basilica, the one we know today which took place over 130 years (1500-1630). I had asked if readers could tell what was the difference between the painting below of Viviano Codazzi in 1630 when the basilica construction was completed and today.

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Solution: Between 1630 and 1660 Gian Lorenzo Bernini decorated the church inside giving us the great Bronze Baldaquin over the Papal Altar and many other monuments inside the building, like the mausoleum of Pope Alexander VII. However on the outside he created the Piazza we see today with the colonnade forming half circles on either side and flanked by statues of Saints.

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Today with the great Bernini Colonnade built on the order of Pope Alexander VII by Bernini to complete the design of the St-Peter’s Basilica. It is interesting to note that the architectural style mimics Roman Imperial style to show continuity between the Roman Empire and the Roman Catholic Church, a point every Pope has made since the  time of Constantine in the 4th century.

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