We finally had good weather for Kathy's birthday this year on the lake in Bavaria called Chiemsee.
We stayed in a small town called Seebruck on the northern point of the lake. It was the site of an ancient Roman fortress called Bedaium on the road from Augsburg (named after Emperor Augustus) to Salzburg. The name Bedaium comes from locally worshiped Celtic god Bedaius, and the addition of Celtic culture to the local history was interesting. The Celtic people, the Alauni, along with Bedaium are even mentioned in Roman texts.
ancient Roman smokehouse foundation |
baskets found in a Roman well |
grave stone of Amanda |
Many of the treasures found during excavation can be seen in a small museum next to the old fortress foundations. The museum contains the same types of durables that you see in many museums: vases, jewelry, metal weapons, and mile stones. Two grave stones were on exhibit. One marked the grave of a 50-year-old former slave named Amanda.
Of course, we had to go for a boat ride on Kathy's birthday trip, so we went to one of the islands in Chiemsee called Fraueninsel (Ladies' Island). It is a small island with 300 inhabitants, some of whom still smoke fish and eels from the lake. Many of them are artists who run shops out of their houses. The icon of the island is the bell tower of the convent of Benedictine nuns. The nuns still live there, in spite of the secularization that occurred during the Napoleonic wars. They have a small shop where you can buy some of the products they make, like honey, candles, gingerbread, liqueurs and bitters.
The convent goes back to 782, when the Duke of Bavaria, Tassilo III, founded the first German-speaking convent beyond the alps. In 850, the convent became very important when the daughter of Ludwig the German (who was Charlemagne's grandson) was made abbess. Irmingard was considered a saint, as indicated by location of her marble coffin, which was originally in the foundation of the south-western pillar of the church. (The idea was to show that holy people were the supports of the Church.)
fresco in the Michael's Chapel |
About 50 years after Irmingard's death, the convent was destroyed by the Huns, and the only remains from that period are the gatehouse and the foundations of the Minster. But the upper floor of the gatehouse contains the chapel of St. Michael, which contains original frescoes, one depicting archangels watching over Christ.
There is also a bishop's cross, made in the late Merovingian period around the year 700 in a workshop on the British Isles and brought to Chiemsee perhaps in the 8th century by Irish missionaries. The cross is made out of maple wood with gold cladding.
bishop's cross |
detail of the top of the cross
The lake itself and how we got there
Chiemsee (the name means Chiem Lake) is just north of the foothills of the alps. We took the train to the main train station at the southern end of the lake (Prien am Chiemsee), whence we planned to take the bus to the northern end. However, after missing the bus, we were lucky enough to take a little tourist train to the harbor on the lake.
A small steam locomotive (cute!) pulled the train for the 8 minute trip through town to the harbor. Along the way, kids on the streets waved at the train. The picture at right shows the steam locomotive at the harbor preparing to take the train back into town.
From the harbor, we took a boat to the town of Seebruck (lake bridge) at the northern end. This one happens to be a paddle boat. The whole trip took about an hour, with the boat making stops at the islands and towns along the way.
From our slick hotel, which had its own expansive lawn with roses in full bloom, we walked to a point of land designated as a nature preserve. There was a two-story tower offering a telescope for watching the local bird life. Many coastal areas on the lake, including large parts of the islands' shores, are designated nature sanctuaries to protect nesting and migrating bird species and fish spawning grounds.
In the picture above, the metal structure in the background near the birdwatching pavilion is part of a sculpture commissioned for the town. Throughout the town, commissioned metal sculptures speak of the town's history. I call this one "Three Celts in a Boat"; it was on the lake front near the town beach.
On our second day there, we walked out away from town into a nature preserve. The path wound along the lake, going by reed beds where signs were posted encouraging people to protect the nesting grounds of the various birds in the area.
1 comment:
Enjoyed the blog! The artifacts were interesting, beautiful and so old. I am amazed objects can last a long time. The train ride and your 3 day stay sounds like it was enjoyed by you very much. I too liked the Celtic vase, the 3 men in a boat seems usual for the Celts trust. Just try it, probably never made it to their destination and as it looks Grandma would have said, foolhardy! Another birthday remembered well!
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