Vienna – Europe Day 15

Vienna, Austria

Our day started in the Museumsquartier this morning with breakfast in the courtyard. I’m enjoying our return to European breakfast that does not focus on greasy, hot, and sugary meals that are the norm back home. Mind you that I certainly love my over-medium eggs, bacon, fried potatoes, and even the occasional pancake loaded with melted butter and syrup, but these past weeks of eating various breads, jams, boiled eggs, and occasionally yogurt with some fruit or muesli has been a serious healthy treat. Afterward, we only needed to cross the street to arrive at the Kunsthistorisches Museum.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

The entry into the Kunsthistorisches Museum is magnificent and helps set the mood for a visit to grandeur. This European effort to properly astonish a person entering a place that is meant to leave an impression, while effectively implemented in places like Washington D.C. and Disneyland in the United States,  is in full effect nearly everywhere we go over here. On the other hand, places like the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, and Glacier National Park can achieve the same thing with their natural beauty that would be difficult if not impossible to find in much of Europe aside from the Alps, the fjords of Scandinavia, the Wattenmeer in Northern Germany, and the stark volcanic landscape of Iceland. Okay, these kinds of comparisons are stupid, and so I’ll move on now.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

Is this a church, a cathedral, a museum, or a superhero masquerading as architecture? This question triggered a wondering out loud about the role environmental aesthetics play in the culture of a population. Let’s take India and Bollywood first. The movies are outrageously colorful and can be known to jump from exotic location to location with no regard for geography. An average movie will have half a dozen large-scale musical productions and fanciful examples of wealth to adorn the romantic aspect of the movie. These three-hour-long fantasy films take the people of India away from reality and the poverty that surrounds many within India.

On the other hand, take the United States and Hollywood. Action heroes, spies, killers, fast cars, and big guns. Ideas of conquering and winning are typically more important than sophistication and opulent splendor of sappy romance and love. The environment and emotions are utilities that only add nuance to the main character and their quest to win.

European film has historically relied upon intrigue, mystery, love, art, schemes, and hints of things behind the scenes that must be teased out of the fabric of history and culture that the narrative is wrapped in.

How much of the cultural needs of these three environments relate to the dominant styles represented in each region’s films? India and an escape from overpopulation and choking poverty, America with open meaningless space that needs to be subdued even with violence if necessary, and Europe with nuance and history found deep within the art, architecture, music, and philosophy? While science is currently a unifying element among our cultures, films about it haven’t proven of any interest aside from the movies that have looked at historical events that surrounded particular milestones.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

This brings us to just what it is that is available to be read between the lines, buried in the details, and hidden in plain view that might require something more than the visceral raw emotions to consume a thing. Here at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, in the main area leading to the various exhibitions, is a gallery of sorts that, while not adorned with framed art, still contains a treasure that might be beyond the obvious.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

We just so happened to be here at a time when a temporary scaffolding has been erected to allow visitors to get an up-close look at some of the details that were created by Gustav Klimt specifically for this room in the Kunsthistorisches Museum here in Vienna. This work was commissioned a year before the museum opened in 1890 and 10 years before he stopped taking commissioned work following accusations of creating pornography for a ceiling in the Great Hall at the University of Vienna.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

Not only are we afforded an up-close and intimate view of Klimt’s work, but we can also glean details of the architecture that we could only get hints of when observed from below.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

In the galleries off the center of the museum, we begin to encounter paintings only seen in textbooks, television, and prints in faraway places other than from where the original hangs. Today, we get to walk up to these rarities with the reality that we are here. This closeup is from “Jagdbeute” by Adriaen van Utrecht from roughly 1650.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

I’ve never seen this piece from Otto van Veen titled “The Persian Women” before, but fell in love with the idea of these women shaming their men (who had fled from a battlefield) by showing them their pudenda.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

From the Flemish master Peter Paul Rubens, we get to peer into his work “The Hunt of Meleager and Atalanta.” If you are interested in a great read about Ovid’s Metamorphoses and the Meleager, Atalanta, and the Calydonian Boar, I’d direct you to read this article on ElecticLight by the author “Hoakley.”

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

Detail from “St. Luke Painting the Madonna” by Jan Gossaert.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

Today, we have maquettes with correct musculature for 3D artists to follow, but 500 years ago, I guess Frans Floris didn’t quite understand proper anatomy when he tackled painting “The Last Judgment.”

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

Caroline is seen here checking out Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s work titled “The Tower of Babel.” For recognizability, I feel like this work nearly competes with the “Mona Lisa” or “The Death of Marat.”

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

While we never made it to the cafe here in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, we did have the opportunity to check out some of the architectural details of the floors above the seating area. Elegance would be one word of many that would come to mind in describing this tiny corner in such a grand building.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

Art and lots of it to the point of not being able to absorb everything accosting the senses makes us spend a lot of time in museums.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

This is me recognizing how much time we’ve spent and how little we’ve seen when visiting a typical museum.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

Much of the art and many of the sculptures were once part of the royal collection that was being amassed by the Habsburgs. I wonder what intriguing pieces of art are residing in private collections around the world that are being commissioned from the greatest artisans and craftspeople by the wealthy?

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

A great example of mandibular prognathism, a birth defect that was a distinguishing characteristic of the later Habsburgs. This protrusion of the lower jaw, which is often accompanied by a thicker lower lip and enlarged tongue, was passed on from generation to generation among the royal family due to a proclivity towards incestuous relationships and breeding.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

Direct descendants of the Habsburgs are now extinct, though the name lives on.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

This is just one of a thousand pieces of extraordinary stuff on display here that would take a lot more than a mere five hours to explore and truly appreciate.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

I’d never seen a “bezoar,” also known as a gastrolith, before today; I didn’t even know they were a thing. These rocks, held inside gastrointestinal tracts, are also known as stomach stones or gizzard stones, depending on their location. Not only were they thought to have magical qualities, but they were considered good for health, too. So, to make a giant specimen into a piece of art, it must have had some serious intention and value behind it.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

Tapestry Featuring the Arms of Emperor Charles V, produced under Willem de Pannemaker, Brussels, around 1540. Made of wool, silk, and metal threads.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

I’m astonished at this bust of Isabella of Aragon by Francesco Laurana that was sculpted back in 1471 as there is something so lifelike, soft, and tender as though it were a cast made just recently. If I owned this, I’d follow the lines that the sculptor put down just to feel how someone with such an incredible gift might have felt the shape of Isabella’s face as it joined a kind of immortality.

Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria

Remember those pieces from Klimt at the beginning of this entry? They were commissioned to bring attention to the Egyptian exhibit that was going to be a permanent part of the collection. We didn’t do justice to seeing anything here, especially the antiquities out of Egypt, as we more or less ran through this part of the museum. What our visit helped cement is that we need to return to Vienna to pay proper tribute not only to this museum but the dozens of other museums we couldn’t visit during our stay.

Natural History Museum in Vienna, Austria

Across the way opposite the Kunsthistorisches Museum is the Natural History Museum which we did not take the opportunity to visit today, but it is on the list of places to return to. Others on that list include but are not limited to: Vienna Undertakers Museum, Johann Strauss Museum, Schottenstift Museum, Schönbrunn Palace, Österreichische Galerie Belvedere, Museum of Ethnology, Museum of Art Fakes, Liechtenstein Garden Palace, Leopold Museum, KunstHausWien, Haus der Musik, Globe Museum, Chimney Sweep Museum, Beethoven Pasqualatihaus, Arnold Schönberg Center, and the Old Vienna Schnaps Museum to name a few.

Caroline Wise and statue of Goethe in Vienna, Austria

Caroline takes a moment to pose with fellow Frankfurter Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Other than being a literary hero in German-speaking areas, I couldn’t find out precisely what the connection between Goethe and Vienna was.

Crypt in Vienna, Austria

Welcome to the Imperial Crypt, also known as the Capuchin Crypt. This is the final resting place of 145 members of the House of Habsburg.

Crypt in Vienna, Austria

This is Emperor Charles VI and the sarcophagus that should house his remains well into the future. Not only was he a Holy Roman Emperor, but he was also King of Bohemia, King of Hungary and Croatia, Serbia, and Archduke of Austria. His coronation was in Frankfurt, Germany, back in 1711.

Crypt in Vienna, Austria

Veiled face on the sarcophagus of Holy Roman Empress Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, German Queen, Queen of Bohemia and Hungary, and Archduchess of Austria by her marriage to Emperor Charles VI.

Crypt in Vienna, Austria

Tomb of Empress Maria Theresia of Austria with the tomb of Emperor Joseph II in the foreground. Born Maria Theresia Walburga Amalia Christina on 13 May 1717, she was the only female ruler of the Habsburg lands. She was the sovereign of Austria, Hungary, Croatia, Bohemia, Transylvania, Mantua, Milan, Lodomeria, Galicia, the Austrian Netherlands, and Parma. By marriage, she was Duchess of Lorraine, Grand Duchess of Tuscany, and Holy Roman Empress.

Crypt in Vienna, Austria

Archduchess Maria Theresia Elisabeth Philippine Luise Josepha Johanna was only eight years old when she died in 1770. She was the daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II. This crypt is a once-in-a-lifetime look into a kind of burial opulence not often seen and rarely done today.

Vienna, Austria

This is the outside of St. Michael’s Church  (whose interior was part of yesterday’s blog entry). Fortunately, the need for Sachertorte overcame our need for another visit. Plus, we knew that the Demel would close early, and we were not going to risk missing the tasting of the competing recipe for the most authentic Sachertorte.

Sacher Torte from Demel in Vienna, Austria

So what’s the verdict? The truth is that we both thought the Sachertorte at the Sacher was somewhat better. The torte here at The Demel was a bit dry. Does that make it worse? Not by a long shot, and we would gladly enjoy a slice from either baker at any time. The idea that we are so spoiled to even begin to try both of them is already a privilege not lost on us.

Schotten Church in Vienna, Austria

The Schottenkirche or Scots Church is another in a series of splendid churches worthy of a visit. I’m nearing the point where I could say that I’ve never visited a European church I didn’t like.

Vienna, Austria

The Votivkirche, or Votive Church, owes its existence to the attempted assassination of Emperor Franz Joseph in 1853. The Emperor’s brother Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian started the campaign to build the church to thank God for saving the Emperor’s life. The successful assassination of his nephew, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, in 1914 was the spark that started World War I. It was also right here after taking this picture that my foot caught an exposed root and planted me flat in the dirt. With a quickly swelling and bleeding knee and some scraped knuckles, I headed back to our apartment to see if we could find some bandages to tend to my unsightly open wounds.

Vienna, Austria

Patched up with supplies from our Airbnb, with a limp and a bit of pain, we made our way back onto the streets of Vienna.

Vienna, Austria

A peek at one of the Lipizzaner horses in the Spanish Riding School Stables.

Plachutta Restaurant in Vienna, Austria

A look at the cuts of meat from an ordinary steer printed on the plate of where we are dining tonight. Caroline is pointing out that a lot of the terms are specifically Austrian.

Caroline Wise at Plachutta Restaurant in Vienna, Austria

Plachutta claims to have the most famous Tafelspitz in the world, they are most likely correct and not exaggerating a thing. Tafelspitz came to prominence back when Emperor Franz Joseph stated the dish was his favorite meal. There’s an art to eating this, and while the servers are great at helping those of us new to Tafelspitz, their website can show you the art well before you make your reservation. Check it out by clicking here.

City Hall at night in Vienna, Austria

It’s just before midnight before we arrive back at our apartment following our two-and-a-half-hour dinner. Now that City Hall is once more bathed in its traditional lighting, we enjoy that we had the chance to see it lit in the many festive colors during the Life Ball. We are in love with Vienna.

Vienna – Europe Day 14

Rose Garden in Vienna, Austria

Our apartment on Josefgasse was about a five-minute walk away from City Hall and 10 minutes to the Volksgarten and its beautiful roses.

Vienna, Austria

During our stay here in Vienna, I’d estimate we will have walked by one corner or the other of the Hofburg Palace more than a dozen times. While you are here, I dare you not to take a hundred photos of the palace as in every light and time of day; it creates spectacular views that leave you in awe.

Fiaker in Vienna, Austria

An entire train length of fiaker taking their passengers on a tour of the inner-city of Vienna. Caroline and I eschew these kinds of experiences as they too often feel cliched. While we appreciate that they are still available and that the tradition continues, maybe we’ll change our mind when walking through these areas becomes too difficult, and on one of those visits, we’ll get on board and see if we were wrong the whole time.

Vienna, Austria

Yesterday, when we stepped into St. Stephen’s Cathedral, it was too late in the day to head up the South Tower. This morning, we wanted to beat the crowds and made it our first stop. The narrow circular stairway climbs 343 stairs to ascend the 67 meters to this view. The hike up is in one of the tightest spaces I’ve gone up, but the view from above is worth the minor effort. My image is skewed due to me only traveling with my 17-55mm lens for the sake of my comfort, which means I had to take nearly a dozen images and stitch them together in Photoshop to achieve this panorama. There’s a wealth of data missing in this low-res version I’m posting, and if I get a couple of requests for a higher-resolution copy, I’ll oblige and post it.

Vienna, Austria

I’m standing in the gift shop to take this photo in one of the rare moments someone wasn’t coming up or going down. With me currently weighing 235 pounds (106 kg), I’d say if you were somewhere closer to 275 lbs, you’d want to think twice about attempting this.

Vienna, Austria

You don’t only find great views while looking out the windows; the texture of this old stone and graffiti from across the ages is also worth taking in.

Caroline Wise in Vienna, Austria

There’s a transfer point while going up and down the tower, so the entire ascent and descent are not always in such intimate quarters.

Vienna, Austria

Poked our head into the Church of the Brothers of Mercy.

Vienna, Austria

We tried looking into the Carmelite Church, built back in 1623, but couldn’t gain access. So, while the photo is horrible due to being shot through a window, it does give a reference point to another church visited on our visit to Vienna.

Caroline Wise at Wollmeile in Vienna, Austria

Wollmeile may as well be a church as Caroline gets ready to perform a “Laying on of hands.” The question raised here is not, “Did Caroline buy wool?” but, “How much yarn did Caroline buy?”

Vienna, Austria

This is the St. Francis of Assisi Church, and was on the way during our trek to see the main channel of the Danube during our stay. Along the way, we also passed the famous Wiener Riesenrad or Vienna Ferris Wheel that has made several appearances in films over the last seventy years, including the movie The Third Man.

Vienna, Austria

The church is to be found at Mexikoplatz, which got its name following World War II when it was only Mexico that stood with the Soviet Union in protest against the annexation of Austria, better known as the Anschluss, in 1938 by Nazi Germany.

Vienna, Austria

Like a fairy tale building encountering the work of M.C. Escher.

Danube in Vienna, Austria

The walk was 3.2 miles or 5.1 km to reach the Danube. My imagination had this famous river running through the heart of Vienna, but considering how it is prone to flood, I see the wisdom of having built the city center well away from this otherwise romantic river. The bridge we are crossing takes us over to the Donauinsel (Danube Island), which is 13 miles long (21 km) and between 230 and 688 feet wide (70 to 210 meters).

Caroline Wise standing in the Danube in Vienna, Austria

It was established many years ago that if Caroline was encountering a body of water for the first time and the opportunity arose for her to doff her shoes and step into the sometimes icy, at other times tepid waters, she would get busy stepping out of her shoes and socks and dipping her toes in. She’s seen here feeding this beautiful swan some plastic packaging, which killed it about 15 minutes later. Just kidding, as though my tree-hugging environmentalist German woman would do a thing to hurt a creature. She’s sharing the dark rye bread we’ve been carrying with us since Condor Airlines dropped us off in Frankfurt. Our feet needed a break, and as much as we’d have liked to have walked back on some random street north of us, we opted to hop on the subway to dart back into town for lunch and a snack.

Apple Strudel in Vienna, Austria

Cafe Frauenhuber on Himmelpfortgasse is not only one of the oldest coffee houses in Vienna, but it also hosted concerts by Mozart and Beethoven during its long history. Lunch for me was a traditional Wiener Schnitzel, while Caroline had sliced blood sausage with roast potatoes that looked an awful lot like eggplant parmesan.  Dessert was a yummy apple strudel with cream and a couple of cafe melange (Viennese-style cappuccinos).

Naked woman in Vienna, Austria

Then, while we’re finishing our coffee, a naked lady walks by. Nobody is yelling at her, and nobody is running over to take her picture. Okay, so I scrambled to grab my camera in time to get a shot of her butt; had I been quicker, I suppose this photo would not have been safe for Facebook. A little ways past our cafe, a crew that had been photographing her gave her a wrap to get dressed in, and off they went.

Vienna, Austria

Back to the Hofburg Palace and what might be considered, in retrospect, the first blunder on this trip. Just as we stayed away from the fiaker, we should have stayed away from Hofburg when we saw the crowds. Before you enter, it is made abundantly clear that photography will not be allowed in the Imperial Apartments and the Sisi Museum. However, it is allowed in the Silver Collection.

Vienna, Austria

Often, I’ve thought that where photography is forbidden it’s because the museum or state wants to maximize the amount of revenue they can make from their expensive-to-maintain collection and the buildings that house it. In the case of Hofburg, I now believe the reason why no one is allowed to take photos is that the place is so crowded that they slow down as people try to snap images for their memories and their blogs; the pause would grind visitation to a halt. So why is photography allowed here in the Silver Collection?

Vienna, Austria

Photography is allowed here because this maze is a gauntlet that visitors race through to get to the apartments and the Sisi Museum. There are thousands of pieces of flatware, silver, gold, and everything else that could accompany a meal both in a palace or on visitation to another Kingdom from across the centuries.

Vienna, Austria

The quantity of handcrafted artwork that was used for piling mashed potatoes into, is extraordinary and makes one wonder if any of it was used on more than one occasion.

Vienna, Austria

How so much has survived the centuries and invasions by Napoleon, revolutions, plague, and World War II is incredible.

Vienna, Austria

In the cordoned-off Imperial Apartments, it is standing room only and the crowd simply pulses by in a constant push of moving in and quickly out of the hot and humid rooms. Security is an ever-present element, as are the security cameras that are watching us. I took these crappy photos with my phone held down by my belt to not bring attention to myself and the fact that I was trying to get a couple of photos to show the place we were visiting. Before we reached the Imperial Apartments, we had pushed our way through the crowds in the Sisi Museum. Unfortunately, we arrived at the same time as a huge French tour group, and it was impossible to concentrate or see much of anything while the guides were talking, and their captive audience blocked displays and walkways.

Vienna, Austria

By now, I just really want to get out of the Palace. There has to be a better way of visiting the Hofburg that allows for a quality visit; maybe take a page from the people who operate Hearst Castle over on the California coast and limit the number of guided and timed tours.

Vienna, Austria

After this, we were brought directly into the gift shop. Was it the naivety of youth that had us believing that gift shops had things that represented a place to such a degree that we wanted to pick up a memento that would remind us of our visit? Today the trinkets and gifts look as if they all came from the same group of factories in China, and every so many hours, the factory retools with designs representing the New York City Metropolitan Museum of Art, followed by the Louvre in Paris, and then the Edwards County Historical Museum and Sod House in Kinsley, Kansas.

Vienna, Austria

Much more our speed was this visit to St. Michael’s Church, one of the oldest in Vienna. Construction began almost 800 years ago in 1220, and after 575 years of alterations by 1792, it finally reached its current appearance and has remained unchanged since then.

Vienna, Austria

The organ dates to 1714 and is the largest baroque organ in Vienna. According to Wikipedia, it was once played by 17-year-old Joseph Haydn back in 1749, and Mozart’s Requiem was for the first time performed here at a memorial service for the composer on 10 December, 1791.

Vienna, Austria

There are a number of tours on offer at St. Michael’s, and if time allows, they all looked interesting but will have to remain unknown to us until we find ourselves on a return visit to Vienna.

Vienna, Austria

Close-up of the high altar.

Vienna, Austria

These frescoes were recently uncovered and dated to the early 15th century.

Vienna, Austria

Back on the streets of Vienna, we have a date with a yarn store that must be visited today because tomorrow is Sunday, and it won’t be open.

Vienna, Austria

The Ankeruhr Clock is broken. Though we didn’t know that it was broken at the time, we joined the crowd, and so we stood there with everyone else for about 20 minutes until we were certain that nothing was going to happen.

Vienna, Austria

This is the Greek-Oriental Church, and it does not appear to be visitable, which is okay as we have wandered over to this part of town to visit a shop on the ground floor.

Caroline Wise at Wollewien in Vienna, Austria

Yep, that’s right, there just may be as many yarn stores as there are churches across Europe. The truth is there are not that many shops, though ask a fiber artist visiting Europe if they wish there were, and I can nearly guarantee you that would be at the top of their list. We are at WolleWien (Wool Vienna) with Gertrud, the owner, who was terrifically helpful and friendly. We even learned a thing or two about Viennese culture from her and received a great recommendation for dinner at a nearby restaurant, Czaak.

Caroline Wise in Vienna, Austria

Dazed from shopping for yarn twice in one day, Caroline tries to find her way.

Vienna, Austria

That play on the drinking game never anticipated running into a city like Vienna; there must be a church every two or three blocks in this place. Welcome to the Jesuit Church, which is also known as the University Church. Built between 1623 and 1627, it was consecrated in its last year of construction. Then from 1703 to 1705, the church was remodeled into its current appearance.

Jesuit Church of Vienna, Austria

Wow, how do we get so lucky? Another choir at practice works to make this church all the more opulent than it already is.

Vienna, Austria

It’s nice to see ornate, heavy pews that grace a church, as I’ve noticed more and more churches with metal and vinyl seating that don’t complement the overall decor and sense of history in the most befitting way.

Vienna, Austria

The Jesuits have a great website that goes into detail about the church that can be found by clicking here.

Vienna, Austria

The organ was just dedicated in 2004.

Tafelspitz in Vienna, Austria

Dinner was again enjoyed on an outdoor patio as the heat was too much to endure indoors. Tonight saw us eating at Beim Czaak serving old-style Viennese food since 1926. This is my first encounter with the classic Viennese dish Tafelspitz, or boiled beef Austrian style.

Spinning and Weaving art in Vienna, Austria

On the way back across the old town, we came across this relief depicting the arts of weaving and spinning fiber into yarn. The “Wollmeile” Street was the heart of the neighborhood that housed many weavers, dyers, fullers, and wool merchants.

Vienna, Austria

While we won’t have time to take in the theater or a concert, it is abundantly clear that the city of Vienna thrives on an active arts scene.

Apple Strudel in Vienna, Austria

Before calling it quits for the day, we find time for one more dessert along the way. Cafe Landtmann is known for its apple strudel and vanilla sauce, and we were going to have to try it. Since 1873, the cafe has been serving the public, and to demonstrate its popularity, it was packed solid at 10:00 p.m. and is open from 7:30 to midnight seven days a week. As we were enjoying our treat, we could hear the Live Ball event down the street and watch some of it (somewhat delayed) live on TV screens. The musical performance was a modern take on the “Sound of Music,” starring Conchita Wurst as the female lead.

Walking stats: 28,230 steps, 13.2 miles or 21.4 km. Climbed 42 floors.

Budapest to Vienna – Europe Day 13

Budapest, Hungary

This was the view from the front door of our Airbnb here in Budapest, and who wouldn’t agree that this was a thousand times more authentic than the sterile and generic view inside a hotel that could be had anywhere on Earth? Not feeling like we need to make any last-minute visits to something we missed, we are content to go grab some breakfast and a coffee and get moving up the road to our next stop on this cross-Europe road trip.

Shakshuka in Budapest, Hungary

The plan was to grab a quick breakfast at California Coffee Company around the corner from the room and near our parking garage; that was until I spotted that another cafe called Nyakleves featured shakshuka (poached eggs in a roasted pepper and tomato base) on the menu. The first time we had shakshuka, it was lovingly made by Giovanni Scorzo at Andreoli Italian Grocer, but our friends Itay and Rotem made shakshuka twice for us before they moved from Arizona to Los Angeles and left us with wonderful memories of a meal shared with friends. In honor of all three of these terrific human beings, we are having the most mediocre shakshuka we should ever have to endure, but it did bring Giovanni, Itay, and Rotem into our thoughts, so there is that.

Country side in Hungary

It’s not uncommon for our vacations to remove us from the bustle of city life, even if it’s away from the half-hearted sun-baked version found in America’s fifth-largest city of Phoenix, Arizona, that hardly qualifies as a real city when compared with some of the places we’ve visited that are thriving with life. So finding ourselves out here on the rolling plains of Hungary looking at corn growing as far as the eye can see hearkens at the fond memories of being off the beaten path, even if it’s only for a few hours.

Wheat growing in the Hungarian country side

This is not the first field of wheat we’ve passed and have seen in all stages of growth. We’ve also passed fields of beans, kale, a ton of grapes, and some other crops we didn’t have time to stop and figure out what they were.

Snail chilling in the Hungarian countryside

We were probably driving about 90 mph or 145 kph when I spotted this snail attached to this reddish plant, and the contrast was so striking that I skidded to a full stop, ending up taking out a loaf or two worth of wheat that had been destined for bread but are now pressed into the soil, but I have my picture of this snail. Maybe you are thinking, “What’s the big deal?” Well, how many times have you seen a white-shelled snail attached to a red plant in Hungary? Never, right? That was my answer, too, but now I have proof that I was there, saw that, done that, so there.

Entering Slovakia from Hungary

In Europe, you drive a couple of three hours, and blam, you are in a new country just like that. Because we left Budapest early today, we felt we had some extra time to meander our way to Vienna, and so we decided to take in country number seven on this journey across the old country. Welcome to the Republic of Slovakia for those of you who cannot read Slovak.

Danube on the border of Hungary and Slovakia

That bridge that was just ahead in the previous photo was going over this small arm of the Danube. Matter of fact that last photo was taken on a small island that’s on the main channel of that famous river. True, it is the less-famous arm of the Danube, but I thought it looked nice all the same.

Caroline Wise knitting in Slovakia

Speaking of looking nice, how does Caroline look knitting in public and sipping a beer while in Slovakia? While the “Worldwide Knit in Public Day” was still eight days away, Caroline was getting her practice in so she could make a proper impression upon the world when June 9th rolled around.

Lunch in Slovakia

Our stop was in the village of Gabčíkovo at Pension Hóstád for lunch. Today’s mid-day meal photo is my dish: it was the pork platter of blood sausage, pork liver, and cutlet with potatoes.

Danube in Slovakia

Caroline’s need to obey the rules (it’s a German thing) had her being a little leery about crawling up a levee to catch a glimpse of a shipping channel that reroutes some of the waters of the Danube. With the American belligerence of her husband (me), I assured her it was perfectly okay, even if it wasn’t explicitly allowed by a sign stating so. Turns out that this waterway is controversial due to environmental issues that the Hungarians figured out after Slovakia began work on their leg of the shipping lane. The overall project remains incomplete, and we didn’t have to go to jail for trespassing.

Vienna, Austria

Our arrival in Vienna, Austria, is under gray skies, but on the horizon, we have hints of blue that look to be encroaching on the cloud cover. This is the Hofburg Palace built back in the 13th century and was the seat of power of the Habsburgs.

Vienna, Austria

This statue is now 123 years old and is named “Die Macht zur See,” which in English means “Power at Sea.”

Vienna, Austria

Close up detail of “Die Macht zur See.”

Sachor Torte in Vienna, Austria

We didn’t linger as we walked from our apartment to Cafe Sacher. For months now, we have been waiting for this moment to land in Vienna to try the two competing recipes that lay claim to being the original Sacher Torte. This particular cake was perfected by Austrian Franz Sacher back in 1832 for Prince Wenzel von Metternich in Vienna. Over one hundred years later, the bragging rights of who was the most authentic of the two competing recipes settled out of court, and today, we are trying one of them. This chocolate cake with apricot jam and dark chocolate is served with unsweetened whipped cream. Our verdict is that this cake is great, and though we love our first try, we are still looking forward to trying the version from Demel.

Vienna, Austria

The first small church we visited was the Maltese Church, or Church of Saint John the Baptist. While there was a church on this site as early as 1217, it gave way for the current building that was built in the 15th century, and then by 1806; it was rebuilt into the current design we see now.

Vienna, Austria

The reflection of the old in the new wasn’t lost on us that this view could have only ever been seen here in modernity as our ancestors never worked with glass facades. What you don’t see in this photo is that Caroline and I are in a sea of humanity with 10’s of thousands of people on the main shopping thoroughfare here in the center of Vienna.

Vienna, Austria

While you may not be able to decipher it in the previous picture, St. Stephen’s Cathedral is the church that is reflected in part of the glass. This church, sitting upon two older churches, was built between 1137 and 1160, though continuing construction would go on for a few more centuries. The Wikipedia article about St. Stephen’s is full of great information and I highly recommend reading it before you go and reference it while you are visiting. By the way, remember what I was saying about the clearing skies a little bit ago?

St. Stephen's Cathedral Vienna, Austria

The church contains 18 altars so me showing you one or two won’t give much away about what you will see here should you be so lucky to take in a visit to St. Stephen’s. You are looking at the high altar that was built from 1641 through 1647.

St. Stephen's Cathedral Vienna, Austria

It seems the builders of St. Stephen’s started with something gothic in mind and then some baroque fellows came along and ornated the place up. Of course, this is just speculation on my part because I can’t legitimately tell you the parts of a grass hut with any authority, so take my words as more entertainment than knowledge.

St. Stephen's Cathedral Vienna, Austria

Dear Pope, I’m enchanted by the architecture and history found in the many places of worship that your organization of Catholic believers visits, and am humbly requesting sponsorship of my travels and lodgings for the period of three years in order for me to visit some of the greatest churches and basilicas and study them so that I may write what it will have been like to spend so much time in the solemnity, art, culture, architecture, treasures, and spirituality of your finest buildings. Sincerely, John Wise.

St. Stephen's Cathedral Vienna, Austria

Well, our game of visiting every church we spot might prove difficult to blog about without veering into nonsense, as I’m starting to run out of stuff to say to accompany the images I would like to share. The easy road would be to limit how many photos from church interiors I post, but I seriously desire to have these reminders being part of a narrative and timeline that allows me to revisit every day of our Europe 2018 road trip. Part of the problem might also be the jet lag I’ve encountered since getting home. The first posts of this trip were written by me nearly in real-time and were often posted the next day – well, that worked for the first week, nearly. Once we had picked up the rental car and left Frankfurt, impressions became intense, and free time to write was rare. Since arriving back in Arizona, I’ve managed, at best, to pen about 5,000 words as my brain wants to be uncooperative with my desire to share my thoughts.

St. Stephen's Cathedral Vienna, Austria

Having seen much of this church it must be time to go visit another.

Vienna, Austria

This is St. Peter’s Church and is relatively modern in comparison to some of the churches we’ve already visited. Baroque in its architecture, St. Peter’s, was completed in 1733 after only 22 years of construction. Today, it is operated by the priests of Opus Dei.

Vienna, Austria

While the exterior of the church is compact and largely obscured by surrounding architecture, the interior is mind-boggling in its rich and ornate offering to the senses. Lucky for modern visitors, when renovations were undertaken in 1998 through 2004 it was said that much of the artwork and interior was darkened and had lost its luster. That is obviously not a problem today.

Vienna, Austria

As we were visiting, a group of people in black suits and dresses started gathering at the front of the church. This was either the setting for something diabolical about to happen straight out of the movies or maybe we were in for something special.

Vienna, Austria

While nothing stands up against time that has been created by us humans, and everything suffers decay, it would be great if future generations, a thousand years from now, were also able to witness what beautiful creations our ancestors were able to bring to our reality amongst their dealings with pestilence and obsessions with war and destruction.

Vienna, Austria

The group that was amassing at the front of the church was a choir. There was a concert scheduled for later in the evening, and the choir was rehearsing for their performance; we just happened to be so lucky that we were visiting right then and were able to take in a free sample of what the even luckier audience was going to be able to listen to this evening. It appears that St. Peter’s hosts frequent music performances, so a visit to their website before and during your visit to Vienna should be in order.

Vienna, Austria

Just as coffee houses are integral to the Viennese culture so are the fiaker. The word “fiaker” comes from the French word “fiacre” back when Nicholas Sauvage, a coach-builder from Amiens, France, set up a business in Paris in front of Hotel de Saint-Fiacre renting out horses and carriages as an early form of taxi. Today, across the center of Vienna, they are a romantic throwback to a simpler and slower time when, for those who could afford it, it was a much quicker way to get around the capital city.

Vienna, Austria

Today, the fiaker competes with subways, trams, bicycles, and motorcycles (though maybe nowhere like in Italy) for getting around Vienna.

Vienna, Austria

As the sun begins to set on our first day in Vienna the cloud cover has started to return, though no rain accompanied it.

Vienna, Austria

We just so happened to time our arrival in Vienna with the beginning of Life Ball 2018. This is the largest charity event in Europe for supporting people with HIV and AIDS. While formally getting underway tomorrow, the city is already buzzing with the party-goers. City Hall is lit up in purple on the left in anticipation of the Life Ball festivities.

Vienna, Austria

We discovered a phenomenon where it seems that no matter which street or direction we go during our stay in Vienna we kept ending up in front of the Hofburg.

Vienna, Austria

The Habsburgs left their imprint of luxury all over this city.

Vienna, Austria

It’s 11:00 p.m. when we reach this side channel of the Danube that cuts into Vienna, and along its banks are thousands of people sitting in cafes, bars, or right at the water’s edge as they drink and meet with friends into the night.

Walking stats: 20,400 steps for 9.5 miles or 15.4 km and only climbed 16 floors.

Budapest – Europe Day 12

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

Today is the last day of May and our last day in Budapest; it is also the first time in our lives that I or Caroline have visited a synagogue. Not only is it our first synagogue, but it was once the largest on Earth until a copy of it that is larger was built in New York, so we are at the second-largest synagogue on our planet. Welcome to the Dohány Street Synagogue.

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

The sections of the pews are identified by individual languages that determine the tongue a tour will be conducted in. Sit down in the appropriate area and someone will come by and introduce you to the history of the synagogue, followed by a brief tour of the grounds so you better understand the role of the synagogue in Budapest and that of the Jewish people in Budapest. So one of the things you’ll learn is why the organ sits behind the Torah Ark (the altar in Christian churches) or how this synagogue differs from traditional synagogues due to Budapest’s Jewish population trying to better integrate into the community back in the 1850s. It is unusual for a synagogue to even have an organ, and famous composers Franz Liszt and Camille Saint-Saens played the original instrument that was installed in 1859 and replaced in the 1960s.

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

Male visitors must wear a kippah to enter the synagogue, and both sexes are expected to wear appropriate clothing (paper kippots and covers for bare shoulders are offered at the entrance). During our short visit, I don’t feel like I learned much of anything about the faith or ceremonies held here and think it would be nice to have a more detailed encounter to fill some of the gaps in my ignorance of Jewish religious practices.

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

I couldn’t find a great angle to get an overview of the synagogue in its entirety. This was probably due to our approach, and then by the time we were leaving, I was in too bad of an emotional situation to go hunting for a better image, so at least as far as my blog is concerned, this is the best I’ve got.

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

Our visit to the synagogue turned out to be a hugely emotional experience for both of us as the connectivity of people in general, and the quick trauma suffered by the Jews of Budapest was made clear, along with the living conditions of those who were able to endure. From the ghetto to the mass graves of people who witnessed firsthand the rage of intolerance, the picture painted is all too clear of where our nationalist hate-filled ugly selves can bring humanity.

I couldn’t just stand here and listen dispassionately as the stolen happiness of these people was laid bare; I wept. I am free to visit and pass through with the luxury of experiencing a fullness of life that was extinguished for 600,000 Hungarian Jews, 2,281 of them buried mostly anonymously at my feet.

Unfortunately, I will probably lose this heavy emotional burden of shame over the next hours as, once again; I’m proven to be of little consequence to the conscience of humanity, who rarely relate to the suffering of others beyond their immediate families and friends.

It’s peculiar how I’ve found these outpourings of emotions in the most beautiful and the most tragic of places on our Earth. How does one adequately convey to others what it is like to be consumed by such powerful emotions that are beyond personal suffering or from witnessing such majestic beauty that seems to be related?

Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary

Placards in the garden commemorate the Jewish victims buried here that were identified; others who lived here and died elsewhere are memorialized by signs on the back wall.

Meatology Budapest, Hungary

It was nearly an hour of walking around and talking about impressions and emotions before we were finally able to merge back into a state of normal. I’d read about Meatology prior to the trip, and this was a “must visit” restaurant and while we attempted to get a table last night, we were denied as they were booked solid. Upon arriving at this tiny location we understood why there are not many more than a dozen tables here. My New York Strip steak was nearly perfect though I wasn’t able to try their ribeye as the table before us bought the remaining stock. Caroline opted for rabbit for the second time on this vacation and it too was fantastic.

Controversial monument about World War II in Budapest, Hungary

This very controversial monument was erected in the middle of the night to avoid protests from people in and out of the Jewish community who felt the portrayal absolved the Hungarian people at the time of World War II from the atrocities they willfully committed, by in some say inferring that they too were victims of the powerful Nazi regime.

Soviet War Memorial in Budapest, Hungary

Liberty Square and the monument to the Soviet Liberation of Hungary following World War II. Ironically, it was back in 1956 that the Soviets effectively invaded Hungary to squash a revolution to oust the Marxist-Leninist government.

Caroline Wise at 1001Fonal in Budapest, Hungary

If it’s Thursday, May 31st, this must be 1001Fonal, which translates to 1001 yarns. Caroline’s main contribution to trip planning is to find the most important aspect of her desire to shop in exotic and foreign cities: the yarn store. There is no need to goad her into a big bright smile and say cheese after entering one of these shops; her excitement begins as we first get sight of the place.

Yarn from 1001Fonal in Budapest, Hungary

The skein of yarn on the left in purple, blue, red, orange, and pink is destined to become my Budapest socks. As for the rest of the yarn and where Caroline intends to use it, I have no idea. Maybe she’ll add a note here as she begins to tackle the effort to edit my run-on sentences, poor grammar, and stuff that even I have problems figuring out what I’d originally wanted to say when I’m putting down a flow of thought unencumbered with much critical thinking. Like just now? Just kidding, sweetheart! I only have some vague ideas about what I’m going to do with my fibery loot. Probably scarves, but whether they will be sprang braided, knitted, or woven, I can’t yet say. – C.

Levendula Kézműves Fagylaltozó in Budapest, Hungary

It’s hot and humid. We have shopped and celebrated yarn purchases and had a great lunch. Earlier, we wept and were dragged into the miasma of a dark history. It is now time for ice cream because nothing soothes the frazzled and excited traveler quite like ice cream does. We are at Levendula Kézműves Fagylaltozó, which translates into Lavender Artisan Ice Cream, believe it or not. You should ask me what’s in that cup. Well, I’ll tell you, it’s sour cherry and sea buckthorn, strawberry ginger, and Tokaji Aszu wine flavor

This statue of Ferenc Rákóczi stands in Kossuth Lajos Square near Parliament. As the Prince of the Estates Confederated for Liberty of the Kingdom of Hungary, Ferenc fought for a war of national liberation from the Habsburgs and is considered a hero here in Hungary. The article over at Wikipedia about him is quite interesting should you be interested.

Shoes on the Danube Promenade

Shoes on the Danube Bank is a memorial for the people who were shot on the banks of the Danube by Arrow Cross fascists during World War II. Victims were brought to the river’s edge in the winter of 1944-45, told to take off their shoes and turn to face their executioner. They were then shot and fell or were thrown into the ice-cold waters of the Danube and carried away. Thousands of mostly Jewish Hungarians met their fate here. There are about 30 pairs of iron shoes, all different and worn-looking, anchored to the river bank. Some have been adorned with ribbons; there are some candles. While this is a popular memorial to photograph and many people are around us, our minds are immediately drawn back into the grief we felt earlier, and we spend a few minutes catching up to return to the day.

Tram in Budapest, Hungary

Was this the tram we took to our next stop? No, but a tram, any tram, should have been an option because before the day is done, our feet will be finished. Instead, we continued our walking adventure so we’d have maximum flexibility to stop, look, learn, or taste our way through Budapest.

Great Market Hall in Budapest, Hungary

We’re at the Central Market Hall, where one would expect to find an abundance of paprika as Hungary is well known for it. The Central Market opened back in 1897, but by 1991 needed some major renovations that were completed by 1994 and took the market back to its pre-World War II glory.

Central Market Hall in Budapest, Hungary

Next to paprika, there is more smoked meat and sausage in the market than someone could consume in a year. The variety of all goods, including a shop that specializes in various fruit strudels, is fantastic. If we lived in Budapest, I would be a daily customer. How I wish we Americans had a greater demand for quality food than the low-quality, high-calorie crap that is mostly on offer across our land. Sure, there are pockets of connoisseurs, but those are mostly among high-earners who’ve acquired a taste for the finer things in life.

Caroline Wise at a cafe in Budapest, Hungary

We are on vacation, and a mid-afternoon treat and coffee feel absolutely normal. Hopefully, with all this walking we are also working some of our calories off. In any case, there will be enough time when we get home to deal with any lingering guilt of gluttony.

Budapest, Hungary

Out of the central part of Budapest, we are heading to a local graveyard.

Budapest, Hungary

There’s no particular grave we are interested in. After all of the hustle and bustle of crowded shopping districts, some peace and quiet in a lush setting sounded appealing.

Fiume Road Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary

We arrived at the Fiume Road Cemetery after searching for the only entrance we could find.

Fiume Road Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary

From Marilyn Monroe in California to the Kennedys in Arlington and various cemeteries around northern Europe, this is the furthest east I’ve traveled to visit a graveyard. The Fiume Road Cemetery shows up on a number of people’s recommendations as a place to visit in Budapest, so I put it on the list in case we had time. Obviously, we did.

Fiume Road Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary

A monumental tribute to Lajos Kossuth, who was Governor-President of the Kingdom of Hungary during the 1848 revolution against the Habsburgs. If this rings a bell, it was earlier in the day that we were passing a statue of Ferenc Rákóczi who also played a large role in the revolution.

Fiume Road Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary

With only 90 minutes to explore the cemetery before they locked the gate, we did not have enough time to visit much more than a small fraction of this tranquil location set within the expanse of Budapest. There’s a lot of historical references here that neither Caroline nor I have a clue about. So I’ll wonder out loud here, “What is the Hungarian fascination with lions?” – I’m going to wager that lions, as kings of beasts, represent majesty and power. The internet also says that lions used to be on the crest of Hungarian kings. C.

Fiume Road Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary

A small unkempt mausoleum holds the remains of this person named Miklós, maybe two people, as the name shows up twice, but I don’t know. Whomever this was, they warranted a beautiful, if neglected, final resting place in the heart of Budapest.

Sunset in Budapest, Hungary

The sun was getting pretty low in the sky as we found the exit and headed in another direction from which we came to potentially see something we’d not seen on the way to this side of town.

Sunset in Budapest, Hungary

Getting closer to the main downtown district, we started looking for something to eat that wouldn’t have us walking across the city looking for that perfect meal. We were tired and ready to call it quits for the day.

Dinner in Budapest, Hungary

There it was dragging us into the small shop where I was delivered the largest plate of döner Kabab I’ve ever had. Caroline opted for falafel, and once we were done, we hobbled back to our apartment, satisfied that with the time we had allocated to seeing Budapest, we had done all we could and were happy with our stay. Tomorrow we drive to one of the main seats of power of the House of Habsburg and will learn more about their large role in the Holy Roman Empire.

Budapest (Side Note) – Europe Day 11

Statue from Budapest Cemetery

There is no time to slow down, and yet we are moving too slowly. Impressions are flooding in faster than we can adequately process them, but we reach for more. Our short pauses are for physical recuperation, not for reflecting on what we are taking in. We have been to six countries in the past week and walked over 70 miles within them. We have slept in five different apartments spread out between as many cities. We intend to remain relentless in maximizing the effect of blitzing the senses with a constant barrage of novelty.

Our way of traveling may not be everyone’s cup of tea, but the way I see it, this is like reading a book where my eyes absorb word after word, and over time, the sequence unfolds with a story being exposed to me, though while in the first chapters, much of what will happen is yet to occur and little is apparent. A good adventure should deliver a long and sometimes convoluted story filled with exotic details and characters whose nuances keep us mystified and intrigued until, somewhere in the final chapters, it all starts to make sense. Until then, persist and collect further details as you grow familiar with the plot. This is a journey that I hope will continue to feed my imagination from the impressions made for years to come, just as my favorite books have done.

Vacations shouldn’t always be a simple break from the daily routine; they can also be enigmas and treasure chests that lend tall tales and riches that can be experienced in bits and pieces for the rest of our lives. The photographic record and the rare words I’m able to find along the trail are the strings of popcorn to memories that might otherwise fade without these helpers.

Our lives are not pop culture, and the major milestones and markers should not be other people’s dramas and comedies. We do have the ability to forge personas based on the makeup we have gone out and collected actively, as opposed to having banality smudged upon our faces while we have not learned how to invite uniqueness into our experiences. Taking an active role in reading, talking, traveling, and learning is difficult and fraught with failure compared to the ease of watching TV, playing video games, and trying to survive on junk food, both literally and figuratively.

So we race forward. Back home, we read, read, and read some more. We read to gather history, to expand our vocabulary, to feed our dreams of things we’ve not seen but are allowed to imagine. Then we travel, and we once again gather history, expand our vocabulary, and feed our dreams while having the images delivered firsthand to our memories.

Every moment out here in a place we are unfamiliar with is only worth as much as we are able to interpret it. When we encounter a word we do not understand, we don’t close the book and only look for tomes where we know all the words; we open a dictionary and learn something new. Likewise, when we find a food item we’ve not tried, we do not walk away; we try it and attempt to know something about it. Should I come upon a 15th-century red marble relic from a palace I may never have thought I wanted to see, I embrace that its image is now a part of who I am, and in the future, should I be reading a book about Hungary from five hundred years ago I might have a reference point and connection that would have otherwise not been there.

Voracious could be the word used to describe our attitude to taking on this journey across Europe. Like a great book, we will not want to put it down as we approach the end, but we will look forward to what comes next as we are old enough to now know that it’s okay to embrace different subject matter where the next title might be more compelling than the last. Life and sharing conversations will help fill in the gaps as another piece of the human puzzle starts to be understood in some small way. To do this, we must find enough persistence to persevere in a quest to know more.

We’ve met very few like us, but we’ve met enough to know we are not alone in the hunger for cultural and intellectual knowledge that extends beyond the mundane.

Budapest – Europe Day 11

Budapest, Hungary

We have a list of sights we intend to visit while in Budapest, and initially, we are foregoing looking at it and are just venturing out to see what we stumble upon. Wouldn’t you know that a church would show up so quickly? Churches are easy targets, to be honest, as they are visual focal points easily seen from various vantage points across a city. Knowing that a large Gothic or Baroque building is just over there lets you assume that there are probably some other interesting things to see in its immediate vicinity. Believe it or not, we are not going into that church just yet.

Budapest, Hungary

Breakfast was calling from “A Table” over on Arany János Utca, and we answered by grabbing a couple of americanos and a hot breakfast Hungarian style. The tip for this place proved worthwhile, though most of the visitors were speaking English. Next time we visit, we need to discover where the locals go. It seems that it’s mostly Americans who use TripAdvisor.

Budapest, Hungary

Back to that church, we held off on visiting. St. Stephen’s Basilica is named after King Stephen (Istvan in Hungarian), who lived between 975 and 1038 and was the first king of Hungary. It’s a relatively new building, having replaced a theater that stood on the site back in the 18th century. The consecration of St. Stephen’s was in 1905. After another photo, I’ll take you into the church, but pay special attention to that center dome, as there is a narrow circular stairway that is well worth your investment to crawl up. But first, I give you the following.

Budapest, Hungary

The stonework directly in front of the church could easily be overlooked as you gawk at the imposing building in front of you and race to the door to start learning of the history and opulence contained within, but you should stop to admire this beautiful piece of art. Anywhere else, this would be a centerpiece within a lobby or otherwise drab city hall; here in Budapest, it is but one tiny part of a 360-degree view that is embedded with details out of a mandala.

Budapest, Hungary

These next 14 images are going to go into some of the details that caught my eye. I shot a lot more than this, but most are of poor quality, and while there are more than a few more that I consider worthy, this is already going to be too many images for some readers. Then again, I’m not writing this blog for visitors; it is here for the sole purpose of serving my wife and me. For those of you who might endure my blathering on and on endlessly about my interpretation of things or are simply happy to see what a person can accomplish on a single day in Budapest (though we have roughly three days here in the city), I invite you to indulge with me, and maybe you too can delight in the extraordinary lines, arches, decorations, columns, and rich, warm light this church bathes in.

Budapest, Hungary

I present the altar. Just one of the columns on the left or right of the altar would turn one of those local fairly plain churches into a destination that those of the Catholic faith would make a pilgrimage to. So I’m projecting here, and maybe they wouldn’t, but obviously, it would draw Caroline and me in. I’d like to note that Caroline has a preference for Gothic churches and finds some of the gaudier Baroque churches to be too flamboyant and ostentatious. As for me, I love them all and would love nothing more than to visit all the major cathedrals and basilicas of Europe, South and North America, and anywhere else people have invested hundreds of years to build such monuments.

Budapest, Hungary

This is the main dome over the nave and not your only view of it.

Budapest, Hungary

The dark warmth and glow here are magnified by the contrast of dark woods and marble embellished with gold and lines that pull light and distribute shadows in the most seductive ways. If I had to guess, I might venture to think that the clergy doesn’t want visitors to associate seductiveness with the church but rather solemn reverence for God while visiting. Maybe they could also be happy knowing that visitors find such pleasure in these houses of worship.

Budapest, Hungary

A closer look at the altar and the world within the larger world within the universal one we all inhabit can be seen represented here. The metaphor of one looking out over another who looks over the many is a poetic notion that, in a romantic view under the best of circumstances, seems too oft corrupted by our base human nature wanting self-aggrandizement. This embracing of power seizes the alpha animal, allowing his position as an apex predator to initially, with benevolence, guide a people. The flocking or pack mentality of his followers is easily abused when the senses of the leader are drawn into the luxury that accompanies the opulence of privilege. When the wealth of knowledge and wisdom begins to replace the narrow-mindedness of the adolescent ego, we start to ascend to greater things and higher potential. Sadly, this cannot be fully understood by the young, and even among those who are becoming older, many will fail to find the truth of conviction and purpose while they can still enjoy its magnificence.

Budapest, Hungary

This idea of looking up and to the heavens for our source of life and guiding light, while relatively simple, is a complex interpretation of looking to the sky for the sun that grows our food and the clouds that deliver freshwater to grow our crops. We as a species (except for us atheists) look to God to grow us spiritually and imbue us with life while nourishing our souls on our journey of transformation from nothing to life, to death, to rebirth. The genius of early humanity to translate the cycle of life into one of the spiritual, intellectual processes is brilliant in its own right, though hypocrisy has tainted the potential of its message to engage me at an appreciable level beyond my recognition of its mechanical functionality as a primitive control engine to breed complacency and blind faith.

Budapest, Hungary

Still, we must look up and within. Not just into the heavens and a godlike figure, we must also look within and find the greatness of what we postulate in the essence of god within ourselves. Our philosophers for the past couple of hundred years have been trying to show us the way to self-fulfillment, but in times of uncertainty, we look to the strong man instead of the strength we can find within; this is the work of fear or through the eyes of the church maybe this is the root of evil.

Budapest, Hungary

And he said unto them, “Let there be music,” and the organ pumped out the jams. The language of music is not the tyranny of thought and words; it is the elixir that stirs the body into movement and the mind into the trance of ecstasy. Johann Sebastian Bach was lucky enough and alive at a time that allowed him to celebrate bringing Europeans further into the Enlightenment by unifying their souls in songs of celebration, loss, mourning, and creation. To hear the organ resonate with the choir, bringing the angelic voice of innocence to the bellowing of the Earth being tamed by humanity, is maybe a kind of early mind control that allowed the people of this earlier age to stand before their own naked potential.

Budapest, Hungary

Are your eyes able to see all the details at once? Is your mind able to catalog the myriad of meanings engraved, etched, and presented to your senses in a moment? Can you learn the lessons of life in a year, twenty, or even fifty years? All of our lives, we search for meaning in the little and big things our minds and bodies are able to encounter, and still, we are left with more questions than answers as to what it all might mean. There is a part of me that feels that the building of the church itself is a large question looming all around us that asks us to see the outside as the monolithic object that draws us in to start looking within. And when we understand this larger purpose of finding beauty and meaning in the tiniest of details, maybe we can start to understand that is in part the tiny details of who we are, what we eat, the words we make from letters that only represent tiny sound fragments that find meaning when strung together much like a life brought to fruition in the stringing together of millions of tiny events and circumstances that create the individual within the larger system. Just as the church is a building for finding spirituality, maybe the container of the human is the building where we are supposed to find culture and, ultimately, enlightenment.

Budapest, Hungary

Look into the shadows, for though you cannot see, there is no reason to believe there is nothing there. Light in the darkness illuminates a reality you didn’t know existed prior to you seeing it. This is part of the basis of both religion and enlightenment: look within your mind and look within your heart to find the power of the intellect of us people or your obedience to a God because your mind cannot fathom the breadth that knowledge can bestow upon you.

Budapest, Hungary

The window allowing you to look out also lets light in, and the candle that burns, destroying itself in the process, illuminates our environment, allowing us to see where the light of the window cannot reach. Deep within the closed spaces of ourselves, we find the greatest darkness and the place that religion and philosophy have been begging us to explore with the help of their light, showing us a path. Maybe I’m lost in metaphors as I write this from almost 11,000 meters in the sky (36,000 feet) on our flight back home, but this idea of the candle destroying itself strikes me in the way that we humans also burn through our own energy source ultimately destroying ourselves on our journey to bring light to others. If we are complacent, allowing others to light the way, how will we find within ourselves the things we do not realize are integral to becoming a greater self?

Budapest, Hungary

Within this church is a side chapel, and within it is a box, and within it is another box, a reliquary that holds something else. Something the church finds precious and valuable is there for all to see, though none of us can touch it or see it in its entirety; it is the right hand of King Stephen. We are only allowed to catch a glimpse of his hand, and even then, we are denied to view or examine it on a cellular or molecular level. The onion skin’s layers are many, but never do we get to the ultimate possession of knowledge that allows us to know it all; we are forever in ignorance of universal knowledge. We are only people visiting the artifacts of our ancestors, and rarely, if ever, do we truly understand where we have been or where we are going.

Budapest, Hungary

We look deeper as time goes by. We do not enter the center, the top, or in the depths of our world. We must move through the door and choose our path, and while we might see what we think is the big picture, we soon realize we haven’t seen much at all until we gather nearer to the source of what created the larger image. From the door, we could not read the text or interpret the panels, nor could we move from the door into the inner domain of the sacristy, which is usually beyond our reach anyway. The lesson for humanity is writ large within the physical constructs of the church in a symbolic representation that is beyond the clergy. The priest only exists in a fraction of the time that the church and its ideas are representing. The priest is here as a caretaker and person to welcome you for you to find your way in a universe that does not come with GPS or a road map to show you a way on your journey.

Budapest, Hungary

Again, we explore the seductive lines on the edges of what our eye first sees, but beyond that lie greater questions that beg for answers. We cannot find our lives in the confines of the television or in the instant gratification of sending our friends a photo on Instagram. Curves of the body may entice us, but they are only a small part of the story. What does the smile tell us? What does the scent allude to? Where do the connections and passages lead to? These questions are not just about the church or religion; they are about human will, relationships, intellect, and emotional well-being. Shelter is only found within, and the hearth will grow cold when we fail to fuel it. This is true about the essence of us people, too; what are you fueling yourself with? Hopefully not strictly junk.

Budapest, Hungary

Now we go up instead of within, and here we find not the top as we might have expected, but the top as it is with still another layer above us. On this side of the dome, I cannot imagine what might be on the other side had I not previously been below it. Even though I have seen the dome from below it’s difficult to not place the art and ornament in its proper place that is just on the other side of this structure. I do not know how sturdy this is, how thick it is, or how much it might weigh, but I do believe that what I think is on the other side is actually there. This is my Schroedinger’s cat as found in a church.

Budapest, Hungary

So I look up, and now I see the top, or do I? I do not, not even close. It is too dark and obscured at the top to see what is up in the scaffolding. I do understand that the stairs lead to another passage that would take me to the cupola and surrounding me would be a roof clad in copper, but I’m not allowed. Above the cupola is a base where a golden cross is mounted. It’s time to step into the sky. Before I do, I realize my assumptions are wrong because the cupola must be sitting above the bell tower. A few more steps and my investment in walking up all these stairs might deliver some answers.

Budapest, Hungary

My first step into this new world and perspective is not met with proof of a bell tower but with a view of the world as I’ve never seen it before. How many other perceptions of reality exist out there within the many buildings and people who move between them?

Budapest, Hungary

Another view and another unfathomable multitude of potentials waiting to become realities.

Budapest, Hungary

This angle produces yet more options and outcomes. Should I now aloft myself to the International Space Station how might my understanding shift yet again?

Budapest, Hungary

The bell towers turn out to be in the left and right smaller domed towers. Funny how it’s hard to perceive all angles of a potential reality before you’ve stepped into them.

John Wise and Caroline Wise in Budapest, Hungary

How do I know I’ve been to these places and been able to consider the things that have coursed through my mind and lodged themselves in my memories? I have this image that proves that Caroline and I have been in the presence of the top of the exterior of a church in Budapest, and yet I cannot accept the images and icons of organized religion as similar proofs. Seems that my perspective is biased and possibly flawed; I’ll have to keep on trying to light the shadows within my mind in my continuing search for answers.

Budapest, Hungary

Like magic or by the elevator, we are transported to the adjacent south tower where the treasury is located. And as you’d expect, it houses a collection of treasures.

Budapest, Hungary

From clothing to trinkets, goblets, and religious artifacts that this particular church holds dear.

Budapest, Hungary

Some placards explain many of the objects, such as when they were created, by whom, when, and of what materials. I pass them by to allow some mystery to continue to exist. Who knows, maybe someday I’ll return and still have something more to learn.

Budapest, Hungary

The death mask of Cardinal Mindszenty. During World War II, he was imprisoned by the pro-Nazi Arrow Cross Party, who were responsible for horrible atrocities not only against the Cardinal but the local Jewish population too; more on that later. Opposing communism, he was tortured and given a life sentence after the war in 1949. After serving eight years during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, he was freed and lived in the United States embassy for 15 years until he was allowed to leave Hungary. He died in exile in 1975 in Vienna, Austria.

Budapest, Hungary

How many cultural references are in this image? What is the history of each line, symbol, and material? This wasn’t just made one day from ideas and forms unique to the artist; the person was drawing upon the histories of generations that preceded his own craftsmanship.

Budapest, Hungary

Whose hands worked the needles of this design? Who spun the silk and other materials that the robe is made from? Did certain materials and dyes come from other corners of the Earth? It’s amazing to me to imagine the magnitude of cultural expression and history that can be embedded in a single piece of cloth and our ability to attempt to give meaning to things that bear our imprint.

Budapest, Hungary

From the animals depicted in Chauvet to the lion’s statues found in many cities around the globe, we humans use fierce beasts, demons, dragons, and gargoyles to ward off our enemies. If only our totems to our aspirations for peace were effective against bullets and explosives.

Budapest, Hungary

We are heading for the stairs that will take us up to Buda Castle. After seeing the Pest side of the city from St. Stephen’s Basilica, it is time to see the Buda side from Matthias Church.

Budapest, Hungary

Down below, we could have taken the funicular, but that would have stolen the midway views as we trudged up the mountain. That’s St. Stephen’s on the other side of the bridge that is crossing the Danube.

Budapest, Hungary

There seems to be a joke here that asks, “What happens when two funiculi pass on the side of the mountain?”

Budapest, Hungary

Our second museum of the trip is the Buda Castle History Museum, which is worthy of a visit should you ever find yourself in Budapest. These are royal seals used over the history of the country. Deciding what to photograph in a museum is difficult because essentially everything is of interest, but blog entries shouldn’t have a thousand images accompanying them either. So, I try to choose things that might not always get photographed and that I might later have something to say about. My results are a mixed bag.

Budapest, Hungary

Were there once Danube River dolphins, or are those gills and rabbit ears on those two things facing each other?

Budapest, Hungary

There were dozens of red marble carvings on display; this was qualified as a favorite, so here you go.

Budapest, Hungary

The tiles of a mosaic floor piece in beautiful shape after so many centuries. How many centuries do you ask? I’m not sure, though most everything in the museum seemed to date from about 1500 through the mid-1600s.

Budapest, Hungary

The only thing missing is some antlers.

Budapest, Hungary

Buda Castle from the inside court.

Budapest, Hungary

Oh yeah, antlers.

Budapest, Hungary

Ruins of some sort. (maybe we find out something more about these)

Budapest, Hungary

Changing of the guard. I’m guessing this is the presidential palace, but it felt awkward to ask anyone official-looking here as the police and security in plain clothes didn’t look like they’d enjoy answering tourist questions.

Budapest, Hungary

Matthias Church is about to be explored from top to bottom, but not in that order.

Budapest, Hungary

Before that, we headed over to Fisherman’s Bastion, which, to be honest, I think is more a ploy to collect a few more forints because….

Budapest, Hungary

Other than a slightly nicer view of Parliament and the city on the other side of the river, there’s not much difference in the view than just 10 feet below where we stand.

Budapest, Hungary

We are inside the church and will watch the clock as the tower operates on a schedule and limits on how many people can go up per group.

Budapest, Hungary

There’s a warmth in here with all the dark tones that paint this church with a very different feeling than, say, the Dresden Frauenkirche with its white and gold aesthetic or Magdeburg’s Dom, which is cold, gray, and quite austere. The other day, we were in the ornate Basilica of St. Anthony in Padua, which was relatively bold in its presentation, whereas Matthias Church feels subdued yet just as sophisticated.

Budapest, Hungary

To think that the majority of humanity will never gaze upon or look within these living museums whose purpose is to facilitate prayer, devotion, and ultimately salvation is a strange thought to me, as our churches, mosques, and temples are such integral parts of our lives. The diversity and work that exists upon these walls and the adornments both in and outside the building are testaments to our brilliance in architecting places that inspire our imagination to heights we’ve never witnessed in another species.

Budapest, Hungary

Solemnity comes to the person who walks into a church just as it does when one enters a hospital. We somehow sense the fragile nature of our existence when in places that heal, be it with medicine or spiritual guidance. This formality of dignity might also play a role in how people go about their lives in cultures that place greater importance on the social rules that enforce these behaviors, though this is purely conjectured on my part, coming from a thought-out-loud question.

Budapest, Hungary

From reflection and inspiration, we are feeding the more benevolent side of our natures. Maybe our commercial and social gathering places need a return to such environments that demand respect, quiet, and contemplation. How would writing be affected if it were being done during extended visits to a church as opposed to the coffee shop?

Budapest, Hungary

To sit here in the pulpit and find the words that might come to mind while taking influence from my surroundings sounds like a grand working vacation in its own right. How would one go about seeking permission to be allowed such a task and privilege?

Budapest, Hungary

In an age before movies and television, I could see the church as fulfilling the role of taking a community to another place, much like modern media does today. Here in the church, the worshiper listens to scripture and the gospel while viewing the scenes reflecting passages from the bible, with the air scented in frankincense and colored light streaming in from stained glass, helping create an ancient theater experience featuring god and the apostles as the main cast.

Budapest, Hungary

This is a rare view for me as I cannot recollect many other churches I’ve been able to visit above the nave or apse for a look into the church such as this.

Budapest, Hungary

This is the altar in the sanctuary of Matthias Church. Its scale is somewhat skewed due to our view from above its main body. Some of the altar’s imposing authority, when seen below, is lost; maybe this is why the average visitor or congregation member of a church is seated before the altar in the nave.

Budapest, Hungary

Over the past decade, more work regarding the investigation of how light impacts us emotionally has been undertaken at the professional research level, but still, the field, from what I can find, is in its nascent stage. While early research has shown some effect on how the spectral quality of light affects us, I would like to better understand how this light found in vast, dense places combines with the unique acoustic qualities of the church that amplify or greatly alter the prosody of the sermon to impact our senses and emotional being.

Budapest, Hungary

On a similar note, how do architecture and our internal spaces affect our perceptions and emotions? While a search on the internet has given me a few leads to follow up on, I don’t have the time at this writing to encapsulate what they have to say, so I’m giving my reader and myself a couple of links to read. The first one is from Kashmira Gander and an article she wrote for the Independent out of the United Kingdom titled “How Architecture Uses Space, Light, and Material to Affect Your Mood.” The other article is from Shivangi Vats, published on Medium titled, “Impact of Architecture on Human Psychology….” There’s so much to know about life and so little time to learn about it all.

Caroline Wise in Budapest, Hungary

Up the tower, we go for yet another view of things from a perspective not everyone is willing to try to reach.

Budapest, Hungary

If you’ve never been to a European city on Christmas Day to hear a dozen or more church bells ringing across the landscape, you may not be able to fully appreciate how profound the effect is on us. While the solitary bell is a beautiful sound in its own right, it is the various tones and pitches working in concert, echoing through the streets, that real bells bring that recordings broadcast from modern bell-less towers cannot deliver. Seeing these large bells, it is as though we intuitively understand we are standing before something great. When rung, they will resonate deep within us and seem to strike something primordial.

Budapest, Hungary

We have arrived at the top of Buda. Pest lies across the Danube and Parliament can easily be seen in all of its spectacular glory there on the banks of this historic river.

Budapest, Hungary

Other than the cars below and many of the houses in the distance, it’s a strange thought looking out here from the tower of Matthias Church that the view is much the way it might have looked hundreds of years ago.

Caroline Wise at the Museum of Applied Folk Art in Budapest, Hungary

Another temple of worship we needed to visit, this time it was the Museum of Applied Folk Art. Turns out that this place doubles as the meetup point for a local fiber arts group with somebody’s Baby Wolf loom set up with a length of cloth being made.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

On an adjacent loom was a sample draped over a weaving in progress. I tried to sneak a peek at it but was admonished not to touch a thing by one of the people working at the front door.

Caroline Wise at Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

The loom was a relatively simple two-shaft loom but with some beautiful woodwork that made it into a work of art.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

I must live under a rock, or Caroline doesn’t share all the available information with me regarding loom configurations, as I’ve never seen a two-shaft or a six-shaft loom before.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

Ethnic folk art is what this museum is about, and while there isn’t much on display, what is here is interesting enough to keep our attention. Many of the photos I’ll take here are for Caroline to take inspiration from once we return to America.

Mester Porta in Budapest, Hungary

Some of the pieces Caroline could make if only she had time away from knitting all these socks she makes me and that other thing that consumes so much of her time: work.

Döner Kabab in Budapest, Hungary

After we visited the Folk Art Museum, one of the ladies who was doing needlepoint, there told us of a nearby folk art store called Mester Porta just down the street. We did a bit of shopping and then desperately needed something to eat before we started on a long walk to the other side of the river. The lady working at Mester Porta told us of a decent Döner Kebab shop further down the street, and that’s where we headed. Do not attempt to think that a Döner and gyros are the same things if you are in America. Gyros is a poor excuse for something that wants to imitate the amazing Döner but is made in some factory in Chicago and is the exact same weird meat product served from coast to coast, whereas in Europe, each shop owner has their own recipe and meat combination. Sometimes conformity sucks unless it’s In-N-Out Burger.

Budapest, Hungary

We are crossing the Danube on the Margaret Bridge, which was opened in 1876 and is the second oldest bridge here in Budapest. Earlier in the day, we crossed from Pest to Buda on the Széchenyi Chain Bridge which is the oldest bridge here in Budapest and the first that was a permanent crossing of the Danube. The night before, we drove over the Liberty Bridge, coming into the city, and the night shot of Buda Castle was taken while we were crossing Elisabeth Bridge, which means we have now crossed all the major bridges of Budapest. Margaret Bridge is a three-way bridge connected to Margaret Island, and we would have loved to have visited, but we have an appointment at 6:00 p.m. we’ve got to get to, and it feels far away in this heat, humidity, and in-light of the distance we’ve already walked today.

Budapest, Hungary

This is the Néprajzi Múzeum of Ethnography that chronicles life in Hungary and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries. We didn’t visit this time; maybe on a subsequent vacation, we’ll be able to take it in.

Budapest, Hungary

Up close to Parliament, that was sold out during our visit, so better planning would have been required if this had been a must-see. It’s on the list should we ever come back.

John Wise and Caroline Wise in Budapest, Hungary

We arrived at the dock for Dunarama early, which was fortunate for our tired feet, laden bladders, and parched palates. With a half-hour before our departure, we sat on the floating restaurant patio with a couple of bottles of sparkling water and took a well-deserved break. As 6:00 p.m. came around, one of the boatmen approached us to bring us aboard a small speedboat that was about to be our means of travel for a private tour up and down the Danube.

Budapest, Hungary

The view from the middle of the Danube is truly a different perspective than all others we’d had today. Initially, we took it slow and leisurely to acquaint ourselves with the sense of being on one of Earth’s most famous rivers. Would Parliament have looked so amazing under rainy skies or perfectly blue skies? From the light clouds and the reflection of Parliament in the river, we had what must be one of the most incredible sights seen on our planet today.

Budapest, Hungary

On the other side of the river, Buda Castle was nearly in silhouette, with the sun getting lower in the west. Our tour company, Dunarama, while not inexpensive, might offer the most unique views of the city and its river banks.

Budapest, Hungary

All of the romance with a blast of outrageous fun comes with a trip on the water. While we were speeding down the Danube, the guys turned up AC/DC’s Thunderstruck and opened up the throttle with some hairpin turns thrown in for added thrills. While Caroline was initially reluctant to add so much sound pollution to the pristine environment, once we were hauling ass, she was all smiles and fist pumps of excitement. We were paying for a 50-minute tour and soon were feeling that it was all too short and that we could easily do it all over again. I don’t believe we could have chosen a more perfect day or time to have taken this extraordinary journey on the Danube.

Budapest, Hungary

By 7:00 p.m. we are pulling up to the dock and catching our breaths. We walk to a nearby restaurant that promises an authentic Hungarian meal and take our time to relax and get full. From here, we wander around the city center, taking in all the open shops, people sitting around enjoying a drink, an abundance of Thai Massage joints, and the general feeling of being in a Bohemian wonderland of debauchery and vast history. Budapest is certainly at a crossroads historically, culturally, and economically as the world of Europe is still changing with the global movement of people, capital, and entertainment. We clocked 12.26 miles or just under 20 km of walking across the city today and climbed 77 floors of steps; our feet and heads need an overnight break.