Mainz 29
November 2019
Mainz is located at the confluence of the Rhine and Main
Rivers, across the river from Wiesbaden and itself is part of the Frankfort
Rhine-Main Metropolitan Region. First
founded by the Romans in the 1st century BC, it served as a military fortress of the Roman
Empire before becoming, in the 8th century AD, an important city of the Holy Roman Empire as
the seat of the Archbishop-Elector of Mainz.
Although grapes may have been growing here before the arrival of the
Romans, it was the Romans who significantly advanced the wine making in this
region. Most of the Roman fortifications
were located across the river, and during the Christian era, a bridge was built
to connect both sides of the river. Over
the ensuing years, political and religious wars saw Mainz change hands between
the French and the Germans several times.
During WWII, it was heavily damaged with about 80% of the city’s center
destroyed.
It is also the birthplace of Johannes Gutenberg (sometime
around 1394), who invented the moveable-type print press (patterned after a
wine press) and in the early 1450s printed his first books, including the
Gutenberg Bible (also known as the 42-line Bible, the Mazarin Bible, or just
the B42). To do this, it was necessary
to create uniformly sized metal molds for letters. Somewhere between 158 and 180 copies of the
Bible were printed, but only 49 remain today.
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Gutenberg Press |
Today started with a walking tour of the old center of
Mainz. We began with a tour of the
Gutenberg Museum where our guide described the procedures that Gutenberg used
when developing his printing press. She
showed how the individual keys were created.
She then demonstrated how the printing press operated, and with Bill’s
help, printed off a page of the Bible using the same print keys and machine that
Gutenberg used to print his copies of the Bible. As a thank you to Bill for helping her, we
now have a souvenir of our visit – the printed page that our guide had
made. We then toured the room where
three copies of the Gutenberg Bible were stored.
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Helper Bill |
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Bill's Reward |
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Red and Blue Street Signs |
As we were walking, our local guide told us an easy way to
get back to the Rhine River and our boat if we became lost. The street signs that appear on the buildings
at each street’s intersection with another street are colored coded. The Red streets run perpendicular to the
River while the Blue ones run parallel.
To reach the river, just follow a street with a red sign. She told us that this was done to help
sailors to keep from falling into the river in a drunken stupor. Perhaps after a few glasses of Glühwein, we may need this
information!
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St. Martin's Cathedral |
Following the museum, we visited St. Martin’s Cathedral
with its six towers. It is the second
most important cathedral in Germany after the Cathedral of Cologne. First built in 975 AD, it has been rebuilt
and restored over the ensuing years, with its present form a combination of
Romanesque, Gothic and Baroque styles of the 13th and 14th centuries – the
Romanesque section of the church (the nave in the back of the church) is the
oldest part of the church and dates back to the late 900s. It was the site of seven kings’ coronation.
Construction of the first cathedral on this site was begun
in 975. In 1009 it was due to be
consecrated. In a celebration of this
consecration, the church was adorned with torches around its roof so the people
in the nearby countryside could see it.
Unfortunately, the torches caught the roof on fire, and the cathedral
was destroyed on the day it was to be consecrated.
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Tombstone Inside the Church |
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Tombstone Inside the Church |
The pillars inside the church are adorned with the tombstones
of the many archbishops and bishops that were buried in the church. However, after 1928, bishops have been buried
in the crypt below the floor of the church.
Above the pillars that separate the sanctuary into three sections are
painted murals.
After visiting the church, we were turned loose to enjoy
the Christmas Market in the square by the church. Most Christmas Markets open at 11 AM so there
was enough time to walk around, shop, and enjoy a mug of Glühwein or sample
their pastries or brats before returning to the ship for lunch.
Scenes from the Mainz Christmas
Market:
This evening we left the ship for a fun evening of food and
dancing in Rudesheim, a wine city located about an hour’s drive up the
Rhine. We had about an hour before
dinner, so we walked around their Christmas Markets, gaily decorated and brightly
lit. The city has a cable car that takes
you from the marketplace where we were up to the top of a hill where there is
the Niederwalddenkmal Monument, built to commemorate the founding of the German
Empire in 1871 and the unification of Germany. So of course, we had to ride it to the
top. I thoroughly enjoyed the view, and
after a few moments of discomfort (Bill does not like heights), he too enjoyed
the trip. We had a lovely view of the town
of Rudesheim with the old Booseburg Castle (now part of a winery) all lit up
and across the Rhine River, a brightly lit church. Construction of the Niederwalddenkmal
Monument was stated in 1871 when Kaiser Wilhelm I laid the first stone and was
completed in 1883. It is a statue of a
34’ tall Germania woman, holding the recovered crown of the emperor in her
right hand and the Imperial Sword in her left.
On the right side of the statue is the peace statue and on the left is
the war statue. As it was dark and the
cable car was closing about 10 minutes after we reached the top, we were unable
to visit the statue, but we were able to see it from our boat as we cruised the
scenic, castle-laden section of the Rhine the next morning.
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Church Overlooking Rudesheim |
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Booseburg Castle at Night |
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Rudesheim Christmas Market |
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Rudesheim from the Cable Car |
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Wine Bottle Christmas Tree |
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Chicken Dance |
We had an enjoyable (and filling) dinner of wiener
schnitzel followed by singing and dancing with the duo of performers in the
restaurant. They played everything from
polkas to the Chicken Dance. That
chicken sure gets around! Then it was
back to the ship for some much-needed rest before beginning to cruise the
scenic portion of the Rhine with its many castles and the famous Lorelei rock.
Did you know that a nautical mile and a statute
mile are not the same distance. The
nautical mile is 1852 meters (about 6076 feet) will a statute mile is 5280
feet. The nautical mile is defined as
the distance spanned by one minute of arc along a meridian of the Earth
(north-south).
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