Thursday, September 24, 2015

A Morning at Marienplatz, Munich 2015

Arrived in Munich airport at 6:30 am of March 25th, 2015. We dropped off our luggage at Ostbanhoff and went straight to Marienplatz to have breakfast at Richart.

On one of the walls of St. Michael's church. We were looking around before going up the church's steep and long stairs for a panoramic view of the inner city.

View of some of Munich from atop St. Michael's church.

The Marienplatz and the new City hall.

Viewing deck atop St. Michael's Church.

The Glockenspiel
From Wikipedia: Part of the second construction phase of the New Town Hall, it dates from 1908. Every day at 11 a.m. (as well as 12 p.m. and 5 p.m. in summer) it chimes and re-enacts two stories from the 16th century. It consists of 43 bells and 32 life-sized figures. The top half of the Glockenspiel tells the story of the marriage of the local Duke Wilhelm V to Renata of Lorraine. In honour of the happy couple there is a joust with life-sized knights on horseback representing Bavaria (in white and blue) and Lothringen (in red and white). The Bavarian knight wins every time, of course.
This is then followed by the bottom half and second story: Schäfflertanz (the coopers' dance). According to myth, 1517 was a year of plague in Munich. The coopers are said to have danced through the streets to "bring fresh vitality to fearful dispositions." The coopers remained loyal to the duke, and their dance came to symbolize perseverance and loyalty to authority through difficult times. By tradition, the dance is performed in Munich every seven years. This was described in 1700 as "an age-old custom", but the current dance was defined only in 1871. The dance can be seen during Fasching (German Carnival): the next one is in 2019.
The whole show lasts somewhere between 12 and 15 minutes long depending on which tune it plays that day. At the very end of the show, a very small golden rooster at the top of the Glockenspiel chirps quietly three times, marking the end of the spectacle

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