Wednesday, October 9, 2024

9/15/24: Ettelbruck Town Walk & Vianden Wander


Since Steven and I had decided to forgo paying about $35 for a continental breakfast at our charming hotel in Vianden, we were in a bit of a pickle as there was no shop, bakery, or grocery store open on a Sunday morning to grab something to eat. The closest option meant returning to Ettlebruck, the town we had tried to visit the previous afternoon but had given up after not finding a parking spot. We'd passed an Aldi, a huge supermarket chain found over much of Europe but figured we could pick something up in Vianden. Ha, ha, the joke was on us, so we trotted back 30 minutes and feasted on croissants and petit pain au chocolat - yum, yum!


Roundabout sculptures near Patton's Memorial Park in Ettlebruck: 



Like many small towns we visited a few months ago in Japan, Ettlebruck also had custom sewer covers!


Seeing the banner for the previous day's Ettlebrooklyn Street Festival made sense as to why the town had been busier than normal. The banner made us think of our daughter, Nina, and her husband, who live in the 'other' Brooklyn, as in NYC!


At the Town Hall, we read that the first written reference to Ettlebruck dates from 901 when members of the Frankish nobility bequeathed their property in Hettilbrucka to the Benedictine abbey in Echternnach which we'd visited the day before. Until the French Revolution, the village known as Hof Ettlebruck remained under the control of the monks and only consisted of 300 inhabitants until the 17th century. Ettelbruck became a market town and commercial center after 1780 because of its location and transportation center. The 2009 census showed a population of 7,800 people, about half native Luxembourgers and the rest coming from 50 other nations. When I read that the Portuguese community was by far the largest, I understood why its members had been able to donate the statue we'd viewed yesterday. We noticed later the significant number of people of African heritage. 


We decided to follow the town's self-guided walk which took us to St. Sebastian Church just as parishioners were gathering after Mass had let out. 



The chestnut tree in the Place d'Eglise or church square was more than a century old and was the only one still standing of four avenues of trees that led to the church. The others had been destroyed by shells during the Ardennes Offensive aka the Battle of the Bulge.

Discovery of Gallo-Roman tombs nearby proved the existence of a population cluster from approximately 30BC to the 2nd century AD.


Three sculptures represent a farmer, a shopkeeper, and a teacher which symbolize the three socio-economic professional classes in the town's growth from village to the city it had become as an agricultural center. The current technical high school, founded in 1852 by nuns, welcomed girls to its agricultural management school in 1892, and later, an agricultural college trained young farmers from the Grand Duchy.



The Latin inscription engraved on the 1770 Wark Bridge could be translated as, "Calmly, the Wark crosses the imposed yoke."


You might have thought we were in the American Brooklyn when we spotted a sign for Kid's Fashion as it was in English!



Fortunately, these handsome facades were able to be preserved after the war. 




Inserted into the pavement in front of former Jewish-owned shops in Place Guillaume were blocks with small metal plates each bearing the name of Jewish victims of the Shoa in Luxembourg. The artistic project represents the world's largest decentralized monument. 


The Place de la RĂ©sistance was named in memory of all WW2 resistance members who fought against the Nazi occupation of Luxembourg. From August 1941 onward, resistance movements in the Ettlebruck area operated under Yvo Kerger's leadership. Like the fate of so many others, he was later arrested, and detained in several prisons before being killed at the Mauthausen concentration camp just before the Americans liberated it in May of 1945.


The sculpture by the former butter market represented a farmer's wife displaying her dairy products for sale who, while trying to choo away a stray cat with her ladle, knocks over one of the churns and spills the milk onto the ground!


For a brief time, Hotel Herckmans was the country's political center after the government fled to Ettlebruck following revolutionary unrest in the capital in 1848. Members of Parliament stayed in the hotel and met in the elementary school.





We walked a few blocks to reach Aeschenhivel or Ash Hill which garnered its name from the great fires of 1532 and 1543 when warring soldiers twice reduced Ettlebruck to ashes. As if that weren't enough, Dutch filibusters torched and pillaged the village in 1602, and during the Thirty Years War in 1635, most townships were destroyed in the country with the passage of the Imperial Army. But wait, there was still more - the plague almost wiped out the remaining population in 1659, and fires in 1778 and 1814 once again reduced most of the town to ashes.




The commemorative stone was placed in memory of two young neighborhood resistance fighters, Michel Dax and Jengo Thull who were shot on September 5th, 1942. They had participated in the nationwide general strike after Luxembourg youth was ordered to enroll in the German military.


The way to Bolgesteen, an ancient Ettelbruck neighborhood: 


Steven and I wondered if the recent political climate and anti-Semitic hatred had led to there not being a historical marker only at the town's synagogue.


Yes, Janina, the streets were this deserted when we visited!



Considering Ettelbruck didn't merit any mention in our tour book, we were more than pleasantly surprised by our time in the small town and the effort its town leaders had put forth to welcome visitors with its striking sculptures, murals, and informative walking tour. 



As the country's national military museum was located just a few miles away in the town of Diekirch, we went there to learn about Luxembourg's role in WW2 and the Battle of the Bulge as the town played a pivotal role in the war. I'll leave that to the next post, however, as it deserves more time and space.

From Diekirck we returned to Vianden whose white stone-walled castle had greeted us on our arrival the day before.



On the small town's main street or Grand Rue was the family-run Hotel Heintz which had once been a brewery and inn run by the Trinitarian monks and was now our abode.


Next door was the Trinitarian Church, the former monastery, which dated to 1248 and was expanded in 1644 and again in 1732. Though a work of major Gothic architecture in Luxembourg, its liturgical and artistic accessories reflected popular piety as practiced by the Trinitarian monks and parishioners. The church was also the burial place for Vianden's lords during the first centuries. 



The Main Altar dated from 1758 and was a typical example of the religious sculpture of the late Baroque period.  


The sculpted funeral slab which depicted Countess Marie of Spanheim, 1337-1400, daughter of the Earl of Vianden, looked so soft it almost didn't look like marble!


The historic Trinitarian organ from 1693 is one of the oldest in the country


The Holy Sacrament Altar was designed in the Baroque style in the early 17th century. It was likely the church's main altar until 1758 before being moved in 1953 to the chancel in the north nave. 



Perhaps Steven and I have seen too many utterly gorgeous churches in every small town throughout Sicily and here in Malta since visiting Luxembourg and that has colored my point of view, but I don't remember being wowed by the monastery.


What a shame the cloisters were being renovated as they had been the heart of the monastery.


We continued our stroll down the Grand Rue toward the center of the community. Though the street was narrow and two-way and the sidewalks were almost non-existent, some drivers liked to use it as a racetrack!


An open-air concert venue just off Grand Rue:





After the well-known French writer, Victor Hugo first visited Vianden in 1863, he returned several times including when France expelled him in 1871. Hugo is credited with helping organize a rescue when a fire broke out and destroyed many houses and compensating those affected. On the bridge was a replica stone bust sculpted by Rodin.


Across the street was the house where Hugo stayed and has become  MusĂ©e LittĂ©raire 'Victor Hugo.'


It seemed that Hugo left his mark on several places in the small town as the hotel and restaurant were also named after him! We dined on a lovely meal there that night. 


We enjoyed more lovely views of the chateau overlooking Vianden as we walked along the river, knowing we’d see more of it on our last day in the area.




Just behind the monastery we'd visited earlier was the Sodality Church which traces its history to 1735 in a letter from Pope Clemens XII. Inside was an unusual two-sided banner.





The town's history museum was formed by knocking two houses together. At the end of the day, that was of more interest to us than actually touring it!


Next post: Diekirch's military museum as I mentioned above!

Posted on October 9th, 2024 from the city of Victoria, formerly known as Rabat, on the island of Gozo off the main island of Malta - have I thoroughly confused you yet? In less than two days, we're off to Tunisia where we'll also be visiting a city called Rabat so I hope we can keep it all straight. Please take care of yourself and your loved ones.

6 comments:

  1. Thanks again for your wonderful photos and narrative, Annie. I especially liked the mural that covered the entire two stories of a building. And the description of the soft-looking funeral slab reminded me of having a similar impression viewing funeral slabs in a cathedral in Spain.

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    1. Ruth, Glad you enjoyed the photos and narrative, Ruth. That 2-story mural was quite striking, wasn't it! You're absolutely right about the similarity in the 'texture' of the marble slabs in Spain. What an incredibly talented sculptor to be able to evoke that feeling of movement.

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  2. The white stone-walled fortified Vianden Castle set on the hill is stunning ! xo Lina xo

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  3. Indeed it was, Lina, and even more so up a lot closer!
    XOXO Annie in Tunis

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  4. You, as always, give descriptive tours that make you want to go. Lack of tourists was certainly appealing! Great pictures, too. chrispy

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  5. Thanks, Chris, for your positive feedback about the photos and my descriptions making you have itchy travel feet! Luxembourg is such an easy travel place to visit - great (and free!) transportation, good food, and such easy access to shops, grocery stores, museums, and castles throughout the small country. Its natural beauty is certainly on a par with Switzerland which you know well. Love to you and John from Djerba Island, Tunisia

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