| 
       
  
   
Mời quý dộc zã thăm viếng các lâu dài kỗ kính, thần thoại, ma quái ỡ Âu châu 
Unusual and Spectacular Castles
Castles That Will Inspire and Haunt You  
       
      Arguably born the day that villagers -- and the people who
      profited off them -- decided that wood wasn’t strong enough to keep them
      safe, castles quickly became more than just edifices dedicated to
      security. Instead of repelling borders, real or imaginary, castles became
      THE status symbol of status symbols. Monuments to bravado, they were
      stone and mortal proclamations to the age-old idea that "mine is
      bigger than yours."  
    
Pierrefonds -
      picture-postcard example of a castle 
       
      If you want an picture-postcard example of a castle, you don’t
      have to go anywhere but the Château de Pierrefonds in France. Although it
      may have started out as a structure designed to keep some folks out and
      others safely in, it was later partially sugar frosted by none other than
      Napoleon the 3rd, who was shooting for a true nobility status symbol: a
      iced cake that no one but the very rich and very privileged could eat. 
       
        
      (image credit: Frédéric Lavaux) 
       
      Pierrefonds is still a beautiful place, even if its fortifications
      were overly gilded –- or maybe because of it. It’s no wonder it's used to
      this day when central casting gets a call for a classic castle. 
       
        
      (photos by Ralph Gant and Benoit Stordeur, see more) 
       
       
      When fairy tale jumps from a landscape and hits you between the
      eyes 
       
      If you want a real Disney, fairy-tale, and totally insane castle,
      you have to visit the residence of one totally insane German king, namely
      Ludwig II of Bavaria. Look up gaudy in the dictionary and there’s a
      picture of his castle: Neuschwanstein ("The New Swan Rock").  
       
        
       
        
      Neuschwanstein Castle, gracing ten million over-saturated
      postcards and jigsaw puzzles, (image credits unknown) 
       
      Glitzed and filigreed, Neuschwanstein is like Ludwig’s twisted brain
      turned inside out and realized in stone and brick. It is also sublime and
      splendid, over-the-top and strangely fragile - all at the same time. We
      are going to devote a special article to it, truly a place not of this
      world. 
       
        
      photos by Avi Abrams 
       
      Monstrous chandelier? Check. Room made to look like a cavern? It’s
      there. Entire rooms dedicated to Wagner (with whom Ludwig was obsessed)?
      Absolutely. It’s all there, larger and more ornate than any life …
      unless, of course, you were the King of Bavaria.  
       
        
      photos by Avi Abrams 
       
       
      The Coral Castle - Nobody knows how it was built 
       
      One of my favorite castles, though, wasn’t the dream of a king
      realized in stone and mortar. Spurned at the altar back in his native
      Latvia, Edward Leedskalnin took his disappointment, and a case of
      tuberculosis, to Florida in 1923. There, in the land of oranges and
      sunshine, Leedskalnin began to build his very own castle, one he worked
      on until his death in 1951 (more info) 
       
        
      (image credit: sarahmizoo) 
       
        
      (images credit: Jim) 
       
      It’s still there and definitely worth seeing. It might not have
      the polish of Pierrefonds or the glimmer of Neuschwanstein, but Rock Gate
      Park, as he called it, is still a striking sight: monstrous slabs of
      coral skillfully balanced and beautifully positioned, all of them
      assembled without reinforcement or mortar. He spent over 28 years
      building the Coral Castle, refusing to allow anyone to view while he
      worked.  
       
        
      (The Throne Room, supposed to depict the Moon and the
      planets - photo by Claudia Domenig) 
       
      Leedskalnin’s construction genius is legendary. No one quite
      understands how he built his castle and then moved it ten miles away in
      1936. Some people think he used a kind of perpetual motion machine or
      mystical methods to move his several-ton blocks. Whatever the means, his
      Coral Castle, is still a magnificent achievement -– the sublime result of
      his own two hands, his incredible inventiveness, and a tragically broken
      heart. 
       
       
      Portmeirion: a surreal village in Gwynedd, Wales 
       
      Stepping away from literal castles, but staying within the theme
      of very special men and the homes they created, one of the most beautiful
      is one you might not know the name of but one you’d recognize
      immediately. All I need to write is "You are Number 6." 
       
        
      (image credit: Richard Hagen) 
       
      Located in Wales, Portmeirion was created by Sir Clough
      Williams-Ellis in 1925 (though some of it wasn’t finished until 1975).
      Although Sir Williams-Ellis wasn’t a king, he was obviously knighted, and
      certainly had help with his remarkable residence. Portmeirion deserves to
      stand with Ludwig’s vision of Germanic paradise and Leedskalnin’s
      eccentric coral castle because of its unique, and spectacularly
      beautiful, vision. 
       
        
      (image credit: Gavin D. J. Harper) 
       
      Williams-Ellis was so dedicated to preserving the tranquil
      elegance of Portmeirion that the filming location of Patrick McGoohan’s
      "The Prisoner" wasn’t revealed until the final episode of the
      series. Even with the careful hiding of the village’s identity, anyone
      who knew anything about architecture would have recognized the
      Williams-Ellis’s pearl-white cottages and the legendary green dome where,
      in "The Prisoner", the village’s rotating Number 2s had their
      office. 
       
        
      (image credit: Matt Buck) 
       
      Portmeirion is truly a beautiful place and completely unspoiled by
      its television appearance. It remains today just as Williams-Ellis
      intended it to be: a tranquil village with a tasteful dusting of
      nostalgia. 
       
       
      The Postman's Palace - another single-handedly built castle 
       
      Ferdinand Cheval has imagined his "Ideal Palace" and
      simply went on to built it - after all, why not? He spent 33 years with
      this project (located in the village of Hauterives in the picturesque
      Drôme region of Southern France) - but the results are nothing less than
      stunning: 
       
        
       
        
      (photos by Emmanuel Georges, Eric Devlies, Francerama) 
       
      Initially considered "the village idiot", he was
      suddenly hailed as a genius and a celebrity in France, upon completion of
      this intricate affair. But is it the "Ideal Palace"? Everyone
      seems to have a different opinion. More info and images are on this page. 
       
      Whether it's the gussied-up fortresses like Pierrefonds, the
      gilded dreams of a mad king like Neuschwanstein, the eccentric genius of
      Leedskalnin and his Coral Castle, or the whimsical grace of
      Williams-Ellis’s Portmeirion and Ferdinand Cheval's Palace, a man’s home
      can really be his castle. 
       
       
      More Fantastic Castles, to Visit and to Think About (Wistfully) 
       
      Eltz Castle, Germany: another fairy-tale location, this time
      completely surrounded (and in certain degree concealed) by the forest: 
       
        
      (image credit: frizztext, see more) 
       
      Germany (just like Switzerland and Austria) has many enchanting
      castles, big and small - 
       
        
      Castle-like mansion in Arnsberg and a large Buerresheim
      Castle, photos by frizztext 
       
      The stretch of Rhein between Cologne and Mainz has the especially
      high concentration of great fortresses, presiding over the quaint
      riverside villages: 
       
        
      This is a great site listing all the castles 
       
      Egeskov Castle, Denmark: 
       
        
      (image credit: Malene Thyssen) 
       
      Eastern Europe abounds in awesome castles. This is for example,
      Castle in Moszna, Poland: 
       
        
       
      Check out the sinister door handle from the Dracula's Bran Castle
      on the bottom right. Towers emerging from the mist in the photo below:
      this is Bragança, a walled town in northern Portugal. Very evocative
      image on the bottom left is Le Chateau de Nyon in Nyon, Switzerland: 
       
        
      (originals unknown) 
       
      The Chittorgarh Fort in India. This pool was often the only source
      of water during the numerous sieges by Mughal Emperors: 
       
        
      (image via) 
       
      Nestled in High Places: 
       
      The way to the Guaita Fortress in San Marino (more info) - 
       
        
       
      Try not to think of "Myst" and "Riven" while
      looking at the above picture... Here is the high cliff on which the
      fortress stands: 
       
        
      (image credit: Ricardo André Frantz) 
       
      Overlooking the Echaz Valley and the storybook village below,
      often shrouded in fog, Lichtenstein Castle comes close to being the
      perfect castle in Europe.  
       
        
      (image credit: Andreas Tille) 
       
       
      The Abandoned Castle in Rural Italy 
       
      Oh yes, still unclaimed by some luxury developer, nor touched by
      multi-million renovation... hiding in a valley in a tangled forest:
      Castello di Zena: 
      (here is a Google Earth location, but don't set your hopes too
      high - this is a guarded private property) 
       
        
      (image credit: cyberbiscottato) 
       
      A mystery. Falling to pieces. Splendor in the grass. 
       
       
      A View That Launched 10,000 Epic Fantasy Books 
       
      Another feature of fortified high places is the splendid view they
      often afford. We'd like to open up a sort of competition: The Best View
      From a Castle, but the winner already easily comes to mind - and it's the
      Neuschwanstein's Castle, again. The panorama of the towering Alps and a
      nestled gem of the lake, Alpsee, is enough to make you sigh and close
      your eyes... dreaming. 
       
        
      Photo by Avi Abrams 
       
      The ultimate castle, that was ever designed to grace the face of
      the Earth 
       
      King Ludwig, again. The planned Falkenstein - truly THE Lost
      Castle. The one that he was all set to build - but for the financial (and
      mental) meltdown he suffered. 
       
        
      Christian Jank's first High Gothic design for Falkenstein,
      1883.  
  
  
         
 | 
     
It's not my first time to pay a quick visit this website,
ReplyDeletei am browsing this web site dailly and take pleasant information from here everyday.
Stop by my web site; Dre Headphones