Slovenia made sense in terms of my themes for the journey - mountains & lakes, and borders & frontiers. As for the first pair, Slovenia's are outstanding, as pretty as you'll see anywhere in Europe; as for the second two...well, let's just say that borders and frontiers in and around Slovenia have shifted many times in history.
The train ride to Slovenia from Austria (Innsbruck in my case) is filled with beautiful views |
Slovenia (a mostly Roman Catholic country) is the closest of the Balkans to the rest of Europe, and managed to engage in less fighting and stay more sane than its bellicose neighbors. In fact for a time after the fall of the Soviet Union, Slovenia was considered the great success story of the Balkans, first to join the EU, economy stable if not thriving, mix of minorities (among them Serbs, Muslims and Croats) living together relatively peacefully.
An admirable start. But alas, after the promise of its early years, its progress has fallen off, the government is weak, the economy has fallen off, unemployment grown, infrastructure lags well behind its closest EU neighbors, Italy and Austria. One of my two excellent Slovenian tour guides sighed when I naively asked how things were going in her country, and seemed very frustrated but not at all shy to tell me about how the initial excitement had turned into malaise. Previous shifting frontiers, newly created and very artificial borders (my other guide scoffed at the word borders: "lines on a map, no more..."), while not alone responsible for the downturn, certainly have played a role in the change.
Aside: I have family, not-so-distant cousins, in nearby Croatia. Let me amend that. They think of themselves as Croatians, but the village where the clan Hrkach is centered happens to be just across the border from today's Croatia, in Herzegovina. I have never met them, may try to do so in the near future (it has to be sooner rather than later as the title of my blog makes clear: "la vita e troppo breve per Dottore Gianni"). But I am in touch with a few of them via Facebook. They live in Bosnia-Herzegovina, but to offer a trivial example of where their loyalties lie, they cheer for the Croatian footballers, not the Bosnian team. They are displaced Croats. Just over the hills is where they really belong. Or might the BORDER belong just the other side their village? My Croatian family inhabits a frustrating, somewhat uncomfortable "frontier".
Another tie-in to my reasons for the visit; Slovenia, at least the part of it closest to Italy and Austria, was also caught up in the bloody battles in World War I that I have described briefly in previous posts about my recent journey. The years of the "Great War" were the last for the Austro-Hungarian Empire, of course, and Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms references some of what is now Slovenia. The mountainous regions particularly in the northwest of that not yet founded land saw fierce fighting.
"Happy talk, keep talking happy talk..."
If those notes seem a disillusioned, dreary beginning to my descriptions of the visit, they are. Except for chats with my tour guides, however, gloom is not very apparent, at it wasn't in my four days at the capital, Ljubljana. Those days were bright (even if the weather was not) and joyful for me, and seemed so also for many of the Slovenians I came across.
Old Town Ljubljiana, along the River Ljubljanica |
Capturing the spirit of Venice along the river in Ljubljana |
Franciscan Church of St Mary, and in front of it the Preseren statue, on the square named for him |
The Preseren statue and above the poet, his muse - naked, tsk tsk |
Preseren is depicted gazing into the distance. If one follows his eye-line carefully one will find that his gaze rests on a bas-relief sculpture of a woman on the second floor of a yellow house.
Julija, the woman who broke Pressrun's heart |
The Triple Bridge, leading from Preseren Square across the river |
I'm standing on the central section of the Triple Bridge here, looking up towards the castle |
another look at the Hauptmann House |
The Cobblers' Bridge, with an attractive young woman snapping a picture - I hope she was trying to get me into hers, as I was certainly trying to get hers into mine |
Walking along the river, other sights include the Cobblers' Bridge. A classical colonnade makes it easy to find and identify. On a walking tour the guide told us that the columns were meant to have a purpose, in holding up a roof so that the cobblers could work in rain as well as shine. That part was never finished, but it's just as well as none of the shoemakers are there any more, only tourists, and many of them!
Another look at the Cobblers' Bridge |
The Butchers' Bridge - note the fellow stating on the glassed area - he's got nothing to worry about, but a woman wearing a short skirt? |
Love-lock hell |
One of the peculiar sculptures on the Butchers' Bridge |
Another statue on Butchers' Bridge |
A busy restaurant area in the Old Town - the river is just off camera to the right. Ljubljana's joint are jumping! |
The fine Town Hall of Ljubljana - note the white banners on either side, proclaiming GREEN - see below |
Mural in the Town Hall courtyard depicting the Roman era |
Old map of the city in the courtyard of Town Hall |
Woman barely visible behind the grid in the Town Hall courtyard |
Wall of greenery celebrating Ljubljana as 2016 Green Capital of Europe |
Outside in front of Town Hall Robba's statue of three rivers |
Smaller Robba statue in the Town Hall Courtyard |
One of the namesakes of the Dragon Bridge |
And another |
Less intimidating dragons on the wall next to the river |
At least one Slovenian craft brewery features a dragon! |
More than one dragon, in fact! |
Nice if underwhelming castle courtyard |
view of the city from the castle ramparts - might be nicer on a clear day |
A glimpse of the cathedral (and above it the castle) from river's edge |
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