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Austria, Bohemia and beyond

Gneixendorf |

Linz |

Baden - Rauhenstein |

Mödling |
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Bonn
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Bohemia
Bohemia, with its natural thermal springs and spa resorts known since
Roman times, was the holiday playground of the wealthy aristocracy of
Imperial Vienna.
Beethoven - on the advice of his doctor - spent the summer of 1812 in
the spa towns of north-western Bohemia - a stay fraught with emotions
since it followed the brief love affair he had in Prague with the woman
known as the Eternally Beloved, almost certainly Antonie Brentano.
On his arrival in the spa town of
Teplitz, he wrote the letter found
in his effects after his death.
In the postscript he refers to
the woman in question as "My Eternally Beloved" [Meine
Unsterbliche Geliebte].
During his stay in Teplitz he met Germany's greatest living
playwright and poet, Goethe.
In the
park (left) behind the small castle of Teplitz, Beethoven and
Goethe were walking, when Goethe spotted the Empress of Austria walking
with her retinue.
He hurried over, insisting Beethoven come with him. Goethe positioned himself in front
of the Empress and as she passed
executed a deep bow. Beethoven pushed his top hat firmly on the back of
his head.

He crossed his arms and strode past the Empress, intentionally
snubbing her.
Goethe was appalled, and their friendship was
irretrievably damaged.
A famous picture (right) of the time commemorates what is known as
'The Incident in Teplitz'.
Beethoven travelled on to Karlsbad, where he stayed in the
same house as the Brentanos, and Franzensbrunn.
Teplitz today, now named Bad Teplice in the Czech Republic, is an
amalgam of Imperial style and hideous Communist concrete. The old square
and the castle - now a museum - retain something of their 19th century
charm, and the park is still beautiful. Other parts of the town reflect
the dead hand of Communism.
Karlsbad, now Karlove Vary, is a thriving town, beloved of German
day-trippers and site of an annual film festival.
Many old buildings
remain, but the effect is marred by a tall block of concrete in the
centre of the town given to a grateful people by its Communist rulers.
The drive from Teplitz to Karlsbad - which Beethoven did by coach and
which Bonnie and I did by car - travels through some of the most
naturally beautiful Bohemian countryside - now scarred and still
disfigured by oil pipelines, pylons, rusting power stations and other
debris left from the Communist era.

Gneixendorf |

Linz |

Baden - Rauhenstein |

Mödling |
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Bonn
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