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  • You have made it to Neuschwanstein Castle, one of the most -- if not the most beautiful

  • castle in the world. The construction of this breathtaking castle

  • began in the summer of 1868, when up to eight meters of stone were outcropped to make way

  • for the foundation of the castle. In June the next year, the new access roads which

  • would enable the transportation of material to site were completed. On September 5th the

  • very same year, the foundation stone was laid and the real construction had begun. Despite

  • its medieval look, the last building techniques, material and innovations were used in the

  • construction of the castle. The foundations were cemented and the walls were built of

  • brick with light-colored limestone used merely as cladding.

  • As you probably can imagine, building a castle on a place such as this, is quite hard. Despite

  • the modern building techniques, the construction process was difficult and complicated. Even

  • though it was built rather quickly compared to other great castles, it was not built as

  • rapidly as the founder of the castle, Ludwig II, had hoped. The castle consists of the

  • gatehouse which you pass through when you enter, the Knights House with a square tower

  • to the right and a citadel in front of the courtyard. The first building which was completed

  • was the gateway building in 1872. This building was used as a provisional living quarter Ludwig

  • II when he visited the site, until the main citadel had been built. The construction of

  • the citadel started in 1872 and was finished twelve years later in 1884, though without

  • all the final details completed. By that time, Ludwig moved in to the castle and lived there

  • permanently. The whole castle as such stood ready 1892; which totals a construction time

  • of 24 years. The effect of this white, fairy-tale castle with its beautiful location is simply

  • amazing. Unfortunately, the man who dedicated his life and a fortune on the project, Ludwig

  • II, never got the see the castle completed, as he died in 1886.

  • So, who was this man, who had such a masterpiece of a castle constructed and what were his

  • motives? The story behind Ludwig II is almost as intriguing and romanticized as the castle

  • itself. Ludwig was the oldest son of Crown Prince

  • Maximilian II of Bavaria. He lived a typical life of a young royal, with a strict regimen

  • of study and exercise and rather harsh relations to his father and mother. Ludwig spent much

  • of his time at Castle Hohenschwangau, the former ruined castle of Schwanstein, which

  • his father had rebuilt in a gothic style. "Hohenschwangau" means in a strict translation

  • "The upper land of the Swans" and the castle was decorated with scenes from medieval legends

  • and poetry, including the legend of the swan knight Lohengrin. The swan was also the heraldic

  • animal of the Knights of Schwangau, whose successor the Maximilian II considered himself

  • to be. Ludwig had already as a child vivid imagination and he identified himself with

  • Lohengrin, both as a real swan knight and as the fictitious knight Lohengrin. The young

  • Ludwig was also influenced by the romantic mountain scenery and the castle became one

  • of his favorite places to stay. It was a place for him to escape the strict and limited reality.

  • Ludwig soon became an admirer of Richard Wagner, a German composer and theatre director. Wagner

  • had a very classic and romantic way of doing operas. Ludwig was introduced to Wagner's

  • "Lohengrin" on 2 February 1861 in the Munich Court Opera House and he was captivated.

  • At the age of 18, Ludwig became Ludwig II as he took over the throne after his father

  • who had died in a three-day illness. At that time, one of the very first orders he gave

  • was to summon Richard Wagner to his court. There Ludwig II rescued the composer from

  • a financial crisis which helped him to create new operas.

  • Soon after the death of his father, Ludwig II suffered a severe personal blow. As the

  • region of Bavaria was allied with Austria, who in 1866 lost the war against the expanding

  • Prussia, Bavaria was forced into an alliance with Prussia which removed the Ludwig's right

  • to dispose over his own army in case of war. This meant that Ludwig II no longer was the

  • sovereign ruler, simply a vassal of the Prussian ruler. One year later, he began planning for

  • a kingdom and castle of his own, where he could be a real king once again.

  • This castle would be named "New Hohenschwangau Castle" and would be a better recreation of

  • the ideal medieval castle compared to his fathers. Perfection was the key with a mixture

  • of original style and modern technical features. The main architecture of the castle was drawn,

  • not by a professional architect, but by the theatrical set designer Christian Jank. This

  • further shows how fascinated Ludwig II was by sagas and fantasies and what his motives

  • for the castle were. Through out the castle, its design pays homage to the German legend

  • of Lohengrin, the Swan Knight. As the construction of castle progressed,

  • Ludwig alienated himself from people and spent more and more time in the mountains and less

  • time in Munich as he drifted into his fantasy world. Ludwig II increasingly identified himself

  • with Parzival, a legendary medieval figure who became the Grail King through his purity

  • and faith. Ludwig was so intrigued that he asked Wagner to write an opera about it, which

  • he did in 1877. Wagner and his circle privately even referred to Ludwig as "Parsifal", and

  • his problems were incorporated into the drama of the Grail. This opera was then played exclusively

  • several times for Ludwig. During this stage, Ludwig started to redesign many of the castle

  • rooms. For example, the "Writing Room" was changed into a small grotto. The modest "Audience

  • Room" became a huge Throne Room. The room was no longer intended for giving audiences,

  • but was built as a monument to kingship and a copy of the legendary Grail hall. A massive

  • Knights Keep was planned for the middle of the upper courtyard but was never built; only

  • the foundation for the keep which is still visible.

  • However, Ludwig's behavior was in the long run not compatible with his duties as a head

  • of state. Reality was knocking on Ludwig's door 1885 as foreign banks threatened to seize

  • his property due to his overwhelming depts. The construction of the castle had cost him

  • a fortune. When Ludwig refused to react rationally, he was declared insane by the government,

  • and interned in Berg Palace. The next day he was found drowned under mysterious circumstances

  • in Lake Starnberg, together with the psychiatrist who had certified him as insane.

  • After Ludwig's death, the castle and all its glory was opened up to the public. The castle

  • was also renamed from "New Hohenschwangau Castle" to its current name Neuschwanstein

  • Castle -- meaning New Swan of Stone Castle. Even though photography is forbidden inside

  • the castle, it is the most photographed building in Germany and it is visited by around 1.3

  • million people each year. If it feels like you have seen this castle before, it might

  • be because it has appeared in several movies and is the inspiration for the Sleeping Beauty

  • Castle in the Disneylands. Ludwig once said; "I want to remain an eternal

  • mystery to myself and others". It is certainly what he has become and his mysterious element

  • still fascinates people today. Even though Ludwig II passed away, the story of his life

  • and his masterpiece work in form of Neuschwanstein Castle, will live on a long, long time.

You have made it to Neuschwanstein Castle, one of the most -- if not the most beautiful

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