Prague

Shops outside our hotel down from Vyšehrad

Flats on the west bank

View from the walls of Vyšehrad looking north west

Hotel U Semika from the walls of Vyšehrad

Graveyard atop Vyšehrad

SV Martin (St Martin) cathedral on Vyšehrad

Old city walls

Art in a complex below the main Prague castle

The road up to the main Prague castle

 

View from the tower of the SV Vita (St. Vitas) Cathedral

Tiny work truck

Approaching Karluv Most (Charles Bridge)

Karlüv most

Czech king and Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV

East of Karlüv most

Interior wall of Vyšehrad

Kutna Hora

Yes those are bones, from 40,000 victims of the Black Plague and the Hussite Wars: 

In 1278 the Cistercian abbot of Sedlec, Henry, travelled to Palestine and the Holy Land, bringing home a sample of earth from Golgotha. Upon returning he sprinkled the earth over the grounds of his local cemetery. The grounds were immediately considered scared and hence became a much sought after location for burials. In the 14th century the Black Death spread the bubonic plague across Europe and now 30,000 bodies all wanted a resting place within the sacred grounds. 

Such vast numbers of dead led to the creation of the ossuary in 1511 by a half-blind monk who gathered up the bones to be stacked up within the ossuary, making space for new corpses, which were soon taken up by more victims from 15th century Hussite Wars. The ossuary itself is situated in the basement of the All Saint’s Chapel.

Gate to Vyšehrad

Salzburg

Homes built into the cliff

Old town

Roadway up to the Salzburg castle

Munich

Inside courtyard of the the New Town Hall (Neues Rathaus)

Outside of the New Town Hall (Neues Rathaus)

Linderhof

Schloss Hohenschwangau

Neuschwanstein

Munich