窪蹋勛圖

 

Cesky Krumlov diary

Dal students go to class in a castle surrounded by a bear-filled moat

- June 6, 2011

One of the Cesky Krumlov castle's bears frolics in the moat.
One of the Cesky Krumlov castle's bears frolics in the moat.

Rebecca Schneidereit is taking part in Dalhousies Advanced Seminar in Baroque Culture, held annually in Cesky Krumlov (a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the Czech Republic). Her diary follows the daily activities of the seminar class, which is crosslisted between the Theatre, History, and Music departments.

Monday, May 30, 2011
Met the rest of the class and Professor Simon Kow at the Linz airport. After the twistiest, turniest 1.5 hour bus ride imaginable (made only more memorable by the incessant Elvis on the radio), we were deposited wobbly-legged upon the cobblestone roads of Cesky Krumlov. Were staying at the Penzion Gardena, a beautiful little inn 10 minutes from the castle, where classes will be held starting tomorrow. Had dinner with my roommate on a terrace overlooking a ravine plenty of tourists flitting around in Ye Olde-type costumes they rented (Im told our turn will come). A walk through the town afterwards yielded up everything from fashion boutiques to museums to souvenir shops and even a rock and roll bar (how baroque). Roommate and I agreed wed be hitting up the torture museum during the lunch break between classes tomorrow no better way to set the tone for the semester, right?

Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Class started at 10 a.m. in the castle, which is surrounded by a moat of bears. That was not a typo. There are live bears. In the moat. Word is theyre vegetarian. Im unconvinced. Our first lecture was an Introduction to Baroque Art we started with Berninis Ecstasy of Saint Teresa and moved through Gentileschi, Caravaggio, Reubens, Rembrandt and Vermeer (not all strictly Baroque, but it helped to provide context). After class, my roommate and I hit up Cesky Krumlovs Museum Tortury, full of dioramas and exhibits of instruments of torture. We recovered our stomachs just in time for the welcome dinner at Krcma Marketa chicken (roasted before your eyes on a fire in the main dining area), vegetables with cheese, and beer for less than $15? Yes please

Wednesday, June 1, 2011
Our lecture this morning was on Jan Huss and Hussitism. Hussitism was apparently sort of a Bohemian proto-Protestantism, to shamelessly oversimplify. The subject matter enabled us to sneak an episode of Blackadder in the afternoon, to help situate the very dense text historically. Visited a wax museum with my roommate, which Id never done before super creepy. Wax Charlie Chaplin may give me nightmares (in a good way).

Thursday, June 2, 2011
Class today on The Habsburgs and the Counter-Reformation. The Habsburgs were a bunch of Austrian nobles whose motto was AEIOU, which they managed to make stand for something along the lines of Austrias going to conquer everything. The assigned reading was Ignatius Spiritual Exercises, a sacred how-to for self-improvement of the sanctified variety. We learned during the lecture that defenestrationthrowing your enemies out of windows is not infrequent in Czech history (once in Cesky Krumlovs own castle). Thats miles more stylish than burning at the stake. In the afternoon, we screened the first half of Amadeus in preparation for viewing Mozarts Nozze di Figaro during our class trip to Prague. The World of Baroque Theatre conference starts tomorrow and runs all weekend I know Ive been spoiled by our class starting at 10 a.m. when Im shocked that we have to register at nine!

Friday, June 3, 2011
As I write, Im still stuffed with the (free) sausages and (free) white wine served at the garden reception which followed tonights opera in the Cesky Krumlov theatre (a working baroque theatre, one of only a few in the world). The opera was Handels Terpsicore somewhat light on plot, but heavy on arias, ballet, and gorgeous period costumes. Thats just what I did this evening, of course. During the day, our class sat in the Hall of Mirrors, listening to various lectures pertaining to the World of Baroque Theatre (a category that encompasses a broad mix of topics). On the lunch break, my roommates and I hit up Cesky Krumlovs puppet museum, basically a big storehouse for theatrical marionettes. They were showing a video recording of a performance of Mozarts Don Giovanni done entirely through puppetry. If youve never seen marionettes sword fight, description cannot possibly do it justice: I advise you to get on Youtube, stat.

Saturday, June 4, 2011
The lectures at the World of Baroque Theatre Conference finished up today tons of interesting stuff, some of it concerned with Cesky Krumlov itself as well as its nobility. (It definitely adds a new dimension to history to be sitting in the castle where it happened). Over the lunch break, I found a cute boutique and grabbed a skirt and sundress, both red with white polka dots (possibly my Kryptonite). Once the lectures wrapped up, conference attendees went to a Czech restaurant for dinner, where I ordered the pork knee on a friends advice. Said knee was a unique experience, but not one I would repeat it involved more work than actual food.

Sunday, June 5, 2011
Slept in for the first time since getting here, did some laundry in the sink, then sauntered down to Cesky Krumlovs summer palace with the rest of the class and Professors Kow and Peter Perina. The summer palace was a warm-weather hangout for Cesky Krumlovs nobles, a place they went for privacy, and they took that privacy seriously the table was even elevated in and out of the dining room so servants wouldnt constantly be crashing their dinner parties. After the summer palace, the class watched the ducklings in the garden pond, then split up about half went rafting on the river, half stayed in Cesky Krumlov, getting work done or seeing the sights. Tomorrow we tour the castle Im hoping for some lurid dungeons.