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Saturday, 22 August 2015

1990 Weimar and Jena guide

My pointless series of guides to the past continues with two of the more famous town in Thuringia.

I stayed once in the Hotel Elephant. It was creepy to later discover that Hitler's room there had lain untouched since WW II. No-one told them what to do with it so they just left it as it was.




Weimar
Another 25 km east of Erfurt is Weimar, a city associated in British minds with the decadence of 20's Germany (which in fact mostly took place in Berlin). To Germans,  it's one of the main centres of classical German culture through its connections with Goethe, Schiller and a host of other writers, musicians and painters. In one of those little ironies of 30's Germany, one of the most notorious concentration camps, Buchenwald,  is just outside this city of art. Today they concentrate on the more cultured aspects of the past and the town is littered with museums and memorials to Goethe and Schiller. The centre of the town, having been spared bombing, is very attractive. In keeping with its prominence in the 18th and 19th centuries, there's a higher proportion of neo-classical architecture than elsewhere in Thuringia.

On Markt, smack in the centre of the old town, is the Hotel Elephant. Its cellar restaurant (10 - 22), recently tarted up, has the vaulted ceiling and appearance typical of a Ratskellar. It possible verges a little on the bland, with little decoration and rather glaring lighting. The food is pretty good and not too unreasonable in price. The beer is draught Ehringsdorfer Pils. Walking over to the opposite side of the Markt and along Dimitroffstraße you come to another square, Herderplein. Here is Gastmahl des Meeres, the local branch of a chain of fish restaurants. They vary in quality (the one opposite the Fernsehturm in Berlin is to be avoided), but this is one of the better ones. In its uncomplicated single room, decked out in appropriately nautical style, there's a good range of seafood at very reasonable prices. Again, the beer is Ehringsdorfer Pils.

Jena
Continuing eastward from Weimar another 25 km will bring you to Jena, a town made famous by the Karl Zeiss optical works (and the football team of the same name). Its impact on the town is very evident as, although the town has a long history and a famous university, the factory dominates the town, covering a large central area. The rest of the town looks rather down-at-heel, with the extensive war damage not particularly well repaired. The Marktplatz has been restored, but otherwise there's just the odd original building stuck between a collection of banal post-war constructions. A bit like Frankfurt-am-Main, on a smaller scale.

On Lutherplatz, between the Hauptbahnhof and the city centre is the Schwarzer Bär. This modest old building is, remarkably, the only hotel in town (unbelievable, given that it has a population of over 100,000). The small and homely restaurant (10 - 22) has a limited but ample range of food and sells the local Jena Pils on draught.

Over on the other side of town is Westbahnhof. Looking remarkably like a rural station in the UK, this houses one of the few genuinely pleasant and welcoming Mitropas (10 - 22). It's compact and cosy, without the appearance of having changed a great deal since the station was built. Perhaps its slightly obscure location and branch line character save it from the unsavoury characters who tend to plague Mitropas.  It sells draught Jena Pils.




Hotel Elephant
Markt 19,
99423 Weimar.
Tel: +49 3643 8020
http://www.hotelelephantweimar.com/


Schwarzer Bär
Lutherpl. 2,
07743 Jena.
Tel: +49 3641 4060
http://www.schwarzer-baer-jena.com

2 comments:

  1. Hi Ron - hope all is well. This post made me smile, as I once spent a few nights at the Schwarzer Baer in Jena. I was there for a conference while I was working in Kiel in 2000. I remember it being a very grand old building, with huge stone walls and lots of hunting themed bric a brac. I ate a very fine meal of thick, stodgy dumplings with some venison ragout washed down with schwarzbier. I also learned a great tip from a very cool German guy whom we hung out with at the conference. We were looking for somewhere to carry on drinking after most people had gone home (as you do) and I suggested we find a taxi and ask the driver to take us to the best place in town. The cool German guy said "No, that is not how you do it. You get into a taxi and ask to be taken to the worst place in town. That is always the best place in town". So we all piled into a taxi and ended up in some cellar bar, where the band Embryo were playing. Drunk, they were phenomenal. Anyhow, fine memories of Jena. I've some very fine memories of a long weekend in Erfurt also, so enjoying these DDR memories enormously. Some Foggy Noggin news also - Jim is releasing a milk stout on 9/19 based on a Mackesons recipe from 1907. Hope all is well with you. Cheers, Steve

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  2. Stephen,

    good story. Glad you're enjoying my DDR series. Not quite sure where it's going.

    Where did Jim get the 1907 Mackeson recipe from? That's before Whitbread's involvement.

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