Thursday, September 13, 2007


Some things are the same wherever you go.


Walking towards St. Thomas Church in Leipzig -- where JS Bach was organist and composer for 27 years.


Luther Tour at Eisleben town square with Luther Statue.


Luther Tour at the baptismal font in St. Paul's. Over 500 years old. (The baptismal font...)


Walking up the hill to St. Paul's, where Luther was baptized. His birth home is on the corner to the right.


Town Square at Eisleben. Martin Luther in his doctorate robes.


Walking to Luther's birth home in Eislelben.

Day 3 -- Eisleben and Leipzig

Day 3 -- Eisleben and Leipzig -- After breakfast we boarded our bus for the ride to nearby Eisleben. This is the small rural town where Luther was born. We visited his home of his birth in the morning, right down the street from St. Paul's Church where he was baptized, baptized the day after he was born.

From Luther's birthplace we then walked to the home where he died some 60+ years later, here in the same town. Even though he was quite ill he had been invited to travel from his home in Wittenburg to come back to Eisleben, to help deal with some legal disputes. And "Oh yes, would you please preach to the townfolk while you are here?" He was preaching at the church across the street from the negotiations when he was taken gravely ill and went on to his reward.

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We had lunch in the town square and took a great photo of ALL of us near the commemorative Luther statue.

In the afternoon we drove to Leipzig for a bus tour of the town center. Leipzig is a huge center of commerce, noted for it's annual market fairs, and huge downtown Market "Palaces." We finished the afternoon with a walking tour of downtown, ending at St. Thomas Church. St. Thomas is where J.S. Bach was organist and composer for 27 years!

Tomorrow we go into Wittenburg to see more of Luther's life.

WHAT WE HAVE LEARNED --
German's celebrate St. Nicholas day on Dec 6. We have Martin Luther to thank for a Dec 25 Christmas, and the exchanging of gifts on that day.

The largest concentration of Turks in the world in a single city is Istanbul. The second is Berlin!

Leipzig gets it's name from the German word "linden." Linden trees are lime trees, and the area has lots of them.

Napoleon lost only 3 major battles in his life. First Moscow, then the battle of Leipzig in 1813, and finally his Waterloo. The battle of Leipzig killed 120,000 people, more than died at Gettysburg.

The German word "straße" is not "strabe" but rather "strasse." That odd "ß" is the German symbol for a pair of "S's"

JS Bach got buried three times. (so far...) First in a simple country cemetery with no stone. Then he was moved and re-buried more honorably in a church in Leipzig. That church was bombed into rubble in WWII. Finally he was moved to St. Thomas Church, where he rests today under the floor near the altar.
The rows and rows of fencing and barbed wire -- reminder of the horrors of WWII


After Erfurt we went to Buchenwald concentration camp, just out side Weimar. We were here for several hours.

This building is in the former internment camp, and is the museum.



No, not food served to the monks in the monastery. This is a good, German lunch we had before moving on to our next stop.

Inside the sanctuary at the Augustinian Monastery.


Luther Tour arrives at the Augustinian Monastery in Erfurt where Luther took his vows and studied.