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Munich

  • 28-01-2002 8:39am
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,574 ✭✭✭


    Have to go there in a few weeks, and not well versed in the ways of the Barvarians.

    Anyone know the place?
    or Know what to do for joy in Munich?

    (Apart from drinking Beer, eating trout and visiting an old Olympic stadium)


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 78,580 ✭✭✭✭Victor


    Visit the BMW factory? To be honest it might be a nicer place to visit in summer (less cold).


    http://webcenter.travelocity-dest.aol.com/DestGuides/1,1840,AOLCOM|2025|3|1,00.html

    INTRODUCTION
    Sprawling Munich, home of some 1.3 million people, is the capital of Bavaria, and one of Germany's major cultural centers. It's also one of Germany's most festive cities.

    Longtime resident of Munich, Thomas Mann, wrote something about the city that might have been coined by an advertising agency: "Munich sparkles." Although the city he described was swept away by two world wars, the quote is still apt. Munich continues to sparkle, drawing temporary visitors and new residents like a magnet from virtually everywhere.

    Some of the sparkle comes from its vitality. With its buzzing factories, newspapers and television stations, service and electronics industries, and high-tech laboratories it's one of Europe's busiest and liveliest places. More subtle is Munich's amazing ability to combine Hollywood-type glamour and stylish international allure with its folkloric connections.

    Few other large cities have been as successful as Munich in marketing folklore, rusticity, and nostalgia for the golden days of yesteryear, yet this rustic ambience coexists with the hip and the avant-garde, high-tech industries, and a sharp concern for what's going on in Berlin, London, and Washington, D.C.

    As Americans migrate to New York or San Francisco to seek opportunity and experience, so Germans migrate to Munich. Munich is full of non-Bavarians. More than two-thirds of the German citizens living in Munich have come from other parts of the country, and tens of thousands are expatriates or immigrants from every conceivable foreign land. Sometimes these diverse elements seem unified only by a shared search for the good life.

    Outsiders are found in every aspect of Munich's life. The wildly applauded soccer team, FC Bayern München, is composed almost entirely of outsiders--Danes, Belgians, Swedes, Prussians--and the team was trained by a Rhinelander throughout its spate of recent successes. The city's most frequently quoted newspaper mogul (Dieter Schröder) and many of the city's artistic movers and shakers are expatriates, usually from North Germany.

    What's remarkable in Munich is the unspoken collusion of the whole population in promoting Bavarian charm and rusticity, despite the fact that the real dyed-in-the-wool Bavarians risk becoming a distinct minority in their own capital. This is what lends the city such a distinctive flair.

    Virtually everyone has heard the city's many nicknames--"Athens on the Isar," "the German Silicon Valley," and "Little Paris." But none seems to stick. More appropriate is a label that's voiced with more ambivalence both inside and outside Munich--"the secret capital of Germany."

    Munich's self-imposed image is that of a fun-loving and festival-addicted city, typified by its Oktoberfest, which began as a minor sideshow to a royal wedding in 1810 and has become a symbol of the city itself. It draws more than 7 million visitors each year. Redolent with nostalgia for old-timey Bavaria, raucous hordes cram themselves into the city during a period of only 16 days.

    Oktoberfest is so evocative, and so gleefully and unashamedly pagan, that dozens of places throughout the world capitalize on its success by throwing Oktoberfest ceremonies of their own. These occur even in such unlikely places as Helen, Georgia, where citizens and merchants reap tidy profits by wearing dirndls and lederhosen, playing recordings of the requisite oompah-pah music, and serving ample provisions of beer in oversized beer steins. No one has ever marketed such stuff better than Munich, but then, few other regions of Europe have had such alluring raw material from which to draw.

    A somewhat reluctant contender for the role of an international megalopolis, Munich has pursued commerce, industry, and the good life without fanfare. You get the idea that despite its economic muscle and a roaring GNP, Munich wants to see itself as a large agrarian village, peopled by jolly beer drinkers who cling to their folkloric roots despite the presence on all sides of symbols of the computer age.

    Underneath expansive, fun-loving Munich is the reality of an unyielding, ongoing conservatism and resistance to change, both religious and political. But as a symbol of a bold, recently reunited Germany forging a new identity for the 21st century, Munich simply has no parallel. As such it continues to exert a powerful appeal.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,574 ✭✭✭Clinical Waste


    Hmmm, maybe it won't be so bad.

    Thanks Vic,

    ps Couldn't do that link again could you? Doesn't seem to work from my end.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 78,580 ✭✭✭✭Victor


    Sorry about that, VBB misunderstood the link and mis-parssed it. There are lots of links of that page.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,574 ✭✭✭Clinical Waste


    Thanks.:D


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