Alsace Road Trip - Strasbourg
Alsace
We’ve been on a road trip to Alsace, in eastern France, for the last week and a half. We visited Strasbourg, Colmar and Mulhouse (pronounced “ma-looze,” of course). We’ve never been to this part of France and Mary has suggested it for a road trip over the last few years. We finally got it together and are very glad we did; this is a very enjoyable, and very different, part of France.
First, the different. Alsace is located due east of Paris, a five hour drive, so about 280 miles. Over its history, it has bounced back and forth between France and Germany, the transition from one to the other almost always driven by hostilities. I thought about outlining the history of Alsace but the more I read, the more complicated it became. So I’m going to boil it down t0 answer the question, “Is Alsace French or German?” reminding you that there was no real Germany until the 1870s, Alsace has been:
French, then Germanic, then French with Germanic language, laws and customs prevailing, then French with French laws, then Prussian and Austrian (Germanic), then French, then German, and now French. Simple, eh?
The important thing to remember, and you’ll see this in the houses and buildings of Alsace, is that the Germanic influence is stronger than the French influence here. Makes for an interesting area…
We were gone nine days and rather than post one big long boring post about the whole trip, I’ll do several posts to cover each of the main places - Strasbourg, Colmar and Mulhouse - and maybe a couple shorter posts about places we visited. Let’s start with some pictures of downtown Strasbourg. It will definitely make you think you’re in a city smack in the middle of Germany.
Strasbourg
Strasbourg is a big city: about 470,000 people in the city proper and 800,000 in the “urban area” (including suburbs and smaller towns around the city). The central city is on an island of sorts; the Ill river splits north of the city, half goes in a stream to the east and the other half in a stream to the west, and rejoins south of the city.
The Cathedral
The Strasbourg cathedral has several distinctive aspects. Like many churches in Europe, it was built on top of an earlier church, which may have been Catholic or Protestant or pagan. That church was started in the 1100s, largely of Romanesque architecture, solid, with thick walls, small windows and rounded or slightly pointed arches. In the 1200s, as the beautiful Gothic cathedrals were being built in France, work on the Romanesque Strasbourg cathedral was stopped and a Gothic design created. (This was not unusual; many churches in France and Europe had mysterious fires that burned a Romanesque church and allowed a new Gothic structure to be built in its place.) Rather than tearing down the existing Romanesque church, which had a completed apse and altar and transept, the new Gothic design was added onto it; this included the nave and almost all the exterior
The most unusual aspect of the Strasbourg cathedral is its west façade - the main entry to the cathedral and the most visible part. It has Gothic unlike any other we’ve seen.
Walking Around
We did a LOT of walking in Strasbourg. It’s a fairly compact city, with interesting things to see just about everywhere.
Some Older Buildings
Some Newer Buildings
The River Ill
Strasbourg’s central area is surrounded by the river Ill. It’s not a huge river, but the city has taken advantage of it fully, with miles of beautiful river banks and walks. We even took a boat that went all around the city, through a couple locks and up the Ill a few miles to see the European Parliament buildings.
Some walking Around Sights
That’s my quick description of Strasbourg. We really liked it here and we know we saw a small part of its history and beauty. I suspect we will return on a future France trip. It’s an easy high-speed train ride from Paris, and there really is no need for a car once you’re here. But after three nights, it was time to head south to our next destination: Colmar.