Wednesday August 2
involved a short three-hour tour of highlights of the city of
Tallinn, Estonia, particularly the upper and lower parts of the Old
Town.
The guide gave us a quick overview of Estonian geography, demographics and history. He also told several self-deprecatory jokes about Estonians, who are apparently famous for not speaking much. He told us several tales about medieval history of the city and life under Soviet occupation. He pointed out one building from the Soviet era, said to be built of “micro-concrete:” 90% concrete, 10% microphones.
The guide gave us a quick overview of Estonian geography, demographics and history. He also told several self-deprecatory jokes about Estonians, who are apparently famous for not speaking much. He told us several tales about medieval history of the city and life under Soviet occupation. He pointed out one building from the Soviet era, said to be built of “micro-concrete:” 90% concrete, 10% microphones.
He also said that
Estonia has realized its population is declining and in the long term
its economy is in trouble, so they’ve made a big push to become the
“Silicon Valley” of the Eurozone. They have digital signing of
contracts, online voting, and originated some successful tech
companies like Skype.
Estonians
apparently don’t talk much but love to sing. The first stop was the
Tallinn
Song Festival Grounds, an outdoor stage; it once once held a
choir of 36,000 ordinary citizens attended by about 110,000 people
total, around 8% of the country’s population. There is a major
festival of Estonian singing every five years. One coincided with
independence from the Soviet Union, so Estonians like to say they
sang their
way to freedom. The statue is of Gustav
Ernesaks, an Estonian composer involved in the Singing
Revolution, who saw independence from Russia after World War I, and
from the Soviet Union decades later.
This statue
commemorates the sinking of the Rusalka
in a storm, with 200 lives lost.
I took it through the tour bus window at an angle, so had to do a bit of incremental rotation in IrfanView to get it to look right.
The Estonian government building, and an image at the front of a
Russian Orthodox church opposite it. We went inside, and I lit a
candle for sick friends.
The city wall.
A street scene in the Old City.
The
Married Merchants building. It
was apparently mostly a gathering place. The guide told us that the
various separate crafting guilds were so exclusive that there was a
limit on the number of Masters; the best way to become one was to
marry a widow, and when she died to marry a younger woman, who would
in turn likely become a widow and marry a younger aspiring Master.
The oldest still-working apothecary in Europe, on the town square.
The
town hall, and the windows of the main council chamber. The
inscription speaks for itself. Apparently
the councilmen were sworn to secrecy about private deliberations. One
revealed to his wife that a particular prisoner was to be beheaded
the next day; the time and method was supposed to be kept secret so
it would be a surprise. When the whole town found out (including the
prisoner) the councilman himself was hanged (after due process) for
breaking the secrecy rule.
A coffee roastery where I took a break during the tour’s free time.
Returning
to the MSC Fantasia.
At this point I was looking forward to this afternoon’s critique
session, where six of us will comment on each other’s submissions.
As with the previous blog, I had to wait to get back to the Atlantic
Hotel in Kiel to have fast enough WiFi for uploading the photos.
No comments:
Post a Comment