Friday, November 29, 2019

Erfurt Zoo

Delaney and I decided it would be fun to ride the tram to the end of the line today and visit the Erfurt zoo.  It was about a 15 minute ride through largely residential areas and ended on the outskirts of town. 

 We had the place mostly to ourselves today.  Temp about 35 with a slight wind.
We had a great time together!
We thought it was funny that the first exhibit in Erfurt is the same as in Wichita:  Flamingos!

Glad for the images to go along with the words.  We would have enjoyed it regardless, but it was funny to see some of the words for different animals.  None of the signs had any English on them (not that I expected them to).

Meerkats were loving their heat lamps today (even inside). 


Lion House - two new cubs were born in the spring and they were showing a video of the birth.  It was pretty amazing to see. 

The zoo ground were laid out very nicely. Lots of large trees.  In the summer, the paths would be quite beautiful with shade and small gardens. The exhibits were very modern and the habitats quite well done.  The lemurs (below) had a million different branch walkways, hanging objects to play with, etc.  
  

The lemurs were very active today.

They had every size of bird in the ostrich family - emus, tegus, cassawaries, etc.



They had a number of exhibits with bridges over them, so animals could be seen from different angles. 


This was labeled as a bison, and it did have horns, but it sure looks like a horse tail to me!

Delaney loved every bit of the zoo, but the playscape was an especial favorite. 

This 'snake swing'  can hold up to 4 kids straddling it and swinging forward and backward.  Delaney and I both stood on it and loved it!  Why can't we have these kind of fun swings in the US? 

Delaney feeding the goats - they were NOT patient! #NearlyTrompled


They had a big enclosure for guniea pigs, but none were out. This would have been fun to watch.

Time: 3:36 pm.   Days have been pretty short!

The elephants had a great modern enclosure, nearly as large as the one in Wichita.

There was actually a walk through area with the wallabys / kangaroos


Old Manuscripts

My expectations were really surpassed today when I decided to go on a faculty-invited trip to the University of Erfurt's Library.  We were told we would get to see some old manuscripts.  I expected to see a number of 500+ year old books encased in glass, but instead, we got a one hour engaged conversation with their archivist who had hand picked about 15 books to show us with very interesting examples of historical writings.  He was very well educated and really enjoyed sharing.  He studied in Cambridge and probably spoke/read at least 5 languages including old German, Latin, French, English, and probably Greek. 

I feel very bad that I don't remember his name, but he did note that he forgot his name tag, so...
Here he is with a cart full of his historic collection in the individual grey boxes.  He noted that they were kept in the basement in a climate controlled area that was colder than the reading room.  They were given several hours to come up to the same temperature as the room. 

He started by showing us manuscripts dating back to the 1300s that were copied by hand.  They often had the original text in the center portion, with notations in different script/hand by others in the margins.  These were sometimes notations by the professors who were teaching the contents of the original manuscript to their students.

For many years, books were not really written as a single long manuscript, but were actually compilations of papers that were eventually bound together in a collection.  They did not have a title page or an author as we would expect to find in volumes today.  Most often the binding was wooden (brown part), with a leather cover on the spine (white part).

You can see the different sized pieces of parchment in this bound volume, indicating the collected nature of its parts.

The archivist picked a wide range of different collections to share.  This entire volume was a "medical book" full of tables of the moon's cycle, Saturn's cycle, Jupiter's cycle, etc.  It was a critical reference for any doctor who didn't want to inauspiciously bleed his patients at the wrong astronomical time and put them at risk... (!)  Kind of a weird example of how advanced astronomy was compared to medicine at this time.
The archivist also noted that the scribe had to be particularly careful in copying the text, while a mispelled word might be noted and corrected, an mistake in the number tables would probably never be caught.


This book had a biblical geneology dating back to Adam and Eve.  It included Noah and his three sons, along with an explanation that these three sons were the forefathers of the three continents:  Europe, Africa and Asia (prior to the discovery of the Americas). 

The oldest books we saw were made of parchment from sheeps skin. About 4 pages could be made from one sheep skin, so you can image how costly it was to have a 50 page book copied, just for the cost of the sheep skin alone.   I asked about when they switched to paper and he said it varied considerably and that the British parliament still printed its acts of law on parchment.  He explained that the parchment is very durable.  The wooden based paper of the 1700 and 1800s had a lot of acid in it that caused it to be very brittle and degrade quickly.  I asked about 'non-wooden based' paper.  He explained that some paper was made from rag cloth, wet down and separated out, then dried.  The wire strainer they used to lift out the paper sheets would leave a thinner part on the paper which was the original 'water mark'. 

The archivist set out each of the books in a foam padded podium and then turned by hand to the pages he had marked previously for our review.  He explained that the handling of texts with bare hands vs. cotton gloves was controversial.  He preferred to use his cleanly washed hands than to risk the clumsiness of cotton gloves that might cause physical damage by mishandling the book.

Several of the manuscripts had fold out sections.  This was a stylized map of Jeruselem from the Crusades. 

Each book had a different binding. Those that didn't latch like this had a kind of cinch belt around them.  They are preserved better when bound tightly.

This book still had a very heavy chain attached to it that once bound it to a reading pulpit.  Books often used to be bound in place, so rather than taking a book from a shelf and moving it to where you wanted to read, you went to where it book was to read it. 

Those scribes that copied texts were not necessarily the ones to do the art work.  They would leave a blank square for an ornate first letter to be added on each page. 
Also, they used multicolored inks for writing.  When they started using a printing press, the two colored ink pages were very difficult to do well.  They had to be run through the press twice with two different colors of ink, and the hope that the red would align with the black that was already on the page. 

These were sketches of all of the diplomats who participated in the negotiations of the Treaty of Westphalia!!!

This is a book written by an early paleontologist, shortly after they started finding fossils and he was cataloging them.  His students played a joke on him and placed false 'fossils' on his work site.  He was fooled by them and copied them into his book.  They even included rocks with Hebrew symbols on them.  We know better than to think these would be found in nature today, but apparently they did't know a lot about evolution, etc. at that time - ha!

Thanksgiving Dinner

Our German hosts pulled out all the stops to serve us a wonderful Thanksgiving dinner on Thursday evening.  There was turkey, roast beef, ham, potato cakes (not mashed, to Delaney's disappointment), green beans and sweet potatos (combined), salmon, breads, salads, and lots of desserts (fruits, cheeses, mousses).








Thursday, November 28, 2019

Random observations

One of my favorite things to blog about while traveling are the small, unique things that I observe while walking on the streets.  Below are some of my random observations.


Postal bike parked on the street.  I love the unique design of training wheels to keep it from tipping over.


I have no idea what the meaning is of these animal images on each floor of our hotel, but we have pigs, giraffes, and cows.  Perhaps for kids to know which floor they are on?? Aren't they with their parents if they are not old enough to remember floor numbers??  


Sandmannchen = Sandman
We were organized on our cultural tours by cartoon characters.  Our group was Sandman.  All kids know these characters although we had never heard of them.
We found him in the park in our later explorartions. 

From Wikipedia:
22 November 1959  East German television began broadcasting its own Our Sandman , complete with its own "good night, children" character, so called Sandman . Created by the puppetmaster and director Gerhard Behrendt , the East German show presents everyday life, travel, and fantastic adventures. The character often showscased socialist technological achievements, such as the use of awe inspiring vehicles like futuristic cars and flying devices. Belonging to the point that after the wall fell, former citizens lamented the appropriation of the beloved cartoon by corporate West German television.  The production of the German version of Sandmännchen ceased in 1991, following the unification of Germany. The East German version was finally published and episodes are still broadcast today. 


We saw this sign on the river.  Google translate says "Bats are calling".  There is a box to the side that reminds me of a feeding station that you see at animal parks, but it could be a thing that makes bat sounds to attract them??  We probably won't unravel this mystery.



Our student hosts shared that gnomes are a "thing" in Thuringia (this part of Germany).  We've certainly seen a number of them.  This was my favorite, with an advent calendar in his hat.
Our group noticed that nearly all the police for the president's security had facial hair...dress code or not??

Delaney and I visited McD's because she was craving a familiar burger.  We looked for a trash can, but instead found this tray drop kind of like in a cafeteria.  The cups fit in round spots on the top so the trays could be stacked.