As well as exploring the city streets, we went to Vavel
castle, which was the home of the Polish monarchy.
Having climbed up and into the castle, we leave through the
twisting tunnels of a cave called the Dragon’s Den. It is said to house the
dragon that guards this entrance to the castle – no millionaires waiting to
throw insults and shell out cash.
Underground in the Dragon's Den
This way out leads to the banks of the Vistula.
The footbridge we cross has hundreds of padlocks locked
to the mesh of the sides. Most are labelled with two names and a heart,
reminiscent of the ancient graffiti at Stonehenge. Some of these are clearly as
old as the bridge. The bridge itself doesn’t seem so old but other older
bridges are also adorned with padlocks. We didn’t find anyone to explain the
tradition.
At the other side we were in the industrial quarter – a sea
change from the Krakow that draws the tourists, except that tourist buses drive
past us every few minutes taking people to and from the Schindler factory which
is our intended destination. A misreading of the map makes it a longer walk
than it should have been. It’s a very intense experience to walk round what is
now a packed museum knowing what happened here and what draws people.
Those padlocks are called love padlocks. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love_padlocks. The tradition is not thought to be very old, possibly from round about 2000.
ReplyDeleteThank you. That's interesting. So a mini mystery as to what started it.
ReplyDelete