Archive for tour

Hasselbach and Allendorf Ancestral Discoveries

Saturday, April 27th, 2013

April 22 and 23

OldestHalfTimberedHouse copyDennis Jenkins from Grand Junction, Colorado wanted to find out more about his ancestral ties to the hamlet of Hasselbach near Weilburg, Hessen, Germany. Dennis takes the record for waiting the longest between first learning about European Focus Private Tours (1998) to actually stepping off the plane to begin his personal journey. Starting from his landing and soon after, within an hour or so, Dennis was walking the quiet lanes of tiny Hasselbach, a sleepy little “Dorf” with a name which is tied to the history of a certain kind of bush (called a hassel) growing here with brown berries. “Hassel,” and “bach” for stream – Hasselbach. Such is the origin of village names in Germany. While walking around the village we encountered a local who told us that administratively, the village belongs to Weilburg. But the villagers attend church in another, closer village called Allendorf, just a couple of kilometers over the hill to the north.

Taking photos of the war memorial

Taking photos of the war memorial

We went to Allendorf and quickly found the church, located in the center of the small village. The pastor was not at home, but the church caretaker was. She cheerfully let us into the old church with its precious “Koehler” organ from the early 1700s, one of only two in the Nassau region of Hessen. The church is well-maintained and dates from the early 1700s. It is not the first church to stand on this spot. At least two others have stood here, and the old stone baptismal font is from one of those earlier churches, and dates from the 1200s.

We learned from the pastor that records have been microfilmed and are kept in the archive in Darmstadt as well as copies held by the LDS church.

 

 

The church

The church

Front of church

Front of church

The early 1700s Koehler organ

The early 1700s Koehler organ

Christmas Markets in Germany Tour Offer

Tuesday, April 2nd, 2013

April 2

RothenburgWinter

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Experience the markets of Dresden, Seiffen, Plauen, Zwickau, Coburg, Bamberg, Nurnberg, Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Ulm and Augsburg on this relaxed, luxurious 12-day adventure.

Micro-Group with only 10 persons invited! Compared to the run-around, rush-rush-rush of the big bus tours, this tour is the antidote with plenty of browsing time, plenty of time to soak up the history and the ambience of these places and to enjoy cozy pubs and restaurants, beautiful scenery and the best personal attention from your drivers and guides.

Priced at $6,600 pp including round trip air (coach) from an East Coast gateway city to Dresden and return from Munich. Dates of the trip are departure on November 26 and return on December 8.

Adults only, please. Participants must have an ability to walk and to be in an overall excellent physical condition as it is impossible to drive right into or very close to the markets.

No single supplement. Deposit amount of $750 pp holds your place.

Entire cost of the trip is due in advance. Payment deadline is April 19, 2013.
Credit cards are not accepted for this trip.

Small Group Travel Offer for Germany in July, 2013

Tuesday, March 5th, 2013

April 2

It’s rare that we offer a small, mixed group tour but here it is, and your chance to experience a semi-private tour with European Focus at a price that is quite a bit lower than our custom-designed, fully private tours. This tour has definite dates, July 1 arrival through departure on July 13. The full itinerary is available, just ask. This trip is priced to book fast, and will be considered a full “Go” with just five persons.

Bacharach copy

Castles, Country Inns and Historic Guesthouses of Germany Tour

Small Group Tour
Offered for no more than five persons
Tour date: July 1 to 13, 2013
Deadline to book: April 22

Highlights:

Staying two nights in a real castle high above a gorgeous river valley
Visit Heidelberg, ancient university town
Visit Erbach and the Odenwald Forest
Miltenberg am Main and an overnight stay in an historic inn built in 1599!
Stay three nights in Rothenburg ob der Tauber – Germany’s best medieval town with daytrips to nearby Nurnberg and to Weikersheim Castle and Gardens plus the Romantic Road
Two nights in Meersburg on Lake Konstanz and another historic inn, this one built in 1605
A picnic in the Swiss Alps
The wine-growing region of the Suedliche Weinstrasse (Southern Wine Road)
The Rhein River Valley and two nights in one of Germany’s most charming spots

- 12 days and nights in Germany
- Private American guide who speaks German
- Luxurious, roomy vehicle with all comforts, A/C, leather
- Unique rooms, always with private facilities in the room
- All breakfasts, lunches and two of your dinners

Priced to sell out quickly at only $4,975 per person – sharing or single
Airfare not included but assistance offered at no surcharge

Deposit to hold your spot: $750
Visa and Mastercard accepted for all payments
Final payment due on June 1

Full itinerary available, just call us at 800.401.7802 or e-mail us at info@europeanfocus.com

PARIS, SOUTHWESTERN FRANCE & BARCELONA
Micro Group Tour for 2013

This trip starts off with three nights in one of the world’s most enchanting cities, with a guide who knows how to make the most of your time here. We then move away from the city to explore the environs o southwestern France. Carcassonne and the surrounding area is famous for many reasons. Carcassonne and the area also has a lot of mystery and history associated with the Knights Templar. We then make the drive to the one-and-only Barcelona, a city that has been at the crossroads of so much history – from Christopher Columbus connections , to the avant-garde Modernisme movement, with incredible architectural masterpieces by Gaudi (Sagrada Famiglia) and others. This city is really charming with much to see and do. We stay at a centrally-located, small boutique hotel. Trip price does not include airfare.

If there’s interest within the group there is much more to experience, including:
• Plenty of exposure to remnants from Gallo-Roman times
• Exploration of the area around Carcassonne, featuring more quaint and interesting villages, such as Mirepoix (unusual and pretty Middle Ages architecture with nice shops), as well as excursions to the countryside to see some of the castle and abbey ruins and other picturesque villages
• Possibility to enjoy an excursion of the Canal du Midi
• While in Barcelona, sightseeing, including Sagrada Famiglia and some other Gaudi buildings, monument of Christopher Columbus, and Las Ramblas

13 days starting from (depending upon number of people)
EURO 5,299

Package Offer includes:
• All meals and drinks (up to two glasses of wine per person or two beers with dinner)
• All lodging, transportation costs, fuel and tolls
• Tips and admission fees

Minimum number of guests required: Five
Maximum we are able to take: Ten
Tours offered in spring and in fall

PARIS, PROVENCE & CÔTE D’AZUR
Micro Group Tour for July or August or October, 2013 (Max 5 adults)

This trip starts off with two nights in one of the world’s most enchanting cities, with a guide who knows how to make the most of your time here. We then move away from the cities and to explore several distinct regions of Provence – from fragrant and visually stimulating markets in some of the most scenic villages in France to taking in the wonderful cuisine of the regions. Finally, we move on to the Côte d’Azur, staying right on the sparkling Mediterranean in a quaint but bustling old fishing village.

If there’s interest within the group there is much more to experience, including:
• Plenty of exposure to remnants of the Roman world in their Gaulish territories
• Experiencing unmatched and diverse natural beauty and landscapes (picque-nique anyone?)
• Relatively slow-paced
• History from pre-Roman, Roman, Middle Ages to present

12 days starting from (depending upon number of people)
EURO 4,959

Package Offer includes:
• All meals and drinks (up to two glasses of wine or two beers per person at dinner)
• All lodging
• Transportation costs, fuel and tolls
• Tips
• Admission fees (except for special requests such as parasailing on a beach or bullfights for instance)

Melk Abbey, Austria

Saturday, November 17th, 2012

(September 22)

Our guests Art and Carol at the entrance to Melk Abbey during their September 21 – October 6 private tour in Europe.

Melk Abbey or Stift Melk is an Austrian Benedictine abbey, and one of the world’s most famous monastic sites. It is located above the town of Melk on a rocky outcrop overlooking the river Danube in Lower Austria, adjoining the Wachau valley.

The abbey was founded in 1089 when Leopold II, Margrave of Austria gave one of his castles to Benedictine monks from Lambach Abbey. A monastic school, the Stiftsgymnasium Melk, was founded in the 12th century, and the monastic library soon became renowned for its extensive manuscript collection. The monastery’s scriptorium was also a major site for the production of manuscripts. In the 15th century the abbey became the centre of the Melk Reform movement which reinvigorated the monastic life of Austria and Southern Germany.

The west facade of the church


Today’s impressive Baroque abbey was built between 1702 and 1736 to designs by Jakob Prandtauer. Particularly noteworthy is the abbey church with frescos by Johann Michael Rottmayr and the impressive library with countless medieval manuscripts, including a famed collection of musical manuscripts and frescos by Paul Troger.

Due to its fame and academic stature, Melk managed to escape dissolution under Emperor Joseph II when many other Austrian abbeys were seized and dissolved between 1780 and 1790. The abbey managed to survive other threats to its existence during the Napoleonic Wars, and also in the period following the Nazi Anschluss that took control of Austria in 1938, when the school and a large part of the abbey were confiscated by the state.

The interior of the abbey church is a spectacular display of gold and color. This view shows the high altar.


We visited Melk Abbey while en route between Berchtesgaden and the Wachau Valley, on the Donau (Danube) River in September. To experience Europe’s glorious past at your own pace, ask us about a private tour for just you and your spouse, partner or family or friends today.

A great way to wrap up a visit to Melk Abbey is to board a cruise from Melk to Krems.

Visiting Relatives in Willmandingen

Thursday, September 20th, 2012

Events occurred on September 16, 2012

Pastor Rahlenbeck greets those who came to church on Sunday, September 16. Two of those were American descendants of a man who left Willmandingen more than 140 years previously.

A trip revolving around family history depends on connections made. One of those connections was made with the pastor of the church in tiny Willmandingen, Germany.

A letter sent to the pastor’s office by Beth Renney from Fresno, California reached across the miles and the years, resulting in a boisterous family reunion with cousins in the Schwaebische Alb. Some of those cousins had not seen each other for more than 20 years, even though they live in the same town.

Eric Wiech hands Suzanne Pellegrino of Pittsburgh a book printed on the 1200th birthday of the village in 1972.


Pastor Rahlenbeck received Beth’s letter around the 20th of August. After more than a year of planning, it was this letter that touched off a storm of communication between a relative in Willmandingen through another English-speaking relative named Birgit Wiech. In these small towns, it seems as though everyone is related. Those exact connections may be hard to grasp for the outsider, but they’re there. We saw those connections up close during a “coffee and cake” meeting on the 16th of September at a hotel in Willmandingen.

Beth Renney of Fresno, left, with cousins Birgit Wiech and 92-year young Anna at the family reunion. Beth had just presented a gift of California pistachios.


Birgit had organized a private lunch at our hotel in the nearby village of Erpfingen. After this getting to know you time, (it was actually a warm up for what was to come) we made our way over to the hotel for what can only be described as a very active meeting. It seemed as though everyone was talking at the same time. And, most of them in the unique dialect known as Schwaebisch, which is incomprehensible to all but those who grew up with the language. Thank goodness for Birgit and her daughter Nicole, who acted as translators.

Family reunion


Photos were shared, stories told, and connections made. A highlight of the visit was when Beth and her sister Suzanne brought out a map of the United States to show the Germans, some of whom never leave their home town area, the huge distances between where Suzanne lives near Pittsburgh and where her sister lives in Fresno. To see the state of Arizona and to realize that Germany would fit inside of its borders truly boggles the mind and makes one speechless. Well, with this group, at least quiet for a couple of seconds.

St. Pankratius in Hoinkhausen, Germany

Saturday, September 15th, 2012

September 15, 2012

Ancient stone carving on the north side of the church


The Catholic Church of Saint Pankratius is the ancestral church of Suzanne Pellegrino and Elizabeth Renney’s Mollerus ancestors, who settled in this village in the last years of the 18th century.

Detail of the high altar from 1721


The church was built as early as the 12th century. A stone triptych on the north entrance of the church dates from that first building period. The rest of the church dates mainly from the 16th and early 17th century.

Where ancestors were baptized


A massive organ with 33 registers built by Johann Patroclus Moeller dominates the rear of the church. It was built in 1750 and is still in good working condition, although some locals say that the large organ is too loud for the small church, which appears larger on the outside but which is smaller inside due to the nearly six foot thick walls.

The organ dates from 1750


Beth Renney and Suzanne Pellegrino, both descendants of an ancestor who emigrated from Hoinkhausen, in the ancestral church of St. Pankratius


The pulpit and high altar date from 1721.