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6 months ago

Engelbourg: the castle with the hole!

Engelbourg: The Castle With The Hole!

A less glamorous variation of the 10 yen coin photo, but I did say back in March that this place made me crave Polo mints!

More seriously, I returned to Thann this weekend with two Japanese people working in France this year. The timing was impeccable, as there had been some snowfall in the previous days, giving us some spectacular views from the summit.

Engelbourg: The Castle With The Hole!
Engelbourg: The Castle With The Hole!

Also, just in time for the start of the Christmas market! Getting into the festive mood early this year... and no need for fake snow! At least, that was the case yesterday. Today, the weather got much warmer and it's probably all gone.

Engelbourg: The Castle With The Hole!

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6 months ago

The Mulhouse-Thann tram-train

A Mulhouse tram-train in tram mode, near Porte Jeune tram stop.

Combining a suburban train service with the ability to navigate city streets sounds amazing. People can live nearer to the countryside, get frequent service into town, and, if everything lines up, commute straight into work without changes and avoiding the main station. The complementarity and opportunity to revitalise a branch line all sounds appealing... but a real challenge to implement. In France, only Mulhouse has truly achieved it.

A Mulhouse tram-train stationed at the Thann St Jacques terminus, on the train line between Mulhouse and Kruth.

Tram-trains aren't exactly rare in France: there are several lines around Paris, Nantes and Lyon have them (and many more had tram-train projects at some point). But, while the vehicles are capable of running in both modes, they are mostly used as a cheaper way to operate a line. The Nantes-Clisson and Nantes-Châteaubriant tram-trains, for example, which I have ridden, are just regional trains, running on heavy rail nearly all the way, and only stopping where the trains always used to.

Mulhouse is the only place in France to have true tram-train operations as described in the introduction: the tram-trains add traffic to line 3 between Mulhouse central station and Lutterbach, before switching to train mode and continuing on the branch line to Kruth as far as Thann.

A Mulhouse tram-train passing the Cité du Train museum on the tram line paralleling the Strasbourg-Basel main line.

The vehicles themselves are remarkable, as they need to be equipped for both streetcar and heavy rail operations, and each has its own requirements: lighting, horns, power supply, safety features... Mulhouse's vehicles are Siemens Avanto S70s, built in 2009-2010, and operated by SNCF as class U 25500. Similar units were introduced near Paris as early as 2005.


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1 year ago
After That News Post, Back To Thann, For This View Of The Thur Valley And The Vosges Mountains. On The

After that news post, back to Thann, for this view of the Thur valley and the Vosges mountains. On the day of my visit, I climbed here first, before continuing along a ridge to the Grumbach summit and down to the Grumbach pass, before circling back down to Engelbourg Castle which I posted about first. A nice hike, not too difficult - most of the climbing is done when you've reached the Roche Albert viewpoint. There's something to be said about why it's called "Albert's Rock", but I'll save that for another time.

After That News Post, Back To Thann, For This View Of The Thur Valley And The Vosges Mountains. On The
After That News Post, Back To Thann, For This View Of The Thur Valley And The Vosges Mountains. On The

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1 year ago

The "Witch's Eye" - Engelbourg Castle ruins, Thann

The "Witch's Eye" - Engelbourg Castle Ruins, Thann

For what it's worth, Prince Albert II of Monaco is visiting Thann in the South of Alsace this weekend, as he is also Count of Ferrette. Held by the Austrian Habsburgs for a while, the title was bestowed upon Cardinal Mazarin, a prime minister to King Louis XIV, following the French conquest of Alsace in the 1640s. A member of House Mazarin married the Prince of Monaco in 1777 and that's how the title ended up where it is today. I don't plan to explain the origin of the other bazillion oddball titles the Prince of Monaco holds...

It's just a pretext to mention Engelbourg Castle, built by the Counts of Ferrette in the 13th century on a hill above Thann. The French Counts wouldn't benefit from it for too long: as it lay too far from the German border to be of strategic value, the same Louis XIV ordered its demolition in 1673. But, as you can probably tell from the photo, something weird happened during the process. The cylindrical dungeon came apart in segments, and one of these landed on its side. For whatever reason, it was left there, creating a unique landmark known as the "Witch's Eye", as an echo to the "Witch's Tower" in the town of Thann, but all it reminds me of is Polo mints.

A short hike uphill from Thann, it also offers nice views of the valley and the vineyards on the neighbouring hills.

The "Witch's Eye" - Engelbourg Castle Ruins, Thann

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