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  Featured Destination: Assmannshausen, Germany
 
Text and photos by Kwon Ki-wang
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Assmannshausen, a German village writers like the great Johann Wolfgang von Goethe frequented, is the largest producer of red wine among the villages along the Rhine River. Here, old-fashioned wooden buildings and wine storehouses that helped define the romanticism of Europe and people who make wine the old fashioned way invite the connoisseurs of wine. Visiting the little village on a fine autumn day, I became intoxicated by a sip of fine wine and the feeling of autumn in a vineyard.

As the scorching summer weather begins to recede, giving way to the cool autumn breezes, the villages along the Rhine become more beautiful than at any other time of the year. The wind blowing from the river awakes autumn that lay dormant within each grape, and spreads the gift of the season throughout the vineyard. For hundreds of years, the river has flowed unchanged and the people made homes along the river. Who was it that said a river is the lifeline of all living creatures?
It may be for this reason that people near the river appear to live in comfort and contentment. As the river flows steady, though the times have changed, the villages along the river retain the storied past.
When I first saw Assmannshausen, a small antiquated village long the Rhine, it looked as lovely as a tiny pebble that has been carefully washed with river water, It was purely by accident that I stopped in this romantic village while traveling along the Rhine. But, as time passed, I became increasingly sentimental and had the illusion that the stories of the village's past have lured me to this place.
Goethe's songs of grapes

About two hundred years ago, Goethe followed the river, made his way into Assmannshausen and soon became fascinated with the beauty of the place. What he particularly loved was the feeling and the song of autumn he found in the ripening bunches of grapes.

Flourish greener, as ye clamber,
Oh ye leaves, to seek my chamber,

Up the trellis'd vine on high!
May ye swell, twin-berries tender,
Juicier far, - and with more splendor
From <Autumn Feelings>, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1775

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It is said that the romantic poets and artists of the 18th and 19th centuries used to gather at Assmannshausen to discuss literature and art over red wine. Goethe was known to have particularly loved this village and frequented the place not far from his home in Frankfurt.
Putting aside the association with a literary great, the captivating sight of Assmannshausen in early autumn is more than enough to arouse the imaginations of travelers with poetic souls. That is probably why I was so strongly tempted to be drunk in the sense of romanticism left on the riverside by the great author and his friends. Assmannshausen is widely known for Spatburgunder, a variety of red wine grapes that is rare even in Germany. Unlike ordinary red wines, wine made from Spatburgunder has a relatively light rosy and clear color that make it popular even among those who don't much care for red wine. The 60km-long Rhine Gorge, located between Koblenz and Rudesheim on the Rhine Highway, is Europe's most representative wine production center. The red wine produced in the region is known for clean aftertaste, and white wine for dryness.
900 years of wine making in every corner

Assmannshausen is a small village but its history dates back some 900 years. In 1108, people from bordering France moved her and formed a village and called it Hasemanshusen. In keeping with its reputation as an ancient town, Assmannshausen boasts a number of beautiful wooden buildings that were constructed hundreds of years ago. Of them, Hotel Krone is widely known for its first-class cuisine, as well as for its stunning architecture. The hotel's rooms were built hundreds of years ago of the finest-quality wood, and the interior is a sight to behold.
Even the squeaking noise from the worn floor seems refined. And the seasonally flowering garden in front of the hotel adds charm of its own. Looking from the hotel to the other side of the Rhine, an ancient castle is visible midway up the side of a mountain. Dating to around 900 AD. Rhinestein Castle was built by Otto III, the then German emperor, and dedicated to the archbishopric of Mainz. Later, the castle was used as a royal palace and used mainly as a fortress. Cannons set into the walls testify to the castle's history. The interior of the castle, marked by a array of arch-shaped ceilings is wondrous and the hall where the lords of the castle roamed is decorated with various curios in the manner of a museum.

The road from the Hotel Krone into the village connects to a narrow alley that leads to the midway point of a hill. In the sloping vineyard around the area, Spatburgunder grapes are grown. These are the raw materials for creating Germany's best red wine. On the hill at the back of the village, a gondola transports people to the Niederwald Monument on the mountaintop for viewing the vast vineyards that lie along the slopes. From here, visitors enjoy panoramic view of the vineyards, Rhine and Rudesheim. On the crest of the mountain stands a gigantic Statue of Germania, which commemorates the reunification of Germany in 1871. The statue is so huge that it's rather awkward in its surroundings, but local residents cherish it.
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Festival of green grapes and red wine People cultivate grapes and make wine in ssmannshausen but they go to Rudesheim to drink toasts. Rudesheim, also known as a city of wine, bears the nickname "Pearl of the Rhine" and welcomes a continuous stream of tourists year round. If Assmannshausen can be compared to a shy country girl, then Rudesheim could be a well-dressed, mature woman.
Depending on the season, taverns specializing in wine, in every corner of the town, throw open their doors each night and fill the air with the sounds of joyful music.
With the arrival of autumn, villages along the Rhine hold wine festivals and celebrate the year's harvest. There is no doubt that the Rhine is the lifeline of Germany's modern industrial economy, but villages in the gorge still bear an old, unchanging atmosphere. As autumn deepens and the aroma of wine takes hold, people usher in the harvest season and recollect the days gone by. On these fine autumn days, as well as during the winter, the fragrance of red wine will linger round the people of small village Rhine, Assmannshausen
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Kwon Ki-wang travels around the world to photograph and write about the beauty of the scenic spots he finds.

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