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The Danube from the Black Forest to the Black Sea

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An illustrated travel narrative recounts a canoe expedition along the Danube from its mountain sources to the Black Sea, blending practical accounts of navigation, weirs, rapids, and canal works with descriptions of towns, monasteries, ruins, and regional customs. The travelers record architectural sights, river commerce, rowing clubs, music, and everyday rural life, interweaving vivid river incidents and logistical challenges with historical and cultural reflections that map the river’s changing scenery from narrow gorges to broad plains.

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Title: The Danube from the Black Forest to the Black Sea

Author: Francis Davis Millet

Illustrator: Alfred Parsons

Release date: May 16, 2020 [eBook #62150]
Most recently updated: October 18, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images available at The Internet Archive)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DANUBE FROM THE BLACK FOREST TO THE BLACK SEA ***

Contents.

List of Illustrations
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(etext transcriber's note)

 

 

THE DANUBE

FROM THE BLACK FOREST
TO THE BLACK SEA

BY
F.   D.   M I L L E T
AUTHOR OF “A CAPILLARY CRIME” ETC.

ILLUSTRATED BY

THE AUTHOR AND ALFRED PARSONS






NEW YORK
HARPER & BROTHERS, FRANKLIN SQUARE


Copyright, 1892, by Harper & Brothers.

All rights reserved.

Wenn ich dann zu Nacht alleine
Dichtend in die Wellen schau’,
Steigt beim blanken Mondenscheine
Auf die schmucke Wasserfrau
Aus der Donau
Aus der schönen, blauen Donau.
Beck.

CONTENTS

CHAPTER I
The Black Forest—The Brigach and the Brege—The Highest Sources of the Danube—Journey thence from London—Villingen—Arrival at Donaueschingen—The Canoes and Outfit—Arbitrary Source of the DanubePage I
CHAPTER II
The Start—Swans and Spectators—The First Weir and First Luncheon—Society for the Preservation of the Banks of the Danube—Tuttlingen and Max Schneckenburger—First Public Performance at a Weir—First Night in Camp and a Spoiled Breakfast—Monastery of Beuron and its Monks—Crags and Castles15
CHAPTER III
Sigmaringen and Hohenzollern—Nuns at Riedlingen—Haymakers and Haymaking—The Last Weir—A Vigorous Current—The Confluence of the Iller and the Danube—Ulm and the Danube Rowing Club—Start from Ulm—Appointment of Camp-finder32
CHAPTER IV
Lauingen; Its Architecture and its People—Blenheim and Höchstädt—Donauwörth—Lumber-rafts and our Narrow Escape—Virtuous Vohburg—Roman Remains and one of the Scenes in the “Niebelungenlied”—Weltenburg Abbey—The Befreiungshalle and Kelheim—In Sight of Ratisbon46
CHAPTER V
Ratisbon; Its Architecture and its People—The Walhalla—The Plain of Straubing—A Summer Squall—A Typical Bavarian Farm-house—Visit to a Local Freight Flat-boat—Rowing Clubs at Deggendorf and at Winzer59
CHAPTER VI
Fourth of July at Passau—The Austrian Frontier—Through the Gorge in Rainy Weather—A Curious Ferry—A Brief Halt at Linz and a Camp at the Mouth of the Traun—Shooting the Rapids below Grein—Melk and the Pass below74
CHAPTER VII
Dürrenstein, the Dungeon of Richard Cœur de Lion—Ruins and Sentiment—A Gem of River Scenery—Canalization of the River—The only “Blue Danube”—Tulln and its Antiquities—Active River Commerce—Our Raftsmen Friends88
CHAPTER VIII
Vienna; Its History and Characteristics—The Lia Rowing Club—Our Stay at Hainburg and Excursions in the Neighborhood—Theben, the Frontier Town of Hungary—A Model Postmaster102
CHAPTER IX
Pressburg and the River below—Monotony of Landscape and our Introduction to Dust and Mud—Gran; Its Situation and Attractions—Visegrád—Our Hospitable Reception—General Görgei—Our Reluctant Parting—Approach to Budapest—The First Accident to the Fleet—The Neptune Club—Gypsy Music119
CHAPTER X
Budapest almost our Capua—The Bridges and Baths—The Great Hungarian Plain—Cheery River Folk—Duna Földvár—A Surprise Picnic and a Severe Storm—In the Heart of Hungary—Mohács and a Veteran of Two Wars—Tokay and Patriotic Sentiments133
CHAPTER XI
The Franzens Canal between the Danube and the Theiss—A Heterogeneous Population—Monostorszég and a Peasants’ Dance—Curious Types and Costumes—A Spectacular Sunday—First Signs of Oriental Life151
CHAPTER XII
A Watermelon Metropolis—Our Fleet taken for Torpedo-boats—A Gypsy Queen—Peterwardein and Carlowitz—Busy Life on the Banks—In Sight of Belgrade—Evening in Camp—The Servian Frontier—Semlin and Belgrade—Oriental Characteristics and Modern Improvements—A Sculptor’s Paradise—An Unexpected Encounter164
CHAPTER XIII
Semendria and its Great Castle—Our Passports are Useless—Bazias and the Entrance to the Carpathians—The Emperor’s Birthday on a Gunboat—Castle of Golubáç—Drenkova and the First Rapids—Escape from a Whirlpool and a Dash through the Cataracts184
CHAPTER XIV
Improvements to Navigation—Rapids of the Jur—The Kasan Defile—Remarkable River Scenery—Trajan’s Tablet and Old Roman Roadway—Orsova and the Herkulesbad—Ada Kaleh, the Turkish Settlement—The Iron Gates—The Danube and the Ister—Origin of the Name of the Danube—We Lose our Admiral—The Iron Gates—Captured by Roumanian Soldiers—Under Military Supervision197
CHAPTER XV
We are Arrested in a Servian Militia Camp—Barbaric Soldiery and Strange People—We Surrender to a Roumanian Picket—A Characteristic Servian Village—The Frontier of Bulgaria211
CHAPTER XVI
Kalafat and Widdin—A Gale out of a Clear Sky—Bulgarian Fishermen—Widdin and its People—Quaint Turkish Sailing Craft—The River Landscape and the Bulgarian Villages—Custom-house Annoyances—Our Passports save us230
CHAPTER XVII
A Grazing Country—Wild-fowl in Abundance—Nicopolis and the First Reminder of the War of 1877-78—Exodus of Turks at Sistova—Trip to Plevna—Echoes of the War—Rustchuk and Silistria—Monotony and Mud247
CHAPTER XVIII
Squally Weather and Head-winds—The Dobrudscha—Trajan’s Great Wall—Our Camp is Besieged, but Peace is soon Declared—A Roumanian Village—Braila and Galatz—A Tribe of Gypsies267
CHAPTER XIX
The Danube Delta—The European Commission and its Work—Sulina, a Town on English Soil—We Enter the Territory of the Czar—The River divides and the Delta begins280
CHAPTER XX
We Fraternize with Russian Soldiers—A Night at a Picket Station—Custom-house Formalities at Ismail—We Encounter the Police—A Desolate Land—We Camp in the Mud—Kilia—Moldavian Peasants and Russian Pickets295
CHAPTER XXI
We reach Vilkoff and Renew our Struggles with the Custom-house—A Remote Town—The Sturgeon Fishery and Caviar—We Push on to the Black Sea—A Gale is Blowing, and We make a Landing with Difficulty—The Roumanian “Cordon”—A Paddle in the Black Sea—We dismantle our Canoes and reach Sulina312

ILLUSTRATIONS

 PAGE
Alfred Parsons, Poultney Bigelow and F. D. Millet.Frontispiece
Peasant Girl of the Black Forest 2
A Haymaker3
Donaueschingen Girls5
The Sketch-book7
Black Forest Cow Team10
Spectators13
The Start—Donaueschingen17
Pforen20
Hut for Duck Shooting—Neidingen22
Max Schneckenburger, Author of “Die Wacht am Rhein”23
Below Mühlheim, Kallenberg25
Wernwag28
Wildenstein29
The Monks of Beuron30
Sigmaringen33
Hohenzollern34
Nuns at Riedlingen35
Crossing the Weir—Rottenacker37
Peasant Girls Mowing39
Bridge at Rottenacker40
Wood-sawyer at Ulm43
From Strasburg to Ulm44
The Bell Tower—Lauingen48
Donauwörth49
The Ferry51
From Ulm to Straubing53
Between Weltenburg and Kelheim54
An Early Visitor55
Ratisbon from the Bridge61
Returning from Market, Ratisbon64
Oberau, near Straubing65
Local Freight Flat-boat69
On the Tile-boat71
From Straubing to Dürrenstein75
Grein, from the Camp, July 6, 189177
Pump at Pöchlarn81
The Benedictine Monastery, Melk85
Early Morning Opposite Dürrenstein89
Dürrenstein93
From Dürrenstein to Budapest96
Lumber Raft98
A Little Girl of Hainburg103
Peasant Wagon, Hainburg105
A Hungarian Ferry107
The Wienerthor, Hainburg108
The Town Wall, Hainburg110
Hundsheim113
Gossips, Hundsheim116
The Watch-tower, Theben117
Peasant Girl, Theben120
Hungarian Cattle121
Gran (Esztergom)123
Visegrád126
Swineherd127
A Family Wash130
An Ark-boat131
Country Market-boat, Budapest134
Washer-women137
Duna Földvár139
Water-carriers, Duna Földvár142
Fishing-station143
Peasant Girls at Mohács146
From Budapest to Belgrade152
Schokacz Types154
In Sunday Dress, Monostorszég157
Hungarian Girls at Bezdán159
Erdöd160
Current Mills162
Vukovár Watermelons166
A Pig-wallow167
A Gypsy Girl171
Threshing Wheat173
A Croatian Bivouac175
Ó Szlankamen176
Servian Women177
Fortress at the Junction of the Danube and the Save—Belgrade178
Bulgarian Bozaji, Belgrade180
Fountain in the Square, Belgrade182
Semendria185
Rama189
Golubáç191
Roumanian Peasant Girl194
The Kasan Defile199
Remains of Trajan’s Road near Orsova202
From Belgrade to Rustchuk204
Remains of Trajan’s Bridge, Turnu Severin207
Roumanian Peasants209
Servian Fishing-canoes210
Carrying Water for the Camp—Brza Palanka213
“Our Guard,” Servian Militia Camp215
Massing of Servian Troops on the Bulgarian Frontier217
Drawing Water for the Camp, Brza Palanka219
Servian Militia, Brza Palanka223
Building a House in Servia225
House at Radujeváç226
Roumanian Picket Guard227
Bulgarian Fisherman Basket-making232
Cann, opposite Kalafat235
Bulgarian Peasant Types237
Turkish Types239
Turkish Quarter, Widdin241
Turkish Vessels243
Bulgarian Village245
Becalmed247
On the Bulgarian Shore, near Rahova249
Turkish Flat-boat252
Turkish Women at Sistova253
Old Mosque, Rustchuk257
Bulgarian Buffalo Cart259
Market-place, Silistria261
Mosque in Silistria264
From Rustchuk to Sulina265
Roumanian Peasants Selling Flowers and Fruit268
Hirsova270
Gura Ghirlitza272
Loading Grain at Braila274
Gipsy Camp at Galatz277
Galatz281
Peasants of the Delta284
Dredging the Delta287
Turkish Sailing Lotka, Sulina288
Hills near Matchin289
Kilia290
Chatal Saint George291
Toultcha293
Windmills of Toultcha294
Russian Picket Post297
Fishing-hut among the Reeds303
A Late Camp307
Moldavian Peasants: A Windy Day in the Delta309
Vilkoff313
Fishing Station on the Black Sea315
Roumanian Sailors at the “Cordon”319
The Last Toilet in Camp 323
By the Black Sea327

 

 

THE DANUBE

FROM THE BLACK FOREST TO THE BLACK SEA

 

 

CHAPTER I

T the head of a pleasant little valley high up among the bristling mountain-tops of the Black Forest, a tiny stream of clear water comes tumbling down the rocks, and, gathering strength and volume from an occasional spring or a rivulet, cuts a deep channel into the rich soil of the hayfields, and dances along gayly over its bed of glistening pebbles. To the north, west, and south the bold summits of the water-shed, heavily clothed in dark masses of coniferous trees, make a rugged, strongly accentuated sky line, and to the east delightful vistas of sunny slopes and fertile intervales stretch away in enchanting perspective to the hazy distance. This little stream, the Brigach, with its twin sister, the Brege, which rises about ten miles farther to the south, are the highest sources of the mighty River Danube, the great water highway of Europe since earliest history, celebrated for ages in legend and song, gathering on its banks in its course of nearly two thousand miles to the Black Sea the most varied and interesting nationalities in the civilized world, and unfolding in its flow the most remarkable succession of panoramas of natural beauty known to the geographer. The Black Forest Railway, which crosses the mountains from the valley of the Rhine into the upper valley of the Danube by the way of Triberg, mounts the western escarpment of the range by a series of steep grades, curves, and short tunnels, in the midst of beautiful scenery of a semi-Alpine character, and, after the divide is reached, follows the course of the Brigach to Donaueschingen, a tidy little town in the Grand Duchy of Baden, usually called the source of the Danube, and, for the greater part of the year, the head of navigation for small boats on the upper river. A mile and a half below Donaueschingen the Brigach and the Brege join, and the stream here receives the name of the Danube.