Our first Deutschland destination was Worms. We were here for an hour long pit stop before we made our way to our first stop in Heidelberg and here is an assortment of pictures I took while I was there. Be sure to stay tune for September 1st, which is when my post on Heidelberg will be live.
This Rhineland-Palatinate city's most famous visitor was Martin Luther, who was the leading figure in the Protestant Reformation. He came to Worms in April of 1521 when he was asked to appear before the Imperial Diet. It was here he refused to renounce his views and the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, declared him an outlaw.
This Rhineland-Palatinate city's most famous visitor was Martin Luther, who was the leading figure in the Protestant Reformation. He came to Worms in April of 1521 when he was asked to appear before the Imperial Diet. It was here he refused to renounce his views and the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, declared him an outlaw.
This mosaic on the balcony of the Holy Trinity Church, the largest Protestant church in Worms, illustrates the trial for Luther of heresy.
The other symbol of Worms is dragons. Everywhere I turned I kept seeing countless dragons in sculptures, fountains, and figurines. Worms in one of Germany’s oldest cities and that there used to be folk talk here about a dragon that was going to smash the city unless he got a townsperson a day as a sacrifice. Worms is also the setting for the epic poem, “The Nieblungenlied.” In this poem, the hero Siegfried is a dragon-slayer who bathed in the blood of a dragon he’d killed. The dragon on the city coat of arms is believed to be the dragon from ‘The Nieblugenlied.’
This mural reminded me of the scene from “The Hobbit” when Bilbo runs into Smaug.
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