 Its name betrayed the simplicity of the place, but not its elegance: Český
Krumlov, the "Czech bend in the river." There in the 13th century the local
village erected a husky tower from which the garrison could survey the
watercourse and hillsides below. From roadside where our bus from Prague
delivered us, the tower - cylindrical, drawn to a flag-bearing point over a
porticoed walkway apt for crossbow-bearing archers - dominated the horizon.
But the tower's prominence receded immediately as we approached the village
and the river drew into view. A dramatic oxbow bend made permanent by the
human settlement that fortified its banks, the river (headwaters of the
Vltava/Moldau) poured forth from the wooded foothills of the Šumava mountains,
nearly touching its own shoulder blades here before hustling north to the
plains and eventually through Prague. Within the confines of the switchback
lay a cobbled village of whitewashed buildings, tiled roofs, and arched,
timber bridges.
Like most towns from the medieval period, Český Krumlov had a castle; this
one - the Krumlovský Zámek - leered over the granite rockface at the northern shoulder of the river
bend. We ascended through the bold, wrought iron gates and traversed the
length of courtyards and antechambers to a bridge of sorts leading to the
western wing of the castle.
I'll remember little of the castle, frankly; rather what will remain among the
visceral memories of this noble little village is the hail storm that slipped
over the hillsides from the west as we looked down at the village from that crenellated
perch. The late spring sky darkened with the first heavy,
frigid water drops, and then suddenly the ice fell: opaque pellets the size
of green peas, riccocheting off the castle walls and plunging
into the roaring river below. Up in the eaves of the castle, we remained
safe and dry until the storm passed and the late afternoon sun bathed the now
shiny town in orange.
That night, we warmed ourselves with chicken stew, stuffed pork, and dark
beer, a meal probably unchanged since medieval times, with a new appreciation for the ardor of medieval winters past. But it being late May, we
slept with the window open to the river, and let the cool spring air carry in
the rustle and chatter of the waters, in a village in the bend of the river. |