$url = $subpage->get("redirect_url|url");
  • Home
  • About
  • The Magazine
  • Letter from Europe
  • Notes
    $treeMenu->render($options); ?>

© 2005–2024 hidden europe

Warhol Logo Warhol Logo
  • Home
  • About
  • The Magazine
  • Letter from Europe
  • Notes
Back Up Top

hidden europe 24

Lonely Planet's Europe

Picture above: Arcaded mosque in Cordoba, Spain (photo © Patrickwang / dreamstime.com)
  • Home
  • The Magazine
  • hidden europe 24
  • Lonely Planet's Europe

Summary

We learnt from 'The Europe Book' that Frenchmen no longer were berets, that Liechtenstein is Europe's largest exporter of dentures and that the sugar cube was invented in the former Czechoslovakia. We review Lonely Planet's latest coffee table offering.

hidden europe 24 /
As member with online access, you can sign in to read the rest of this article online.
Magazine issue
hidden europe 24
Articles in this issue
  • Editorial hidden europe 24
    Editorial
    By hidden europe

    Welcome to hidden europe 24. This issue of hidden europe travel magazine contains articles on Poznan's main square, the city of Angouleme, Allianoi on Turkey's Aegean coast and the search for Franklin's lost expedition.

    Read on
  • Poznan blues
    Feature
    By Nicky Gardner

    Europe's city squares are being radically reshaped by the arrival of mass tourism. Thus far, Poznan's beautiful central square has resisted the pressure for change. It remains essentially a place for the locals. But change is surely in the offing.

    Read on
  • Angouleme - murs peints
    Feature
    By Rudolf Abraham

    The city of Angoulême in the Charente valley is home to one of France's most distinctive art form: the bande dessinée or comic strip. Guest contributor Rudolf Abraham introduces us to this extraordinary city.

    Read on
  • The nymph's call to Allianoi
    Feature
    By Üstün Bilgen-Reinart

    Progress always comes at a price. Not far from Turkey's Aegean coast the beautiful ruins at Allianoi are about to be flooded. Local horticulturalists demand more water for their tomato crops. But the defenders of Allianoi are not giving in easily. Üstün Bilgen-Reinart reports from Turkey.

    Read on
  • The search for Franklin
    Feature
    By Nicky Gardner

    About twenty clairvoyants, mediums and spiritualists were closely involved in the search for Franklin's lost expedition. The ghostly tale of Louisa Coppin is just one part of this improbable story.

    Read on
  • Form and function: Dessau
    Special spaces
    By Nicky Gardner

    The Dessau Bauhaus was the creative focus for a galaxy of talented artists, architects and designers, among them Walter Gropius, Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky and Mies van der Rohe. We explore the small town of Dessau in eastern Germany.

    Read on
  • East is East: Oleg's story
    People
    By Nicky Gardner

    About ten years ago, significant numbers of poor people from Estonia were persuaded to travel to Switzerland to take part in medical trials. One of them was Oleg.

    Read on
  • A first class surprise
    Railscan
    By Nicky Gardner

    The view from the carriage window may be identical in first class, but sometimes it makes good economic sense to travel in style. There are many instances in rail journeys across Europe where first class travel may actually be cheaper than second class.

    Read on
  • Colour codes: a child's meditation
    Moments
    By Nicky Gardner

    Foreignness is often deliciously exotic. In an unusual departure from the regular hidden europe style, we place ourselves in the position of a child pondering worlds beyond the home village.

    Read on
  • Of turrets and towers
    Sights
    By Nicky Gardner

    From radio towers in Moscow, to the ancient pigeon towers of Isfahan, towers are things to be celebrated and explored. We look at some of Europe's finest, and take a close look at towers along the route of the Great Western Railway from London to Penzance.

    Read on
  • Lonely Planet's Europe

    We learnt from 'The Europe Book' that Frenchmen no longer were berets, that Liechtenstein is Europe's largest exporter of dentures and that the sugar cube was invented in the former Czechoslovakia. We review Lonely Planet's latest coffee table offering.

    Read on
  • Spitting distance from the Baltic
    Routes
    By Nicky Gardner

    The Curonian Spit is a delicate concave arch, a narrow thread of land that divides the Baltic from the Courland Lagoon. We travel from Lithuania into Russia through one of Europe's most intriguing landscapes.

    Read on
  • A Baha'i pioneer
    Snippet
    By hidden europe

    A short tribute to Brigitte Hasselblatt, the spiritual mother of both the Shetland and the Estonian Baha'i communities.

    Read on
  • A Polish curiosity
    Snippet
    By hidden europe

    To walk through the door of the church is to leave modern Poland and enter a space suffused with exotic incense and the rich iconography of European Orthodoxy. A note on the Polish Orthodox church in Jelenia Góra.

    Read on
  • Sicilian New Year
    Snippet
    By hidden europe

    Snow gathered on Etna on the first of January makes wonderful granita - the perfect antidote to any New Year Day's hangover.

    Read on
  • Slovakia's new currency
    Snippet
    By hidden europe

    Slovakia adopts the euro and along the way reshapes its identity. Icons of western and secular modernity replace a more eastern demeanour.

    Read on
  • Latin lover
    Snippet
    By hidden europe

    Do you think Latin is a dead language? We present the case to the contrary.

    Read on
  • Preview hidden europe 25
    Preview
    By hidden europe

    a look ahead at hidden europe 25

    Read on
Close

The Exotic in the Everyday

hidden europe is a curated collection of words in print and online that focuses on offbeat places. We criss-cross the continent to bring our readers some of Europe’s finest travel writing.

Information

  • Member access
  • Contact hidden europe
  • hidden europe privacy notice
  • Sitemap
  • Legal stuff
copyright © 2005-2025 hidden europe