hidden europe 34

From Waterlitz to Austerloo

by hidden europe

Summary

Did you know you can take the train to Brathlavstan or fly to MaastrAachen? The portmanteau title of Daniela-Carmen Crasnaru’s 1998 poetry anthology Austerloo prompts us to reflect on portmanteau terms in European geography.

Have you ever heard of Brathlavstan? Until recently we had not. And when we did stumble on Brathlavstan, we were surprised to find that it lies on the banks of the Danube downstream from Vienna. The name hinted of somewhere distinctly more exotic.

In fact Brathlavstan is a rare European example of a portmanteau place name. The name refers not to a country but to a railway station, namely Bratislava hlavná stanica, which both the German and Russian railway ticketing systems (and, for all we know, many others besides) abbreviate to Brathlavstan.

North America bristles with portmanteau place names, from Calexico and Mexicali (two sides of a community that straddles the border between California and Mexico) to names like Michiana and Arklatex (which both refer to interstate regions within the United States).

Related article

The Taste of Yellow: Wines of the Jura

Could you imagine paying more than €100,000 for a bottle of wine? Not any bottle of wine, but a bottle of vin jaune (yellow wine) from the French Jura. And a wine that was made before the French Revolution. We discover a French rarity that takes decades to reach maturity.

Related blog post

Saltholm, Denmark - Corsica - Moldova Wine Festival

The upcoming days see a couple of quirky festivals in Corsica, each marking the Catholic feast of the Nativity of Mary on 8 September. At Lavasina, in Corsica's north-east corner, locals gather on the beach for midnight Mass in honour of the gifted Madonna who allegedly regularly intervenes in village affairs for the general good of the community.