On January 16, we began our journey home with one last stop: Neuschwanstein Castle, near FΓΌssen, Germany. Rising high above the valley, its white towers piercing the winter sky, the castle looked exactly like the storybooks promised. Its name, Neuschwanstein, means βNew Swan Stoneβ β a reference to King Ludwig IIβs emblem, the swan, which symbolized purity, grace, and his familyβs ancestral connection to the Knights of Schwangau (βswan landβ). Swans appear throughout the area β in the lakes, in local folklore, and carved into the castleβs architecture.
Construction began in 1869, commissioned by Ludwig II as a retreat rather than a royal residence. The king, deeply inspired by composer Richard Wagner, envisioned Neuschwanstein as a tribute to medieval legend and German romanticism. However, Ludwigβs fascination with grandeur and solitude became his undoing. He lived to see only a small portion of the castle completed before his mysterious death in 1886. No royal court ever resided there β the castle was never fully furnished, and it remains unoccupied to this day.
During World War II, Neuschwanstein took on a new, darker purpose. The Nazis used it to store art looted from across Europe, including priceless paintings and sculptures. In the final months of the war, it was discovered and protected by the U.S. Armyβs βMonuments Men,β a group of Allied officers tasked with recovering and preserving Europeβs cultural treasures. Their mission helped prevent the destruction of countless works, and much of what was saved here was later returned to its rightful owners.
We hiked up to MarienbrΓΌcke, the suspension bridge overlooking the castle and the frozen gorge below. The view was breathtaking β snow-dusted turrets framed by rugged peaks and icy waterfalls. Standing there, it was easy to see why Walt Disney visited in the 1950s and used Neuschwanstein as the inspiration for the Sleeping Beauty Castle at Disneyland.
As we left, the late afternoon light cast the castle in a soft glow, the swan banners fluttering in the cold air. From the serene harbor of Lindau to the alpine slopes of Ischgl and the dreamlike beauty of Neuschwanstein, our journey through the winter Alps blended history, legend, and a touch of American connection β proof that even in Europeβs oldest places, stories still find new ways to intertwine. π©πͺ





















