Liechtenstein is another one of the European micro states and is apparently about the same size as Washington DC in the US. It’s actually a lot bigger than some of the other micro-state siblings which ranked in size order are: Vatican, Monaco, San Marino, Liechtenstein and finally Luxembourg. I’ve now managed to visit them all.
I was staying in Schaan, about five minutes drive north of the main town (doesn’t seem right to call it a capital
city) of Vaduz. Schaan is home to Hilti Corp. the largest employer in the nation and it was visible from my hotel window after checking in.
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They’ve even managed to get their own sculpture into the middle of a roundabout in front of their factories.
Half the country is a mountain range with Austria over the other side. The other half is more flat land beside the Rhine River, which is the border with Switzerland.
Liechtenstein and Switzerland share much in common, including use of the CHF as the national currency. This annoys me in a minor but specific way as I like to collect a coin from each country visited. The Swiss Franc is already up on the pantry door at home with all the other coins. Apparently they mint some non-legal tender commemorative coins, so maybe I’ll have to look at something like that. Not sure I want a $500 gold coin sitting on the pantry door though…
The drive down from ZRH was easy to follow on the downloaded Google maps that I linked via CarPlay. (I subsequently discovered the car had its own active satnav - it just wouldn’t easily find places in Liechtenstein - I think in true French fashion it would only work properly with the random combination of the glove box open, right indicator on and the driver singing La Marseillaise

) It took about 90 minutes and passed through so many tunnels and spectacular lake and alpine scenery.
After dumping everything in the hotel room I headed into Vaduz to go to the Liechtensteinisches LandesMuseum (the national museum) which took about an hour to look through some of the history and culture of the country. The national anthem is called (this was their English translation) ‘High on the young Rhine’ and I guess ‘young’ in this context means whilst the river is still smaller than it will become further downstream.
I parked near the Rhine and did have a look over it into Switzerland on the far bank!
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Have a listen to that anthem and tell me what stands out! Very interesting.
When the museum closed I walked the short distance through the centre of town.
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Love the little uphill clearing and alpine houses.
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Schloss Vaduz above the town.
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I didn’t get into the art museum due to the time, but it’s a very striking polished concrete structure.
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It’s a compact town centre and was lovely in the afternoon sunlight. Not surprised to see names such as Rothschild and Onassis on some of the buildings.
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The relatively young (for Europe) Kathedrale St. Florin.
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The building on the right that looks a bit like a barn is the Landtag or parliament building. When I first saw it I thought it was built of wood but is actually a minimalist design using bricks.
Lovely place. Being one of the richest countries in the world everything is expensive. I paid CHF33 for a basic ‘escalope vom schwein’ which seemed an appropriate choice for dinner in a place like this.