Unsere Reporterin Alexandra Kosma macht sich mit ihrem Interrail-Ticket auf eine Reise durch Europa 🚝 Wer wissen möchte, wie sie von Köln nach Lyon und dann weiter in die Cinque Terre gekommen ist kann sich Folge 1 und 2 in der ARD Mediathek anschauen 👉1.ard.de/interrail-folge3-salzburg?yt=k
Vielen Dank! Damit können wir dienen. 😁 Klick dich gerne durch unsere bisherigen Zugreisen in der ARD Mediathek: 1.ard.de/interrail-folge3-salzburg?yt=d
Danke für die schöne Reportagereihe. Die Fahrt von Cinque Terre nach Salzburg wäre mir aber zu heftig gewesen. Zürich hätte sich doch für einen Zwischenstopp angeboten.
Das stimmt, Zürich und Umgebung hätte man bei dieser Gelegenheit auch erkunden können. 😊 Die Flexibilität und die vielen Möglichkeiten sind echt ein Highlight beim Interrail-Reisen!
ja, hätte in dem Fall glaub ich auch Zürich statt Salzburg genommen. Oder den direkten Nachtzug, der zwischen La Spezia und Salzburg fährt. Allgemein muss ich sagen, dass ich sehr gerne Interrail-Reisen mache, aber wenn ich nur 10 Tage Zeit habe, dann beschränke ich mich dabei auf nur eine Region (zum Beispiel nur Lyon + Cote d"Azur), statt zu viel Zeit im Zug zu verbringen.
@@ARDReisen war schon zwei mal dort, sehr schöne und kompakte Stadt, das stimmt! Beim nächsten Mal werde ich hoffentlich auch in dieses Restaurant gehen.. 😋
Frage: Warum nicht Milan, Verona, Brenner, Innsbruck, Salzburg... Wäre doch viel schneller als das Eck der Schweiz zu nehmen und dann noch durch das Arlberggebiet, bei dem der Zug nicht schnell fahren kann
When he was born, Salzburg was part of Prince-Archbishopric of Salzburg in the Holy Roman Empire (of the German Nation) - but that has nothing to do with Germany, as we know it today. Hence, your statement is absolutely incorrect.
@@lexmole as a nationality he described himself as German, because he was born on the German soil which is now Bayern, so yeah Mozart was German from modern Bayern in the South of Germany. Austria or Austrians didn't exist, it was all German Empire that contained several German Kingdoms.
Read this, I fucking dare you. Austria existed as a unified territory before Germany even dreamt of such a thing. But ignoring that, being German or Germanic had a very different meaning than that it has today. Back then the borders of countries, kingdoms and duchies were ever changing. People identified more with their ethnicity than their "country", since as little as one battle could change the latter. Germanic people called themselves German, no matter if they were from Austria or Germany, Slavic people called themselves Slavs, no matter if they were from Ukraine or Russia etc.., with no regard to today's geopolitical borders. The Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation and Germany share a similar name, but not because they were the same thing. Yes, The Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation laid the foundation for today's Germany. But it's the shared name that gets some crazed people thinking that today's Germany can take ownership of notable inventions or people that existed within the Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation, or even the countries itself. And that's not right. I'll explain using the Germany/Austria example. The Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation was called that because of the Latin word for the tribes this empire was founded upon: Germanus, Germani. Now if you Google a map of where Germanic tribes were at at the time, you'll notice that almost none of them were in modern day Austria. Modern day Austria was a bit more divided under the Romans, Celts, Gauls and some other more minor tribes. Germans however held no significant part of it. You should also be able to see that by pulling up one of the many maps to this topic that you find on Google. Modern day Austria was one of the many acquisitions of the Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation, similar to Slovenia, Czechia, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Luxembourg, Liechtenstein, Monaco and parts of Croatia, Poland, France, Italy and Belgium. The Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation has always been so much more than Germanic people. It has always included Latin people, Slavic people and their likes. And unless you would consider notable inventions or people of all those countries during the time "German" (which would make you some weirdass German nationalist), you have no business considering those of Austria German. Now, language evolves. If we were to take today's meaning of the words "German" and "Germanic", "German" is more tied to being a citizen of the country Germany and "Germanic" is used to conflate the ethnic and tribal backgrounds of people in over 15 countries. Which is okay. Germany deserves an adjective it can identify itself with and we Europeans don't need to be tying ropes out of 2000 year old tribal backgrounds to hang ourselves with anymore. But if that evolution in language is weaponized and used to demean people of their national identity, national independence or national pride, all to feed German grandeur, that's when it's a full stop. There is a reason historians and genealogists with any sort of foresight still differentiate Germanic, Slavic-Germanic, Celtic-Germanic, Greek-Germanic and so on. I have a history and geopolitics master and I'm Austrian. I have a lot of love and sympathy for our German neighbours. But if someone's national identity is entirely based on the fact that a geopolitical and faith based union of far over a thousand separate entities that was named after tribes, that lived on your modern countries area 2000 years ago, once influenced a big part of Europe and that the influence the languages those tribes once spoke can still be seen in Europe today, then I truly pity you. But with you in particular, I'm past the point of fucking pity. You cannot use your complexes, conflate them with the truth just to make you feel better, just to take away from other people and their sense of being. We in Europe started two World Wars over this. You'd think we've fucking learned, but here we are. I strongly suggest you think about it and you reconsider.
@@antheiheiant everything you said is untrue, Mozart was from modern Germany, Adolf Hitler as we all know was from Austria, in Mozarts time Austria didn't EXIST.
Unsere Reporterin Alexandra Kosma macht sich mit ihrem Interrail-Ticket auf eine Reise durch Europa 🚝 Wer wissen möchte, wie sie von Köln nach Lyon und dann weiter in die Cinque Terre gekommen ist kann sich Folge 1 und 2 in der ARD Mediathek anschauen 👉1.ard.de/interrail-folge3-salzburg?yt=k
Die Videos mit der kompetenen und äußerst sympathischen Alexandra Kosma mag ich sehr. Immer sehenswert.
Vielen lieben Dank! 🙌
Tolles Video, sympathisch präsentiert. Gern mehr von diesem Format. Zugreisen Europa entdecken. 😊
Vielen Dank! Damit können wir dienen. 😁 Klick dich gerne durch unsere bisherigen Zugreisen in der ARD Mediathek: 1.ard.de/interrail-folge3-salzburg?yt=d
Danke für die schöne Reportagereihe. Die Fahrt von Cinque Terre nach Salzburg wäre mir aber zu heftig gewesen. Zürich hätte sich doch für einen Zwischenstopp angeboten.
Das stimmt, Zürich und Umgebung hätte man bei dieser Gelegenheit auch erkunden können. 😊 Die Flexibilität und die vielen Möglichkeiten sind echt ein Highlight beim Interrail-Reisen!
ja, hätte in dem Fall glaub ich auch Zürich statt Salzburg genommen. Oder den direkten Nachtzug, der zwischen La Spezia und Salzburg fährt. Allgemein muss ich sagen, dass ich sehr gerne Interrail-Reisen mache, aber wenn ich nur 10 Tage Zeit habe, dann beschränke ich mich dabei auf nur eine Region (zum Beispiel nur Lyon + Cote d"Azur), statt zu viel Zeit im Zug zu verbringen.
Danke für die schönen Impressionen aus meiner Heimatstadt 🤗 Finde eure Serie toll 🎥 🚂 liebe Grüße
Das freut uns sehr, vielen Dank! ☺️
Ich habe bei dem Essen irgendwie Gänsehaut bekommen, ich glaube irgendwas stimmt mit mir nicht 😂😂 aber es sah so geil aus!
Bei solchen Menüs kann man schon mal Appetit bekommen. 😁 Käme ein Ausflug nach Salzburg für dich denn mal in Frage?
@@ARDReisen war schon zwei mal dort, sehr schöne und kompakte Stadt, das stimmt! Beim nächsten Mal werde ich hoffentlich auch in dieses Restaurant gehen.. 😋
80ger Reportagen Moves: Zur Eröffnung um die Kamera herumlaufen, zum Standortschnitt auf die Kamera greifen 😂
Frage: Warum nicht Milan, Verona, Brenner, Innsbruck, Salzburg... Wäre doch viel schneller als das Eck der Schweiz zu nehmen und dann noch durch das Arlberggebiet, bei dem der Zug nicht schnell fahren kann
Salzach nicht Salz Ach oder Salzaach 🥴
Es heißt nicht Salz-Ach sondern SALZACH !!!
Mozart was German, in his time Austria didn't exist, Salzburg belonged to Bayern which is now Germany of course.
When he was born, Salzburg was part of Prince-Archbishopric of Salzburg in the Holy Roman Empire (of the German Nation) - but that has nothing to do with Germany, as we know it today. Hence, your statement is absolutely incorrect.
@@lexmole as a nationality he described himself as German, because he was born on the German soil which is now Bayern, so yeah Mozart was German from modern Bayern in the South of Germany. Austria or Austrians didn't exist, it was all German Empire that contained several German Kingdoms.
Read this, I fucking dare you.
Austria existed as a unified territory before Germany even dreamt of such a thing.
But ignoring that, being German or Germanic had a very different meaning than that it has today. Back then the borders of countries, kingdoms and duchies were ever changing. People identified more with their ethnicity than their "country", since as little as one battle could change the latter. Germanic people called themselves German, no matter if they were from Austria or Germany, Slavic people called themselves Slavs, no matter if they were from Ukraine or Russia etc.., with no regard to today's geopolitical borders.
The Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation and Germany share a similar name, but not because they were the same thing. Yes, The Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation laid the foundation for today's Germany. But it's the shared name that gets some crazed people thinking that today's Germany can take ownership of notable inventions or people that existed within the Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation, or even the countries itself. And that's not right. I'll explain using the Germany/Austria example. The Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation was called that because of the Latin word for the tribes this empire was founded upon: Germanus, Germani. Now if you Google a map of where Germanic tribes were at at the time, you'll notice that almost none of them were in modern day Austria. Modern day Austria was a bit more divided under the Romans, Celts, Gauls and some other more minor tribes. Germans however held no significant part of it. You should also be able to see that by pulling up one of the many maps to this topic that you find on Google. Modern day Austria was one of the many acquisitions of the Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation, similar to Slovenia, Czechia, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Luxembourg, Liechtenstein, Monaco and parts of Croatia, Poland, France, Italy and Belgium. The Holy Roman Empire Of The German Nation has always been so much more than Germanic people. It has always included Latin people, Slavic people and their likes. And unless you would consider notable inventions or people of all those countries during the time "German" (which would make you some weirdass German nationalist), you have no business considering those of Austria German.
Now, language evolves. If we were to take today's meaning of the words "German" and "Germanic", "German" is more tied to being a citizen of the country Germany and "Germanic" is used to conflate the ethnic and tribal backgrounds of people in over 15 countries. Which is okay. Germany deserves an adjective it can identify itself with and we Europeans don't need to be tying ropes out of 2000 year old tribal backgrounds to hang ourselves with anymore. But if that evolution in language is weaponized and used to demean people of their national identity, national independence or national pride, all to feed German grandeur, that's when it's a full stop. There is a reason historians and genealogists with any sort of foresight still differentiate Germanic, Slavic-Germanic, Celtic-Germanic, Greek-Germanic and so on.
I have a history and geopolitics master and I'm Austrian. I have a lot of love and sympathy for our German neighbours. But if someone's national identity is entirely based on the fact that a geopolitical and faith based union of far over a thousand separate entities that was named after tribes, that lived on your modern countries area 2000 years ago, once influenced a big part of Europe and that the influence the languages those tribes once spoke can still be seen in Europe today, then I truly pity you. But with you in particular, I'm past the point of fucking pity. You cannot use your complexes, conflate them with the truth just to make you feel better, just to take away from other people and their sense of being. We in Europe started two World Wars over this. You'd think we've fucking learned, but here we are. I strongly suggest you think about it and you reconsider.
@@antheiheiant everything you said is untrue, Mozart was from modern Germany, Adolf Hitler as we all know was from Austria, in Mozarts time Austria didn't EXIST.
Are you dumb on a purpose?
🫶