Echternach tourism poster - Echternach - Luxembourg
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Becktracker
N 49° 48.773 E 006° 25.255
32U E 314458 N 5521017
Colourful advertising poster for the city of Echternach in Luxembourg from the 1950's
Waymark Code: WM16AXX
Location: Luxembourg
Date Posted: 06/17/2022
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member ScroogieII
Views: 1

From (visit link)

If you are into travel posters and vivid colors this poster is true eye candy! The poster was made to encourage people to visit the town of Echternach in Luxembourg. Echternach is said to be the oldest town in Luxembourg founded about 1300 years ago. As seen on the poster the little town is a true historical gem with many beautiful buildings, churches and even a medieval city wall. The poster has been designed by Gillan and it is made from the 1950's.

From (visit link)

The town grew around the Abbey of Echternach, which was founded in 698 by St Willibrord, an English monk from Ripon, Northumbria (in present-day North Yorkshire, England), who became the first bishop of Utrecht and worked to Christianize the Frisians. As bishop, he was the Echternach monastery's abbot until his death in 739. It is in his honour that the notable Dancing procession of Echternach takes place annually on Whit Tuesday.

The river Sauer that flows past the town now forms the border between Luxembourg and Germany; in the later Roman Empire and under the Merovingians by contrast, the Sauer did not form a border or march in this area. The Roman villa at Echternach (traces of which were rediscovered in 1975) was reputed to be the largest north of the Alps. Echternach was later part of the Electorate of Trier (present-day Germany) and was presented to Willibrord by Irmina (Irmine), daughter of Dagobert II, king of the Franks. Other parts of the Merovingians' Roman inheritance were presented to the Abbey by king of the Franks Pepin the Short.

Echternach continued to have royal patronage from the house of Charlemagne. Though the monks were displaced by the canons of the bishop of Trier between 859 and 971, and although Willibrord's buildings burned down in 1017, the Romanesque basilica, with its symmetrical towers, to this day houses Willibrord's tomb in its crypt. The abbey's library and scriptorium had a European reputation. As it flourished, the town of Echternach grew around the abbey's outer walls and was granted a city charter in 1236. The abbey was rebuilt in a handsome Baroque style in 1737. In 1794 the church was sacked and the abbey used as a porcelain factory. In 1797, in the wake of the French Revolution, the monks were dispersed and the abbey's contents and its famous library were auctioned off. Some of the library's early manuscripts, such as the famous Echternach Gospels, are now in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris. In the 19th century, a porcelain factory was established in the abbey and the town declined, until the advent of the railroad brought renewed life and an influx of tourists.

During the concluding months of World War II in Europe, on December 16, 1944, Echternach served as the southernmost point on the battlefront for the attempt of the German Wehrmacht forces attacking the Allies to retake Antwerp, during the Battle of the Bulge. The town was badly damaged in World War II but was thoroughly restored.
Name of publication (required):
Echternach Grand Duche de Luxembourg


Date of Publication (required):
1950's


Does the ad identify the location of the company?: yes

Web URL to additional proof of location or additional information.: Not listed

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Becktracker visited Echternach tourism poster - Echternach - Luxembourg 10/13/2010 Becktracker visited it