We were there several times and even getting to the entrance is quite a challenging walk. Nothing there makes sense. The area is rather remote even today so think some 130 years ago. A different item I came across several times>> Did Ludwig 2 even exist some stories indicate he was really a person from a fairytale. His Alleged father was related to the "finishing"of that other epic building the Kölner Dom. It was told his father Maximillian after a building stop of some 600 years at last finished the construction.In Munich there are several Tartarian "Royal"buildings and where Ludwig normally lived was Schlosz Linderhof nearby in the Bavarian Alps. Then there was the Versaiile replica at Chiemsee, complete with Mirrorhall.
@MrMoparbob4983 жыл бұрын
Frank Kleij Very cool -& I can't imagine what it would be like to see in person, I would love to, anyhow I believe all the Great Fires, World Wars, catastrophic events.. Natural -&- Man made, these created events killed many birds with one stone.. specific groups of people were chosen, wealth increased in certain people, power struggles, property owners etc. there was something very special & extremely complex & every community, city was connected, from pictures, maps, descriptions from books - it was amazing, that doesn'tt even begin to describe it.
@WorthyistheLambRev13 жыл бұрын
No because it was from the millennial reign of Christ, like the other old world buildings they mostly destroyed. We are in the short season Satan was loosed again to deceive! Watch the Timeline Deception, Conspiracy R Us, Golden Age Passed,, and Question the Narrative the Short Season and Jesus seen coming with the clouds?
@kimtruthseeker50003 жыл бұрын
@@WorthyistheLambRev1 I'm just learning about this...and, I'm still in awe...but it truly resonates TRUTH❗👍💯👍
@WorthyistheLambRev13 жыл бұрын
@@kimtruthseeker5000 yes it does!
@davidmeinertdecrepidude3 жыл бұрын
I cringed every time he slaughtered the pronunciation... Visited there when I was a kid. the thing that stuck was that he was "Mad King Ludwig", and this wonderful fantasy castle was the product of a very unbalanced mind. The psychedelia of the 19th Century. (Edit) Also that this was the inspiration for Disneyland's Castle. 🎄
@andreasspreitzer76753 жыл бұрын
Greetings from Bavaria! He is known as the Fairytale King who was not only building Neuschwanstein but many other buildings in the region! As you said, the story goes that he run out of money....for me he is just a cover up (Fairytale King) to explain the "out of order" buildings all over the place!
@ireen19623 жыл бұрын
Yep. This "king" just found ! this castle 😊
@kevintucker33543 жыл бұрын
That makes sense!
@jrgmty76853 жыл бұрын
So he is the Pachacutec of Germany haha. Pachacutec supposedly built everything in Peru. The difference is he stopped building because 100 Spaniards on horses scared a powerful emperor to death. wow what a bunch of lousy children stories.
@eggshen273 жыл бұрын
The FreeMason parasites in your local area hide the true history.
@lewiscooper92323 жыл бұрын
@@jrgmty7685 I bet every country has its own! Anyone know any others? Corradini for all sculptures
@joanistock16723 жыл бұрын
I visited this castle in 1974 or 75. It was amazing. It stood high up on the hill gleaming in the sun. The interior was over the top incredible. Gold everywhere. An experience I treasure.
@ryanclark39573 жыл бұрын
It's to the point that I get excited when I get a notification of a new video of yours. Thanks for all the time you spend doing this. Bravo good sir!
@almacharles87463 жыл бұрын
I visited this castle when I was 12 years old in 1975. It felt to me like a very old castle. It is the castle where the film Chitty Chitty bang bang was filmed. The main thing I remember is the castle kitchens and riding in a horse and carriage through the snow.
@kimtruthseeker50003 жыл бұрын
Hi... Did you note if there were Bathrooms built❓😊
@JustPlainFolks3 жыл бұрын
Hohenschwangau Is where his Dad built a castle very nearby the cast you are covering. As a child he was familiar with the area and want to top his fathers structure, his father having died when he was 18. A more interesting structure is actually also relatively nearby. Linderhof is the most important structure of the 3 in my opinion. The water features alone suggest ancient high technology. He also built his own private Grotto (Cave) there for putting on operas incl. Wagner (normally pronounced with a V as in "Vagner" by the way). He clearly was infatuated with Wagner and since it was well known he was not heterosexual, many additional stories help explain his strange behaviors. For example none of the staff at his home in Linderhof were allowed to be seen by him. His quarters were surrounded by hiding places where staff would wait until he was not present. The main dining hall had a massive elevator for the dinning table to remove the table before and after meals to be set up and cleared outside his view. It was all quite nuts but most believe it was simply to protect his privacy and companions from scandal. If you ever go there this is a must see and all 3 castles/properties can be seen in a long day. Additionally just around the mountain is Oberammergau (sp?) In Southern Germany where the Gingerbread houses and Bavarian history are all preserved. All of these sites are well worth your time and visit. We stayed in that town for 3 days and then saw the other sites as well. It is also close to Munich for Oktoberfest which happens ironically in September (at least it did in 2007).
@NickyLindolls3 жыл бұрын
Oh wow I totally forgot about this aspect of the kings history. It certainly would explain a lot. Yes October fest is in the last two weeks of September and more recently the first week of October. Used to be two weeks long but now I think it’s longer.
@lovealways26093 жыл бұрын
Is this the same Vagner/Vaugner/Wagner ~ the classic composer whom A. Hitler also idolized?.. *not Wagner's fault who liked him.
@JustPlainFolks3 жыл бұрын
@pyropulse Once you visit sites in person, you understand the difference between things achievable in an era, and things that are not. The polygonal stone work in Peru and the surrounding areas? Those were not remotely possible in those eras. The stone work throughout Egypt? Not possible. For these 19th century castles, they were built when they claim. No magic fairy dust needed. They are modern buildings and there were people alive to see it done on the record. There are plenty of contemporary buildings using the same modern technology as well. Get out and travel the world and see for yourself. Balbec and similar structures in Lebanon likely had to be built in a time before records of any kind were kept. All attempts at dating those simply show at x thousands of years ago they were already there. Places like the modern castle above have all sorts of foundational wood that can be tested. But modern media at the time covered the expenses of building it while it happened. I believe he was murdered because of it. He broke the bank doing it further proving those older structures happened likely pre cataclysm, most of which were widely decimated. Seeing the destruction of such enormous structures with burn marks proves the cataclysm and that nothing survived that to tell the tale first hand. So it is humorous to have some random guy rage on me when he has no first hand clue about any of it.
@MrJasonshores3643 жыл бұрын
@pyropulse it is well documented about his proclivities, all you have to do is read.
@raypratt36113 жыл бұрын
@@JustPlainFolks yes but WTF is it built on,thats what jarid is saying,there is an older building UN-DER-NEATHE!?!?and theres only records and pics of ADD ONS not the place from foundation on up,so NO it is not proof!!
@AstarteXVI3 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid,6-7, my parents bought for me a puzzle of thousands of pieces, completely randomly. It was this castle, so I looked at it for hours and I "solved" it many times. It resonated with me, just how beautiful it is. After seeing all this research on the old world, I suppose universe did not bring this to me randomly.
@kevintucker33543 жыл бұрын
I like your thumbnail pic. Very wise man whom I have learned much from! Or least reminded of much wisdom
@AstarteXVI3 жыл бұрын
@@kevintucker3354 Yes it's true. A great mind.
@thinkoflovelight3 жыл бұрын
I don’t believe in coincidence
@joanistock16723 жыл бұрын
I bought a similar, maybe same, puzzle for my grandmother after visiting the castle. We worked it many times together.
@kimtruthseeker50003 жыл бұрын
@@AstarteXVI Is that Manley Hall❓ the 33rd degree Freemason❓
@kateemma-3 жыл бұрын
Just as a bit of extra information, this castle, because it is so amazing and fairytale like appearance, has been used in many films and programmes. Two of the most famous films, in which this castle was given a cameo role was The Great Escape, which sees the characters played by James Garner and Donald Pleasance fly past it in a plane as they escape and then in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang the car also does a similar fly past, both giving the audience a great view of the entire magnificent structure, truly a fairytale castle, with a fairytale story.
@gailrobinson26883 жыл бұрын
I went there in the late 60s on a group tour. It was beyond breathtaking...this castle was not built by the locals ! It was Tartarian. Nobody in that village or at that time could ever have built such an amazing castle. He just took it and claimed it just like he did with the Bavarian money, with the exception of the Wagner paintings ! I hope one day we will find out the real story of this glorious monument to the real builders.
@marittarucker12933 жыл бұрын
I was born in Koblenz, Germany. To my good fortune, Koblenz is at the point where the Rhein and Mosel rivers meet. Along the sides of the Rhein, the are many, many castels. As a child, my granparents took me on boat- rides and I could see all these castles up on the tops of the mountains, on both sides of the river. Often we would disembark and visit these castles. There were tours of the insides. IT WAS WONDERFUL!!. Sometimes we would ride up to the castels on donkeys. I feel extremely fortunate to have these wonderful extersions. America has nothing like that...it is a young country. How lucky can a little girl get? I'm 72 now and have been in America since I was a 8. But my memories are vivid. I could never forget these wonderful memories, and sometimes visit these castles in my dreams. Wonderful, wonderful memories. Also, there are videos of these castles on line, and I sometimes pull these up. Also there are videos about Koblenz, which was built by the Romans, way back. Live vicarariously and take a look on line...marittarucker@gmail.com
@JayGell3 жыл бұрын
I have been in this one, It was way back in '76/'79. The public tour was great, the resident tour was incredible. Great Job!
@Lee.Higginbotham3 жыл бұрын
I went there a few times during the 1980's. Stationed in Bavaria in the US Army. Once I climbed a hill trying to get the great picture on the post cards looking down. Didn't work out. It started snowing since it was December but I saw some cool looking goats. They kept looking down at me and kept climbing higher as I climbed higher. The inside had unfinished sections. In the summertime I remember seeing hanggliders. That would probably be a great way to get aerial pictures. I went to Ludwigs Linderhof and Herrenchiemsee. Linderhof is also spectacular especially when the fountain goes off. Also went to Lake Starnberg where Ludwig either drowned or was murdered. There is a cross there. All 3 must make good revenue for Bavaria. Always lots of tourists. Bavaria is a great place to visit. Munich, Garmisch, Berchestgarten, the Alps etc... plus the things Ludwig had built.
@edthesillybrain3 жыл бұрын
Hearing more confidence in your speech. Nicely done sir. Nicely done. Not an easy thing to overcome, be it in person, or putting your voice on the net. Public speaking’s of a sort, are intense. You’ve certainly become reinforced, and I’m happy for you.
@chasiu753 жыл бұрын
Yes less robotic now. The first video I saw from him I thought it was a fake computer generated voice. 😄
@keding91593 жыл бұрын
Keep researching. The castle is said to have advanced, never before used, heating and cooling.
@LifeLuvWe3 жыл бұрын
Agree..... the man, Richard Wagner looks like John Wayne.. this castle has a story. Remodle more like it. Great vid, thank you.
@TLeiph3 жыл бұрын
OK so if you guys watch The reveal report or listen to the co host Jessie Czebotar, she goes in depth how there are underground systems below this castle(and she tells about many places in the world that have these tunnels or D.U.M. Bases). She says that this castle is one of the buildings used for satanic rituals that she personally had to endure as a child brought up in the satanic cult. She is out of the cult now and she is speaking out! Very interesting.
@ireen19623 жыл бұрын
Wow interesting 😊
@johnbarr66163 жыл бұрын
Jessie is a fantastic and reliable source as well a believer in Christ. Note, Nuescbhwanstein’s replica is located in the US. Disney’s Magik kingdom castle in Florida. Also many caverns and tunnels below the entire facility.
@kimtruthseeker50003 жыл бұрын
@@johnbarr6616 Yes I've read the very same info in several sources❗ I've read where there is more infrastructure below the Earths Surface...than on the surface❗👍 Complete cities and citadels...complete with a Sun simulators to illuminate. The movie MIB...is closer to Truth than most would ever think❗💯👍💯
@faerieSAALE3 жыл бұрын
My family has a lineage that dates back to the "Golden Valley" and Castle Kyffhauser. They were employees of and stewards of the KING where they were coach teamsters and horse breeders. While NOT part of the royal family or any connection of it - they were highly regarded and thus lived very well. That castle was also built upon ancient ruins of other castles on top of the Harz Mountian. Today, the castle is mostly gone save various parts and the deepest freshwater well known to exist from medieval times. We have our full family history documented going back to the mid -1400s in Prussia.
@machinehead69613 жыл бұрын
Nice to see those colorized shots and old views of foundation, as seen depicted in postcards as a Disney type case glowing white. To see the timbers and such,good work.
@dfrasu3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. I recently purchased a Märklin train set. Markland is 160 year old toy maker in Germany. It is 1/ 200 a scale. The train included in the set was his personal train.This castle is the model in it. It is very precise. They only manufactured so many. It got me into the history of this place and the owner. The pictures are great. Well done. Thanks!
@geoffreybuck85213 жыл бұрын
Great history of the castle. The castle was built for people our size. Thanks for another interesting video.
@forslavjo2 жыл бұрын
I was lucky enough to visit Neuschwannstein when I was in Germany around 2008. It is absolutely gorgeous. We were toured around, there were many areas roped off. I'd of loved to wonder around that castle without a guide for a while, but there were expensive things everywhere, so maybe thats why I couldn't. Its beautiful, mind blowing, and way out there in they country. We drove quite a ways I remember. I'd love to go back with the questions I now have.
@chasiu753 жыл бұрын
Is the Biltmore Estate Castle in Asheville, NC more ancient than they claim?
@KKP-3 жыл бұрын
I would like to know this too. That castle is amazing and also said to be haunted. Weird things definitely happen there
@annie-taffinoz57493 жыл бұрын
I was lucky enough to have visited this beautiful tartartian castle back in the 90's, it was quite the hike to get up to it but well worth it. There was a gold room & it is exactly that- everything in that room was gold. The 'official narrative' they gave at that time was that king Ludwig drowned in a lake nearby, sounded completely ridiculous to me.
@michiganporter3 жыл бұрын
This is awesome! Unbelievable...literally. Our rulers all have Bavaria in their ancestors it seems....
@kriscubero6778 Жыл бұрын
Wait, wasn‘t Bavaria where Illuminati was founded?
@annarozell76712 жыл бұрын
I lived in Germany for 3 years. I visited the castle and hiked in the Alps around it. The new castle had running water in the kitchen and a large vat that keep live fish in it. It was never lived in so they said. It was not completely finished but almost complete. It is truly impressive! I had been in a lots of castles and cathedrals. It all makes u think about what really is known . This info was in the literature give to me at the time of visit.
@lizmcnay99473 жыл бұрын
Neuschwanstein - New Swan stone castle was pathetic, dank, underdeveloped, unfinished, and largely undecorated when I spent the day there. His Father's castle is basically across the street. It's not impressive either. Ludwig didn't manage to get a functional kitchen built. Food was prepared at his Father's castle the brought to him. The maids kept quitting. I don't blame them. The spindly towers on either side of the Swan's body house the worst sets of stairs I've ever seen, or heard of. Several people have fallen down them, there are recorded deaths. They are without railings, slippery stone, far too narrow at the inside portion of the spiral and ungainly and hard to use on the wider edge of the spiral. They were slick because there's no heating system. It was actually warmer outside than inside the castle. Yes, some of it was pretty, but shortcuts we're definitely visible. A lot of it was empty because the portions Ludwig had managed to finish were gutted by him to pay for more improvements. There was a stove that couldn't have come up the horrible stairs that nobody knew how to operate, it was very pretty, and showed no signs of having used wood, coal, or oil, but allegedly was intended to heat the upper Chambers. It was allegedly Walt Disney's inspiration for the castles at both Walt Disney Land & World amusement parks. I doubt Walt would have used it as an inspiration if he had seen just how basic, concrete, and plain it was throughout a lot of the interior. The lower stable area is worth investigating, that was unbelievably strange. The doorways were built for someone in the 9-12 foot tall range, and the stable doors were massive. None of it made any sense at all. They were excavating the bottom parts, the middle parts were filled in by donations after it was nearly entirely gutted to pay Ludwig's debts, the top portions were always empty. I don't think anyone could live there, not even for theatrical effect. The bottom parts were clearly intended for *HUGE* people, the servants must have been dwarves, or at least very small. The windows leaked. There was a stiff icy wind pushing through the whole place. We were there in November, but it really shouldn't have been so miserably cold inside the castle. We had seen the old red brick castle at Rotenberg which means red city beforehand. Trust & believe that Rotenberg is worth several hours of video. The Castle of Rotenberg now houses a military museum. It is worth months of research because Rotenberg is one of the only castles of its advanced age anywhere in the world. Rotenberg is the oldest standing castle in Germany. The red bricks that make up nearly everything in Rotenberg feel incredibly different than any other bricks I've ever touched. They also smell odd, kind of like rust, and a bit like blood. It's a very strange place. The energy there was really weird, we all got dizzy, both my children vomited. We felt like we'd been on cheap carnival rides all day after Rotenberg. I did like Germany. I do have German family. I came away from that vacation wondering how anyone fell for the whole "Fatherland" propaganda. I know parts of it had been bombed into craters, but the parts that were untouched were not the sort of thing I'd really brag about except for Rotenberg. I can answer questions, if you have any, but I think I made clear that you need to look at the stables and the weird cavernous storage at the base of Neuschwanstein, and that Rotenberg largely because of the red bricks is worth multiple episodes on your channel. Thanks for the episode. I did enjoy it.
@kimtruthseeker50003 жыл бұрын
Hi... Question please... We're there any Bathrooms with Toilets❓Or any plumbing ❓ Thanks 😊
@lizmcnay99473 жыл бұрын
@@kimtruthseeker5000 not that I recall. There were chamber pots, and a very fancy chair that had a chamber pot in it.
@lizmcnay99473 жыл бұрын
@@kimtruthseeker5000 not that I recall. There were chamber pots, and a very fancy chair that had a chamber pot in it. There were wash basins built into dressers. Part of why his servants HATED him was that they had to carry water up and down the worst staircase I've ever seen.
@kimtruthseeker50003 жыл бұрын
@@lizmcnay9947 So that does convey no internal Plumbing❗👍 Any Sinks with running water❓ Thank you 😊
@lizmcnay99473 жыл бұрын
@@kimtruthseeker5000 there were water sources out in the stables. Probably the biggest use of the Castle was as a warehouse for stolen artwork during WW2. Both it, and the Castle at Heidelberg were tightly packed with paintings, antiques, clocks, and boxes of jewelry, cash, and gold.
@travisinsiam3 жыл бұрын
A few years ago I visited Pena Palace in Sintra Portugal. Very similar set up to me. A Castle built upon an older base. Ferdinand II is said to have built it on an old monastery that was ruined by lightning and then an earthquake. Mostly constructed between 1842 and 1854, story gets very fishy from there on wikiP. Hey I love you work, thanks for keeping it real.
@timparlier19203 жыл бұрын
I went there in the 90s. It’s really like being in a fairytale land. Don’t think we’re gonna see something like this built in our lifetime
@a.b.40522 жыл бұрын
Nothing like this has been built in over 200 years and nor will it occur again for another 200 at least.
@bobbyr.75783 жыл бұрын
here in Quebec we built in ONE YEAR ,: The Chateau Frontenac , Opened in 1893, the Châteauesque-styled building has 18 floors; its 79.9-metre (262-foot) height is augmented by the 54 m (177 ft) elevation it sits at
@rumirill3 жыл бұрын
I was there briefly in 1974, impressive as it doubtless is, personally took little note, apart from my presence, was more into the beer than Arch.how I have changed in 48 years! Bravo
@Oberbaumbruecke3 жыл бұрын
I think they made him the mad king. People in this time had access to poison etc. There is another strange story with Kaspar Hauser who wasn't allowed to rule either.
@Oberbaumbruecke3 жыл бұрын
PS: The minaret structures don't look very "German" to me. 😉 I am from Berlin.
@Machinebudzz2 жыл бұрын
Thanks, learned alot. My maternal side came from Bavaria. Been twice. Most beautiful part of the World to me. With many mysteries.
@KathyMaKB2 жыл бұрын
From the USA. Thank you for sharing this beautiful castle with us. I have loved it since the first time I saw it. I've wondered what it looked like inside. Maybe you can do an even more in-depth video in the future. Again, thank you.
@cal70633 жыл бұрын
This one honestly sounds so crazy it has to be true...only truth could be that farcical...love the work bro keep em coming 💪
@cal70633 жыл бұрын
Wealthy eccentric Bavarian royalty, patron of arts, friends with composers and playrights wants to build a whimsical castle, arrested to then be found dead under mysterious circumstances .....Jeffrey Epstein of his time
@diplomatnj97333 жыл бұрын
Great video 👍👍👍👍🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
@skullasylum333 жыл бұрын
good one today 😁. hope you have a great friday jarid!!
@carolinepekle Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this great share. Its happen that my son is a huge fan from this castle and King Ludwig II. We visited the castle last year and because of its fame and most likely other reasons... the visit is like a a marathon, you cannot stay still in a room, you always have to move and many rooms cannot be visited. Part of the history was that Ludwig II was not appreciated by the politics of time, and thus because he was an art lover, from Wagner to architecture and litterature, Ludwig II wanted to "bring back" to Bavaria a certain glory of culture that has fallen away for the "obsession for politics". And while history said that he has killed himself, it is most likely that he have been murdered... The other interesting thing is that through my son fascination we came to find a comic book from French author Alex Alice, "le chateau des étoiles", that starts the story in this castle: Neuschwanstein, and that it is about creation of flying machines that function with Ether.... quite mind blowing, but then the story shift to something more appropriate for the audience I guess, but overall I am sure that AA knows more than he is letting us know!
@johnnyvadas3 жыл бұрын
You are doing terrific work first of all and what made me jump out of my chair is at 13:18 on the timeline that shows a graph showing Tartaria 1961, Profile Cassette G? Could you tell me more about this Graph? I belong to several groups that study Tartary, Tartaria , Tartarus etc. Thanks, Big Fan!. John 432 Vadas
@tomolliver3 жыл бұрын
I was also wondering what this was
@christinebeames23113 жыл бұрын
Hi John I. 77 and remember tartaric bring mentioned in school briefly , then , never heard of it again till researching on youtube
@lindaegli56573 жыл бұрын
Thank you 😌
@desertsunman58802 жыл бұрын
A magical place, indeed - thank you for the memories. Stolen glimpses of the interiors, can be seen in the film: 'Something for Everyone' with Michael York & Angela Lansbury, 1969 - a storied Film representative of Castle Nue & a World that lost it's nerve ... 'Poverty, poverty, poverty; what an improbable end to it all ...' I fell in love that very same year ...
@jes0lis3 жыл бұрын
Linderhof Palace, was Ludwigs primary home in Ettal Germamy and is where the 1st photos shown here are from. All in gold leaf . ( New-swash- stien) my best break down of pronunciation) castle was never completed and still only given a short inner tour. Before ending to a tunnel , u see door ways 3 levels up an empty large portion is just a void. Other areas are just not avail fir viewing. The residential palace is on a large estate and i believe had the 1st known retractable section of floor in bedroom to lower into kitchen so he didnt have to see the staff. 3 denominational wood carvings in ceiling like an angel with wings stepping out from ceiling and the leg of angel and 1 arm being in wood reaching thru as if coming thru into the physical world.
@joelhurley26783 жыл бұрын
Hey Jarid, the Germans pronounce Wagner's name as Vagner. He is remembered for The Flying Dutchman music, which was used in Apocalypse Now in 1979. It was about Flying Ships .Great Video!
@pamelacoles46343 жыл бұрын
Jarod, your pronunciation is really off putting!
@rosewright46053 жыл бұрын
Visited this castle while in Germany in the mid 90's. I'd love to re-visit with 'a new set of eyes'.
@alicehardy90942 жыл бұрын
What an amazing story! I have no idea if this narrative can be trusted, but it surely makes an incredible story! Thanks for posting.
@jolicska2 жыл бұрын
Your scepticism of the comstruction circumstances is well founded. I belive this castle among with others were not built by human hands but another civilisation. Look at the castle Frontenac for example they say that enormus castle was built in one year in the late 1800's too. No way it is physically possible. Same goes for Neuschwanstein
@Daniel-415-Ponce3 жыл бұрын
I find it strange and sinister that not only the king but also the man who had been sent to remove him from the castle were both found dead together. Was there any official explanation ever given to account for how the two deaths had come about?
@NickyLindolls3 жыл бұрын
They say it’s a mystery but also say it could have been a murder suicide, being that the king killed himself (drowned) after murdering the official. It’s also speculated that the official killed the king and then drowned himself accidentally. On the tour I was on way back in the 90’s they told us that the king was considered crazy and was a figurehead only. He had no access to money other than a government stipend. It’s a truly sad story. That place is epically magical. Such wonder and reverence in that place.
@a-testforthefuture18173 жыл бұрын
Your work speaks for itself!!! Awesome stuff❤ Of course Disneyland is a representation of Bavaria, not by mistake. But anyways the funny thing is that the original foundation of this castle is a portal. There is a special planetary alignment that takes place and it has to do with the Golden Satya Yuga cycle... As a matter of fact all temples/castles/churches/government buildings are on geographical portals that and have been capped for Electromagnetic Spiritual Energy reasons ...lol but thats for another time! The Tetraploid King wore a Gold Crown with high resonating frequency crystals because he was receiving the self healing frequencies 528HZ repairs DNA and 432HZ which is mossarts and Beethoven's Divine frequency... The whole earth is a circuit with pressure points and much more... for example a castle/building is energy , look at it as a capacitor and/or a resistor for earthly powers built right in the quantum elements of space and time that your body is occupying at this present moment which is all electrical - another example is to rub your feet on the carpet, static electricity right? Or have a heart attack , they will rush you to the hospital and shock you.Right? So when you use your heart , thats the field that speaks directly to the matrix that recognizes the real you , When we dug with satellites from space and broke through the clovis layers on earth the findings we out of this World! but a good place to start to innerstand a little deeper is to KZbin Circuit board earth.... SPIRAL OUT@@@@@@@@@@@@@UR CHOICE kzbin.info/www/bejne/ZpurpKRpa8SBirc
@barbibutton96192 жыл бұрын
Michelle Gibson also speaks of the key lines, portals, circuit board etc of earth. She's on YT.
@mullman2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been there several times and it doesn’t feel old at all but like the supposed time frame by a crazy king. Hohensalzburg Fortress in Salzburg IS old. Research Chartres cathedral southwest of Paris - most fascinating place I’ve ever visited.
@KerriEverlasting2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely loved this, would love more castle histories!! 🏰 💖
@leilihana29913 жыл бұрын
These castles look otherworldly. The interiors are so over the top; they seem almost crazy. My bet is that thus is the work of some past/lost civilization that knew how to mass produce, by machines, these interiors in separate pieces and assemble them somewhat Lego style. Makes me wonder if a lot of the interior pieces in other buildings and castles throughout the realm weren't "harvested" by the finders and thieves for the purposes of reselling them for good profit. The materials used may have been of high quality and durable. The precision and sheer quantity of the intricate details of the adornments hint at a past civilization that was very prosperous and technologically advanced. I hope they weren't satanic. Perhaps it was fashionable to have the level of intricate adornments they had. Crazy, huh?!
@WorthyistheLambRev13 жыл бұрын
No. It was a kingdom building from the millennial reign of Christ, like many the controllers destroyed! I don't know where my comment went, but watch the Timeline Deception, and Conspiracy R Us, and Question the Narrative the Short Season.
@Violet-qf8dr3 жыл бұрын
It could be from the Millennial Reign, but it could also have been built by the Nephilim, who are also mentioned in the Bible. The Nephilim were giants, which would explain how so much of the ancient construction seem to be built for much larger beings.
@WorthyistheLambRev13 жыл бұрын
@@Violet-qf8dr no. That was the pyramids and things. Not a beautiful kingdom all over the world, with states and art of Jesus and the Saints, some of it still here! And why would the elite try to destroy it all! That's just a distraction. The new testament and Jesus or history never mentions them. I understand the confusion.
@a.b.40522 жыл бұрын
@@WorthyistheLambRev1 So you are theorizing this 1000 year reign has passed and we are now moving into darkness? Sounds plausible.
@HerrPiniculus3 жыл бұрын
I looked at the model for Neuschwanstein with slowMosel. Admittedly there are several castles and palaces that the architects used as their orientation, but Eltz Castle in a side valley of the Moselle has been so naturally and harmoniously integrated into the landscape. For me it is the really romantic castle and over 800 years old. ;-)
@TALL1FU493 жыл бұрын
many years ago my mom took me there. we took the carriage up to the top and then took the tour. i even got to see alot more then what people are shown now. i even got to see the kitchen and also got to climb into one of the towers. also the castle that sits below this one was owned by the same king. neuschwanstein is now owned by the german government.where you get your info is mostly wrong. It was never destoryed. it was only added onto it. my parents grew up in germany. my dad was from ludinghausen. the only german town with two castles from two different kings. and my mom was from ulm. thats where she was born. ulm is home to the munster. the tallest church in the world. my mom help german and gi soldiers during the war.
@leilihana29913 жыл бұрын
Sorry, Jarid; I meant to tell you you're doing great work! I really enjoy your videos! Thanks for sharing 👍 💯🙏
@annehat48333 жыл бұрын
Thank you for always thinking outside the box..love it !
@oldirtyronin3 жыл бұрын
Great channel dude
@FreeSpear3 жыл бұрын
The narrative is so absurd the sign might as well be... "Built by King Beavis in 1989 in dedication to good friend Bishop Butt-Head"
@urabundant3 жыл бұрын
This was incredible!!!!👏👏👏👏👏👏
@davidcurry92923 жыл бұрын
It’s nice that they weighed all the supplies and materials and broke it down by time frame and type of materials?
@Gwaplord39573 жыл бұрын
They refurbished the old castle that stood in that area, that’s why a set designer was the head of the building.
@diewunderbaren26563 жыл бұрын
No heater in there?
@nillehessy3 жыл бұрын
one of my brothers spent the night once here he just went along with the last tour group of the day and hid behind a curtain and waited ´till everybody was gone yeh he´s funny like that he said it was pretty cool walking around there at night alone but he had a restless sleep in one of the huge beds and in the morning he just joined the first tour group of the castle and walked out of there with them and that was it
@88Shinto3 жыл бұрын
Isn't the Disney castle modelled after Neuschwanstein?
@mrmcg92883 жыл бұрын
Yes
@kimlarso3 жыл бұрын
Fairytale King it is, then!
@timothydillow31603 жыл бұрын
That glorious edifice has been there for a thousand years.
@miekevangeffen20833 жыл бұрын
I’ve been there, it is mind-blowing. The father of him had a castle nearby and they must have had so much money. (Hitler also loved Wagner’s music, I don’t, very bombastic) Also there is a castle near a big lake and woods where they could hunt, in possession of this family. They say that Frans was depressive I think he also was gay, so lots of money is not a cure for happiness..
@lambros19563 жыл бұрын
I travelled by train along the Rhine in the seventies and saw some amazing buildings. Very similar to the one in the video. I`m really enjoying your work. Thank`s for sharing
@JamesPercival1233 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this . I especially noticed the Falkor Dragon statue @ 13 :03. Almost identical to Falcor in the movie, The Neverending Story! Interesting .
@micheleploeser77202 жыл бұрын
I visited the castle in 1988. A wonderful place
@mikaso3 жыл бұрын
Very well researched and presented. Thank you so much for sharing!
@gregjohnston28273 жыл бұрын
😎 thanks Jarid
@American_Made3 жыл бұрын
This castle is sitting on what was likely a small rocky peak, it was chosen as there would be a lot of stone that could be quarried and used. Any architect that builds a new building knows the foundations are the key to the longevity of any building and would want to strip anything that sat here down to a really stable bedrock base from which to build from. There would be several reasons. While this wasn't from a period of sieges, in the dark ages a castle would be built in such a place so as to give it a foundation that would be very difficult to undermine. This was a common tactic to collapse a wall, simply dig under it and it will fall. Another reason for the rocky base would be stability for the weight this structure would have. Just my opinions of course. I am not an architect. I do have some engineering schooling though.
@snoo3333 жыл бұрын
fascinating. thank you
@juliaantjehelder69152 жыл бұрын
I was in the castle in 2018, very beautifull and crowded. Lots of People from the east before covid
@EveRoissy2 жыл бұрын
Another crazy, ridiculous, unbelievable narrative about a structure that certainly wasn't built with the tech of the time... Thanks for your work!!
@EveRoissy2 жыл бұрын
@@dergutehut3961 I meant it wasn't built with the tech of the time we were TOLD existed. Thanks.
@EveRoissy2 жыл бұрын
@@dergutehut3961 It's starting to sound like you're not quite following the 'mudflood/Tartarian' narrative. Castles like this were NOT built with the supposed tech of the time, when there was no heavy machinery; hence, they are from a PREVIOUS time - inherited architecture that we are given stupid stories about to make us believe they are from the present humanity. They are not.
@beverlyreiner-baillargeon62053 жыл бұрын
Been there, saw it. it really is as beautiful as you've shown. they even had running water in it. truly amazing place to see. great video
@janehicks93683 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for this vide and wow just wow
@boonedog44603 жыл бұрын
It does seem obvious that it was built on the older castle's foundation, which is the area of the castle that is most intriguing to me. If you are already researching this castle, find out how many basement levels there are.....I am sure there are also underground tunnels leading to the foundation of the "older" castle that once occupied the space. Now THAT would be interesting though I highly doubt that kind of information is obtainable to most.
@williamwagner56933 жыл бұрын
Funny how I have time for a and b but might skip a+b. Thanks fora great two part presentation!
@toycarpgmr3 жыл бұрын
Neuschwanstein castle was the inspiration for the castle at Disneyland. I visited there many years ago. It was built with running water and interior heating.
@theshamanarchist54413 жыл бұрын
I don't think any stage set/props designers will be offended by the suggestion that it is a very strange thing indeed to hire one to design such a gargantuan constructiom project as this? It's almost like asking the 'Lego World Champion' to rebuild the tower of Babel, using hand made mud bricks and not the injection moulded plastic ones that he would be more familiar with. It's an intimidating accomplishment, by any standards.
@shafur33 жыл бұрын
So very beautiful 😍
@stephanieteague17483 жыл бұрын
Absolutely gorgeous!❤️
@dennismacwilliams1963 жыл бұрын
Great looking place
@chaseparish17913 жыл бұрын
Wow.. just wow!!
@Αηδίεςστηγη2 жыл бұрын
All were created from the begining when they fell onto this earth that why we can't understand how ancient structures are built.
@caseymckinney41012 жыл бұрын
You can also manipulate light with harmonics
@dannwan85373 жыл бұрын
WOW! Do we know what Dracula's castle really looked like? Or how much of the castle is left if its still standing?
@bazjr863 жыл бұрын
Slains castle in Aberdeenshire was the inspiration for Bram stoker's dracula.
@bazjr863 жыл бұрын
It's ruins now you can see it on here. I've been twice it's pretty cool nothing like this one tho
@dannwan85373 жыл бұрын
@@bazjr86 Are you sure? Thought the orange top cream walled castle in Germany or Romania was?
@annarozell76712 жыл бұрын
The stones looked newer than other castles that I visited.
@billshackelford28693 жыл бұрын
It's pronounced Neu-Schwan-Stein. Nice pictures. For a VERY long but worthwhile film, see Visconti's 4-hour film "Ludwig." Interestingly it was Ludwig II who paid off all of Richard Wagner's debts, which contributed in part to his own financial problems. (Of course he really DID spend extravagantly, as you can see. Oh, and by the way, Neuschwanstein was only one of THREE of Ludwig's abodes!)
@truthache2 жыл бұрын
Cinderella’s Castle
@Am-dh9gq3 жыл бұрын
It's like the old and new together bc he knew what was there
@cheechmcduck70133 жыл бұрын
some nice tartarian purple columns in them coloured pics.... an amazing castle
@charlesdavis70873 жыл бұрын
At some point in time, I'm sure you'll come to pronounce Richard Wagner's name correctly, namely, Rick - ard Vag - ner. I love your passion and story-telling.
@FRESHboosters3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Charles. I’ve heard it a few times already, but certainly know now for the future. Anticipating a big response when the follow up video has correct pronunciation. Luckily you can see past that to the actual depth of the video.
@lindadaugherty88903 жыл бұрын
Very beautiful castel.. the,work involved took some excellent skills . And so big. Shame he had to leave something so amazing. Thank you for sharing old history. Now days the history we learned in school is all wrong
@rishardparish22982 жыл бұрын
Palaces castles mansions are such a stupid thing to have unless you live in it and never go outside and die in it otherwise it's pretty impractical
@tomsimpson53173 жыл бұрын
I went there once it was life a ferry tail wish I could live there
@juliaantjehelder69152 жыл бұрын
Also look at castle "de haar" in Utrecht the Netherlands. Build around the 1900s. Bij Helene de Rothchild, very strenge story. Great toerist attraction
@stacielynn79293 жыл бұрын
Love it
@ireen19623 жыл бұрын
So.... it was.found by this "king" .... Thanks Jarid 👍👌
@IanCdnMerkaba3 жыл бұрын
Look up Tartaria, there was a worldwide civilization that was wiped out by something, maybe a mud flood? worldwide.
@michaelormsby11123 жыл бұрын
I was there bout '90, present time. Even then, I was sketchy as to the "rebuild" story as this place was "strategically" significant...