
-
Anisimova 'frozen by nerves' in historic Wimbledon final rout
-
xAI apologizes for Grok's offensive posts
-
Gaza truce talks in the balance as Israel and Hamas trade blame
-
'A legend': Bad Bunny brings Puerto Rican pride to epic show
-
Peruvian citadel that is nearly 4,000 years old opens doors to tourists
-
Springboks overcome Wiese red card to crush Italy
-
Iga Swiatek: From queen of clay to Wimbledon champion
-
Wimbledon glory beyond a dream for Swiatek
-
Milan wins baking Tour de France mass sprint as French denied again
-
Swiatek destroys Anisimova 6-0, 6-0 to win first Wimbledon title
-
Six killed in massive Russian drone, missile attack across Ukraine
-
Police arrest more Palestine Action supporters
-
Milan wins baking Tour de France eighth stage in mass sprint
-
Infantino hails Club World Cup as 'world's most successful competition'
-
England check India's progress despite Rahul century in third Test
-
Marc Marquez battles back to win German MotoGP sprint
-
'Fairytale' Neuschwanstein castle becomes UNESCO heritage site
-
Trump says Mexico, EU to face 30% tariff from Aug 1
-
Lions' Ringrose out of first Wallabies Test, Cowan-Dickie in doubt
-
Sinner seeks redemption against Alcaraz in Wimbledon final
-
Stokes' run-out of Pant helps England slow India charge
-
Farrell makes tour debut as Lions thrash Australia-New Zealand XV
-
Sparkling Fiji score four tries to beat error-prone Scotland 29-14
-
Pioli returns to Fiorentina after one season at Al-Nassr
-
Marc Marquez takes seventh pole of season at German MotoGP
-
Barrett says All Blacks impressed by young France talent
-
Pakistan won't send hockey teams to India: govt sources
-
NCaledonia politicians agree on statehood while remaining French
-
Robertson hails 'ruthless' All Blacks after France crushed 43-17
-
American midfielder Tillman joins Leverkusen from PSV
-
Sparkling Fiji score four tries beat error-prone Scotland 29-14
-
Ukraine says four killed in massive Russian drone, missile attack
-
Akram hails 'modern-day great' Starc on 100-Test milestone
-
Wales look to future after ending 18-game losing run with Japan win
-
Gaza ceasefire talks held up by Israel withdrawal plans: Palestinian sources
-
All Blacks score six tries to hammer under-strength France
-
Cambodia genocide survivors 'thrilled' at new UNESCO status
-
Worker in critical condition after US immigration raid on California farm
-
German backpacker drank from puddles in Australian bush ordeal
-
German backpacker escapes Australian bush ordeal by 'sheer luck'
-
Bad Bunny draws jubilant Puerto Ricans to historic residency
-
Worker dies after US immigration raid on California farm
-
PSG coach Luis Enrique warns against complacency in Club World Cup final
-
Boeing evades MAX crash trial with last-minute settlement
-
US sanctions Cuban president four years after historic protests
-
Pope Leo's Illinois childhood home to become tourist site
-
Canada just can't win in trade war with Trump
-
US State Department begins mass layoffs
-
Fuel to Air India jet engines cut off moments before crash: probe
-
Chelsea out to stop PSG completing clean sweep in Club World Cup final

'Fairytale' Neuschwanstein castle becomes UNESCO heritage site
The Neuschwanstein castle in Germany's Bavaria, perhaps best known for inspiring Walt Disney's fairytale castles, has been named a World Heritage site, the UN cultural agency announced on Saturday.
Three other royal residences, also constructed in the late 19th Century under the famously arts-obsessed King Ludwig II of Bavaria, were also added to the coveted list: Herrenchiemsee, Linderhof and Schachen.
Neuschwanstein, perched on a rocky, 200m-high Alpine crag, is Germany's most visited castle, with almost 1.5 million people flocking there every year.
"A fairytale comes true for our fairytale castles: We are #WorldHeritage!" Bavaria's governor, Markus Soeder, wrote on X after the announcement.
Neuschwanstein combines an idealised medieval exterior with architectural techniques considered cutting-edge at the time.
Its main rooms are adorned with paintings of German and Nordic legends, the same stories that inspired composer Richard Wagner, for whom Ludwig was a generous patron.
Peter Seibert of the Bavarian Castles Administration (BSV) told AFP that the UNESCO listing "is a very great responsibility, but also recognition... for the work we have done so far in preservation".
Philippe, a 52-year-old visitor from Canada, was surprised that the castle was not already a World Heritage Site.
"We're lucky to still be able to experience this," he said, calling the listing "a very good idea".
Herrenchiemsee meanwhile evokes a Versailles in miniature on a lake between Munich and Salzburg, an homage to absolute monarch Louis XIV of France, whom Ludwig admired.
Indeed Ludwig nicknamed Herrencheimsee "Meicost-Ettal", an anagram of Louis XIV's alleged aphorism "L'Etat, c'est moit" ("I am the state").
- 'Part of Bavarian identity' -
The third site in the UNESCO listing is the small castle of Linderhof, completed in 1878, the only one to have been finished in Ludwig's lifetime.
It mixes elements of French Baroque architecture from the reign of Louis XIV with touches of the Rococo style developed in southern Germany.
Its park boasts an artificial cave inspired by Wagner's opera Tannhaeuser, 90 metres long and up to 14 metres high, which houses a grotto of Venus and was designed as a personal retreat for Ludwig.
The electric lighting system used in the cave was state of the art at the time, with glass discs used to illuminate the grotto in different colours.
The last of the four sites on the list is Schachen, a royal house in the style of a large Swiss chalet, where Ludwig liked to celebrate the saint's day of his namesake St Louis on August 25.
It is located at 1,800 metres above sea level, not far from Neuschwanstein.
The four castles have become "part of Bavarian identity" says Seibert, "iconic and perfectly embedded in a beautiful landscape".
Ironically, while Ludwig's architectural legacy is today a source of pride in Bavaria -- not to mention tourist revenue -- they were part of the reason for his own downfall.
The ruinous construction costs of the lavish residences led the Bavarian government to depose him, declaring him insane.
Interned in Berg Palace, he died shortly afterwards in mysterious circumstances at Lake Starnberg.
T.Ziegler--VB