THE HUNDRED-YEAR HISTORY OF VILLA SCHULER
Dear guests, hello and welcome to "Villa Schuler"! Allow us to introduce
ourselves: We are Alessandro and Andrea Schuler the great grandchildren of the
hotel's founder. We probably haven't met you yet, because we only help out
occasionally here in "Villa Schuler". As for me, Alessandro, I am studying
都cienze per la comunicazione internazionale (International Communication) at
university in Catania. My brother, Andrea, is still attending the 斗iceo
classico (grammar school) in Taormina. Our father, Gerhard Schuler, runs the
hotel where you are staying and, hopefully, having a wonderful time!
Much of our childhood was spent in the house where you are now our guests.
Children don't particularly notice whether or not the surroundings they happen
to be living in are special. We took this magnificent place for granted, as if
things could never have been any different. Only later did we come to realise
just how special the place is. And "Villa Schuler" has a really extraordinary
history. Standing on the hotel terrace beneath palms that are as old as the
hotel itself, namely a proud one hundred years, you can enjoy the splendid
panorama of the Bay of Giardini-Naxos, Mount Etna and the romantic Giardino
Pubblico. Originally nothing grander than a private home with some exhibition
rooms for antiques was planned on this site. But things were to turn out
differently ....
If you're interested, over the next few pages we'll tell you a little about
the turbulent family history of the Schulers how "Villa Schuler" survived two
world wars, how our grandmother transformed the rundown building into a charming
hotel in the 1950s and thus, in her modest way, laid the foundations for the
present success of our father's era.
Of course, it would be impossible to tell the story of a hotel without
focusing on the most important factor: its guests. So we will also tell you
something about the people who spent their holidays here over the decades.
Indeed, an interesting and illustrious set of visitors joined us here from time
to time. Many of our guests have valued the family atmosphere of "Villa Schuler"
and have come back again and again. Today, under our father's management, 天illa
Schuler is in the third generation of family ownership. That makes us the
oldest owner-run hotel in Taormina. And our visitors come from every continent.
In these one hundred years "Villa Schuler" has become something of an
institution in Sicily. But read this story yourself!
1886
FAREWELL TO BADEN
The late 19th and early 20th century saw large waves of emigration from
Germany. The daring, the adventurous or simply the desperate were leaving the
country for a better life. For some, it was fashionable in those days to move
abroad. These were people in a financial position to make a new start and
willing to take a risk. Of course many Germans headed for the United States of
America. But there were also Germans who chose Italy as their new home. Goethe's
"Italian Journey" was certainly influential in making Italy and, in particular,
our home Sicily a popular destination.
Our great grandfather, Eugen Schuler senior, the son of a physician's family
from Heilbronn, was one such migrant. At the age of 20 he left his German home
one day and travelled almost 2,000 kilometres southward. That was 1886. And what
an incredibly long and arduous journey it must have been back then: nowadays
almost unimaginable. Our great grandfather suffered from an ear infection that
was difficult to treat. He heard that the mild Mediterranean climate promised at
least some relief, if not a cure. With this in mind he made his way to the port
of Messina in Sicily. On arrival he found that a lively German community had
taken root there. Among them was Konrad Duden, germanist and author of the
famous Duden dictionary. It was in Messina that the young Eugen was to meet his
wife.
He took up an apprenticeship under a German clockmaker. Apart from learning
this fine craft, he developed a keen interest in photography. And it was then
that he married a German woman called Anna M舐klen from Asperg. In 1892 their
only son our grandfather was born in Messina. They named him Eugen after his
father.
Having completed his apprenticeship, great grandfather set up his own
business selling both jewellery and timepieces. He was now very much at home in
Sicily. The story told in our family is that, after a few years, Eugen senior
decided to move again, this time to look for new shop premises in the south of
the island. He was heading for Syracuse, but on the way stopped at
Taormina-Giardini train station where he bumped into an acquaintance who
suggested trying his luck in nearby Taormina. He learned that a sizeable shop
had recently become vacant in the town. Great grandpa decided straight away to
walk up the slope to explore the wonderful place where many years later we were
to be born.
He must have loved Taormina at first sight. In any case he moved into the
shop and set up business as an "antiquities dealer" as his business is
advertised in a German guidebook of 1906 ("Meyer's Reisebcher Unteritalien
und Sizilien"). The shop's previous owners, also Germans, had already been
selling antique artefacts, under the name of "M舐z and Successors". The premises
were large, with four shop-windows on the ground floor of the famous Palazzo
Corvaja on Piazza Badia the building, incidentally, where the Sicilian
parliament of nobles had assembled in 1410 to choose a new king.
Our great grandfather ran the business with the active support of his wife,
but also found time to pursue his passion for photography. In fact photography
helped him to receive a high honour. It's a story our grandmother still likes to
tell us: One day the imperial yacht of the German Kaiser, Wilhelm II, was
anchored off the Sicilian coast. There was talk on board of a talented German
photographer who lived locally. Eugen Schuler's reputation as a photographer
must have reached the ears of the Kaiser, because he was summoned to develop
pictures taken of the imperial family's visit and to do some interpreting for
Wilhelm II.
Great grandfather's business must have been going quite well at this time,
because he soon had the means to purchase some land on the town's lower slope at
Piazzetta Bastione the same delightful spot where you are, we hope, enjoying
an unforgettable holiday. The house he built here was originally intended as a
home for the family. However, our great grandfather decided to add spacious shop
premises to the ground floor where he could exhibit all his treasures for sale.
The future must have looked rosy: a young family, a magnificent house set in a
superb landscape, and a successful and well-respected business. But his luck did
not hold for long. Our great grandpa never reached old age. He died in 1905 at
the age of 39.
1905
THE VILLA BECOMES A HOTEL
Our great grandmother Anna suddenly found herself alone a young widow with
a 12-year-old child. A shadow was now cast over her hopes and plans for the
future. As a widow with a child at school, she couldn't travel around for the
antiques business. But the woman our great grandpa had chosen was not only a
good wife but also had a good head for business. What did she now do with a big
house in this wonderful location? Without further ado she turned it into a
guesthouse! And so began the history of hotel "Villa Schuler".
Without doubt our great grandma Anna had recognised the signs of the times:
at the turn of the century Taormina had already become an attractive destination
for Europeans from colder climates. Many of them liked to stay for long periods,
so money was coming into the town. Although "town" was not yet the right
description for Taormina. A hundred years ago it was still basically a small
village with an extraordinary history. But that was all changing thanks to
foreign visitors. What hastened this development was the presence of a busy
little colony of artists. One of them was Otto Geleng, a German landscape
painter, who came to Taormina back as early as 1868, when he was twenty.
Observant visitors to Taormina may notice the street named after him. Another
was the photographer Wilhelm von Gloeden: his homoerotic pictures, not to
mention the wild tales that were spun around them, made Taormina a talking
point, increasingly drawing the attention of celebrities, artists, writers,
bohemians and intellectuals. They, in turn, acted like magnets attracting people
from high society. Indeed, a number of celebrities came here to follow the
footsteps of Taormina's first ever great literary admirer, Johann Wolfgang von
Goethe. The list of "celebs" who over the years honoured Taormina with their
presence is long. To name but a few: Johannes Brahms, Guy de Maupassant, Oscar
Wilde, Richard Wagner, Austria's Empress Elisabeth "Sissi", the British kings
Edward VII and George V, Thomas Mann, Andr Gide, Jean Cocteau, D.H. Lawrence,
Christian Morgenstern, Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote, Somerset Maugham,
Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich, Joan Crawford, Rita Hayworth, Cary Grant, Sofia
Loren, Elisabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and Christian Dior.
The travellers drawn to Taormina obviously needed somewhere to stay. And
quite a few wanted to stay for several weeks or months. No wonder the pension
run by our great grandmother soon became a profitable business. Many of her
guests belonged to Prussian nobility after all, apart from the prominent
resident artists at work here, the aristocracy was, at that time, probably the
only social group who could afford to stay abroad for months on end.
An interesting glimpse of the early years of "Pension Schuler" is provided by
a travel novel written in 1909, entitled "Seekers in Sicily". The authors, the
well-known American travel writers Elizabeth Bisland and Anne Hoyt, drew from
the experience of their own travels around the island. "Seekers in Sicily" is a
tale of two rich American ladies on a tour of a region of Europe that still
seemed exotic, alien and especially from an American perspective deeply
underdeveloped.
In the spring of 1908 the protagonists, Jane and Peripatetica, find
accommodation for a few weeks in "Villa Schuler". With affection and full of
humour, they describe their impressions and their delight at the hospitality
shown by our great grandmother. Today's guests will recognise our hotel in many
passages of the novel. The luxuriant garden and the distinctive terrace already
existed back then.
"At the bottom of the crack a high wall and a pink gatewaythey were in a
delicious garden, descending a pergola of roses and grapes. Violets and
freesias, geraniums and heliotrope spread in a dazzle of colour and sweetness
under gnarled olives and almonds and blossoming plums; stone benches, bits of
old marbles, a violet-fringed pool and a terrace leading down to a square white
house, a smiling young German girl inviting them in, and then a view dazzling
to even their fatigued, dulled eyes. In front a terrace, and then nothing but
the sea, 700 feet below, the surf-rimmed coast line melting on and off
indefinitely to the right in great soft curves of upspringing mountains (.)
Fortunately the villa痴 interior showed comfortable rooms, clean, airy, and
spacious. But the terrace settled it. They would have slept anywhere to belong
to that."
Our great grandmother had just got things running nicely in the guesthouse
when the next disaster loomed on the horizon: war in Europe. When the First
World War broke out, German property in enemy countries was confiscated. "Villa
Schuler" was no exception. Our great grandma and her son Eugen, who was now 22
years old, had to abandon the villa and flee. She made her way back to Asperg
where she spent the war years. Eugen was called up to fight and reported to
barracks at Karlsruhe. But he was lucky enough not to be sent to the front. A
horse gave him such a kick in the knee that his injury saved him serving his
fatherland in the trenches.
1921
FRESH START AND GREAT MISFORTUNE
Our grandfather Eugen's luck continued: in the military hospital he got to
know a nurse from Hamburg called Thea Andersen, who agreed to be his wife. The
two married and before long a baby was on its way: in 1921 Heinz was born in
Taormina! Returning with his wife and his mother to Taormina, our grandfather
took the risk of making a fresh start. This venture wouldn't have succeeded
without something very remarkable happening. After the First World War, the
expropriated "Villa Schuler" was to be sold off by auction, but local bidders
came together and agreed to withdraw their offer in favour of our grandfather.
Clearly his parents had not only acquired a good reputation in Taormina but some
good friends, too. The way was now free for grandfather Eugen Schuler junior to
repossess his old parental home. As the only bidder he purchased the family
heirloom. Very soon the pension above the sea was doing good business again. The
guests had stayed loyal to "Villa Schuler" and began returning for their
holidays. And perhaps we should mention at this point that in the 1920s and 30s
foreign visitors had a very different approach to their vacations from that of
today's tourists. Back then the guests would arrive in the autumn and spend the
winter on the island until May or June of the following year. That brought
secure bookings. This pattern of travelling and lodging was not to change until
advances in transportation enabled people to reach their destination much faster
and more comfortably.
In April 1926 a daughter, Elisa, was born. But new life was followed quickly
by death in December of the same year: Thea, our grandfather's wife died. Elisa
and Heinz now grew up with their grandmother and father. And it wasn't long
before the next great misfortune struck. At the tender age of eight Elisa died
of an undiagnosed case of appendicitis. Only shortly before, the German
artist Professor August Bresgen, a good friend of our grandpa's, had painted the
girl's portrait. You will have already noticed the lovely painting, which has
hung ever since that time in our breakfast room.
Nobody was able to anticipate then that another world war would follow the
first. Yet just 21 years after the armistice of 1918 the scene was set for the
outbreak of the Second World War. And once again the existence of "Villa
Schuler" stood on a knife edge. Again the villa was expropriated.
1939
CONFISCATION, DAMAGE AND STRUCTURAL ALTERATIONS
In the Second World War many people were forced to realize that there was no
limit to the extents of human suffering, brutality and destruction. Like an
inkwell spilling over, National Socialist aggression poured across continental
Europe, spreading out as far as North Africa. The National Socialists set up
their positions all over Europe, including Taormina. And what could have been
better in a foreign country than to find a "German house" right there. Our
grandfather joined the Nazi party. So in the same way as his father had served
as an interpreter for the German Kaiser, he now found himself assisting Nazis
like Dr. Robert Ley and his entourage whenever they happened to be staying in
Taormina. The busy life of "Villa Schuler" as a hotel had ended abruptly for a
second time. The villa was expropriated and subordinated to the war aims of the
Germans. From then on "Villa Schuler" served as a liaison centre for the German
army. From the stories told by our grandmother it is clear that word of "Villa
Schuler" reached all the way up to the Nazi leadership in Berlin. One of the
guests at the time was Magda Goebbels, wife of the regime's propaganda chief.
When the German military moved out of "Villa Schuler" in 1943, following the
liberation of Sicily by the Allies, it was occupied by the British army. Our
grandfather and his mother fled to Bolzano (Bozen) in the Alps. Appreciating the
building's spectacular location, the British turned the hotel into a rest home
for soldiers stationed on Malta. This change of function brought a number of
alterations. Our grandfather had gradually improved the villa with the hotel
business in mind in 1938, for example, he had an extension built towards
Piazzetta Bastione and added a series of balconies. The British had the
balconies bricked in because, it is said, a drunken soldier fell over the
balustrade and died. When the British left "Villa Schuler" the building must
have been in a frightful state. The wiring and plumbing had been ripped out, and
many of the rooms smashed. The anger created by the war was vented on "Villa
Schuler" because it was the house of a German family. Happily, that is now
history. Today, the British commanding officer at the time, Mr. Robinson, is a
regular guest.
The Italian authorities, who now owned the ruins of "Villa Schuler", put the
management of the premises into the hands of the "Banco di Sicilia". The bank
relocated bombed-out civilians and homeless Taorminesi to the empty rooms. The
same villa that had once offered its comforts to Prussian aristocrats and other
wealthy visitors now became temporary accommodation for the inhabitants of
Taormina who had lost their homes in the war. As was the local custom, chickens
were kept on the roof-garden and rabbits were reared on the palm terrace. And
what did our grandpa do? To secure a living for himself and his mother, he
returned from Bozen and found a position as manager of the 敵rande Albergo
dell脱tna, over on the southern side of Mount Etna near Nicolosi. But his luck
was to turn again in 1952.
1953
"EMERGENCY RELIEF" FROM GERMANY
The Second World War was over. Once again people began to take stock,
reorientate and build a new life. Our grandfather did the same. He apparently
couldn't and wouldn't give up his parents' home. It would certainly have been
too late for him to start a new life in Germany, his father痴 country of origin.
By now he was 61. So he approached the Italian authorities and managed to reach
an agreement to have the family痴 property returned for a second time. This time
he got it back in ruins but free of charge. And so, in 1953 "Villa Schuler" was
returned to our rightful ownership. It was a family milestone that his mother
never lived to see. She had died in 1949.
The situation must have been sad and forlorn: grandfather now lived in a
broken-down house together with a maid, his now 32 year-old son, Heinz, and
Heinz's wife and with lots of memories of happy and successful times. Our
step-uncle Heinz made it clear from the outset that he had no interest in
running the hotel. Instead he decided to become an electrician and moved later
with his wife to Messina, where he specialized in planning and setting up large
electrical installations. For our grandfather, starting a hotel from scratch was
a task simply too big to take on. In any case, no real progress was made for a
while. In a period when our grandpa must have been beset by gloomy thoughts, the
answer to his problems was already close at hand. He was soon to meet her: our
grandmother, Marta.
Change of scene: Germany just after the war. Our grandma, a determined young
woman who could take life's ups and downs in her stride, was living in the
German Kraichgau hills. One day she decided to give up her job and leave home
a remarkably brave step to take at a time when most people longed for nothing
more than stability and security. Born in 1923, our grandmother belonged to a
generation whose teenage years had been spent under a brutal and inhuman regime
and under war conditions. She'd had to wait a long time to get a chance to train
as a nurse the profession she had always dreamed of. Life as a student nurse
was hard, the work routines strict and exhausting. The combination of heavy
responsibility and a deep concern for her patients pushed her to the limits.
Eventually she fell ill with stomach ulcers.
Repeated treatment in sanatoriums brought no improvement. It was in this
situation that a senior doctor came up with a suggestion that would change her
life. Later she would say it was the hand of fate. The doctor was a friend of a
wealthy family whose daughter had contracted tuberculosis and needed a private
nurse. The assignment was at an unusual location: Taormina in Sicily.
Just imagine in the 1950s the journey from Germany to Sicily would still
have seemed like travelling half way round the world. But Marta, our intrepid
grandma, set off for a world completely beyond her experience. At first she
planned to stay for a year. But, as you will have already guessed, it didn't
turn out that way. Marta's patient was married to the director of the local
electricity works, Nino Bolognari. Our grandpa was a friend of the Bolognaris
and regular visitor to their home. He soon got to know Marta. The two married in
1954. Between them an age gap of 31 years and before them a shared future in
"Villa Schuler".
1955
REBUILDING, NEW GUESTS AND NEW STAFF
That's how it can happen. Our grandmother Marta changed her profession from
one day to the next yesterday nurse, today hotel manager. In fact the new job
required the same underlying human quality: the ability to take pleasure in
helping others. Our grandma now realised that this would become her life's work.
The villa was in a desolate condition. There was only one thing to do: smile
and get on with it. With a few workers from the town, our grandparents set about
repairing and restoring the old building bit by bit. It didn't take long before
the hotel could open again, at first with fourteen rooms. That was hard work in
the mid-1950s. In the first five years they didn't have a single domestic
electrical appliance unimaginable today! The standard was still rather modest,
but nobody seemed to mind renting a room with "hot and cold running water".
After what people had gone through during the war, our grandparents' hotel must
have been paradise on earth. At least that's the impression we get from the
entries in the old visitors' books. As if a sudden interruption in the life of a
hotel had been perfectly normal, the tourists returned. Word of "Villa Schuler"
spread mainly by word of mouth.
Some of the children of visitors from the 1920s were now spending their
holidays here. In those days the aristocrats from Eastern Prussia preferred to
travel incognito. However, we know that distinguished names like von der
Schulenburg, Baroness Rietesel, Baroness Gorup and Baroness Gablens came to
stay. Our grandmother learned first-hand some of the stories of German
resistance to Nazi rule. The widow of Carl Friedrich Goerdeler, the leading
figure behind the plot to assassinate Hitler on 20th July 1944, spent some time
in the hotel accompanied by a younger relative. Other prominent guests in the
immediate post-war years were the famous German philosopher Theodor W. Adorno,
the Austrian dramatists Thomas Bernhard, the liberal politician Thomas Dehler,
and the actress Elke Sommer.
But people's approach to travel was changing radically in the 1950s. Direct
train links between Germany and Italy made the journey fast and comfortable by
the standards of the time. More and more guests now chose Taormina for their
summer vacation. The times when guests would reside here for the long winter
months were never to return.
There was still no modern marketing as we know it today. A hotel had a good
name or it didn't. That was one of the reasons why grandpa kept in close touch
with German consulates and members of the German embassies around the world.
Many of his guests came on the recommendation of someone in the diplomatic
service. Grandma still likes to talk about her personal acquaintances, how she
knew every German consul in Italy. The visitors' books from those years have
survived. They represent a unique historical document and bear impressive
witness to the success of this "advertising strategy". Our visitors included an
unusually large number of German civil servants, mayors, judges, privy councils
and senators. The German navy also make an appearance on the pages: "We lay at
your feet for three days," wrote the captain of the German training regatta
"Brommy" in 1961. The ship lay at anchor in the bay with "Villa Schuler" in view
up above. The hotel business was thriving again, so our grandparents decided it
was time to extend the building the 3rd floor was pulled down and rebuilt. Our
grandma ran the hotel with the help of a German nanny and three domestic
servants. In 1954 our father Gerhard was born, and in 1957 his brother Claudio.
Quite a handful for our grandmother. While grandma was busy, grandpa gradually
withdrew from an active role in the business and dedicated his older years to
his burning passion: Mount Etna.
Both great grandfather and grandfather had always been gripped by Etna's
fascination. Both accompanied scientists up to the volcano rim. They documented
the changes occurring over the years to Europe's biggest active volcano. Even
today our grandfather's name still rings a bell among the Etna mountain guides.
He made regular walks to the volcano and became an acknowledged expert at the
Volcanological Research Institute in Catania. Guests who mentioned a strong
interest in Etna would sometimes be invited to join one of his expeditions or he
would give them a slide show and lecture in the hotel. Our grandfather died in
1975 at the age of 82. He found his final resting place here in his beloved
Taormina.
1983
"VILLA SCHULER" ARRIVED IN THE 21ST CENTURY
The story of "Villa Schuler" is not only that it survived two expropriations;
it also documents the remarkable development of tourism in the 20th and 21st
century. Grandma often tells us how she developed personal friendships with her
guests. From time to time she would join in their celebration of weddings or
birthdays. In the old days, she says, people had more time. There was more space
for the personal touch, including a closer relationship with the staff. Anna di
Camillo, one of our maids, worked here for more than thirty years and
she is now part of the family.
The 1970s saw the rise of mass tourism. Holidaymakers could choose between
destinations all over the world. So the profile of our guests changed, becoming
much more international. Our grandma ran the hotel until the end of 1983 and
then passed on the business to her sons Gerhard and Claudio. Some years later
our uncle Claudio took over our familiy痴 holiday appartments which are situated
in Taormina痴 residential area 鼎hiusa. Since then our father has been running
天illa Schuler by himself.
Our father's background as a student of languages in Germany has fitted
perfectly with the demands of the new internationalism. Since the hotel
management has been in his hands, a great deal has changed. Today in 2005, the
year of our 100th, we have a total of 27 rooms and suites. And we have a staff
of ten to make sure "Villa Schuler" runs smoothly 24 hours a day. The hotel
building has been modernised with a number of additions to offer you the high
standards and comforts that will make your stay a pleasant one. Yet while making
all these changes, our father has preserved and cultivated the tradition of
"Villa Schuler" as a matter of great personal importance.
Speaking as the youngest Schulers, but also in the name of the whole team, it
is our wish that the villa's unique spirit will remain a tangible part of our
guests' experience long into the future. We will always be delighted to welcome
you again in "Villa Schuler" to enjoy its rich tradition.
Alessandro and Andrea Schuler
Taormina, spring 2005
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