After 1871, Ludwig largely withdrew from politics and devoted himself to his personal creative projects, most famously his
castles, for which he personally approved every detail of the architecture, decoration, and furnishing.
Ludwig and Wagner ,
Richard Wagner's villa in
Bayreuth, which Ludwig had paid for Ludwig was intensely interested in the operas of
Richard Wagner. This interest began when Ludwig first saw
Lohengrin at the impressionable age of 15, followed by
Tannhäuser ten months later. Wagner's operas appealed to the king's fantasy-filled imagination. Wagner had a notorious reputation as a political radical and philanderer who was constantly on the run from creditors. The reclusive monarch preferred to attend private performances in the royal box of an empty opera house. Wagner was now planning his great personal opera house – the
Bayreuth Festspielhaus. Ludwig initially refused to support the grandiose project. When Wagner exhausted all other sources, he appealed to Ludwig, who loaned him 100,000 thalers to complete the work. Ludwig also paid for the
Wahnfried villa for Wagner and his family to reside in, constructed 1872–74. In 1876, Ludwig attended the dress rehearsal and third public performance of the complete Ring Cycle at the Festspielhaus but avoided the premieres with the honored guests, including Kaiser Wilhelm I and many other German monarchs.
Theatre Ludwig's interest in theatre was by no means confined to Wagner. In 1867, he appointed Karl von Perfall as director of his new court theatre. Ludwig wished to introduce Munich theatre-goers to the best of European drama. Perfall, under Ludwig's supervision, introduced them to
Shakespeare,
Calderón,
Mozart,
Gluck,
Ibsen,
Weber, and many others. He also raised the standard of interpretation of
Schiller,
Molière, and
Corneille. Between 1872 and 1885, the King had 209 (private performances) given for himself alone or with a guest, in the two court theatres, comprising 44 operas (28 performances of Wagner's operas including eight of
Parsifal), 11 ballets, and 154 plays (the principal theme being Bourbon France) at a cost of 97,300 marks. This was not due so much to
misanthropy but rather as the King complained to the theatre actor-manager Ernst Possart, "I can get no sense of illusion in the theatre so long as people keep staring at me, and follow my every expression through their opera-glasses. I want to look myself, not to be a spectacle for the masses."
Castles of King Ludwig over the entrance to
Neuschwanstein Castle Ludwig's main occupation was the construction of a series of elaborate castles. For this purpose he used his personal fortune and his annual grants from the government (4.2 million
Bavarian guilders), called
Zivilliste. However, a large portion of the budget had to be used for the ongoing upkeep of the court. The money available to the king at his free disposal was significantly increased by an annual subsidy of 270,000
German marks (1 guilder = 1.714 marks) from Chancellor Bismarck, which Ludwig received from 1873 onwards. These funds came from the so-called ,, or
Guelph Fund, consisting of the sequestered assets of King
George V of Hanover, who was defeated and dethroned by Prussia in 1866. (King George's widow,
Queen Marie, along with her daughters, received only an annual pension of 240,000 marks from the Guelph Fund from 1879 onwards. The Chancellor used other money from this slush fund, called the
reptile fund, to influence the press.) With these means, the Chancellor ensured Bavaria's loyalty during the founding of the German Empire and especially afterwards. This pension ensured, among other things, that King Ludwig never appointed a government led by the anti-Prussian Bavarian Patriotic Party until his death. However, these politically sensitive payments, handled via Swiss banks, were made under the strictest secrecy. Although Bismarck's Prussian policies ran counter to Bavarian sovereignty interests and were also despised by Ludwig, he maintained a cordial personal relationship with the Chancellor throughout his life. This was not solely due to the annual financial payments. Ludwig had only met Bismarck once in person, when he was still Crown Prince, at a banquet in Nymphenburg Palace. But Bismarck, eloquent and diplomatically skilled, towering in height and broad-shouldered, had impressed the young prince and had also gone to great lengths to flatter him. He had pointed out that his ancestor Nicolaus von Bismarck had been enfeoffed with
Burgstall Castle in 1345 by
Louis V, Duke of Bavaria, the Wittelsbach
Margrave of Brandenburg, because of outstanding services in the margrave's administration, and had therefore referred to himself as a "vassal of the Wittelsbachs" Despite their single meeting, the two remained in correspondence until the end of Ludwig's life, and Bismarck made great efforts to keep the king in good spirits. Although the king thus had enormous financial resources at his disposal, these would ultimately prove insufficient for the megalomaniacal construction projects, plunging Ludwig into desperate debt and contributing to the end of his reign. In 1867, Ludwig visited
Eugène Viollet-le-Duc's work at the
Château de Pierrefonds and the
Palace of Versailles in France, as well as the
Wartburg near
Eisenach in
Thuringia, which largely influenced the style of his construction. In his letters, Ludwig marvelled at how the French had magnificently built up and glorified their culture (e.g., architecture, art, and music) and how miserably lacking Bavaria was in comparison. His dream became to accomplish the same for Bavaria. These projects provided employment for many hundreds of local labourers and artisans and brought a considerable flow of money to the relatively poor regions where his castles were built. Figures for the total costs between 1869 and 1886 for the building and equipping of each castle were published in 1968: Schloß Neuschwanstein 6,180,047 marks; Schloß Linderhof 8,460,937 marks (a large portion being expended on the Venus Grotto); and Schloß Herrenchiemsee (from 1873) 16,579,674 marks. In order to give an equivalent for the era, the British
pound sterling, being the
monetary hegemon of the time, had a
fixed exchange rate (based on the
gold standard) at £1 = 20.43
Goldmarks. In 1868, Ludwig commissioned the first drawings for his buildings, starting with
Neuschwanstein Castle and
Herrenchiemsee; work on the latter did not commence until 1878.
Neuschwanstein print of Neuschwanstein Castle Neuschwanstein Castle (New Swanstone Castle) is a dramatic
Romanesque fortress with soaring fairy-tale towers. It is situated on an Alpine crag above Ludwig's childhood home,
Hohenschwangau Castle. Ludwig reputedly had seen the location and conceived of building a castle there while still a boy. In 1869, Ludwig oversaw the laying of the cornerstone for Neuschwanstein on a breathtaking mountaintop site. The walls of Neuschwanstein are decorated with frescoes depicting scenes from the legends used in Richard Wagner's operas, including
Tannhäuser,
Tristan und Isolde,
Lohengrin,
Parsifal, and the somewhat less than mystic
Die Meistersinger.
Linderhof In 1878, construction was completed on Ludwig's Linderhof Palace, an ornate palace in neo-French
Rococo style, with handsome formal gardens. The grounds contained a Venus
grotto lit by electricity, where Ludwig was rowed in a boat shaped like a shell. After seeing the Bayreuth performances, Ludwig built (Hunding's Hut, based on the stage set of the first act of Wagner's
Die Walküre) in the forest near Linderhof, complete with an artificial tree and a sword embedded in it; in
Die Walküre, Siegmund pulls the sword from the tree. Hunding's Hut was destroyed in 1945, but a replica was constructed at Linderhof in 1990. In 1877, Ludwig had
Einsiedlei des Gurnemanz (a small hermitage, as seen in the third act of
Parsifal) erected near Hunding's Hut, with a meadow of spring flowers; a replica made in 2000 can now be seen in the park at Linderhof. Nearby, a Moroccan House, purchased at the
Paris World Fair in 1878, was erected alongside the mountain road. Sold in 1891 and taken to
Oberammergau, it was purchased by the government in 1980 and re-erected in the park at Linderhof after extensive restoration. Another building from the Paris World Exhibition is the
Moorish Kiosk, including its
peacock throne which Ludwig had added, a modern interpretation of the lost
Peacock Throne of the
emperors of the
Mughal Empire in India. Inside the palace, iconography reflected Ludwig's fascination with France's absolutist government of the
Ancien Régime. Ludwig saw himself as the "Moon King", a Romantic shadow of the earlier "Sun King",
Louis XIV of France, because he had gotten into the habit of turning night into day and vice versa. From Linderhof, Ludwig enjoyed moonlit sleigh rides in an elaborate 18th-century style
sleigh, complete with footmen in 18th-century
livery. Only the king himself always wore contemporary clothing and not historical costumes. However, the lamp in the crown of the sleigh was electric and battery-operated. As in the legendary
Venus Grotto in Linderhof, the king never shied away from creating perfect illusions through the use of the latest technologies which actually makes the "fairytale king" appear far more in tune with modernity than his seemingly backward-looking image.
Herrenchiemsee In 1878, construction began on Herrenchiemsee, a partial replica of the Palace of Versailles, sited on the
Herreninsel in the
Chiemsee. It was built as Ludwig's tribute to Louis XIV of France, the magnificent "Sun King". Only the central portion of the palace was built; all construction halted on Ludwig's death. What exists of Herrenchiemsee comprises 8,366 square metres (90,050 ft2), a "copy in miniature" compared with Versailles' 551,112 ft2.
Munich Residenz Palace royal apartment The following year, Ludwig finished the construction of the royal apartment in the Residenz Palace in Munich, to which he had added an opulent conservatory or
winter garden on the palace roof. It was started in 1867 as quite a small structure, but after extensions in 1868 and 1871, the dimensions reached 69.5 x 17.2 x 9.5 m. It featured an ornamental lake complete with skiff, a painted panorama of the
Himalayas as a backdrop, an Indian fisher-hut of bamboo, a Moorish kiosk, and an exotic tent. The roof was a technically advanced metal and glass construction. The winter garden was closed in June 1886, immediately after the death of the king, partly dismantled the following year, and demolished in 1897 after water leaked into the lower floors. Large winter gardens were fashionable at the time, such as the
Royal Greenhouses of Laeken, but the unique feature here was that it was placed on the roof due to a lack of space in the city center.
Later projects In 1883, Ludwig planned the construction of a new castle on
Falkenstein (Falcon Rock) near
Pfronten in the
Allgäu, a place he knew well: a diary entry for 16 October 1867 reads "Falkenstein wild, romantic". The first design was a sketch by
Christian Jank in 1883 "very much like the
Townhall of Liège". Subsequent designs showed a modest villa with a square tower, along with a small Gothic castle. By 1885, a road and water supply had been provided at Falkenstein, but the old ruins remained untouched. Ludwig proposed a Byzantine palace in the Graswangtal, and a Chinese summer palace by the
Plansee in
Tyrol. These projects never got beyond initial plans. For
Berg Castle, Ludwig had a fifth tower constructed for it called Isolde and used the castle frequently as his summer residence. When
Maria Alexandrovna,
Empress of Russia, visited Berg in 1868, he had the castle magnificently decorated for the duration of her stay there; the castle otherwise, by his standards, was modestly furnished. == Controversy and struggle for power ==