Only slightly larger than Manhattan island,
Liechtenstein
is the world's fourth-smallest country. It's a quiet,
unassuming place, ruled over by His Serene Highness
Prince Hans Adam II, and has made a mint from nursing
some Sfr90 billion in its numbered bank accounts, a
living that has inevitably laid it open to accusations
of dubious practice. Money-laundering aside, the main
reason to visit is inevitably the novelty value. You
have to feel sorry for little
VADUZ , labouring
under the weight of being capital of a historical oddity:
the tiny town bulges with glass-plated banks and
squadrons of whistle-stop visitors aimless with
anticlimax. Central hub is the post office, where all
buses stop, midway between the two parallel main streets,
Äulestrasse and pedestrianized Städtle. Facing it is
the sleek new
Kunstmuseum (Tues-Sun 10am-5pm,
Thurs until 8pm; Sfr5;
www.kunstmuseum.li ),
holding the world-famous private
art collection
inherited - and added to - by the prince, which includes
exquisite works by Rubens, Rembrandt and others. Perched
picturesquely on the forested hillside above the town is
the prince's restored sixteenth-century
castle
(no public access). If you have some time to spare,
catch bus #10 to Liechtenstein's sole mountain resort of
MALBUN , a small, blissfully quiet retreat up at
1602m.