Germany

Vintage Mannheim Port Germany Travel Advertisement

Mannheim

Mannheim
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Mannheim, further west along the Neckar River, is the second largest inland port in Europe. The 17th century town center is laid out like a chessboard: the streets are numbered and the blocks are lettered. The Elector’s Palace is a large baroque building with a lovely library. The Fine Arts Museum has a good collection of 19 – 20th century European paintings. The first bicycle and the first automobile (Benz) were built in Mannheim. Karlsruhe, about 40 miles south, is an elegant city with a Ducal Palace and an excellent collection of German Primitive Paintings in its Art Museum. About 80 miles east of Frankfurt lies Würzburg. The baroque Residenz Palace has a splendidly decorated Great Hall. In the Imperial Fortress (Marienberg Festung) is a superb collection of the religious woodcarvings of Riemenschneider.

Heilderberg, 50 miles south of Frankfurt, is a romantic university town at the head of the Neckar Valley. The old quarter is clustered around a Gothic church. The famous castle (reached by cable railway) and old bridge are illuminated in summer. In the town musuem, partly housed in a baroque palace, is the Twelve Apostles altarpiece by the 16th century woodcarver Riemenschneider.

Wiesbaden Greek Chapel Travel Photo Poster – Historical Places of Germany

Wiesbaden's Greek Chapel Print
Wiesbaden’s Greek Chapel by Dividenda

Wiesbaden, an international spa in beautiful natural surroundings, has an active social life and lively casino. The major event is the May Festival when first rate opera, ballet and drama are performed. The baroque castle of the Dukes of Nassau stands on the shores of the Rhine. On the opposite bank of the Rhine is 2,000 year old Mainz, the largest wine market in Germany (wine festival Aug – Sept). Gutenberg, the inventor of movable type, was born here and the Museum of Printing contains his 42 line Bible. The Mardi Gras carnival is nationally famous.

Frankfurt Cathedral Travel Photo Poster

Frankfurt is equally proud of its international trade fairs and of Goethe, whose birthplace is now a museum (Grosser Hirschgraben 23). The highlights of the old part of town are the steeply gabled Gothic bulidnigs on Römerberg square, including the Town hall with the Emperor’s Coronation Hall, the Cathedral with its tall 15th century bell tower, St Leonhard’s and St Nicholas’ churces and the Carmelite monastery which houses a museum. Frankfurt Zoo is one of world’s greatest: afternoon concerts and plays are presented here.

Frankfurt Cathedral print
Frankfurt Cathedral by Dividenda

Berlin Wall Mural, East Side Gallery, Germany

Berlin Wall Mural, East Side Gallery, Berlin, Germany

Berlin Wall Mural, East Side Gallery, Berlin, Germany Photographic Print
Moos, Martin
24 in. x 18 in.
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Germany conviviality is at the heart of its rambunctious festivals, merry beer halls and taverns, wild night life, flourishing cultural life and hearty eating habits. Folk costumes, customs and architecture thrive in rural areas, and the lovely landscpae abounds in picturebook castles, palaces and churches.

Sunny summrs often lasting through October. Winters are mild except in the Alpine districts. January is the coldest month. Best times to visit are April – September.

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Germany: Brandenburg Gate in Berlin

Brandenburg Gate, Berlin, Germany

Brandenburg Gate, Berlin, Germany Photographic Print
Arnold, Jon
12 in. x 9 in.
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West Berlin is notable for its greenery (only one-third of its area is built up) and East Berlin for its old historical center with the Royal Palace and museums. Kurfürstendamm (Ku’damm), with its Kaiser Wilhelm memorial church is the main thoroughfare of West Berlin, lined with luxury hotels, shops, cafes and cinemas. Behind the church is the Zoo (Tiergarten). Of the few surviving old buildings, the most notable are Charlottenburg Castle, the 18th century Brandenburg Gate, the reconstructed Reichstag and the Rathaus, seat of the Senate, where the Liberty Bell is rung at noon. Important museums include the Egyptian Museum with the famous bust of Nefertiti; Museum Dahlem with 13 -16th century paintings including famous Rembrandts and Vermeers, the Berlin Museum where the collection depicts the development of the city and the New National Gallery designed by Mies van der Rohe. The Olympic Stadium constructed for the 1936 games, holds 100,000 people. In the western suburbs are the forest and lake areas of the Grünewald and the Havel inlets which open out into the Wannsee, crowded with bathers in summer. Excursion parties go to Frederick the Great’s Palace of Sanssouci in the East zone with its great art treasures and to the ancient Palace of the Crown Prince, Cecilienhof where the Four-Power Aggreement was signed in 1945.

Why Americans go to Europe for what?

Voyage de Paris II

Voyage de Paris II Art Print
Brier, David
36 in. x 24 in.
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Americans go to London for social triumph, to Rome for art’s sake, and to Berlin to study music and to economize; but they go to Paris to enjoy themselves. And there are no young men of any nation who enter into the accomplishment of this so heartily and so completely as does the young American.

Paris determined to see all that any one else has ever seen, and to outdo all that any one else has ever done, and to stir that city to its suburbs. He saves his time, his money, and his superfluous energy for this visit, and the most amusing part of it is that he always leaves Paris fully assured that he has enjoyed himself while there more thoroughly than any one else has ever done, and that the city will require two or three months’ rest before it can readjust itself after the shock and wonder due to his meteoric flight through its limits. Paris, he tells you, ecstatically, when he meets you on the boulevards is “the greatest place on earth,” and he adds, as evidence of the truth of this, that he has not slept in three weeks. He is unsurpassed in his omnivorous capacity for sight-seeing, and in his ability to make himself immediately and contentedly at home.

The American visitor is not only undaunted by the strange language, but unimpressed by the signs of years of vivid history about him. He sandwiches a glimpse at the tomb of Napoleon, and a trip on a penny steamer up the Seine, and back again to the Morgue, with a rush through the Cathedral of Notre Dame, between the hours of his breakfast and the race-meeting at Longchamps the same afternoon. Nothing of present interest escapes him, and nothing bores him. He assimilates and grasps the method of Parisian existence with a rapidity that leaves you wondering in the rear, and at the end of a week can tell you that you should go to one side of the Grand Hôtel for cigars, and to the other to have your hat blocked. He knows at what hour Yvette Guilbert comes on at the Ambassadeurs’, and on which mornings of the week the flower-market is held around the Madeleine.

While you are still hunting for apartments he has visited the sewers under the earth, and the Eiffel Tower over the earth, and eaten his dinner in a tree at Robinson’s, and driven a coach to Versailles over the same road upon which the mob tramped to bring Marie Antoinette back to Paris, without being the least impressed by the contrast which this offers to his own progress. He develops also a daring and reckless spirit of adventure, which would never have found vent in his native city or town, or in any other foreign city or town. It is in the air, and he enters into the childish goodnature of the place and of the people after the same mariner that the head of a family grows young again at his class reunion.

The Château Rouge was originally the house of some stately family in the time of Louis XIV. They will tell you there that it was one of the mistresses of this monarch who occupied it, and will point to the frescos of one room to show how magnificent her abode then was. This tradition may or may not be true, but it adds an interest to the house, and furnishes the dramatic contrast to its present wretchedness.