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Where in Germany can I see original buildings,streets, etc. that were not bombed during WW2? |
Danke or Thanks!!!!!!!!!!!! I live in a small, tiny town named Stade (not too far from Hamburg); and Stade never had been bombed during WW2 and still has a medieval charm and character. Wiesbaden has a bunch of locations that are still standing. Especial around Goebenstrasse and the Ring Kirche. There are whole areas that are still standing in what was once considered West Berlin as well. In northern Germany, by the ege of the Luneburger Heide (luneburg heath - famous for fields of heather and flocks of distinctive black faced sheep) between Hamburg and Hannover is the historic town of Luneburg. I was there about 10 years ago and it is absolutely beautiful. It was amazingly left untouched from the ravages of war, and there are still buildings intact with their splendid gables from the 13th century. It grew up as a major trading town especially for salt, and part of the powerful merchant Hanseatic League. Here is a weblink to this town: The person before was correct about Wiesbaden, but was incorrect about Mainz, partially; Mainz was very badly bombed, but there are still plenty of structures that survived. St. Martin's (the Mainzer Dom) and Christuskirche, the two most prominent cathedrals in Mainz, both suffered damage but were not "flattened". There are other buildings in Mainz that weren't completely "flattened" either; in truth, the same can be said for many other German cities. Wiesbaden, though, truly did evade the kind of bombings most other comparably-sized German cities suffered. Many more isolated sites that weren't in cities, such as Germany's hundreds of beautiful castles, weren't hit because they weren't targets, as were many smaller towns and villages that were not big enough to be targeted by bombing raids... any many of those smaller places still harbor plenty of "original buildings, streets, etc." that suffered no WW2 damage. If you're interested in the kinds of damage that larger cities and even famous individual structures suffered during the war, many (if not most) of the more well-known places and buildings are searchable in Wikipedia, as well as the rest of the web, of course. The city of Rothenburg (full name: Rothenburg ob der Tauber) is a walled, medieval city that has escaped bombing during WWII. It has all the traditional things you would expect from a medieval city: high walls with moat, winding cobblestone streets, half-timbered houses, and more. Inside these old buildings, modern shops and restaurants will keep you busy should you grow tired of the historical stuff. The town of Bamberg has many structures that were never touched. Most of the old city is part of the UNESCO historical site http://www.stadt.bamberg.de/ Pretty much all smaller towns and cities in Germany were spared the bombing by the allies. They were mainly interested in the industrial areas as well as the Nazi stronghold. Just start traveling the countryside and you'll encounter med-evil architecture everywhere. I can see some from my kitchen window. You could try Trier or Regensburg. Lots of medieval buildings. Heidelberg pretty much kept its originality...its really beautiful Hmm, that's hard. For Wiesbaden, there is the story that is was not bombed so severely as the US Headquarters was to be placed there after the war. |
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