39 Best Sights in The Romantic Road, Germany

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We've compiled the best of the best in The Romantic Road - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Schaezlerpalais

This elegant 18th-century city palace was built by the von Liebenhofens, a family of wealthy bankers. Schaezler was the name of a baron who married into the family. Today the palace rooms contain the Deutsche Barockgalerie (German Baroque Gallery), a major art collection that features works of the 17th and 18th centuries. The palace adjoins the former church of a Dominican monastery. A steel door behind the banquet hall leads into another world of high-vaulted ceilings, where the Staatsgalerie Altdeutsche Meister, a Bavarian state collection, highlights old-master paintings, among them a Dürer portrait of one of the Fuggers. 

Schloss Schillingsfürst

This baroque castle of the Princes of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst is 20 km (12 miles) south of Rothenburg-ob-der-Tauber. Standing on an outcrop, it can be seen from miles away. You can watch eagles and falcons swoop down from high in the sky to catch their prey during one of the Bavarian falconry demonstrations held in the courtyard here, twice daily from April to October. Castle tour highlights include the Red Salon, named for its wall color and filled with Nymphenbeurg porcelain, and the Billiard Room, with a wood-carved table from 1700.

Schloss Veitshöchheim

The first summer palace of the prince-bishops is 8 km (5 miles) north of Würzburg. Enlarged and renovated by Balthasar Neumann in 1753, the castle became a summer residence of the Bavarian kings in 1814. You reach the castle by walking down a long allée of trees on the extensive grounds. To your right are the "formal" rococo gardens, planned and laid out at the beginning of the 18th century. On the other side of the castle are the "utility" gardens, cared for by the Bavarian State College for Wines and Gardens. The college was founded here in 1902 as the Royal School for Gardening and Wine Culture. Walls, pavilions, a small lake teeming with fish, and gardens laden with fruit complete the picture of this huge park. From April to October fountains come to life every hour on the hour from 1 to 5. Inside the palace are the rooms of the Bavarian royal family, which can only be visited on the 30-minute guided tour, with a tour in German each hour. A bus service runs from Würzburg's Kirchplatz to the palace. Between mid-April and mid-October there is also a boat operating between Würzburg and the palace (daily 10–4). The 40-minute trip costs €15 round-trip, including castle tour.

Echterstr. 10, Veitshöchheim, 97209, Germany
0931-91582
Sight Details
€5, including tour; gardens €2
Closed Mon. and mid-Oct.–Mar.

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Shalom Europa

Focusing on 900 years of Jewish life in and around Wurzburg, in a modern space filled with natural light. The museum includes tombstones from the 1100s to the 1980s, along with stories of some 900 local citizens wiped out by the Third Reich, and the community’s new vibrancy via recent immigrants from the former Soviet Union. The museum includes an active synagogue.

Valentin-Becker-Straße 11, Würzburg, 97072, Germany
Sight Details
€3; guided tour €20
Closed Fri., Sat., and last two weeks of Aug.

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St. Georg's Church

Watchmen still sound out the traditional So G'sell so (All's well) message from the 300-foot tower of the central parish church of St. Georg at half-hour intervals between 10 pm and midnight. The tradition goes back to an incident during the Thirty Years' War, when an enemy attempted to slip into the town and was detected by a resident. You can climb the 365 steps up the tower—known locally as the Daniel—for an unsurpassed view of the town and countryside, including, on clear days, 99 villages, and the internal workings of the massive bell system.

Marktpl., Nördlingen, 86720, Germany
Sight Details
Tower €3; free guided tours weekdays at 11am.

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St. Jakob Church

This Lutheran parish church, constructed from 1311 to 1485, showcases 700 years of stained-glass windows and has notable Riemenschneider sculptures, including the famous Heiliges Blut (Holy Blood of Christ) altar. Above the altar is a crystal capsule said to contain drops of Christ's blood. The Twelve Apostles Altar, by Friedrich Herlin, has the oldest depiction of the town of Rothenburg.

Klosterg. 15, Rothenburg ob der Tauber, 91541, Germany
09861-700–620
Sight Details
Church free, audio guide €2

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Sts. Ulrich and Afra

Standing at the highest point of the city, this Catholic basilica with an attached Protestant chapel symbolizes the Peace of Augsburg, the treaty that ended the religious struggle between the two groups. On the site of a Roman cemetery where St. Afra was martyred in AD 304, the original structure was built in the late-Gothic style in 1467. St. Afra is buried in the crypt, near the tomb of St. Ulrich, a 10th-century bishop who helped stop a Hungarian army at the gates of Augsburg in the Battle of the Lech River. The remains of a third patron of the church, St. Simpert, are preserved in an elaborate side chapel. From the steps of the magnificent altar, look back along the high nave to the finely carved, wrought-iron-and-wood baroque railing that borders the entrance. As you leave, look into the separate but adjacent church of St. Ulrich, the baroque preaching hall that was added for the Protestant community in 1710, after the Reformation.

Ulrichspl. 19, Augsburg, 86150, Germany
0821-345--560
Sight Details
Free

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Ulmer Museum

The most important attraction in this museum of art, natural history, and archeology, founded in 1924, is the Löwenmensch, a 40,000-year-old figure of a half-man, half-lion found in a nearby cave. The museum illustrates centuries of development in this part of the Danube Valley. Art lovers will appreciate its collection of works by such modern artists as Kandinsky, Klee, Léger, and Lichtenstein.

Marktpl. 9, Ulm, 89073, Germany
0731-161–4330
Sight Details
€8; free on first Friday of the month
Closed Mon.

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Fuggerhäuser

The 16th-century house and business quarters of the Fugger family now has a restaurant in its cellar and offices on the upper floors. Only the three courtyards here are open to the public, but you can peek into the ground-floor entrance to see busts of two of Augsburg's most industrious Fuggers, Raymund and Anton. Beyond a modern glass door is the Damenhof (Ladies' Courtyard), originally reserved for the Fugger women.

Maximilianstr. 36–38, Augsburg, 86150, Germany
Sight Details
Free
Courtyards 11–3 and 6–midnight (summer only)

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