55 Sights in Halle (Saale), Germany (with Map and Images)

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Welcome to your journey through the most beautiful sights in Halle (Saale), Germany! Whether you want to discover the city's historical treasures or experience its modern highlights, you'll find everything your heart desires here. Be inspired by our selection and plan your unforgettable adventure in Halle (Saale). Dive into the diversity of this fascinating city and discover everything it has to offer.

Sightseeing Tours in Halle (Saale)

1. Krokodilhaus

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Krokodilhaus Leigh Bedford / CC BY 2.0

Crocodiles or true crocodiles are large semiaquatic reptiles that live throughout the tropics in Africa, Asia, the Americas and Australia. The term crocodile is sometimes used even more loosely to include all extant members of the order Crocodilia, which includes the alligators and caimans, the gharial and false gharial among other extinct taxa.

Wikipedia: Crocodile (EN)

2. Elefanten

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ElefantenMuhammad Mahdi Karim Facebook The making of this document was supported by Wikimedia CH. (Submit your project!) For all the files concerned, please see the category Supported by Wikimedia CH.
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The African bush elephant, also known as the African savanna elephant, is one of two extant African elephant species and one of three extant elephant species. It is the largest living terrestrial animal, with bulls reaching an average shoulder height of 3.04–3.36 metres (10.0–11.0 ft) and a body mass of 5.2–6.9 tonnes (11,500–15,200 lb), with the largest recorded specimen having a shoulder height of 3.96 metres (13.0 ft) and an estimated body mass of 10.4 tonnes (22,900 lb).

Wikipedia: African bush elephant (EN)

3. Ameisenbären

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Anteaters are the four extant mammal species in the suborder Vermilingua, commonly known for eating ants and termites. The individual species have other names in English and other languages. Together with sloths, they are within the order Pilosa. The name "anteater" is also commonly applied to the aardvark, numbat, echidnas, and pangolins, although they are not closely related to them.

Wikipedia: Anteater (EN)

4. Totenkopfaffenhaus

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Squirrel monkeys are New World monkeys of the genus Saimiri. Saimiri is the only genus in the subfamily Saimiriinae. The name of the genus is of Tupi origin and was also used as an English name by early researchers.

Wikipedia: Squirrel monkey (EN)

5. Emilie Oppenheimer

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A Stolperstein is a ten-centimetre (3.9 in) concrete cube bearing a brass plate inscribed with the name and life dates of victims of Nazi extermination or persecution. Literally, it means 'stumbling stone' and metaphorically 'stumbling block'.

Wikipedia: Stolperstein (EN)

6. Mähnenspringer

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MähnenspringerRei at English Wikipedia. Picture taken by Rei in July 2006. / CC BY-SA 3.0

The Barbary sheep, also known as aoudad, is a species of caprine native to rocky mountains in North Africa and parts of West Africa. While this is the only species in genus Ammotragus, six subspecies have been described. Although it is rare in its native North Africa, it has been introduced to North America, southern Europe, and elsewhere. It is also known in the Berber language as waddan or arwi, and in former French territories as the mouflon.

Wikipedia: Barbary sheep (EN)

7. Stadtgottesacker

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The Stadtgottesacker is a cemetery in the city of Halle an der Saale. It was built from 1557 onwards on the model of the Italian Camposanto complexes and is considered a masterpiece of the Renaissance north of the Alps.

Wikipedia: Stadtgottesacker (DE)

8. Goldtakine

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The bharal, also called the blue sheep, is a caprine native to the high Himalayas. It is the only member of the genus Pseudois. It occurs in India, Bhutan, China, Myanmar, Nepal, and Pakistan. The Helan Mountains of Ningxia have the highest concentration of bharal in the world, with 15 bharals per km2 and 30,000 in total.

Wikipedia: Bharal (EN)

9. Adolf Goldberg

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The list of stumbling stones in Halle (Saale) contains all stumbling stones that were laid in Halle (Saale) as part of the art project of the same name by Gunter Demnig. They are intended to commemorate victims of National Socialism who lived and worked in Halle. By May 2024, a total of 288 stones had been laid at 131 addresses; further stones are being planned.

Wikipedia: Liste der Stolpersteine in Halle (Saale) (DE)

10. Marktkirche Unser Lieben Frauen

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The Marktkirche Unser Lieben Frauen is a church in the centre of the city of Halle, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. It was built between 1529 and 1554 and is the most recent of the city's medieval churches. In German, its official name is shortened to Liebfrauenkirche but it is also referred to as Marienkirche and the Marktkirche.

Wikipedia: Marktkirche Unser Lieben Frauen (EN), Website

11. Kunsthalle Talstraße

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The Kunstverein "Talstrasse" e.V. is a non-profit and registered association based in Halle (Saale) that is dedicated to the mediation and promotion of contemporary art. He is the sponsor of the Kunsthalle "Talstrasse" and a member of the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Deutscher Kunstvereine (ADKV), the Museumsverband Sachsen-Anhalt and the Deutscher Museumsbund.

Wikipedia: Kunstverein „Talstrasse“ (DE)

12. Neue Residenz

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From 1644 onwards, Neue Residenz was the name given to the four-winged building complex in the city of Halle an der Saale, which was built in 1531 as New Gebew. The imposing building, built by Cardinal Albrecht of Brandenburg, is the result of the early import of Italian Renaissance ideas and motifs into central and northern Germany and is one of the most important buildings of the early Renaissance in Germany. It is an unpaved building complex with the character of a residence and with a formerly close connection to an elaborate garden beyond the city wall.

Wikipedia: Neue Residenz (Halle) (DE)

13. Robertinum

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RobertinumRalf Lotys (Sicherlich) / CC BY 3.0

The Archaeological Museum of the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, formerly the Archaeological Museum Robertinum, houses the archaeological collections of the University of Halle in Halle (Saale). It is located in the building on Universitätsplatz, which was built between 1889 and 1891; in 1922, it was given the honorary name Robertinum in memory of Carl Robert.

Wikipedia: Archäologisches Museum der Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg (DE), Website, Website

14. Zoologischer Garten

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Zoologischer Garten unbekannt / Logo

Halle Zoo, also known as Halle Mountain Zoo, was established in 1901 on the 130-metre-high Reilsberg in the north of Halle (Saale) in the Giebichenstein district. With a total area of nine hectares, it is one of the smaller zoos. However, due to its structure in several levels around the mountain, the terrain appears much larger than it actually is.

Wikipedia: Zoologischer Garten Halle (Saale) (DE), Website

15. Steinböcke

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The West Caucasian tur is a mountain-dwelling goat-antelope native to the western half of the Caucasus Mountains range, in Georgia and European Russia. It is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List, as the wild population is estimated to be between 5,000 and 6,000 individuals.

Wikipedia: West Caucasian tur (EN)

16. Pauluskirche

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Pauluskirche Michael Hanke / CC BY 2.5

St. Paul's Church is a listed Protestant church in Halle (Saale), built between 1900 and 1903. In the list of monuments of the city of Halle, the church is listed under the registration number 094 11573. The Paulusgemeinde belongs to the church district of Halle-Saalkreis of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany.

Wikipedia: Pauluskirche (Halle) (DE), Website, Youtube

17. Händel-Denkmal

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Händel-Denkmal dnaw / Bild-frei

The Handel Monument in Halle (Saale) is the only monument in Germany in honour of the German-British Baroque composer Georg Friedrich Händel. It was realized there in 1859 on the occasion of the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the artist's death in a joint effort between Germans and British.

Wikipedia: Händel-Denkmal (DE)

18. Stadthaus

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Stadthaus

The Stadthaus of Halle is the neo-Gothic assembly, meeting and festival building on the market square of the city of Halle (Saale) and a listed landmark of the city. In 1903, the German Philologists' Association was founded here.

Wikipedia: Stadthaus (Halle (Saale)) (DE)

19. Denkmalzug LKM V 10 C

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Denkmalzug LKM V 10 C

The V 10 C is a narrow-gauge diesel locomotive for factory railways and sidings. The locomotive was built from 1959 to 1975 in a series of 496 units by VEB Lokomotivbau Karl Marx Babelsberg (LKM) for gauges from 600 to 1067 mm.

Wikipedia: LKM V 10 C (DE)

20. Beatles Museum

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Beatles Museum Rainer Moers, Beatles Museum / CC BY-SA 3.0 de

The Beatles Museum is a museum in Halle (Saale) that initially showed exhibits from an earlier touring exhibition of the Liverpool music band The Beatles. In the meantime, the exhibition has been expanded by about three times and documents the time of the band from its founding (1960) to its dissolution (1970) as well as the solo careers of the band members. The museum is the world's oldest, largest and most extensive public institution dedicated to the Beatles.

Wikipedia: Beatles-Museum Halle (DE), Website

21. Propsteikirche St. Franziskus und St. Elisabeth

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Propsteikirche St. Franziskus und St. ElisabethRalf Lotys (Sicherlich) / CC BY 2.5

St. Francis and St. Elisabeth is the Catholic provost church of Halle (Saale) in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. The church, located in the southern inner city district, district of Mitte, was built from 1894 to 1896 according to plans by the architect Arnold Güldenpfennig as a brick building in the neo-Gothic style and is listed in the list of monuments of the city of Halle under the registration number 094 04870.

Wikipedia: St. Franziskus und St. Elisabeth (Halle) (DE), Website

22. Moritzburg

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The Moritzburg is a fortified castle in Halle (Saale), Germany. The cornerstone of what would later become the residence of the Archbishops of Magdeburg was laid in 1484; the castle was built in the style of the Early Renaissance.

Wikipedia: Moritzburg (Halle) (EN)

23. Zur heiligsten Dreieinigkeit

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The Church of the Holy Trinity is a Roman Catholic parish church in the south of the city of Halle (Saale) in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. The church was built between 1929 and 1930 by Wilhelm Ulrich as a central building and is listed as an architectural monument in the register of monuments of the state of Saxony-Anhalt under the registration number 094 04818. The building was added to the cloister buildings of the nearby Franciscan monastery in Halle, which had been built in 1923/24.

Wikipedia: Dreieinigkeitskirche (Halle) (DE), Website

24. St. Briccius

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St. Briccius, one of the oldest churches in Halle (Saale), is a Protestant church in the former farming and fishing village of Trotha, which is now a district in the north of Halle. The parish of Halle-Trotha belongs to the parish of Trotha-Seeben in the parish cooperation Mitte-Nord in the church district of Halle-Saalkreis of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany. In the list of monuments of the city of Halle, the church is listed as an architectural monument under the registration number 094 05079.

Wikipedia: St. Briccius (Halle) (DE)

25. Johanneskirche

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Johanneskirche Markus Händel / CC BY-SA 3.0

The Protestant Church of St. John in Halle (Saale) is located in the south of the city and is part of the Lutherplatz district, which was developed with cooperative residential buildings from 1910 onwards. The church building was built in 1892/1893 according to plans by Friedrich Fahro.

Wikipedia: St. Johannes (Halle) (DE), Website

26. St. Georgen

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St. Georgen, which is now used by the Free Church, stands on the southwestern edge of the city centre of Halle (Saale) outside the former city fortifications in Glaucha, a suburb of Halle. The church was severely damaged in an American air raid on 6 April 1945 and by artillery fire on 16 April. It was repaired in a simplified form, prepared for blasting in 1985 and completely renovated from 1990 onwards.

Wikipedia: St. Georgen (Halle) (DE), Website

27. Kirche im Diakoniewerk

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The Anstaltskirche der Diakonie or Kirche im Diakoniewerk was built in 1893 as part of the Deaconess Institute according to plans by Friedrich Fahro in Halle (Saale). Together with the Philippuskirche in Leipzig, the church is one of only two sacred buildings in Central Germany according to the Wiesbaden programme.

Wikipedia: Anstaltskirche der Diakonie (Halle) (DE)

28. St. Norbert

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Sankt Norbert is a Roman Catholic church in Halle (Saale) in Saxony-Anhalt, which was built in 1890–1891 in the neo-Gothic style in the then still independent village of Giebichenstein and is a listed building. It is listed in the register of monuments of the city of Halle under the registration number 094 05073.

Wikipedia: St. Norbert (Halle) (DE)

29. Lutherkirche

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The Lutheran Church is a church building in the Luther Quarter in Halle (Saale), south of the city centre. The parish belongs to the Halle-Saalkreis church district of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany.

Wikipedia: Lutherkirche (Halle) (DE), Website

30. Steinerne Jungfrau

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The Stone Maiden is a prehistoric menhir in Dölau, a district of Halle (Saale) in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. With a height of about 5.5 m, it is the second largest menhir in Central Europe after the Gollenstein near Blieskastel in Saarland. The Stone Maiden is registered in the local register of monuments as a ground monument.

Wikipedia: Steinerne Jungfrau (DE), Website

31. Petruskirche

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The Petruskirche in the Kröllwitz district of Halle (Saale) stands in the north of the city on the banks of the Saale on the so-called Tannenberg, opposite Giebichenstein Castle. It belongs to the Halle-Saalkreis church district of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany. In the list of monuments of the city of Halle, the church is listed under the registration number 094 04806.

Wikipedia: Petruskirche (Halle) (DE), Website

32. Sankt Elisabeth

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Sankt Elisabeth

The church of St. Elisabeth in the former village of Beesen, which today belongs to Halle (Saale), dates back to the 12th century. The walls of the church hall, as well as a small arched window on the north side, are essentially from the Romanesque period. In the 15th century, the hall was extended to the east. In 1724/25 the church was rebuilt in the Baroque style. It has a polygonal choir.

Wikipedia: St. Elisabeth (Beesen) (DE)

33. Thalia Theater

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The Thalia Theater Halle (Saale) was founded on October 11, 1952 as the "Theater der jungen Garde". It has had its current name since 1990. Since 1977, it has been organizing the Workshop Days of Children's and Youth Theatre. From 2001, under the new direction of Annegret Hahn, the stage made greater efforts to touch on the reality of the people in the region with its productions. In 2003, the "Hotel Neustadt" project caused a nationwide sensation, in which young people temporarily converted an empty high-rise building into a hotel with a theatre festival as part of a project.

Wikipedia: Thalia Theater (Halle) (DE), Website

34. Marktschlößchen

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The Marktschlößchen is the name given to a representative town house on the market square of the city of Halle (Saale). The Renaissance building with the address Marktplatz 13 now houses the tourist information office of Stadtmarketing GmbH and a Halloren café on the ground floor. The building was listed in 1935.

Wikipedia: Marktschlößchen (DE)

35. Moritzkirche

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St. Moritz, also St. Mauritius, is a church in Halle (Saale), Saxony-Anhalt, Germany, dedicated to St. Maurice. The late-Gothic hall church was built as an Augustine Stiftskirche from 1388. It features late-Gothic stone sculptures and a notable organ from 1925.

Wikipedia: St. Moritz, Halle (EN), Website

36. Sankt Nikolai et Antonii

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St. Nicolai et Antonii is a listed Protestant church in the Stadtforststraße of the former independent village of Dölau, since 1950 a district of Halle (Saale). It belongs to the parish of Dölau-Lieskau in the church district of Halle-Saalkreis of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany. In the list of monuments of the city of Halle, the church is listed under the registration number 094 04618.

Wikipedia: St. Nicolai et Antonii (Halle) (DE)

37. Jahnhöhle

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Jahnhöhle

The Jahn Cave is located in the Klausberge mountains in the north of the city of Halle (Saale) in the district of Trotha, directly on the banks of the Saale. Their formation can be traced back to weathering processes and leachate effects along rock fissures in the porphyry present here.

Wikipedia: Jahnhöhle (DE)

38. Wasserturm

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The water tower at the main station in Halle (Saale) was built around 1910 and is about 17.25 meters high. It stands north of the railway bridges of the main station. The water tank has a capacity of 210 cubic metres and was designed according to the Klönne principle. It was used to supply steam locomotives with boiler feed water via water cranes, first from the Peißen depot and later from the public water supply network.

Wikipedia: Wasserturm Halle (Saale) Hauptbahnhof (DE)

39. Galgenberg

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The Galgenberg is a two-peaked elevation in the northern part of the district-free city of Halle (Saale) in Saxony-Anhalt and represents the highest point in the city area at 134.2 m above sea level as part of its northwestern kuppe, Großer Galgenberg. Its south-eastern summit, Kleiner Galgenberg, is 129.6 m above sea level.

Wikipedia: Galgenberg (Halle) (DE)

40. Opernhaus

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Opernhaus Photo: Andreas Praefcke / CC BY 3.0

The Halle Opera House is an opera house in Halle, Saxony-Anhalt. Originally named the Halle Town Theatre, the theatre was built in 1886 by Heinrich Seeling. A bomb attack on 31 March 1945 destroyed much of the original building. Restorative work ensued a few years later, and the theatre reopened in 1951 under the name Landestheater Halle. In January 1992 it was renamed to its current title. The theatre is currently used for performances of opera, ballet, and orchestral concerts. It is also the main performance venue for the annual summer Handel Festival held in the city.

Wikipedia: Halle Opera House (EN), Website

41. Sankt Katharinen Kirche

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St. Katharinen is the listed Protestant village church of the village of Ammendorf, which was independent until 1950 and is now part of the Ammendorf/Beesen district of Halle (Saale). The parish belongs with those of Beesen and Radewell to the southern parish area in the Halle-Saalkreis church district of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany. In the list of monuments of the city of Halle, the church is listed under the registration number 094 04557.

Wikipedia: St. Katharinen (Halle) (DE)

42. Halle Cathedral

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Halle Cathedral is an Evangelical Reformed Church, and is the oldest surviving church in the old part of the city Halle, Saale. Beside it resided the Archbishop of Magdeburg, who ruled the city for a long period. Albert of Brandenburg remodelled the church's exterior from 1520 onwards and built the neighbouring Neue Residenz, aiming to make the church one of the most influential and powerful monasteries north of the Alps.

Wikipedia: Halle Cathedral (EN), Website, Url

43. Grabhügel 28

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Burial mound 28 of the Dölauer Heide near Halle in Saxony-Anhalt is located in a Neolithic-Bronze Age settlement area of various cultures, of which numerous burial mounds testify. In mound 28 there are stone boxes and stone packing graves, among other things. After the excavations, six of the mounds were left open so that the fixtures are visible.

Wikipedia: Grabhügel 28 (Dölauer Heide) (DE)

44. Villa Lehmann

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The Villa Lehmann, also known as the Lehmann Villa, is considered the most elaborate historicist villa in Halle (Saale) and was built in 1890–1892 in the Neo-Renaissance style according to plans by the architects Reinhold Knoch and Friedrich Kallmeyer for the banker Heinrich Franz Lehmann (II). In the monument register of the city of Halle, the villa is listed under the registration number 094 96744.

Wikipedia: Villa Lehmann (Halle) (DE)

45. Neumühle

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The Neumühle in Halle (Saale) is a former grain mill that was first mentioned in 1283 and rebuilt in 1582. In the list of monuments of the city of Halle, the mill is listed under the registration number 094 04884.

Wikipedia: Neumühle (Halle (Saale)) (DE)

46. Eichendorff-Bank

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Eichendorff-Bank

The Eichendorffbank is a listed stone bench in the Klausberge mountains in the north of Halle (Saale), which was built in memory of Joseph von Eichendorff's student days in the city on the Saale. In the list of monuments of the city of Halle, the bench is listed under the registration number 094 96891.

Wikipedia: Eichendorffbank (DE)

47. Steinmühle

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Steinmühle Jan Hauke, Halle (Saale) / CC BY-SA 3.0

The Steinmühle in Halle (Saale) is a watermill on the Mühlgraben, a natural right branch of the Saale. The stone mill is a former oil and grain mill, and not, as the name suggests, a stone mill. It probably had the first stone mill building in the city.

Wikipedia: Steinmühle (Halle) (DE)

48. Neuapostolische Kirche Halle

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Neuapostolische Kirche Halle Volker Herrmann / CC BY-SA 3.0

The building of the New Apostolic Church Halle is located on Pfälzer Straße in the northern city centre of Halle (Saale). The congregation of Halle belongs to the church district of Leipzig within the New Apostolic Church of Central Germany.

Wikipedia: Neuapostolische Kirche Halle (DE)

49. Goldener Pflug

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Goldener Pflug

The Künstlerhaus Goldener Pflug is a building at Alter Markt 27 in Halle (Saale). It was built in 1605 and is one of the oldest surviving residential buildings in the city. Since 2013, it has been used by artists for studios and exhibitions.

Wikipedia: Künstlerhaus Goldener Pflug (DE)

50. Villa Ulrich

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The Villa Ulrich, also known as the house "Zu den sieben Waben", in Halle (Saale), Ratswerder 7, is the former residence of the architect Wilhelm Ulrich, which he had built in 1924/25 according to his own designs and which represents an important style of the 1920s in its expressionist form. In the list of monuments of the city of Halle, the house is listed as a villa under the registration number 094 04957.

Wikipedia: Villa_Ulrich (DE)

51. Ratshof

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RatshofRalf Lotys (Sicherlich) / CC BY 3.0

The Ratshof is a listed building on the market square of the city of Halle (Saale) in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. The building, which was built at the end of the 1920s, has taken on the function of the city's town hall since the destruction of the Old Town Hall in the Second World War.

Wikipedia: Ratshof (Halle (Saale)) (DE), Website

52. Friedemann-Bach-Haus

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The Wilhelm Friedemann Bach House is a cultural site in Halle in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. The composer Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (1710–1784), eldest son of Johann Sebastian Bach, lived here during part of his career; the building now has an exhibition about W. F. Bach and other composers who lived in Halle.

Wikipedia: Wilhelm Friedemann Bach House (EN)

53. Roter Turm

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The Red Tower is part of the landmark of the city of Halle (Saale). It forms this together with the four towers of the Market Church of Our Lady. Halle is often referred to as the City of the Five Towers because of the striking silhouette of these two buildings. The tower burned out on 16 April 1945 due to artillery fire and lost its characteristic spire. Except for the tower reconstruction, it was restored.

Wikipedia: Roter Turm (Halle) (DE)

54. Kirche Am Gesundbrunnen

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The church "Am Gesundbrunnen" is a listed Protestant church built in 1932/1933 in Diesterwegstraße in the Gesundbrunnen district of the city of Halle (Saale). In the list of monuments of the city of Halle, the church is listed under the registration number 094 11573. It belongs to the Halle-Saalkreis church district of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany.

Wikipedia: Kirche Am Gesundbrunnen (Halle) (DE)

55. Fontäne

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FontäneRalf Lotys (Sicherlich) / CC BY 2.5

The Halle Fountain is located on the Ziegelwiese, an inland island surrounded by the Saale to the west and the Mühlgraben to the east, located in the Saaleaue district of the city of Halle (Saale). It is the third highest in Europe.

Wikipedia: Fontäne Halle (Saale) (DE)

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Disclaimer Please be aware of your surroundings and do not enter private property. We are not liable for any damages that occur during the tours.