63 Sights in Nuremberg, Germany (with Map and Images)

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Welcome to your journey through the most beautiful sights in Nuremberg, 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 Nuremberg. Dive into the diversity of this fascinating city and discover everything it has to offer.

Sightseeing Tours in NurembergActivities in Nuremberg

1. Documentation Center Nazi Party Rally Grounds

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Documentation Center Nazi Party Rally Grounds

The Documentation Center Nazi Party Rally Grounds is a museum in Nuremberg, Germany. It belongs to the network of museums of the city of Nuremberg and is located in the north wing of the unfinished Congress Hall of the former Nazi party rally grounds, which was designed by the National Socialists. Various permanent exhibitions deal with the causes, contexts and consequences of the National Socialist tyranny. Topics that have a direct connection to Nuremberg are given special consideration. A study forum is attached to the museum.

Wikipedia: Dokumentationszentrum Reichsparteitagsgelände (DE), Website

2. St. Sebald Church

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St. Sebaldus Church is a medieval church in Nuremberg, Germany. Along with Frauenkirche and St. Lorenz, it is one of the most important churches of the city, and also one of the oldest. It is located at the Albrecht-Dürer-Platz, in front of the old city hall. It takes its name from Sebaldus, an 8th-century hermit and missionary and patron saint of Nuremberg. It has been a Lutheran parish church since the Reformation.

Wikipedia: St. Sebaldus Church, Nuremberg (EN), Website

3. Albrecht Dürer's House

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Albrecht Dürer's House

Albrecht Dürer's House is a Nuremberg Fachwerkhaus that was the home of German Renaissance artist Albrecht Dürer from 1509 to his death in 1528. The House lies in the extreme north-west of Nuremberg's Altstadt, near the Kaiserburg section of the Nuremberg Castle and the Tiergärtnertor of Nuremberg's city walls.

Wikipedia: Albrecht Dürer's House (EN), Website

4. Weinstadel

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Weinstadel

The Weinstadel is a medieval building in Nuremberg, Germany. It is one of the most famous monuments in Nuremberg's northern old town and is a stop on the Nuremberg Historic Mile. The name Weinstadel derives from its function as a former imperial city wine warehouse, which was established around 1571 on the ground floor of the main building.

Wikipedia: Weinstadel (DE)

5. St. Lawrence Church

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St. Lorenz is a medieval church of the former free imperial city of Nuremberg in southern Germany. It is dedicated to Saint Lawrence. The church was badly damaged during the Second World War and later restored. It is one of the most prominent churches of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria.

Wikipedia: St. Lorenz, Nuremberg (EN), Website

6. Pilatushaus

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Pilatushaus Photo: Andreas Praefcke / CC BY 3.0

The Pilatushaus is a town house in Nuremberg, Germany. It is located in the northern district of St. Sebald below Nuremberg Castle on Tiergärtnertorplatz next to Tiergärtnertor. It is one of the few surviving town houses from the late Gothic period and is one of the most important architectural monuments in Nuremberg's old town. The house is a stop on the Nuremberg Historic Mile.

Wikipedia: Pilatushaus (Nürnberg) (DE)

7. Beautiful Fountain

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Schöner Brunnen is a 14th-century fountain located on Nuremberg's main market next to the town hall and is considered one of the main attractions of the city's Historical Mile. The fountain is approximately 19 meters high and has the shape of a Gothic spire.

Wikipedia: Schöner Brunnen (EN), Website

8. Frauenkirche

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The Frauenkirche is a church in Nuremberg, Germany. It stands on the eastern side of the main market. An example of brick Gothic architecture, it was built on the initiative of Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor between 1352 and 1362. The church contains many sculptures, some of them heavily restored. Numerous works of art from the Middle Ages are kept in the church, such as the so-called Tucher Altar, and two monuments by Adam Kraft. It has been a parish church of the Catholic Church since 1810.

Wikipedia: Frauenkirche, Nuremberg (EN), Website

9. Museumsbrücke

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Museumsbrücke

The Museum Bridge is a sandstone arch bridge that spans the Pegnitz River in Nuremberg. The road bridge is located at the beginning of Königstraße and connects the Nuremberg districts of St. Sebald and St. Lorenz. It is located between the main market square and Lorenzer Platz.

Wikipedia: Museumsbrücke (DE)

10. Weißgerbergasse

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Weißgerbergasse is a street in Nuremberg, Germany. It is one of the few predominantly preserved architectural monument ensembles in Nuremberg's old town. It is lined with bars, restaurants and galleries.

Wikipedia: Weißgerbergasse (Nürnberg) (DE)

11. St. Sebald

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The Roman Catholic, listed branch church of St. Sebald is located in the Altenfurt district of Nuremberg, an independent city. The building is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian List of Monuments under the monument number D-5-64-000-2054. The church belongs to the parish of John the Baptist in the deanery of Nuremberg-South of the diocese of Eichstätt. The patron saint of the church is Sebaldus of Nuremberg, the patron saint of Nuremberg.

Wikipedia: St. Sebald (Altenfurt) (DE), Website

12. St. Rochus

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St. Rochus

Roch, also called Rock in English, was a Majorcan Catholic confessor whose death is commemorated on 16 August and 9 September in Italy; he was especially invoked against the plague. He has the designation of Rollox in Glasgow, Scotland, said to be a corruption of Roch's Loch, which referred to a small loch once near a chapel dedicated to Roch in 1506.

Wikipedia: Saint Roch (EN)

13. Heinrich II

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Heinrich II

Henry II, also known as Saint Henry, Obl. S. B., was Holy Roman Emperor from 1014. He died without an heir in 1024, and was the last ruler of the Ottonian line. As Duke of Bavaria, appointed in 995, Henry became King of the Romans following the sudden death of his second cousin, Emperor Otto III in 1002, was made King of Italy in 1004, and crowned emperor by Pope Benedict VIII in 1014.

Wikipedia: Henry II, Holy Roman Emperor (EN)

14. Neptunbrunnen

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Neptunbrunnen

The Neptune Fountain in Nuremberg is the largest baroque fountain north of the Alps and is considered a monument to the Peace of Nuremberg after the Thirty Years' War. The original fountain was created in 1660–1668 by Christoph Ritter and Georg Schweigger for the main market, donated by the Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand III. For financial reasons, the imperial city did not have the fountain built, but sold to St. Petersburg in 1796.

Wikipedia: Neptunbrunnen (Nürnberg) (DE)

15. turmdersinne

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turmdersinne unbekannt / Logo

The Tower of the Senses is an interactive hands-on museum in the Mohrenturm at the west gate of the Nuremberg city wall. Visitors can try out sensory stimuli and their processing on themselves at experiment stations. Perceptual illusions are also made tangible. The owner of the operating company is the Humanist Association.

Wikipedia: Turm der Sinne (DE), Website

16. Dammbruch-Gedenkstein

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The Rhine–Main–Danube Canal, is a canal in Bavaria, Germany. Connecting the Main and the Danube rivers across the European Watershed, it runs from Bamberg via Nuremberg to Kelheim. The canal connects the North Sea and Atlantic Ocean to the Black Sea, providing a navigable artery between the Rhine delta, and the Danube Delta in south-eastern Romania and south-western Ukraine. The present canal was completed in 1992 and is 171 kilometres (106 mi) long.

Wikipedia: Rhine–Main–Danube Canal (EN)

17. St. John's Cemetery

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St. John's Cemetery -- Grüner Grünling 08:27, 4. Aug. 2008 (CEST) / CC BY-SA 3.0 de

The St. John's Cemetery is a church cemetery in Nuremberg with historical and artistically valuable bronze epitaphs as well as culturally and historically significant lying (standardized) gravestones and burial places of the Nuremberg population from more than five centuries. The burial site is still in operation and is a listed building, and the City of Nuremberg and the Evangelical Lutheran Cemetery Administration are responsible for the burials. Because of the many rose bushes, it is also called the Rose Cemetery. Due to the historical sights, the St. John's Cemetery is a destination within the framework of cemetery tourism and a stop within Nuremberg's Historic Mile.

Wikipedia: Johannisfriedhof (Nürnberg) (DE), Website

18. Hesperidengärten

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Hesperidengärten

The hesperid gardens are several baroque gardens in the St. Johannis district of Nuremberg. They were part of a green belt along the city wall, which included 360 -used gardens and formed the prerequisite for the development of a high -standing garden culture at the gates of the imperial city of Nuremberg. The creation of citrus plants was converted. The green areas were created by patrician families and merchants in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries after the fruit, vegetable and herb gardens in the old town were gradually built on. The magnificent lust gardens separated the newly created suburbs from the old town. The city wall formed the physical border. Wealthy citizens have lived in St. Johannis since the early modern period who brought a touch of Mediterranean culture into the home garden. The Nuremberg patricians and merchants oriented themselves to the model of the nobility in the garden design. Small ornamental gardens were built in the Renaissance and baroque style and equipped with a variety of wells and figures made of sandstone. There were valuable and exotic limon and pomerance collections in the elaborately designed gardens.

Wikipedia: Hesperidengärten (DE)

19. Fembohaus

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Fembohaus

The Stadtmuseum Fembohaus is the city museum of the history of Nuremberg. 950 years of city history are vividly presented. It presents a comprehensive view of the city's history in a new museum atmosphere with ambitious exhibitions on current topics of the city's history. The museum is part of the network of museums of the city of Nuremberg.

Wikipedia: Stadtmuseum Fembohaus (DE), Website

20. Deutsches Spielearchiv Nürnberg

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The German Games Archive Nuremberg is an institution of the museums of the city of Nuremberg. The collection comprises around 30,000 board games, and the focus of the collection is on board and table games from the German-speaking world after 1945. The archive also sees itself as a scientific research institute that documents and evaluates the development of board and table games throughout the German-speaking world since 1945, as well as a promoter of the cultural asset of games in society.

Wikipedia: Deutsches Spielearchiv Nürnberg (DE), Website

21. DB Museum

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The Nuremberg Transport Museum in Nuremberg, Germany, consists of Deutsche Bahn's DB Museum and the Museum of Communications. It also has two satellite museums at Koblenz-Lützel and Halle. The Nuremberg Transport Museum is one of the oldest technical history museums in Europe and is a milestone on the European Route of Industrial Heritage (ERIH).

Wikipedia: Nuremberg Transport Museum (EN), Website

22. Museum Industriekultur

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The Museum of Industrial Culture in Nuremberg is a museum of technology, culture and social history that documents the history of industrialization using the example of Nuremberg, which transformed itself from a poor city into "Bavaria's engine of innovation" in the 19th century. It was built in 1988 in a hall of the former Julius Tafel ironworks (Tafelwerk) and covers around 6,000 m² of exhibition space. The museum is affiliated with a school museum and a motorcycle museum, which deals in particular with the company history of the Zündapp company. The neighbouring Tafelhalle cultural centre is also housed in buildings of the former Tafelwerk.

Wikipedia: Museum Industriekultur (Nürnberg) (DE), Website

23. Toy Museum Nuremberg

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The Nuremberg Toy Museum in Nuremberg, Bavaria, is a municipal museum, which was founded in 1971. It is considered to be one of the most well known toy museums in the world, depicting the cultural history of toys from antiquity to the present.

Wikipedia: Nuremberg Toy Museum (EN), Website

24. Ehekarussell

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The marriage carousel, actually Hans Sachs Fountain, is a large-scale architectural fountain in Nuremberg. It is located directly in front of the White Tower in the pedestrian zone in Nuremberg's city center.

Wikipedia: Ehekarussell (DE)

25. Heunensäule

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The Heunen columns, also known as the Heune columns, are round columns made of sandstone, which were originally intended for the reconstruction of the Willigis Cathedral in Mainz, which burned down in 1009. They were probably completed in the 11th century out of anticipatory business acumen in a quarry in the Bullau Mountains near Miltenberg even before the order was placed. However, the client probably opted for other supports, so that the round columns were never needed. There are said to have been 42 of the columns at one time, in the 18th century there were still 14, around 1960 only eight are known.

Wikipedia: Heunensäule (DE)

26. Sankt Martin

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St. Martin is a Roman Catholic parish church in the Nuremberg district of Gärten hinter der Veste. It was built in 1934 on the site of a former emergency church in the neo-Romanesque style, destroyed in the Second World War and rebuilt in 1948. It belongs to the parish of St. Martin, which is assigned to the Archdiocese of Bamberg. St. Martin's Church is registered as an architectural monument with the number D-5-64-000-1679 at the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments. Its organ, built in 1991, makes the church an important venue for various musical events.

Wikipedia: St. Martin (Nürnberg) (DE), Website

27. Nicolaus-Copernicus-Planetarium Nürnberg

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The Nicolaus Copernicus Planetarium in Nuremberg at the inner-city transport hub Plärrer is the only large planetarium in Bavaria. Together with the Nuremberg Education Centre (adult education centre) and the Nuremberg City Library, it forms the Nuremberg Education Campus. In 2017, 78,000 visitors were recorded.

Wikipedia: Nicolaus-Copernicus-Planetarium (DE), Website

28. Hirsvogelsaal

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Hirsvogelsaal

The Hirsvogelsaal is an early Renaissance building in Hirschelgasse in Nuremberg. This is an extension of his Gothic residence carried out in 1534 by Lienhard III Hirschvogel, a Nuremberg long-distance trader. The reason for the construction was his marriage to Sabine Welser from Augsburg.

Wikipedia: Hirsvogelsaal (DE)

29. Rechenberg

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The Rechenberg is the name of District 902 in the Statistical District 9 – Eastern Outer City in the Statistical District 90. It is also the name for an approximately 338 m high elevation in the northeast of the city of Nuremberg and a surrounding park of the same name.

Wikipedia: Rechenberg (Nürnberg) (DE)

30. Hallerwiese

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The Hallerwiese is a 1.7-hectare park in the St. Johannis district of Nuremberg, Germany. The Hallerwiese is located west of the Hallertor and thus outside the old town. It stretches along the right bank of the Pegnitz between the Hallertor Bridge and the Großweidenmühlsteg. To the left bank of the river is the Kontumazgarten. A footpath and cycle path leads east through the Hallertürlein into Sebald's old town. Hallerwiese is also the name of district 070 in district 07 St. Johannis, but its area is not identical with the park.

Wikipedia: Hallerwiese (DE)

31. Tafelhalle

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The Tafelhalle is a cultural centre in Nuremberg, Germany. The building was originally built in 1909 and 1910 as a screw factory of the Tafelwerk. After renovation work, it was reopened in its new function in October 1987. In addition to a large theatre hall, the Tafelhalle houses a rehearsal stage and a theatre café that offers performance opportunities. In addition, administrative offices are housed in the building. The neighbouring Museum of Industrial Culture is also housed in buildings of the former Tafelwerk.

Wikipedia: Tafelhalle (DE), Website

32. Friedenskirche

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Friedenskirche

The Nuremberg Church of Peace is located in Nuremberg's St. Johannis district at Palmplatz 11. Planning for the construction began in 1916. According to this, the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Peace was to be a memorial and memorial for the entire city. It was built between 1925 and 1928 according to the design of the architect German Bestelmeyer. During the Second World War, it burned down in 1944 after a bombing raid.

Wikipedia: Friedenskirche (Nürnberg) (DE), Url

33. Stadtarchiv Nürnberg

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The Nuremberg City Archive is the central archive for the interests of Nuremberg's city history. As a municipal authority, it is a service provider for the public, research and the city administration. Since 2000, the city archive has been located in the Norishalle at Marientorgraben 8. The holdings of the city archive date back to the 11th century and comprise almost 20 kilometres of shelves.

Wikipedia: Stadtarchiv Nürnberg (DE), Website

34. Volkspark Marienberg

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The Volkspark Marienberg is an English-style landscape garden in the north of Nuremberg and the second largest public park in the city area. Volkspark Marienberg is also the name of district 831 in district 83 Marienberg, but its area is not identical with the green corridor.

Wikipedia: Volkspark Marienberg (DE)

35. 18. Artikel der Menschenrechte

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The Way of Human Rights is a monumental outdoor sculpture in Nuremberg, Germany. It was opened on 24 October 1993. It is sited on the street between the new and old buildings of the Germanisches Nationalmuseum, connecting Kornmarkt street and the medieval city wall.

Wikipedia: Way of Human Rights (EN), Website

36. Rosenau

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Rosenau André Karwath aka Aka / CC BY-SA 2.5

The Rosenaupark or the Rosenau is a park of about 3 hectares in Nuremberg. It lies in the Kleinweidenmühle district west of the Fürth Gate in front of the walls of the old town in a depression that geologically appears as a dry oxbow of the nearby Pegnitz.

Wikipedia: Rosenaupark (DE), Website

37. Pellerschloss

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The Pellerschloss in the Fischbach district near Nuremberg is a manor in the Nuremberg area. It is one of the few land seats of the families of the Nuremberg Patrician from the 16th century in their original building fabric. It is considered the "most beautiful preserved former water lock in the Nuremberg surrounding area".

Wikipedia: Pellerschloss (DE), Website

38. Albrecht-Dürer-Denkmal

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The Albrecht Dürer Monument is a statue on Albrecht Dürer Square in Nuremberg, Germany. Created between 1837 and 1840 by the sculptor Christian Daniel Rauch, it depicts the German painter with brush, pen and laurel branch in his right hand. It is one of the most important works of classicist sculpture.

Wikipedia: Albrecht-Dürer-Denkmal (DE)

39. Rotkreuz-Museum

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The Red Cross Museum Nuremberg is the largest of 15 museums in the Federal Republic of Germany dedicated to the history and activities of the Red Cross. In addition to various other exhibits, the museum has a vehicle hall in which Red Cross vehicles from different eras are shown.

Wikipedia: Rotkreuz-Museum Nürnberg (DE), Website

40. Maria am Hauch

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The Roman Catholic parish church of Maria am Hauch – Maria, mother of the church in Nuremberg-Neuröthenbach, was built in 1967/68 according to plans by the Munich architect Jakob Semler. The patronage of the church is Mary, Mother of the Church. Out of ecumenical consideration, the church and the parish of Maria am Hauch are called. The breath is a hill on which the church was built. The church belongs to the deanery of Nuremberg-South.

Wikipedia: Maria am Hauch (DE), Website

41. Kunstvilla

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The Kunstvilla Nürnberg is a municipal museum in Nuremberg that deals with the presentation, mediation and research of regional art. It is located in a listed neo-baroque merchant's villa in Marienvorstadt and is part of the KunstKulturQuartier.

Wikipedia: Kunstvilla Nürnberg (DE), Website

42. Kunsthalle Nürnberg

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The Kunsthalle Nürnberg is an art centre founded in 1967, near the city centre. It organizes exhibitions by contemporary international artists in its galleries in Nuremberg. The Kunsthalle commissions new work by a majority of the artists it works with.

Wikipedia: Kunsthalle Nürnberg (EN), Website

43. Craftmen's Courtyard

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The Handwerkerhof Nürnberg was created in 1971 as a tourist attraction in the so-called "Waffenhof" of the Frauentor, the last Nuremberg city fortification. It is located at the entrance to the old town "Königstor" and thus on the footpath from Nuremberg Central Station to Nuremberg's traditional tourist destinations.

Wikipedia: Handwerkerhof Nürnberg (DE)

44. Kontumazgarten

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The Kontumazgarten is a 1.7-hectare green space with a children's playground in the Kleinweidenmühle district of Nuremberg. The simple park is located in front of the Hallertor in the west of the old town, on the left bank of the Pegnitz between the Großweidenmühlsteg and the Hallertor Bridge. Opposite on the other bank of the river stretches the Hallerwiese. Kontumazgarten is also the name of district 054 in district 05 Himpfelshof, but its area is not identical with the green corridor.

Wikipedia: Kontumazgarten (DE)

45. Schnepperschützenbrunnen

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Schnepperschützenbrunnen --Grüner Grünling 08:28, 8. Aug. 2008 (CEST) / CC BY-SA 3.0

The crossbow shooter fountain or Schnepperschützenbrunnen is located in Nuremberg, in the green area of ​​Hallerwiese in the St. Johannis district. His line -up in 1904 was made possible by a donation from the St. Johannis citizens' association, his creator was the Nuremberg sculptor Leonhard Herzog. The fountain acts today as a design center of this oldest green area in the city and is one of the popular art and monuments of the city of Nuremberg.

Wikipedia: Armbrustschützenbrunnen (DE)

46. Archivpark

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The Archive Park, also known as the Colleggarten or Kolleggarten after the "Colleg-Gesellschaft" that created the park, is an approx. 2.2-hectare neighbourhood park in the Nuremberg district of Gärten hinter der Veste. It emerged from a plot of land owned by the merchant Georg Zacharias Platner in the north of the city of Nuremberg and used as a garden. The garden extended, according to today's street names, from Archivstraße to Pirckheimerstraße and from Bucher Straße to Pilotystraße.

Wikipedia: Archivpark (DE)

47. Sankt Matthäus

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Sankt Matthäus

St. Matthew's Church is an Evangelical Lutheran church in Nuremberg, Germany. It was planned and built under the direction of the architect Wilhelm Schlegtendal and is located at Rollnerstraße 100 in 90408 Nuremberg in the Maxfeld or Nordbahnhof district.

Wikipedia: Matthäuskirche (Nürnberg) (DE), Website

48. Dudelsackpfeiferbrunnen

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Bagpiper fountains are two fountains in the Franconian former imperial city of Nuremberg, whose bronze fountain figures each have a bagpiper. One of them is located on the Unschlittplatz in the southwest of the old town, the other is a wall fountain in Lammsgasse No. 14 in the northwestern part of the old town.

Wikipedia: Dudelsackpfeiferbrunnen (DE), Website

49. Feldbahn-Museum 500 e.V.

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The Feldbahn-Museum 500 is a museum in Nuremberg, Germany, where light railways of the rare 500 mm gauge are collected and presented. Apart from the more recent 500mm light railway project in Berlin, it is the only collection of material of this gauge in Germany and at the same time the largest.

Wikipedia: Feldbahn-Museum 500 (DE)

50. Erfahrungsfeld zur Entfaltung der Sinne

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Erfahrungsfeld zur Entfaltung der Sinne

The Erfahrungsfeld zur Entfaltung der Sinne is an interactive exhibition that stimulates all the senses, designed by Hugo Kükelhaus. The different exhibits are intended to inspire the visitor to experiment with them, to explore them, like in a park of the senses or a science center. Kükelhaus constructed 32 pieces of playground equipment for schools in the city of Dortmund and demonstrated some of these equipment at the Expo 67 world exhibition in Montreal. His holistic concept for a large open-air exhibition was shown in the exhibition Phenomena, shown in Rotterdam, South Africa, and Bietigheim, among others.

Wikipedia: Erfahrungsfeld zur Entfaltung der Sinne (EN), Website

51. Burgschmietbrunnen

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The Burgschmietbrunnen fountain in Nuremberg stands on a small square at the junction of Burgschmietstraße and Neutorgraben. The fountain was built in memory of the sculptor and art caster Jacob Daniel Burgschmiet. The bronze figure depicting Burgschmiet was designed by the sculptor Fritz Zadow and cast by Ernst Lenz in 1897. The financing is provided by the residents of Burgschmietstraße.

Wikipedia: Burgschmietbrunnen (DE)

52. Irrhain

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Irrhain — is a small landscape-ecological and cultural-historical nature reserve within the Nuremberg agglomeration. It is located north of the city's airport on lands bearing the historical name «Knoblauchland» — «Garlic Field», where farms are located that largely provide the city with fresh vegetables.

Wikipedia: Irrhain (EN)

53. Transit

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The Forced Laborer Memorial "Transit" is a Nuremberg monument. It is located at the Plärrer, a main traffic junction of the Nuremberg city centre, just outside the city wall. The aim is to keep the memory of the fate of the Nuremberg forced laborers during the Nazi era alive.

Wikipedia: Forced Laborer Memorial Transit (EN)

54. St. Georg

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The Protestant, listed parish church of St. Georg stands in the fortified church of Kraftshof, a district of the independent city of Nuremberg. The building is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian List of Monuments under the monument number D-5-64-000-1113. The parish belongs to the Vice Deanery North of the Evangelical Lutheran Deanery of Nuremberg in the church district of Nuremberg of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria.

Wikipedia: St. Georg (Nürnberg-Kraftshof) (DE), Url

55. Kreuzkirche

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The listed Protestant Kreuzkirche is located in Schweinau, a district of the independent city of Nuremberg. The parish church is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian List of Monuments under the monument number D-5-64-000-2471. The church belongs to the Vice Deanery West of the Deanery of Nuremberg in the church district of Nuremberg of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria. The church has been closed since 2004 due to the risk of collapse. The services take place in the community center. The Steinmeyer organ from 1964 was donated to St. Paul's Church in Odessa.

Wikipedia: Kreuzkirche (Nürnberg-Schweinau) (DE), Website, Url

56. St. Nikolaus und Ulrich

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The listed Protestant parish church of St. Nicholas and Ulrich is located in Mögeldorf, a district of the independent city of Nuremberg. The building is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian List of Monuments under the monument number D-5-64-000-1001. The church belongs to the Vice Deanery East of the Deanery of Nuremberg in the church district of Nuremberg of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria.

Wikipedia: St. Nikolaus und Ulrich (Mögeldorf) (DE)

57. Heilige Familie

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The Roman Catholic, listed parish church of the Holy Family is located in Reichelsdorf, a district of the independent city of Nuremberg. The building is registered as a monument in the Bavarian List of Monuments under the monument number D-5-64-000-407. The parish belongs to the Deanery of Nuremberg-South of the Diocese of Eichstätt.

Wikipedia: Heilige Familie (Nürnberg) (DE), Website

58. Erlöserkirche

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The listed Protestant Church of the Redeemer is located in Leyh, a district of the independent city of Nuremberg. The parish church is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian List of Monuments under the monument number D-5-64-000-947. The church belongs to the Vice Deanery West of the Deanery of Nuremberg in the church district of Nuremberg of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria.

Wikipedia: Erlöserkirche (Leyh) (DE)

59. St. Felicitas

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The listed Evangelical Lutheran Chapel of St. Felicitas is located in Reutles, a district of the independent city of Nuremberg. The church is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian List of Monuments under the monument number D-5-64-000-1647. The chapel belongs to the deanery of Erlangen in the church district of Nuremberg of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria.

Wikipedia: St. Felicitas (Reutles) (DE)

60. Deutsches Museum Nürnberg

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The Deutsches Museum Nürnberg – The Museum of the Future is a branch of the Munich-based Deutsches Museum in Nuremberg. Since 2021, it has been located on the site of the former Augustinerhof in the northern old town district of St. Sebald.

Wikipedia: Deutsches Museum Nürnberg (DE), Website

61. Enver Şimşek

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Enver Şimşek Hafenbar / CC BY-SA 3.0 de

The NSU murder series refers to nine racially motivated murders of entrepreneurs with a migrant background, eight of them of Turkish origin and one Greek, which were committed by the right-wing extremist terrorist group National Socialist Underground (NSU) in major German cities between 2000 and 2006. The official investigations focused on the victims themselves and their relatives, which led to their victimization and stigmatization, while hardly any investigations were conducted in the direction of a right-wing extremist motivation. In the leading media, the acts were misleadingly called kebab murders or – after the title of the homicide squad involved – the Bosporus series of murders, which was criticized from 2011 onwards as trivializing, clichéd and racist. The eponymous murder weapon, a Česká CZ 83 pistol, caliber 7.65 mm Browning, was seized in November 2011 in the rubble of the last NSU apartment in Zwickau.

Wikipedia: NSU-Morde (DE)

62. Nassauer Haus

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The Nassauer Haus or Schlüsselfeldersche Stiftungshaus in Nuremberg is a medieval residential tower made of so-called red castle sandstone. Although originally built in Romanesque style, the house is still characterized by Gothic style elements after some renovations. It is the last surviving residential tower in Nuremberg.

Wikipedia: Nassauer Haus (Nürnberg) (DE)

63. Peter-Henlein-Brunnen

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The Peter Henlein Fountain on Hefnersplatz in Nuremberg was built in honour of the presumed inventor of the pocket watch, Peter Henlein. The fountain, donated by the city of Nuremberg and the Watchmakers' Association, was unveiled at the opening of a watch exhibition in 1905. The bronze statue was based on a model of the Berlin sculptor Max Meissner by the Nuremberg art foundry Ernst Lenz.

Wikipedia: Peter-Henlein-Brunnen (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.