10 Sights in Suhl, Germany (with Map and Images)
Legend
Welcome to your journey through the most beautiful sights in Suhl, 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 Suhl. Dive into the diversity of this fascinating city and discover everything it has to offer.
Sightseeing Tours in Suhl1. Großer Beerberg
The Großer Beerberg is a mountain, 982.9 m above sea level (NHN), whose summit is the highest point in the Thuringian Forest and the state of Thuringia. It is located between the three villages of Heidersbach, Goldlauter and Gehlberg in the borough of Suhl. The mountain is made of rhyolite that was formed through volcanic processes in the Rotliegendes rock of the Oberhof Formation, about 280 million years ago, and which was uplifted over the surrounding sediments to form a butte.
2. Schneetiegel
The snow crucible is a cirque valley and at the same time the deepest valley in Thuringia. It is located near Gehlberg in the district-free city of Suhl. The difference in altitude between the Schneekopf summit and the bottom of the snow crucible is up to 380 meters over a distance of about two kilometers. A striking steep slope with a vantage point on the west side is called a rockfall.
3. Großer Finsterberg
The Großer Finsterberg is a mountain, 944.1 m above NHN, in the Thuringian Forest not far from the villages of Stützerbach and Schmiedefeld am Rennsteig. It is the third highest peak in the German state of Thuringia.
4. St. Ulrich
The Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. Ulrich in Heinrichs, a district of the city of Suhl in Thuringia, was built between 1452 and 1503. The listed building is the only place of worship in Suhl that survived the following centuries undestroyed.
5. Schneekopf
The Schneekopf near Gehlberg in the Thuringian county of Ilm-Kreis is 978 m above sea level (NHN) and thus the second highest peak in the Thuringian Forest after its western neighbour, the Großer Beerberg. The Adler Saddle between them is only about 59.4 metres lower than the two summits. To the east some distance away is its subpeak, the Sachsenstein, to the south are the Teufelskreise and Fichtenkopf. The Goldlauterberg further south marks the transition to the mountain of Großer Finsterberg.
6. St. Kilian
St. Kilian is the Roman Catholic church in Suhl, a city in Thuringia, Germany. The listed church bears the patronage of St. Kilian and is a branch church of the parish of St. Marien Meiningen, in the Meiningen deanery of the Diocese of Erfurt.
7. Tierpark Suhl
The Suhl Zoo is a zoo in the east of the city of Suhl in the Thuringian Forest, which specializes in the keeping of endangered European wild and domestic animals. It shows around 450 animals from 100 species.
8. St. Bonifatius
The Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. Boniface is located in Wichtshausen, a district of the district-free city of Suhl in Thuringia. The district of Wichtshausen belongs to the parish of Benshausen in the church district of Henneberger Land of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany.
9. St. Johannes
The church of St. John stands at Hauptstraße 272 of Dietzhausen, a district of the district-free city of Suhl in Thuringia. The parish of Dietzhausen belongs to the parish of Benshausen in the church district of Henneberger Land in the Evangelical Church in Central Germany.
10. Kirche Mäbendorf
The Evangelical Lutheran Church of Mäbendorf is located in Mäbendorf, a district of the district-free city of Suhl in Thuringia. The parish of Suhl-Heinrichs-Mäbendorf belongs to the parish of Suhl with Heinrichs in the church district of Henneberger Land of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany.
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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.