Self-guided Sightseeing Tour #3 in Rostock, Germany
Legend
Tour Facts
3.2 km
31 m
Experience Rostock in Germany in a whole new way with our self-guided sightseeing tour. This site not only offers you practical information and insider tips, but also a rich variety of activities and sights you shouldn't miss. Whether you love art and culture, want to explore historical sites or simply want to experience the vibrant atmosphere of a lively city - you'll find everything you need for your personal adventure here.
Activities in RostockIndividual Sights in RostockSight 1: Petrikirche
Get Ticket*St. Peter's Church, in German Petrikirche, was built in the 13th century and is the oldest of three town churches found in the Hanseatic city of Rostock, in northern Germany. The other two are St. Mary's Church (Marienkirche) and St. Nicholas (Nikolaikirche). A fourth, St. Jakobi, was heavily damaged during the Second World War and subsequently demolished.
Sight 2: Nikolaikirche
Get Ticket*The St. Nicholas Church of the Hanseatic City of Rostock was built from 1230 onwards and is therefore considered one of the oldest surviving hall churches in the Baltic Sea region. It is one of the three surviving large parish churches in the city and named after Bishop Nicholas of Myra. Like St. Mary's Church and St. Peter's Church, it belongs to the Evangelical Lutheran Inner City Parish of Rostock in the Provost's Office of Rostock in the Mecklenburg church district of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany.
Sight 3: Kuhtor
The cow gate is not only the oldest of the still existing four of the previously 22 goals of the historic Rostock city fortification, but also one of the oldest buildings in Rostock and probably the oldest preserved city gate in northern Germany.
Sight 4: Steintor
The Stone Gate in its present form is a gate built between 1574 and 1577 in the Renaissance style in the south of Rostock's historic city fortifications. It replaced the older gate that had been demolished in 1566. Along with the Kröpeliner Tor, the Petritor and the Mühlentor, the Steintor was one of the four main gates of the city of Rostock.
Sight 5: Bernhard Rubensohn
The list of memorials and stumbling stones in Rostock contains the plaques embedded in the ground in the Hanseatic City of Rostock, which commemorate the fate of people who were murdered, deported, expelled or driven to suicide under National Socialism. As in Gunter Demnig's Stolpersteine project, the stones are embedded slabs in front of the victims' homes or places of work, but are not directly related to Demnig's works. The stones have been laid in Rostock since 2000 on the initiative of the Association of Friends and Patrons of the Max Samuel House. They consist of larger stone slabs that show signs of fracture and abrasion. After Demnig did not agree to the further use of the originally used term "stumbling stone", the stones laid since 2016 are referred to as "memorial stones". The new stones were given a different look and are more weather-resistant than those laid until 2016.
Sight 6: St.-Marien-Kirche
St. Mary's Church, Rostock, in German Marienkirche, is the biggest of three town churches found in the Hanseatic city of Rostock, in northern Germany. The other two are St. Peter's (Petrikirche) and St. Nicholas (Nikolaikirche). A fourth, St. James' (Jakobikirche), was heavily damaged during the Second World War and subsequently demolished. St. Mary's was designated in 1265 as the main parish church. Since the Protestant Reformation in 1531, it houses a congregation of the Evangelical Lutheran State Church of Mecklenburg.
Sight 7: Wallanlagen
Rostock's city fortifications enclosed the city of Rostock since the middle of the 13th century. After the original city centres of Rostock's three constituent cities had officially united into one city in 1265, the joint, approximately three-kilometre-long city wall was built, which had more than 20 city gates. These were divided into "land" and "beach gates", depending on whether they led to the Mecklenburg hinterland or to the city harbour on the Unterwarnow.
Sight 8: Dokumentations- und Gedenkstätte für Opfer deutscher Dikaturen BStU Rostock
The Documentation and Memorial Site (DuG) in the former remand prison of the Stasi district administration in Rostock focuses on the work of the Ministry of State Security (MfS) of the GDR and commemorates its victims. It is one of the best-preserved pre-trial detention centers of the MfS. The DuG is embedded in the Documentation Centre of the State of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania for the Victims of Dictatorships in Germany and was operated until August 2017 by the Rostock branch of the Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Records (BStU) in cooperation with the University of Rostock. Between 2017 and 2021, the DuG was closed for renovation. In 2021, the State Agency for Civic Education Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania took over the sponsorship.
Wikipedia: Dokumentations- und Gedenkstätte des BStU in der ehemaligen U-Haft der Stasi in Rostock (DE), Website
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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.
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