Erfurt and Weimar, what great-sounding names! My very first association is with Weimar and the great names of the Reformation and poetry, such as Martin Luther, Friedrich Schiller and Johann Wolfgang Goethe.
And Erfurt? Many years ago, my lovely friend Janett invited me to go hiking with her in the Harz Mountains and get to know her home in Thuringia! Janett and I were both newly in love at the time 😀 so there was hardly any time for great cultural discoveries in Erfurt (just fun stops eating Thuringian roast sausages or ice cream on the Krämerbrücke bridge!)
This time, however, I was able to really discover Erfurt: The city on the River Gera has recently been listed as a World Heritage Site (since September 2023), known as the “Jewish-Medieval Erfurt“; the historic fortress on Petersberg has been given a new visitor guidance system including an interactive cultural centre, which is really worth a visit. My personal highlight: the listening corridors! More on them in a moment.
Krämerbrücke bridge, historic fortress and my experience of the Jewish-Medieval Erfurt (including a book tip on its history!).
No visit to Erfurt is complete without taking at least one photo of the Krämerbrücke bridge, or even better, eating an ice cream on it!
This time, however, my city guide Stefan captivates me with yet another story: the so-called Mikveh, a Jewish bath house whose existence remained hidden for centuries, has recently been discovered in the immediate vicinity of the Krämerbrücke bridge – purely by chance during construction work.
A similar fate favoured the discovery of the Erfurt Treasure, one of the most powerful testimonies to Jewish history in Erfurt during the 13th century. I am told the story of the treasure, its origins and the restoration of Erfurt’s Old Synagogue in such an engaging way that I ask: “Is there a book, a kind of historical novel on this subject? It’s so interesting what you’re telling me here. I would love to find out and read more about this period!”
Well, this is it, as one such book really does exist! I can only recommend that you read Mirjam Pressler’s historic novel “Dunkles Gold” the next time you’re in Erfurt and/or planning a trip there.
Check this out.
German history as told by the mighty Wartburg Castle.
The following day, I set off to cover the 60 kilometres or so from Erfurt to Wartburg Castle. Wartburg Castle, also a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is special not just for its architecture: the Who’s Who of German history has rendezvoused here over the course of the centuries!
None other than Saint Elisabeth herself spent the majority of her life here; Martin Luther also found refuge at Wartburg Castle and actually wrote one of his most famous works there: The first German translation of the Bible. I learn just how revolutionary this was during my tour of Wartburg Castle.
Visiting Wartburg region: World Heritage Site Ancient Beech Forests in the Hainich National Park (with treetop trail).
Right next door, just 20 minutes by car from Wartburg Castle, is another UNESCO World Heritage Site: the Ancient Beech Forests of Europe as part of the Hainich National Park.
After so much culture, it is really refreshing to dive into the tranquil beech forests of the national park. We bypass the visitor centre and quickly make our way to the treetop trail a little further into the forest.
Our nature guide Kevin, one of the youngest national park rangers in the country at the age of 24, grew up in the neighbouring village to the national park. He knew from an early age on that nature would be his life. Even as a child and teenager, he was always drawn here at various stages: not a bad place, we realise appreciatively. We listen to the young nature lover as we make our way through the winding greenery – and realise how far away this immersion in the “jungle” seems to us in modern everyday life. Come with us for a breath of real wilderness in the middle of Germany!
Weimar as the home of Goethe and Bauhaus culture.
The last stop on my world heritage tour through central Germany must of course be: Weimar.
World heritage has a double meaning here. The UNESCO World Heritage Site known as Classical Weimar is not only associated with “the heyday of intellectual life in Germany” à la Goethe and Schiller, what with its “unique testimony to the cultural epoch of Weimar Classicism and the creation of literary works of exceptional importance”, as is stated by UNESCO.
I learn that Weimar is also legendary because of its Bauhaus University and the entire architectural trends that have come from it. The Bauhaus buildings, a World Heritage Site in Weimar for almost 30 years, belong to a “school of architecture that implemented revolutionary ideas in building design and urban planning between 1919 and 1933”, says Thomas, who himself studied architecture at the Bauhaus University in Weimar. Today, he loves to talk to visitors from near and far about the Bauhaus and its impact on modern building culture, as we discuss during our Bauhaus walk.
Travel video taking you to Erfurt, Weimar and the Wartburg region.
Fancy some more information about World Heritage in Germany? My travel video about my trip through Central Germany will take you to Erfurt and Weimar, to Wartburg Castle as well as into the World Natural Heritage of the Old Beech Forests in Europe.
Disclaimer: I have been invited by the German National Tourist Board on my trip to Erfurt, Weimar and the Wartburg region. All opinions are my own.