American Reacts to Gorgeous Middle Age Towns in Germany

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Пікірлер: 247

  • @afjo972
    @afjo9722 ай бұрын

    As a Spaniard in German: German Pre-War architecture is just superior. Sadly, so many precious architectural pearls have gone lost forever

  • @manub.3847

    @manub.3847

    2 ай бұрын

    And it wasn't just the war that destroyed a large part of the really old architecture in cities like Hamburg, for example; city fires (Great Fire of 1842) were often also responsible for this destruction.

  • @Ace-Of-Spades---

    @Ace-Of-Spades---

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes, before WW II, more than half of the houses in the city centre were centuries-old half-timbered houses. But since 95% of Braunschweig's city centre was destroyed by bombs in 1944, there is not much left of it. Much has been rebuilt, but even more has been irretrievably destroyed. 😢

  • @Beautiful_Doors_of_Sweden

    @Beautiful_Doors_of_Sweden

    2 ай бұрын

    In Sweden we lost a lot of beautiful architecture due to the 60s and 70s when some thought why keep this old run down buildings when you can bulldose it and build a new modern box. Also fires. Sweden has been neural for ages. Yet our cities looks like there was a war. Thankfully there is also a lot of beauty left, otherwise I wouldnt have my channel 😄🙂

  • @grafzahl4698

    @grafzahl4698

    2 ай бұрын

    @@manub.3847 And a large part of the architecture was destroyed after the war... :(

  • @Muck006

    @Muck006

    Ай бұрын

    The DESTRUCTION OF HISTORY is still going on ... by "investors" who .. a) buy old houses b) let them ROT to the point of "being unsafe and HAVING TO BE TORN DOWN" ... c) to replace them with UGLY and CHEAP but BIGGER modern architecture. There are two beautiful old villas in my corner of Berlin ... which are on my watch list, because they are "deliberately kept empty".

  • @DeeManson
    @DeeManson2 ай бұрын

    For us in Germany these cityscapes are common but through these videos I can clearly see the beauty you're referring to. To sum it up: We literraly walk through Hogsmeade on daily bases and our students often study in castles looking like Hogwarts. 😂 Come visit guys, you're very welcome here! 😊

  • @RustyDust101

    @RustyDust101

    2 ай бұрын

    Haha, great, I just got an ad for the Harry Potter musical in the middle of this video... damn, those algorythms are getting scary good... 😁

  • @paul1979uk2000

    @paul1979uk2000

    2 ай бұрын

    I think we take it for granted us Europeans because we live in these areas, but for outsiders, it probably looks like a fairytale, especially for Americans that the US doesn't have much history and most of their cities are modern in comparison and honestly, as a European myself, I kinda forget at times how old many of the buildings around me are.

  • @bodob.8828

    @bodob.8828

    2 ай бұрын

    @@paul1979uk2000danke, genauso ist es!

  • @79BlackRose
    @79BlackRose2 ай бұрын

    On your next visit, steer clear of cities and get out to rural Germany and these picturesque towns. Much more rewarding.

  • @Beautiful_Doors_of_Sweden

    @Beautiful_Doors_of_Sweden

    2 ай бұрын

    agree

  • @teachersusan3730
    @teachersusan37302 ай бұрын

    When I was in NZ as a student they showed me a historical building - it was about 100 years old😂😂😂. Well, in Germany that‘s not even old. Hold my beer 😂 🍻

  • @3deverything690

    @3deverything690

    2 ай бұрын

    I'm from Europe, but I live in California. The town in the USA where I live has a sign that says "Historic (insert the name of the town). It is only 80 years old LMAO. Let me know if you find something really worth looking at, at least 1000 years old for example.

  • @teachersusan3730

    @teachersusan3730

    2 ай бұрын

    @@3deverything690 😁🤷🏼‍♂️😝

  • @Beautiful_Doors_of_Sweden
    @Beautiful_Doors_of_Sweden2 ай бұрын

    A couple of days ago in class, the teacher asked where we would most like to go on vacation. Everybody said Thailand, Maldives.. varm beach countries. I said Germany 😄and this video is why. I love the old architecture 🥰 Greedings from Stockholm, Sweden.

  • @monikadear3594

    @monikadear3594

    2 ай бұрын

    😘

  • @knapperfranke9648

    @knapperfranke9648

    2 ай бұрын

    You are very welcome here. 🫶🏻 just visit our country

  • @marcusmr

    @marcusmr

    2 ай бұрын

    Germany is such a beautiful country, its people are very open and friendly. I love vacationing there...

  • @robinwbarrett
    @robinwbarrett2 ай бұрын

    Joel you are an exceedingly lucky young man, you have discovered the magic of Europe four decades sooner than most of your countrymen

  • @danielkaufmann15
    @danielkaufmann152 ай бұрын

    Middle Age : The time period from 6th century - 15th century. 😊

  • @thierryf67
    @thierryf672 ай бұрын

    In France, Aachen is named Aix-la-Chapelle, former capital of an empire that joined what will become later France and Germany. Charlemagne (as we name Charles the Great) is a famous King/Emperor here, too. Germany and France are the legacy of Charles.

  • @raistraw8629

    @raistraw8629

    Ай бұрын

    As a Franconian and a huge fan of the early medieval times, I always dreamed that Germany and France would come together to form a new Frankish Empire.

  • @sarderim
    @sarderim2 ай бұрын

    Just to let you know, you can get "Glühwein" the wine sold on the christmas markets at Aldi in the US during Christmas time. Just heat it up, do not boil it!

  • @martinhuhn7813

    @martinhuhn7813

    2 ай бұрын

    You can´t buy the necessary atmosphere at Aldi. Unlike for beer and wine, that is essential for Glühwein. A complete christmast market is not mandatory, but it needs to be cold, dark (with warm candlelights or a campfire) and there must be a group of people.

  • @RustyDust101

    @RustyDust101

    2 ай бұрын

    The scenery for Glühwein (literally glow wine, yes you can see the common ancestry of those two languages, again) is one part that can't be exported. But the Aldi Glühwein probably is the authentic stuff from Germany, IIRC as they seem to import quite a lot directly from their German warehouses to the USA.

  • @jeansh7325
    @jeansh73252 ай бұрын

    I miss Cologne with its cathedral! That's also a must-see.

  • @zwiderwurzn5908

    @zwiderwurzn5908

    2 ай бұрын

    But after the WWII destructions, you cannot call Cologne a medieval city. And this is what the video is talking about. Wismar, Lüneburg, Wolfenbüttel, Wernigerode, Bautzen, Monschau, Cochem, Marburg, Alsfeld, Michelstadt, Calw, Schwäbisch Hall, Nördlingen, Regensburg, Burghausen and others are probably more to the point.

  • @Steven91637

    @Steven91637

    2 ай бұрын

    Coburg is beautiful too

  • @Ulrich.Bierwisch
    @Ulrich.Bierwisch2 ай бұрын

    I live in Aachen (the second City in this video). Medieval was a pretty long time. The cathedral in Aachen had it's first version around 800 but most parts we have today where added over the next 1000 years. This is typical for a lot of the old towns in Europe. You will see a mixture of different styles from up to 2000 years ago in some cases. I like to travel on the bicycle from town to town. A range of 50-100km is more than enough to have a lot of interesting choices in reach each day. After a few hours of cycling, I have the rest of the day to explore and I stay a day extra in some of the larger cities. A typical trip takes a month and I visit about 25 cities. I have done this many times but the hardest thing is always to decide where not to go.

  • @user-ri7nr5lb3y
    @user-ri7nr5lb3y2 ай бұрын

    Yay, going to Bamberg again this summer. It's so beautiful there.

  • @RossoBianco1895
    @RossoBianco18952 ай бұрын

    Most half-timbered houses are not from the middle ages, as the narrator in the DW video suggested, but in fact from the early modern period around the 16th and 17th century.

  • @Draganter1977
    @Draganter19772 ай бұрын

    we have around 25,000 castles and palaces in germany and we have no cheap wood houses

  • @GiavanniGabrieli
    @GiavanniGabrieli2 ай бұрын

    I remember when I stood in front on that throne a few years ago and saw it for the first time. I was surprised how simple that throne is. Just a few marmor plates nailed together.

  • @EinChris75
    @EinChris752 ай бұрын

    Fun fact: During middle ages, they did not call themselves "in the middle age", but they where the "modern times" then. They invented the most modern things, they built the highest buildings, they had the most population. In about 1000 years, we will be the ones living in the "middle age". If humans still exist and have time to spare on history...

  • @blondkatze3547
    @blondkatze35472 ай бұрын

    It`s always nice to see the history , the old churches and the beautiful landscapes from north to south Germany . It`s very impressive.😊👍🌹🍁🍀💙

  • @d2ndborn
    @d2ndborn2 ай бұрын

    I have traveled though Germany a lot of work. There are so many places to see and food to eat. Love it all!

  • @janettesinclair6279
    @janettesinclair62792 ай бұрын

    Such beautiful architecture and fascinating history. The main cities are worth visiting, but these smaller towns and cities are even more beautiful and easier to navigate. Love Germany!

  • @tosa2522
    @tosa25222 ай бұрын

    6:48 The Holsten Tor was depicted on the old 50 DM banknote.

  • @cdhagen
    @cdhagen2 ай бұрын

    I think it would be a fantastic idea when you come back this summer to focus on the south of Germany and then maybe proceed to Switzerland or Austria. Vienna for example is beautiful. 😍

  • @jogpoel5391
    @jogpoel53912 ай бұрын

    Good Morning Joel, in my Opinion, it´s the red Roofs, that let Videos from the more southern Regions appear more lighter; the North is very like- and endearable, too - says Someone from South Germany ;) There is another well conserved medieval Unesco Heritage Town in Swabia called "Nördlingen" (also with a complete Citywall to walk there). The Town was built in the Middle of a Meteor Crater. P.S. It was a Joy to watch You being so fond of what You see in that Videoclip 😊 Best Wishes! 🙋‍♂

  • @user-sd8ip7rj6d

    @user-sd8ip7rj6d

    2 ай бұрын

    thats actually my question... Red roofs dominate Southern Germany, and darker roofs dominate Nothern Germany, and also Belgium, Netherlands, and Denmark... any specific reason ?

  • @mellowtopia5376

    @mellowtopia5376

    2 ай бұрын

    @@user-sd8ip7rj6dIt’s probably historical reasons. Remember that Germany the state was only founded mere 150 years ago. It used to be a collection of duchies and provinces with close relations to neighbours. The south of Germany has many historical ties to Austria and other southern regions and for buildings they mostly used material that was available there. The north of Germany, Schleswig-Holstein, used to belong to Denmark not too long ago, and there’s not much timber to be found there on the flat plains. What was necessity because of materials available became building convention and style at one point. It’s probably as simple as that. 😊

  • @jogpoel5391

    @jogpoel5391

    2 ай бұрын

    @@user-sd8ip7rj6d I totally agree with mellowtopia

  • @brabusta
    @brabusta2 ай бұрын

    Team up with Nalf @nalfvlogs a fellow American who lives in Schwabisch Hall. I’ve been and it’s gorgeous!!!

  • @teachersusan3730

    @teachersusan3730

    2 ай бұрын

    Nalf‘s videos are really interesting as well

  • @helgaioannidis9365

    @helgaioannidis9365

    2 ай бұрын

    I also wanted to suggest nalf's channel to him.

  • @stefantegethoff5523
    @stefantegethoff55232 ай бұрын

    Come to the Rhine-Ruhr area next time. We might not have the most half-timbered houses because there was so much destruction (there are some though!), but there's a lot of different interesting cities in one region (like Cologne and Düsseldorf with their distinct local beer variations, Kölsch and Alt) and Aachen, Belgium and the Netherlands are also just a short train ride away.

  • @s.h.741
    @s.h.74114 күн бұрын

    I grew up in the Aachen area and the Aachen Christmas market is a highlight. I love Aachen's old pubs and small streets in the city center.

  • @Caddl123
    @Caddl1232 ай бұрын

    Hi from Germany. Look out in Middlefrankonia and Underfranconia in Northern Bavaria The Area around Ansbach Many tiny landcities were never destroyed in any war,also many old big villge centers are so. Kitzingen and Fürth also Lauf an der Pegnitz is a visit worth. Also in the Grabfeld northern of Schweinfurt into Direction of Thuringa are many such little towns. And yes Bavaria and baden Württemberg are each foritself a moth visit worth until you have a bit of an "overlook". :D

  • @bjorndebar8361

    @bjorndebar8361

    29 күн бұрын

    Auch in Niedersachsen haben alle Dörfer und kleine Städte Fachwerk und alte Kirchen. Das findet man in ganz Deutschland, erst im Küstengebiet ändert sich das.

  • @HardmodeHorst
    @HardmodeHorst2 ай бұрын

    As a German i can say 3 most beautiful Cities to go are Quedlinburg, Dresden and Erfurt (because i live there :D). 1 little insider Tip from my side is Bautzen. But this kind of Town centers you can find many in Germany.

  • @frauknusper89
    @frauknusper892 ай бұрын

    How about an exchange year in Germany? There are a few ways to spend some time here. 🙂I would love to see your videos during that time.

  • @Apophis1966
    @Apophis19662 ай бұрын

    My Father was born in the Castle Burg Bentheim ( build 1108 ), Prost from Germany

  • @MichaEl-rh1kv
    @MichaEl-rh1kv2 ай бұрын

    4:50 Quedlinburg was the Easter residence of the Ottonic dynasty: It was this palatinate (Pfalz) they resided during Easter time each year. The medieval German kings were migrating kings, residing each season in another palatinate in another region of the Holy Roman Empire (the word palatinate or Pfalz derived like the word palace from the Palatine Hill within Rome, which was there the place where the emperors built their residences). The palatinates were managed by counts palatinate (Pfalzgraf - the title of a high civil servant. The English form "count" refers to "accountant", the German word "Graf" to Latin "grapheus", scribe - in both cases originally people who could read and write, but later they sometimes only inherited the title as well as the post and employed people doing the reading, writing and accounting for them 🙃). 10:00 They did not mention the other two well preserverd medieval towns nearby to Rothenburg along the western border of Bavaria. Rothenburg and Dinkelsbühl (kzread.info/dash/bejne/q56s17ellJCbe8Y.html), 40 km south of Rothenburg, are Franconian; Nördlingen (kzread.info/dash/bejne/o5p7q7GRYcendKg.html / kzread.info/dash/bejne/f4WXk8WkeqfWZsY.html), about 30km south of Dinkelsbühl, is Swabian.

  • @kuerbis-chen3613
    @kuerbis-chen36132 ай бұрын

    There are many, many more towns in Germany that offer such beauty! You could basically travel Germany from north to south and find them everywhere along the route... from (only a small list of examples that is far, far from exhaustive) Friedrichstadt and Husum in the north, Wismar and Schwerin on or close to the Baltic Sea, over Lüneburg in the famous Lüneburg Heath, to Hessian towns with a large number of half-timbered houses and/or small castles such as Melsungen, Spangenberg, Rothenburg a. d. Fulda, Homberg, Amöneburg, Grünberg, Lich, Münzenberg, Büdingen, Friedberg, Kronberg, Reifenberg, Königstein/Falkenstein and of course Frankfurt with its world-known Römerberg and the recreated "new old town". Then Seligenstadt with its beautiful old monastery, and Eberbach Monastery (site of scenes from the movie "The Name of the Rose" with Sean Connery), Mühlhausen in Thuringia, in Bavaria e.g. Aschaffenburg, Coburg and Schwäbisch-Hall, not to forget quaint little towns along the Rhine and Mosel Rivers and castles there such as the Marksburg and Burg Eltz. I think to explore all of Germany's treasures, you'd need a life-time of travelling. To explore all of Europes beautiful places, several lifetimes. Have fun looking up some of the places - maybe one or two of them catch your interest for your next trip to Germany? P. S. If you ever travel to Southern France, the medieval cities of Aigues Mortes and Carcassonne, and the Pont du Gard (ancient Roman aqueduct) are absolute must-sees!

  • @willzyxOfficial

    @willzyxOfficial

    Ай бұрын

    Wow, thank you for this large list of destinations! Or actually, no thanks, now my Google maps has even more pins than it already had, lol.

  • @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl
    @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl2 ай бұрын

    Just an idea: Ulm is a pretty big town with an old town centre near the Danube river which starts to be navigable in Ulm but isn't being used any more nowadays. The Ulm minster ("Ulmer Münster") is in the middle of that town - the cathedral with the highest belfry of the world. Ulm can be reached quite easily by either flying to Stuttgart or to Munich, then taking a train to Ulm. Ulm has the advantage of not being too far away from many interesting other places. Lake Constance is about 100 km south of Ulm. Friedrichshafen - where the first Zeppelins have been built - is a train ride of about an hour away from Ulm. There are several beautiful towns around Lake Constance, particularly Lindau and Konstanz. Stuttgart, the capital of Baden-Württemberg, and Munich can be reached easily by railway from Ulm. Rottenburg/Tauber which was mentioned in the video isn't too far away either. And quite nearby to Rottenburg is another very interesting medieval town, Nördlingen. They're both north of Ulm. Between Rottenburg and Ulm there's Aalen which is home of a very interesting museum and a few ruins of the time when parts of Germany were occupied by ancient Rome. About 60 km south of Ulm is Memmingen which also has a very beautiful old town center. West of Ulm and south of Stuttgart there's the quite prominent university town of Tübingen which is offering really stunning sights, partly due to a castle on a hill in the middle of that town close to the Neckar river. Tübingen is home to one o the oldest universities in Germany and has a very special flair. In Sigmaringen you can find one of the famous castles of Germany. Again on a hill in the middle of that rather small town. However, visiting the castle is very restricted - in contrast to Hohenstaufen which is farer away. It's easy to take a train from Ulm to Füssen which is the town next to the Neuschwanstein castle (the one which looks like Disney's Cinderella castle). However mind that the town of Füssen has a very nice historical central area too. In Füssen the Lech river is leaving the Alps and the valley of the Lech river can offer many impressive sights. I have to stop here although I could go on for hours and hours about suggestions of interesting things to do starting in Ulm.

  • @Skyl3t0n
    @Skyl3t0n2 ай бұрын

    Bavaria seems sunnier because it literaly is. Bavaria has the most sunshine out of every german state (Though far from california) There's also hotter summers and colder winters. And we still have some snow that piles up a little.

  • @Skyl3t0n

    @Skyl3t0n

    2 ай бұрын

    @@bennosimpson Hör ich zum ersten mal aber kann sein, ist ja auch im Süden. Hab aber auch von ganzen Bundesländern geredet

  • @KoenigTamar

    @KoenigTamar

    2 ай бұрын

    That is simply not true. The south-west might be the warmest part of Germany, but the most 'sun hours' can be enjoyed at the islands in the Baltic Sea: Fehmarn, Rügen, Usedom.

  • @michaelmedlinger6399
    @michaelmedlinger63992 ай бұрын

    There is obviously no exact date for the Medieval Period, but it is usually described as the time between the fall of Rome in the latter half of the 5th century CE to the beginning of the Renaissance (whenever you want to date that! About 14th century or a little later). I have known some historians to take 1492 as the definitive end of the Medieval Period, but probably simply because that is a definite date with major consequences. You have heard of Lübeck because a lot of people wrote in their comments about your visit to Hamburg that you should go to Lübeck as well. It‘s only about a 40-minute train ride from here.

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey38822 ай бұрын

    Jay, people become inured to the specialness of what is common. My grandsons in Queensland take for grznted azure seas, great waves, and endless beaches. My BC family hardly notice the mountains and forests surrounding them. I spent the first 17 yrs of my life in a small town which had the largest 13th century castle in Europe. It was just "there". None of us thought about it. Germans probably appreciate these places more, as many had to be rebuilt after the War.

  • @dnocturn84

    @dnocturn84

    2 ай бұрын

    Many people just live there and hardly notice the castles, cathedrals or other medival buildings / historical buildings. They are just there. Just like you wrote. I don't think this is much different between places in all over Europe. Germany isn't any different in this category. I even hear some crazy people complain about the "old stuff" around them from time to time. So this does exist as well, unfortunately.

  • @johnfrancismaglinchey4192
    @johnfrancismaglinchey41922 ай бұрын

    You must learn German 🇩🇪,,,, I’m convinced Germany is your first Love ❤

  • @PhilipTait-oi2hm
    @PhilipTait-oi2hm2 ай бұрын

    Hello, Joel. I live in York but I can also recommend Rothenburg ob der Tauber to you: you will LOVE it. But, then, Europe is overflowing with medieval cities - Germany, Italy, Spain, France, Portugal, Czech Republic, Hungary and the list goes on. Luckily, you have a lifetime to explore them. ENJOY 😊😊😊

  • @hittingthebridge406
    @hittingthebridge4062 ай бұрын

    I think the south has just the most beauty and action to offer. The Alps and all the outdoor activities and stunning landscape in Bavaria, Lake Constance and the Black Forest in Baden-Württemberg (make sure not to skip Tübingen on your trip, it's a quaint and alternative-minded university town that still gets overlooked by many tourists, but so are many towns around Lake contance) all the way to Palatinate with its vine valleys. If I had to create the perfect route to show the beauty of Germany to tourists, it would be those 3 areas for a start. The rest comes after in my opinion. :)

  • @ub681904

    @ub681904

    2 ай бұрын

    If there only weren't the bavarian natives. Arrogant and conservative as hell.

  • @volti1567
    @volti15676 күн бұрын

    Funnily enough, bavaria is one of the states which gets the strongest and heaviest thunderstorms in germany because of the alps. Some weather tips appreciated too i hope xD

  • @ingostawitz1140
    @ingostawitz11402 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately a great deal of medieval and historic sites in the larger cities of Germany were destroyed ba bombing during WWII. In Nüremberg about 80% in Hamburg 65% etc.

  • @severinveganigang8036
    @severinveganigang80362 ай бұрын

    Hi JPS, I'm finnish but visited Germany 3 times and visiting for the 4th time next summer. There are loads of beautiful places in Germany, but I really reccomend you fly to Frankfurt, since it's close to alot of places and you can take the train to almost every part of the country from the airport. My reccomendations would be Heidelberg, Wurzburg, and the oldest city in Germany, Trier. Looking forward to your Germany vlogs.

  • @lutzherbst3083
    @lutzherbst30832 ай бұрын

    Also think about the art and literature in Germany: Weimar, Leipzig, Dresden, Lübeck.

  • @torstenkersten8566
    @torstenkersten85662 ай бұрын

    you gonna need more than just a couple of days to get the chilled normal vibe here and see at least some of the really cool things in my country. Ever thought about learning some german, getting a job here and live/work here for a year or two? Easiest way to explore the country ...

  • @benjaminmosser2894
    @benjaminmosser2894Ай бұрын

    I am Benjamin from Austria and I really enjoy watching your videos! Thank you! 👍🏻 you have to come to europe again! There is so much to explore that you can‘t even imagine! 👍🏻🥳

  • @mickypescatore9656
    @mickypescatore96562 ай бұрын

    Hi, Joel! I think the most sunny days you find in the state Mecklenburg Vorpommern, east germany. I`m not sure... Don`t forget the Köln Cathedral! This, and after (or better BEFORE) having party there, go outside Cologne (southern, behind the former capital Bonn, and a few kilometers further) you also see a beautifull landscape left and right along the river Rhine (Rhein). You can go by train.

  • @spring_in_paris
    @spring_in_paris2 ай бұрын

    Little advice, if you don't mind. Visit a Christmas market during the week. Not on the weekend. This way you'll actually have a chance to see something. Weekends they are crazy full. Especially the famous ones. With love from Germany 🤘🏻❤

  • @AFNacapella
    @AFNacapella2 ай бұрын

    there are quite a lot of open-air museums all around germany where they re-locate old houses to. the timberframe can be disassembled, rebuilt somewhere else and filled and plastered again. where ever you go in Germany, a "Freilichtmuseum" shouldn't be too far away and most are worth spending a day in. especially if you ask them in advance if someone would like to tour around a youtuber... also plenty of castles do medieval markets and knight tournaments and stuff. dunno if I would wanna plan my trip around that, more check if there's something happening while you're close by anyway...

  • @MsChris2707
    @MsChris27072 ай бұрын

    You‘re 100% correct about the light in Bavaria. It‘s different, indeed brighter.

  • @BlissLovePeace
    @BlissLovePeace2 ай бұрын

    You are right about that ... there is tooooooo or sooo much. Even as a local ... I discover new things all the time and I am flabbergasted ... and it would take years to see just a fraction of it all ... Make sure to visit Freiburg im Breisgau some time ...

  • @274727
    @2747272 ай бұрын

    Have you reacted to the video "This is Germany" 😎It's just stunning video!

  • @APCLZ
    @APCLZАй бұрын

    One of the best Christmas markets in Germany with a middle age theme and ancient buildings is in a town called Esslingen near Stuttgart in south west Germany

  • @ovidiumarianbudulean1851
    @ovidiumarianbudulean18512 ай бұрын

    Come to 🇷🇴 Romania...we have Transylvania....and you can see how german settled in our country hundreds of years ago....they built cities that you can admire today....Villages too...they are called saxon. ...And it's true...Europe is amazing...too many stuff to see and do...but ...keep on trying 😂 ...the best we can all do.

  • @Steven91637
    @Steven916372 ай бұрын

    Koblenz is a nice City on the Rhine River and its Deutsche Eck/german corner where two rivers meet the Moselle and Rhine River. Königswinter near by Bonn is beautiful with the Dragonrock Mountain and the seven peak mountains ⛰ and the Rhine River

  • @alansmithee8831
    @alansmithee88312 ай бұрын

    Hello Joel . Fitted in nicely with a tour of Germany by Magic Geekdom, who just went to a town like this. They compared ot to your favourite UK city, York, but no Yorkshire pudding wraps. They also recently drove on the autobahn. An idea for the summer? P.S. Endless Adventure went to a German themed town in US, which might be interesting for a reaction?

  • @Jaguar79gt
    @Jaguar79gt2 ай бұрын

    a completely different face without your beard 😅 mouthwatering, when you see beer....i haven't seen that yet either. i only know that when you see food 🤤😂

  • @rampp17
    @rampp172 ай бұрын

    In Germany you definitely have to see Walhalla (near Regensburg) and the Befreiungshalle in Kelheim

  • @heros2110
    @heros21102 ай бұрын

    The first scene, right where i am originally from. Lübeck ❤ Now i live near the Alps, 700 miles south 😔

  • @Pucky71
    @Pucky712 ай бұрын

    In ganz Europa findet man so viele Städte mit vielen mittelalterlichen Gebäuden, nicht nur in DE. Aber Fachwerkhäuser gelten tatsächlich als typisch deutsch, obwohl man sie auch in fast ganz Europa findet (oft von Deutschen gebaut, aber eben nicht immer). Schon die alten Römer benutzten die Fachwerktechnik, da man so stabil und materialsparend bauen konnte. Genau, bei deinem ersten Urlaub in DE warst du lange in Berlin. Lasse die Großstädte diesmal links liegen. Hier hast du ja schon ein paar Anregungen gesehen. Ich kann Dresden, Erfurt, Lüneburg, Lübeck wirklich empfehlen. Besuche die Ostseeküste und Nordseeküste. Wenn du in der Vorweihnacchtszeit kommen willst, dann hast du ganz viele Möglichkeiten in ganz Deutschland. Du wirst dich wie im Weihnachts-Wunderland fühlen.

  • @bodob.8828
    @bodob.88282 ай бұрын

    Hello, thank you very much for this nice video. Germany has some very beautiful medieval cities, and one of them is my hometown. Best regards from the Hanseatic city of Lübeck

  • @k4ndypaint
    @k4ndypaint2 ай бұрын

    If you're ever in Erfurt or Bamberg let me know and I'll show up. I live nearby, about 20 km away. As always, great video and keep it up

  • @olivierdew1418
    @olivierdew1418Ай бұрын

    Belgian played in a Rock band late 90's in Boston (usa). Musically... Best place on earth no doubt! But went back to Belgium, missed food at the decent price! (Tim Boston)

  • @sobelou
    @sobelou2 ай бұрын

    Loved it!!

  • @RoterPaelzer
    @RoterPaelzer2 ай бұрын

    You have to visit the Palatinate! Why? There, the climate is like in the Tuscany, on the western edge of the rhinevalley lies Germanies biggest forest, the Palatinate Forest and there are lot of castles! And we have good vines too!

  • @sa_si_ra
    @sa_si_ra2 ай бұрын

    The song you are going with at 6:00 is named ‚All was well‘ by Matt Nasir

  • @florianfussl3769
    @florianfussl37692 ай бұрын

    Unbelievable that most of german cities were rebuilt this way after WWII

  • @kimflycht2258
    @kimflycht225826 күн бұрын

    What she forgot to tell about Lübeck is the reason to this city's great wealth in the Middle-age is this city was one of several cities in a trade union called Die Hasenstädter. These cities was mostly in the Northern part of Germany but also round in the Baltic sea, which the city of Visby Gotland and Stockholm Sweden was a part of. Nördlingen is a very special City from 1100 that still have it's city centre from that time. It have a distinct round shape that have occurred due to this city is build in a meteor crater from 15000 years ago!! The bell tower of the church is build of stones from this impact and are unique to only being created of a meteor impact!! This building is the only one in the world build of stones created of a meteor impact!!! Kind regards the Danish Viking

  • @augustiner3821
    @augustiner38212 ай бұрын

    This is a quite good selection of cities for beginners. To your point with the Bavariasn weather. You're right. I know both regions very well, northern Germany, where I grew up in rainy conditions, and Bavaria, where I live now. The national colors of Bavaria are white and blue, so is the propeller of BMW and so is the weather as well. Regardless where you drop, take your time, don't rush. Lübeck i.e. was the capital of the most successful medevial trading network in the northern hemiosphere, the Hanse. It comprised the region from St. Petersburg to London. So, before going there, it's worth to reading somes lines about that and you will enjoy it even more.

  • @silvialittlewolf
    @silvialittlewolf2 ай бұрын

    I can highly recommend the small city of Schwäbisch Hall! To me, it's the prettiest (small) city we have in Germany.

  • @nikitaeurope
    @nikitaeurope2 ай бұрын

    I used to travel a lot between 2 different countries in Europe. A distance of only 150 km or a 2 hour drive. While in the more southern country people where still sitting on terrasses enjoying the sun in september, only 2 hours up north you drive into rain and stormy depressingly grey weather. So the difference between Hamburg in the north and Munich in the south of Germany is about an 8 or 9 hour drive by car. So not at all surprising that in many cases the weather could be much warmer in Bavaria. There is even a little island called Mainau close to the border between southern Germany and Switzerland where people grow oranges because the average weather is very mild for German standards.

  • @lindekreiter8930
    @lindekreiter89302 ай бұрын

    Come and visit us! We will bring you tu many little towns in Schwarzwald and of course Straßburg and Colmar. You re very welcome! Trier, Heidelberg and Aachen are not far a way from here.

  • @juwen7908
    @juwen79082 ай бұрын

    About the wether, what should I say, yes in Germany it's warmer and sunnier in the south, too. Like everywhere 😉 When it comes to winter times, you will get more snow but also a bit more sun in the south, while it is more cloudy, windy and gray in the north. But in the summer I really prefer the north, because of the beautiful coastal areas. It is so nice to lay in the sun on the beach on the island Rügen. Check out the beautiful city of Binz, for example. We call the baltic sea "Berlins bath tube" 😉, cause so many of us enjoy the summer vacation there 😄😄

  • @herb6677
    @herb66772 ай бұрын

    I would recommand to also visit Limburg an der Lahn and Hann. Münden, along with the great domes of Worms and Speyer.

  • @eisikater1584
    @eisikater15842 ай бұрын

    "Seems a little sunnier in Bavaria", well, as a born Bavarian, of course I must agree. And I must admit that I've always rather been to Italy than to the north of Germany. I mean, who travels several hundred kilometers northwards to see the North Sea or the Baltic when there's the Mediterranean down south?

  • @dnocturn84

    @dnocturn84

    2 ай бұрын

    "I mean, who travels several hundred kilometers northwards to see the North Sea or the Baltic when there's the Mediterranean down south?" You should mention the weather. The Mediterranean is almost always gifted with sunshine and beautiful weather, especially in summer. North Sea and Baltic Sea are very hard to predict weather wise and tend to come with heavy wind / storm and rain is pretty common. But both have some unique things, worth to experience at least once, that the Mediterranean doesn't have.

  • @a4kata40
    @a4kata4014 күн бұрын

    Love Germany from Bulgaria. Great country and Great people.

  • @Talkshowhorse_Echna
    @Talkshowhorse_Echna2 ай бұрын

    The middle ages lastet around 1000 years. But in germany we first hat traveling kings, than Aachen became capital and after that the capital moved multiple times with differend Kings. Thats why Aachen was only the crowning place for multiple 100 years.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy.2 ай бұрын

    Joel is giving us hints for his future travel vlogs.

  • @V2HRT
    @V2HRT2 ай бұрын

    Check out the Black Forest and Elsaß (or Alsace), the western part of France ( ;

  • @gerdkaufmann3672
    @gerdkaufmann36722 ай бұрын

    Meißen is very interessting too

  • @marcel-rogerfalk2778
    @marcel-rogerfalk27782 ай бұрын

    Cities like Lüneburg, Celle, Münster, Seligenstadt, Flensburg, Schleswig, Husum and Bremen should never be forgotten!

  • @juwen7908
    @juwen79082 ай бұрын

    Very good video actually, cause most of these kind of videos only shows the south of Germany. But as see, it also beautiful in the north and east here. 😎

  • @Baccatube79
    @Baccatube792 ай бұрын

    The Middle Ages are usually dated from around 450 to 1450 AD (Marker dates are the End of the Delphic Oracle 391 AD or the Fall of Rime 476 AD on one end and the Fall of Byzantium 1453, the invention of book printing with moveable types in 1403, and the Crossing of the Atlantic by Christopher Columbus in 1492 on the other end.)

  • @Muck006
    @Muck006Ай бұрын

    Britain has half-timbered houses too, BUT ... their style is different ... MOSTLY VERTICAL beams instead of horizontal supports with vertical ones further apart.

  • @chaosannas5133
    @chaosannas51332 ай бұрын

    What you said at 7:50: No, it's not just you😂 Here in northern Germany we say "Nirgendwo ist das Grau schöner als bei uns im Norden". Just means "Nowhere is the gray as beautiful as here in the north"😁When it's cloudy, rainy and windy most of the year, you need that kind of humor and optimism🙃

  • @JonasReichert1992
    @JonasReichert19922 ай бұрын

    Maybe you heard of Lübeck in Connection with Hanse? A training organisation.

  • @katn1952
    @katn19522 ай бұрын

    Monschau, Traben-Trabach, Bernkastel-Kues ❤

  • @thepurplesmurf
    @thepurplesmurf2 ай бұрын

    2:55 this was an interesting moment. "That looks so beautiful" … stops the video right at the moment that shows a crotch shot of the statue. 🤣🤣

  • @Burnsi1
    @Burnsi12 ай бұрын

    It seems i was lucky. Born in Bamberg, now i live 30km from Rothenburg 😀

  • @vomm
    @vomm2 ай бұрын

    The medieval heritage in Europe is almost as much a part of Europeans as it is of Americans. It was your ancestors who built the castles, fortresses, and cities in Europe. Sure, not everything, and sure, the generations in between didn't contribute to the preservation but rather bombed them in World War II. And most of what was lost, was lost through us, in the 70s and 80s an incredible amount was demolished. And today's new construction areas are dystopian, gray, unimaginative, oppressive, and just soulless. Nevertheless, the USA was created by immigration, so there is a connection.

  • @videomailYT
    @videomailYT2 ай бұрын

    ^^ i was a bit more closer to the border from Austria when i was on a short vacation trip there in Bavaria and then a hailstorm come up in a few minutes...it was so strong, it wasn't even possible to see the house on the other side of the street, it was all white...like thick white fog... XD 😉🥳🤣🤣🤣

  • @eckeb.7722
    @eckeb.7722Ай бұрын

    Interestingly, the narrator calls him Charles the Great. Where as here in Germany his name is Karl der Große.

  • @red_dolphin468
    @red_dolphin4682 ай бұрын

    you have to react to the Hanseatic League :)

  • @gastondrei2046
    @gastondrei20462 ай бұрын

    Hope you visit us any time! You are welcome! Love your Videos! Greetings from German Man near Lübeck 😊

  • @lillightstruck5378
    @lillightstruck53782 ай бұрын

    bro i life in a small village in ger and the scene is unbeleavable.

  • @micade2518
    @micade25182 ай бұрын

    Joel, if you think of Germany as the epitome of the Middle Ages' architecture, may I suggest that you watch this: "Rick Steves Art of the Middle Ages" and this: "25 Most Beautiful Medieval Towns of Europe" - touropia (on YT). Enjoy (and better prepare your next trip to Europe)! ;o)

  • @yvonneschonberger197
    @yvonneschonberger1972 ай бұрын

    My Town where I live is over 1000 years old but in WW 2 it was almost destroyed. Thats why unfortunately we no longer have these older houses. But we have Castle and a palace 😊

  • @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl
    @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl2 ай бұрын

    Roughly the medieval era is said to be between 700 ad to 1500 ad - if I remember well from my German history classes. Before it's the era of the late Roman and early Byzantine Empire. The time after the medieval era is called new time (Neuzeit) in Germany - the modern era starts with eg the industrialisation and the American and French revolutions.

  • @thegame1111990
    @thegame1111990Ай бұрын

    Greetings from Lübeck 😋

  • @DiegoGuerra-DGuerra_99
    @DiegoGuerra-DGuerra_9927 күн бұрын

    please make videos about Dresden!! 😁

  • @Steven91637
    @Steven916372 ай бұрын

    Heidelberg and Passau are beautiful towns

  • @RustyDust101
    @RustyDust1012 ай бұрын

    You can fairly easily discern the older Roman style buildings from the younger Gothic style buildings. Romanic buildings have rounded arches over their windows and gateways (unless they are very small, personal doors, in which case in both you can find straight, horizontal lintels). In the same way the ceilings of Roman buildings tend to have rounded domes. Whereas the Gothic buildings tend to have higher, pointed arches, ceilings, and gateways. Those are two of the major differentiation factors. An architect or historian can tell you a LOT more subtle aspects. Edit 1 Lübeck was the capital of the Hanseatic League. It was THE major sea-faring trading powerhouse along all of the Baltic and North Sea coasts as well as shipable rivers. It was also the first more or less international trading agreement that created one set of taxes, tariffs, fees, and even laws in Europe for all its members. If you want, a very early precursor of the EU of today. Even today many cities and towns proudly carry the name Hansestadt / Hanseatic City in their official title. It was a time of immensely successful trades and very stable governments for its members compared to the non-aligned cities outside its borders. Ships always were and will remain the preferred method of transportation for bulk goods. Edit 2 You are correct about the weather being 'friendlier' in the south of Germany. The Gulf Stream carries large amounts of humidity with it. Only once the vast amounts of water vapor hit main land will they cool off and start to form clouds and rain off their load of water. In the south of Germany the layout of the land due to the large Massif Central in France and the merging Alps cause these humid masses to cool off there, and rain off. The north of Germany, just like Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, the south of the British Isles, Denmark, and the southern coast of Norway are either all on the English Channel, a perfect funnel for water vapor, right into the North Sea. The North Sea however is fueled by arctic water currents, so the waters from the Gulf Stream and the arctic currents mix here, causing a massive upheaval of very constant currents until that point. This causes both storms and clouds to form over the North Sea and all its adjacent land masses. Which is accordingly all the countries I listed above. Those get a much, much higher amount of water vapors cooling off to a point where clouds can form easily. The Alps and the Massif Central work like a natural border for those clouds making the South of Germany get far more sun than the North on average. So, yeah, your observation is spot on.