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It is always so funny to hear the story about the non visit of Germany. I had the same storywith Milan. I just managed to glimpse a look onto the cathedral and then run back into our train...
Just a few places ... threre are so many more amazing places in the south! I felt in love with South Germany, when I went there for holidays! So much, that I decided to move there! I am living in the south of Germany for 17 years now, I guess. Never regeted the move! :)
I guess, you didn't know that, but there are castles in Germany which are now B&B's/hotels. You can sleep in a freaking 11th century castle on a mountain top.
Well, Germany was heavily destroyed in WW2 and was rebuilt again after 1945, sometimes literally from the scratch, sometimes by restoring, sometimes by rebuilding using the old style of houses, sometimes using stuff that was left. And sometimes rebuilding was solely dictated by the lacks of housing and the needs of people. Summa summarum: There was no Hollywood glamour, but simple work.
Germany wasn't destroyed as much as most people think. Some areas and Cities were really blown away hard. As Ruhrgebiet, Dresden, Berlin, Hamburg, Frankfurt and some others. But most of the country and about 70% of the factories were still intact. Bigger problem were the refuges from the former German land in the east. Millions needed a place to live. The Marshall-Plan and the fact that most of the industrial complexes were still able to produce (in west-Germany) were the key for the rebirth of Germany.
you should check out some footage from pre world wars german cities if this already looks unbelievable to you whahaha,Dresden pre war for example was nothing short of an litteral fairytale,the flower of the elbe,but also frankfurt,berlin itself. you should def check out some older videos of these cities whenever you got the time,alot of channels have good colorized footage of it these days.
Neuschwanstein castle is beautiful from the outside. Inside a little disappointing. King Ludwig did not live there but mostly in his Linderhof castle, not that far away. So Linderhof is the real beauty regarding interior.
I trade south Germany in any time. The north is more adorable. People with great humor. The smell of salt water. Ecketnförde. Lübeck. Hamburg. Bremen. Oldenburg.
Invitation: If you fly to Stuttgart for a visit, I can give you shelter for free. I got a spare room. That way you save on the hotel and have a tour guide at the same time.
Well yes, many cities look like this. Those are mostly residential buildings with people living in them. We obviously have ugly cities too, mostly because they had been destroyed during the war
3:05 it is an older S-Bahn (commuter) train. Nothing special. 5:40 This footage is from the Berchtesgaden (translates roughly to Perchta's garden, Perchta being the name of an Alpine goddess related or identical to Frau Holle from Grimm's tales) area, which was its own ecclesial state within the Holy Roman Empire until 1803, situated between Bavaria, Salzburg and Austria. It has a lot of small churches as well as the Königssee (which translates now to King's Lake, but was originally "Chuno's lake" after the Kuno of Horburg, one of the founders of the abbey of Berchtesgaden). 5:54 Nördlingen in Bavarian Swabia is the southernmost of three well-preserved medieval towns along the western border of Bavaria; the other both are the Franconian towns of Dinkelsbühl and Rothenburg. It is built in 15 million year old meteor crater, and many of the stones the town is built from have (very) little impact diamonds embedded. Rothenburg ob der Tauber is the most touristy of the three towns. 8:00 Typical wedding coach in that type of town. 8:55 Geologically Lake Constance is comparable to a fjord, however at the foot of the Alps and at an elevation of 400m. Its depth is around 250m. The old town of Lindau was built on an island, now connected to the main land by a road bridge and a railway embankment. The painted building in 9:02 is the old town hall of Lindau, the new town hall is the red one on the right. About hundred steps to the East of it you'll find 2 churches side by side, one the Catholic one and the other the Protestant one. 11:30 Hohenschwangau was built by Bavarian king Maximilian II and was the place his son Ludwig grew up, who after becoming king Ludwig II started to build many other palaces, including his last project Neuschwanstein (which replaced the ruins of the twin castles of Swangove), constructed between 1869 and 1892. 11:55 that in the center is Neuschwanstein, while the yellowish one in the foreground is Hohenschwangau. The lake in the foreground is Alpsee, divided by the forested hill on which Hohenschwangau sits from small Lake Schwansee (to the right from this perspective). 13:31 Nuremberg was once considered to be in the center of the German Kingdom within the Holy Roman Empire (even if this geographically was not fully correct, it was traffic-wise). While the Holy Roman Empire had no official capital, the Imperial castle at Nuremberg was the place where the Imperial regalia were stored and from which they were transported by an armed escort to Frankfurt, where the German-Roman King was to be elected (and since 1562 also crowned; before that Aachen was the place of the coronation). The seat of the Imperial court was since the 14th century for the most time either Prague or Vienna. 14:25 The mountains in the background are mostly limestone, therefore white-ish. The water in the lake in the foreground has high lime content, which gives it its turquoise color. 15:55 Heidelberg was before the Nine Year's War 1688-1697 (also called War of the Grand Alliance or War of the Palatinate Succession) the capital of the Palatinate, but was twice conquered by French troops who destroyed the castle. The capital was then moved to Mannheim, and the castle abandoned after it was struck by lightning during reconstruction work in 1764. Heidelberg is also the seat of the oldest university (founded in 1386) within the borders of today Germany and got most of its later fame from being _the_ romantic university town. Many German towns and cities were destroyed in WW II, but also many reconstructed afterwards. Heidelberg however survived relatively unharmed, being a main military hospital location during WW II. The Old Bridge was blown up by the German army to hold up the US army, but to no avail; the city capitulated as soon as the first GI's appeared. The US army made it 1948 - 2013 its headquarters for Europe and Africa.
Normally, I like to watch your videos, and I watch them until the end. But this time, I would be more than flattering, calling the background “music” from the original video as the soundtrack of massrape! My ears are bleeding, and my eardrum committed suicide!
@@giobozzde Isn't there a way that you can hear the music and that your audience can hear your commentary but not the music? Because if I mute your video, I can see you nodding, looking amazed, and your lips moving, but that was entertaining for only a few seconds...😉😋
That's not clean. If you want to see a really clean metro/train station, you have to go to Japan and Singapore. The latter is so spotless, it is unbelievable.
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The North is wonderfull
It is always so funny to hear the story about the non visit of Germany. I had the same storywith Milan. I just managed to glimpse a look onto the cathedral and then run back into our train...
Just a few places ... threre are so many more amazing places in the south!
I felt in love with South Germany, when I went there for holidays! So much, that I decided to move there! I am living in the south of Germany for 17 years now, I guess. Never regeted the move! :)
Come to the north...it's beautyful too.....😊
Nee, fahrt weiterhin alle nach Bayern und in den Schwarzwald, es ist sowieso schon zu voll in unserm schönen "Rest" vom Land😊
11.54: the yellowish castle on the left is Hohenschwangau, while the white castle in the center (back) is famous Neuschwanstein.
I guess, you didn't know that, but there are castles in Germany which are now B&B's/hotels.
You can sleep in a freaking 11th century castle on a mountain top.
"How do you get here" he asks, while the narrator explains how one gets there.
Well, Germany was heavily destroyed in WW2 and was rebuilt again after 1945, sometimes literally from the scratch, sometimes by restoring, sometimes by rebuilding using the old style of houses, sometimes using stuff that was left. And sometimes rebuilding was solely dictated by the lacks of housing and the needs of people. Summa summarum: There was no Hollywood glamour, but simple work.
Germany wasn't destroyed as much as most people think.
Some areas and Cities were really blown away hard. As Ruhrgebiet, Dresden, Berlin, Hamburg, Frankfurt and some others.
But most of the country and about 70% of the factories were still intact.
Bigger problem were the refuges from the former German land in the east.
Millions needed a place to live.
The Marshall-Plan and the fact that most of the industrial complexes were still able to produce (in west-Germany) were the key for the rebirth of Germany.
you should check out some footage from pre world wars german cities if this already looks unbelievable to you whahaha,Dresden pre war for example was nothing short of an litteral fairytale,the flower of the elbe,but also frankfurt,berlin itself. you should def check out some older videos of these cities whenever you got the time,alot of channels have good colorized footage of it these days.
Neuschwanstein castle is beautiful from the outside. Inside a little disappointing. King Ludwig did not live there but mostly in his Linderhof castle, not that far away. So Linderhof is the real beauty regarding interior.
I trade south Germany in any time. The north is more adorable. People with great humor. The smell of salt water. Ecketnförde. Lübeck. Hamburg. Bremen. Oldenburg.
Invitation: If you fly to Stuttgart for a visit, I can give you shelter for free. I got a spare room.
That way you save on the hotel and have a tour guide at the same time.
Well yes, many cities look like this. Those are mostly residential buildings with people living in them. We obviously have ugly cities too, mostly because they had been destroyed during the war
3:05 it is an older S-Bahn (commuter) train. Nothing special.
5:40 This footage is from the Berchtesgaden (translates roughly to Perchta's garden, Perchta being the name of an Alpine goddess related or identical to Frau Holle from Grimm's tales) area, which was its own ecclesial state within the Holy Roman Empire until 1803, situated between Bavaria, Salzburg and Austria. It has a lot of small churches as well as the Königssee (which translates now to King's Lake, but was originally "Chuno's lake" after the Kuno of Horburg, one of the founders of the abbey of Berchtesgaden).
5:54 Nördlingen in Bavarian Swabia is the southernmost of three well-preserved medieval towns along the western border of Bavaria; the other both are the Franconian towns of Dinkelsbühl and Rothenburg. It is built in 15 million year old meteor crater, and many of the stones the town is built from have (very) little impact diamonds embedded. Rothenburg ob der Tauber is the most touristy of the three towns. 8:00 Typical wedding coach in that type of town.
8:55 Geologically Lake Constance is comparable to a fjord, however at the foot of the Alps and at an elevation of 400m. Its depth is around 250m. The old town of Lindau was built on an island, now connected to the main land by a road bridge and a railway embankment. The painted building in 9:02 is the old town hall of Lindau, the new town hall is the red one on the right. About hundred steps to the East of it you'll find 2 churches side by side, one the Catholic one and the other the Protestant one.
11:30 Hohenschwangau was built by Bavarian king Maximilian II and was the place his son Ludwig grew up, who after becoming king Ludwig II started to build many other palaces, including his last project Neuschwanstein (which replaced the ruins of the twin castles of Swangove), constructed between 1869 and 1892.
11:55 that in the center is Neuschwanstein, while the yellowish one in the foreground is Hohenschwangau. The lake in the foreground is Alpsee, divided by the forested hill on which Hohenschwangau sits from small Lake Schwansee (to the right from this perspective).
13:31 Nuremberg was once considered to be in the center of the German Kingdom within the Holy Roman Empire (even if this geographically was not fully correct, it was traffic-wise). While the Holy Roman Empire had no official capital, the Imperial castle at Nuremberg was the place where the Imperial regalia were stored and from which they were transported by an armed escort to Frankfurt, where the German-Roman King was to be elected (and since 1562 also crowned; before that Aachen was the place of the coronation). The seat of the Imperial court was since the 14th century for the most time either Prague or Vienna.
14:25 The mountains in the background are mostly limestone, therefore white-ish. The water in the lake in the foreground has high lime content, which gives it its turquoise color.
15:55 Heidelberg was before the Nine Year's War 1688-1697 (also called War of the Grand Alliance or War of the Palatinate Succession) the capital of the Palatinate, but was twice conquered by French troops who destroyed the castle. The capital was then moved to Mannheim, and the castle abandoned after it was struck by lightning during reconstruction work in 1764. Heidelberg is also the seat of the oldest university (founded in 1386) within the borders of today Germany and got most of its later fame from being _the_ romantic university town.
Many German towns and cities were destroyed in WW II, but also many reconstructed afterwards. Heidelberg however survived relatively unharmed, being a main military hospital location during WW II. The Old Bridge was blown up by the German army to hold up the US army, but to no avail; the city capitulated as soon as the first GI's appeared. The US army made it 1948 - 2013 its headquarters for Europe and Africa.
Eagle's Nest was a gift for Hitler's birthday.
Hitler didn't like it because he was afraid of heights. That's why he was only there twice.
We have graffiti, there is dirt but we clean it. Germans love cleanliness, but unfortunately: it gives ever any exceptions.😊
Normally, I like to watch your videos, and I watch them until the end.
But this time, I would be more than flattering, calling the background “music” from the original video as the soundtrack of massrape!
My ears are bleeding, and my eardrum committed suicide!
Absolutely sorry
I like these videos but they always have copyright content that gets blocked
So then I gotta mess with the music 😭 unfortunately
@@giobozzde Isn't there a way that you can hear the music and that your audience can hear your commentary but not the music?
Because if I mute your video, I can see you nodding, looking amazed, and your lips moving, but that was entertaining for only a few seconds...😉😋
The Backround Music is bad! :)
😨
Never heard an more unfitting music/sound-track for a video.
That's not clean. If you want to see a really clean metro/train station, you have to go to Japan and Singapore.
The latter is so spotless, it is unbelievable.