Germany's Romantic Road - A Guidebook for Walkers and Cyclists

Cover of Germany's Romantic Road

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Availability
Published
Cover
Paperback - Laminated
Published
1 Jan 1997
Edition
First
ISBN
9781852842338
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ISBN (10)
1852842334
Size
17.2 x 11.6 x 1.5cm
Weight
260g
Pages
224
No. Maps
11
No. Photos
31
Originally Published
1 Jan 1997

Germany's Romantic Road

A guide for walkers and cyclists to the Romantische Strasse by Gordon McLachlan

Guidebook to a 420km trekking or cycling route, the 'Romantic Road' or 'Romantische Strasse', through Bavaria, Germany’s oldest long-distance route. Running from Füssen to Würzberg, the route can be done in either direction and takes 2 weeks as a cycle route, 3 weeks as a walking route. More...

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Seasons

Any time from April to October is good. July and August can be busy.

Centres

From south to north: Füssen, Landsberg, Augsberg, Donauwörth, Nördlingen to Würzberg, plus many Read More... smaller towns and villages en route.

Difficulty

A long route, but the gradients are fairly gentle in both directions. Fully waymarked.

Must See

Hohenschwangau and Neuschwanstein castles, crossing Germany’s great rivers (the Lech and Danube), Read More... pre-alp landscapes, Germany’s ancient city-states.
 
 

This is a guide for walkers and cyclists to the Romantische Strasse, or Romantic Road, Germany's oldest and most popular touring route. Hitherto almost exclusively known as a motoring itinerary, a new waymarked route makes it suitable for cycling or walking. Nevertheless, descriptions of the towns and scenery along the way will be useful to motorists too.

Starting at the charming Alpine town of Füssen, the Romantic Road travels to the famous royal castles of Hohenschwangau and Neuschwanstein, through the pre-Alpine landscape of the Pfaffenwinkel with its ornate pilgrimage churches, to Landsberg am Lech. From there, it goes down the Lech valley to the great Renaissance city of Augsburg. It continues on to Donauwörth on the Danube, along the Wörnitz valley to castle-crowned Harburg, then through the moon-like Ries crater to the walled medieval town of Nördlingen. Two more walled towns, Dinkelsbühl and Rothenburg, are the highlights of the next part of the route. From the latter, it proceeds along the gentle Tauber valley via the former princely capital of Weikersheim and the plush spa of Bad Mergentheim. The Romantic Road terminates in Würzburg, a city equally renowned for culture and gastronomy.

 
 
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