Leine-Heide Cycle Route
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Added on 27 Apr 2012,
on 27 Feb 2024
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Cycle route metrics
Total distance in km
407
Information about rights to the gps-track data | |
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Rights owner | OpenStreetMap and Contributors + biroto-Redaktion (biroto.eu) |
Rights characteristic / license | Contains information from OpenStreetMap, which is made available here under the Open Database License(ODbL) |
Link to the description of the license | |
GPX file taken from | |
GPX file uploaded | by biroto-Redaktion on 27 Feb 2024
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Track points in total
5.524
Track points per km (avg)
14
Start/endpoint
Start location
Leinefelde-Worbis, Thüringen, DE (332 m NHN)
End location
Hamburg, Hamburg, DE (14 m NHN)
Signposting
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Travel reports about cycle tours

30 Apr 2019
80 km
A stage of the tour »Leine - Braunschweig - Ibbenbüren - Dortmund-Ems-Kanal - Ruhrgebiet« of user ThimbleU

29 Apr 2019
77 km
A stage of the tour »Leine - Braunschweig - Ibbenbüren - Dortmund-Ems-Kanal - Ruhrgebiet« of user ThimbleU

28 Apr 2019
41 km
A stage of the tour »Leine - Braunschweig - Ibbenbüren - Dortmund-Ems-Kanal - Ruhrgebiet« of user ThimbleU
Beds4Cyclists, worth visiting and infrastructure
Name and address
Latitude / Longitude
Phone
Fax
Mobile
Type of accommodation
Rating for cyclists
Route km
Dist. to route
Elevation
7 km
0,0 km
286 m
16 km
0,4 km
260 m
Heilbad Heiligenstadt ist eine Stadt im Eichsfeld in Thüringen.
Hintergrund
Das Heilbad Heiligenstadt ist eine Kreisstadt in der Mitte des Eichsfeldes und ein weitbekannter Sole-Kurort. Die Kurkliniken, Kurbad und Kurpark beeinflussen seit der Wiedervereinigung deutlich den touristischen Charakter der Stadt, die aber auch für Reisende ohne Kurambitionen Lohnenswertes zu bieten hat. Theodor Storm, der 8 Jahre (1856 - 1864) als Kreisrichter in Heiligenstadt fungierte, hat die Stadt (nicht nur) mit einem Literaturmuseum ein Denkmal gesetzt; Harry Heine (= Heinrich Heine) wurde hier am 28.6.1825 auf den Namen Christian Johann Heinrich protestantisch getauft. Die Innenstadt wurde aufwändig saniert und zahlreiche große Kirchen zeigen die starke religiöse Prägung der Stadt, die als ein Zentrum des Eichsfeldes noch heute vom römisch-katholischen Brauchtum und Festtagen geprägt ist.
Sehenswürdigkeiten
- ⊙ Kirche St. Martin
und ehemalige Klostergebäude am Friedensplatz, hier befand sich die "heilige Stätte", die der Stadt ihren Namen gab
- ⊙St. Marien
, eine harmonische gotische Hallenkirche mit Doppelturmfassade
- ⊙St. Aegidien
, eine kleine gotische Hallenkirche mit einem Turm und zierlicher gotischer Achteckkapelle
Burgen, Schlösser und Paläste
- ⊙Mainzer Schloss auf dem Friedensplatz, heute Landratsamt
Bauwerke
- ⊙Rathaus am Markt mit Touristinformation
Museen
⊙Literaturmuseum Theodor Storm, Am Berge, 37308 Heilbad Heiligenstadt. ☎ +49 3606 613794. Geöffnet: Di-Fr 10:00 - 17:00 Uhr, Sa + So 14:30-16:30 Uhr. Preis: Erwachsene 2 €, Kinder und Kurgäste 1 €.
⊙Eichsfelder Heimatmuseum, Kollegiengasse 10, 37308 Heilbad Heiligenstadt. ☎ +49 3606 677480. Geöffnet: Di-Fr 10:00 - 17:00 Uhr, Sa+So 14:30 - 17:00 Uhr. Preis: Erwachsene 2 €, Kinder und Kurgäste 1 €.
Information about copyright | |
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Rights characteristic / license | by-sa: CREATIVE COMMONS Attribution-ShareAlike |
Link to the description of the license | |
Input taken over from: |
Wikivoyage-Bearbeiter, 'Heilbad Heiligenstadt', Wikivoyage, Freie Reiseinformationen rund um die Welt, 13. Februar 2019, 19:34 UTC, https://de.wikivoyage.org/w/index.php?title=Heilbad_Heiligenstadt&oldid=1174767 [abgerufen am 19. April 2019] |
taken over / edited on | 19 Apr 2019 - 28 May 2019
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taken over / edited by |
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36 km
0,2 km
180 m
51 km
1,0 km
149 m
- Individuelle Beratung und Tipps für Ihren Göttingen-Besuch
- Stadtführungen
- Online-Zimmerbuchungen
- Pauschalarrangements
- Informationsmaterial
- Souvenirs
- Kartenvorverkauf
- Tagungs- und Kongressorganisation
Information about copyright | |
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Rights characteristic / license | by-sa: CREATIVE COMMONS Attribution-ShareAlike |
Link to the description of the license | |
taken over / edited on | 19 Mar 2019
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taken over / edited by |
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Hours of opening
April bis Oktober:
Mo-Fr 9.30 - 18.00 Uhr
Sa 10.00 - 18.00 Uhr
So u. Feiertage: 10.00 - 14.00 Uhr
November bis März:
Mo-Fr 9.30 - 18.00 Uhr
Sa 10.00 - 18.00 Uhr
Heiligabend (24.12.) und Silvester (31.12.): 10.00 - 13.00 Uhr
51 km
1,0 km
153 m

Göttingen is a city in the southernmost part of the German state of Lower Saxony, bordering Hesse and Thuringia.
Understand
The population of Göttingen in 2017 was about 134,000, of which over 31,000 are students at the Georg-August-Universität Göttingen.
The prestigious Max Planck Society (a German organization for scientific research) was founded in the city in 1948. The Max Planck Institutes for Solar System Research, Dynamics and Self-Organization, for Experimental Medicine, for Biophysical Chemistry, and for History are located in Göttingen. 44 Nobel Prize winners have studied or taught in the city, and these and other notable former Göttingen residents are commemorated by white plaques on many buildings throughout the town. Its nickname is therefore the Stadt der Wissenschaft (City of Science), with a pun: while "Die Stadt der Wissenschaft" means 'the city of science', Die Stadt, die Wissen schafft (identical pronunciation apart from der ~ die) means 'the city that creates knowledge'.
Today, Göttingen is a charming university town, off the radar screen for most English-speaking tourists, but well worth a visit.
See
There is a nice self-guided City Walk on the city's tourism website, which takes you by all the main sites. Highlights include:
- ⊙Altes Rathaus (old townhall). Marktplatz. Built 1369-1444, the Altes Rathaus was the town hall until 1978, and it now houses the Tourist Office. The coats of arms of other members of the Hanseatic League are painted on the walls.
- ⊙Gänseliesel (goose girl). Marktplatz. This fountain outside the Altes Rathaus is Göttingen's most famous figure. She is known as the "most kissed girl in the world" since every local student who receives a Ph.D. gives her a kiss (after being dressed up with a silly graduation hat and wheeled to the statue in a handcart).
- ⊙Albanifriedhof (just outside the city wall to the southeast). One of the city's cemeteries, famous for Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss's grave.
- ⊙Stadtfriedhof. Historic cemetery with graves of important scholars, including eight Nobel Prize winners: Max Born, Otto Hahn, Max von Laue, Walther Nernst, Max Planck, Otto Wallach, Adolf Windaus and Richard Zsigmondy.
- ⊙Botanical Gardens. access behind the Auditorium at Weender Straße and Nikolausberger Weg. These gardens, established in 1736, are well worth a visit for plant-lovers. The former city wall around the Altstadt (old city) is also a circular green area, popular with joggers. Gauss's grave is on the southwest side.
- ⊙Georg-August University. The university is actually spread out in many sections around the city, though you see a couple of its buildings (the Auditorium and Aula) on the self-guided tour. Former staff and students include Gauss, Riemann, Dirac, Bismarck, Oppenheimer, Born, Hilbert, Teller, and Weyl.
- The university runs several museums on a wide range of topics. An overview can be found at the university's website. A large, more ambitious museum focusing on question such as what is knowledge, how is it acquired, etc, the Forum Wissen is going to be opened soon.
- ⊙Synagogue Memorial. Obere-Masch-Straße and Untere-Masch-Straße. This memorial, designed by Corrado Cagli in 1973, stands on the site of a synagogue that was destroyed in 1938. The names of Göttingen's Jewish residents who were murdered during the "dark time" are listed below an abstraction of the Star of David.
- Half-timbered houses. Since Göttingen was not bombed during WWII, it still has many original buildings. Particularly impressive are the 1549 Schrödersches House (Weender Str. 62), the 1497 house at Paulinerstr. 6, the 15th century Junkernschänke (corner of Jüdenstr. and Barfüßerstr.), the 1536 house on Barfüßerstr. (between Jüdenstr. and Weender Str.), and the 16th century house at Groner-Tor-Str. 28, which was only recently revealed beneath a thick layer of plaster. (Half-timbering was regarded as unfashionable from the Baroque era into the 20th century, and many beautiful old buildings have only recently been discovered.)
Churches
Four of Göttingen's churches can be seen from the metal ⊙Vier Kirchenblick (four churches view). in front of the Altes Rathaus (James's, John's, Alban's, and Michael's). Mary's is also worth a peek inside.
- ⊙Jacobikirche (St. James's Church). Jacobikirchhof and Weender Straße. Built 1361-1461, St. James' has the most interesting interior of Göttingen's churches, with fascinating original paintwork (not unlike that of a barbershop) and modern stained-glass windows. The Ott organ is also impressive. It is sometimes possible to climb the tower, although the last set of stairs to the view may be blocked off - ask before paying a euro.
- ⊙Johanniskirche (St. John's Church). Johanniskirchhof. Built around 1200, St. John's is the oldest of Göttingen's churches. It was mostly rebuilt in the 14th century (the north-side doorway dates from 1245). The interior is plain, although one of the two towers can sometimes be climbed.
- ⊙Albanikirche (St. Alban's Church). Albanikirchhof. Built 1423-1467, St. Alban's stands on the site of an earlier mission chapel. Hans von Geismar painted the altarpiece in 1499, and he added himself to the scene of Mary's death as the 13th apostle.
- ⊙St. Michael Kirche (St. Michael's Church). Kurze Straße. Built 1787-1789, St. Michael's was Göttingen's first Catholic church after the Reformation.
- ⊙Nikolaikirche (St. Nicholas's Church). Nikolaistraße. An English Catholic mass is held here every second Friday at 19:00. The area around the church is also used for flea markets on weekend mornings in the summer.
- ⊙Marienkirche (St. Mary's Church). Neustadt and Groner-Tor-Straße. The church bell tower used to be the gate into the neighboring city Neustadt (new city), which Göttingen bought in 1319. St. Mary's is probably older than that; it was formerly the church of the Teutonic Knights. The altar triptych was carved by Bertold Kastrop in 1524.
Information about copyright | |
|---|---|
Rights characteristic / license | by-sa: CREATIVE COMMONS Attribution-ShareAlike |
Link to the description of the license | |
Input taken over from: |
Wikivoyage contributors, 'Göttingen', Wikivoyage, The FREE worldwide travel guide that anyone can edit, 9 March 2019, 21:49 UTC, https://en.wikivoyage.org/w/index.php?title=G%C3%B6ttingen&oldid=3740736 [accessed 19 March 2019] |
taken over / edited on | 19 Mar 2019 - 21 Mar 2019
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taken over / edited by |
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