Romanesque Route

Approximately 1,000 years ago the Saxony Duke Heinrich received the East Franconian king’s crown as a recommendation.

Under the early German monarchy of the Ottonians the region around Harz and Magdeburg became the center of occidental history. Heinrich’s son, Otto the Great formed the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. Along the tourist passage, “Romanesque Route”, you can now experience this exciting history at 88 original settings.

They will encounter imperishable traces of this time, fortresses and king palaces, sensational cathedrals, vital monasteries in various ways and the four highlights on the “Romanesque Route”, the cathedral treasures in Halberstadt, Merseburg, Naumburg as well as the Collegiate Church in Quedlinburg.

On the more than 1,000 kilometers route discover both for buildings of unusual beauty, along with vital history with knight plays, medieval markets, town festivals.  Show dinners, jongleurs and mistrals will delight your heart, let the love go through the belly and take of amusement. The north and south route yield attention to the center of Otto the Great’s favorite city, Magdeburg.   Inside the Magdeburg Cathedral, the first building in Germany of Gothic layout, there are also tombs of Otto the Great and his first wife Editha.

Since 2007 the Romanesque Route has been interconnected throughout Europe and part of the European cultural route, TRANSROMANICA as stated by the Council of Europe, which connects Romanesque structures in Sachsen-Anhalt and Germany with Austria, Italy, Spain, France, Portugal and Serbia.

Suchmaske
Suchmaske

St. Mary’s on the Münzenberg

The church was founded in 986 at the behest of the Abbess Mathilde, in memory of her prematurely deceased brother, Kaiser Otto II, as a monastic church of the Quedlinburg Benedictine order. After a fire in 1017, it was newly consecrated in the ... [read more]

St. Michael's Church, Mücheln

The large, quarry-stone church of St. Michael is located in the St. Micheln district of Mücheln, above the village on a shell-limestone plateau. The origins of this church go back to 1128, when Bishop Otto von Bamberg made a sojourn in the area ... [read more]

The Abbey Church of Zscheiplitz

The Abbey Church of St. Boniface in Zscheiplitz was built in the late 11th century, perhaps even as late as the early 12th century. It is an example of a so-called choir-tower church: the square tower is located at the eastern end, and forms the ... [read more]

The Schönburg

The Schönburg was built by the Thuringian Count Ludwig der Springer in the 12th century. According to legend, he had the castle built out of love for Adelheid, the wife of the Count Palatine of the House of Wettin. The castle towers about 40 ... [read more]
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Contact

Tourismusverband Sachsen-Anhalt e.V. (LTV)
Danzstraße 1
39104 Magdeburg

Contact Person

Manuela Fischer
Koordinatorin "Straße der Romanik / Reisen für Alle"

Leaflet of Romanesque Route

Symbol Beschreibung Größe
Romanesque Road Saxony-Anhalt
21.12.2017
5.4 MB