Europe´s bigest motorhome-portal from motorhome drivers for motorhome driver start
Hagenau, Information and images
The city, in German Hagenau, is located with about 35 000 inhabitants in the department of Bas-Rhin in the Alsace region.. <9> <9> Historical <9> <9> At the beginning of the 12th century, Duke Frederick the One-eyed had a moated castle built on the River Moder, which his son, Emperor Freidrich I Barbarossa, had made into a palace.. <9> In 1140 Friedrich the One-Eyed donated the Cistercian monastery Koenigsbruck.. <9> Like large parts of Alsace, Haguenau fell to France in 1648 with the Treaty of Westphalia.. In 1673 the troops of Louis XIV dragged the city and the imperial palace was razed to the ground.. The Jesuit College, which was built here in 1730, became a barracks in 1767 and a nursing home in 1961.. In memory of the Staufer´s favorite place, a Stauferstel stele was erected in 2012 in the courtyard of this Maison de Retraite.. <9> In 1870 the city and the region returned to Germany.. It has belonged to France since 1918, with a short break between 1940 and 1945.. <9> <9> Attractions <9> <9> Musée historique, 9 Rue du Maréchal Foch.. <9> It is the largest museum in the department of Bas-Rhin outside of Strasbourg.. <9> It exhibits in a permanent exhibition exhibits from all eras, from the Stone Age to the 20th century. <9> <9> The Musée alsacien, 1 place Joseph Thierry, <9> in the Renaissance building of the former chancellery.. <9> The exhibits in the collection reflect life in Alsace since the beginning of the 19th century.. <9> <9> The Romanesque-Gothic church of Saint-Georges, Rue Saint-Georges.. <9> The origin dates back to a sacred building from 1143.. In the 17th century larger extensions took place.. During the restoration in 1963, damages of the French Revolution and the Second World War were partially eliminated.. <9> <9> <994/1795350> <994/1795351> <994/1795352> <994/1795353> <994/1795355> <9> <9> Saint-Nicolas gothic church , Place Saint-Nicolas, < 9> with a magnificent baroque interior.. <9> It goes back to a sacred building from the 12th Century, which was expanded again and again.. Damages from the second world circle were restored in 1965.. <9> <9> The remains of the old town walls <9> Porte de Wissembourg, Grand Rue <9> Tour des Pécheurs, Quai des Pécheurs <9> Tour des Chevaliers, Rue des Chevaliers <9> <9> Fountains: <9 > The Georgenbrunnen dates back to the Middle Ages, <9> <9> <994/1795361> <9> <9> the 18th century Bee Fountain, <9> the Dolphin Fountain from 1825. <9> the Fountain at Place d´Armes <9> <9> <994/1795365> <994/1795366> <9> <9> The Neo-Classical Synagogue, 3 rue du grand-rabbin-Bloch.. <9> Built in 1820, it was destroyed by the Nazis in 1940.. The reconstruction took place in 1959. <9> <9> The Classicist Theater, 2 place du Maire-Guntz.. <9> Built in 1842-46 <9> <9> <994/1795357> <9> <9> Dis historic Hop Hall , 115 Grand Rue.. <9> Every Tuesday there is a market here.. <9> Built in 1867, it was expanded in 1881 and 1908.. <9> <9> The Old Watermill <9> <9> The Late Medieval Customs Office Ancienne douane <9> <9> The Baroque Townhouses <9> From the 18th Century <9> <9> <994/1795358> < 994/1795362> <994/1795363> <9> <9> The Staufersterstele in the courtyard of the Maison de Retraite, Rue du Chateau 1. <9> <9> <9> <1001> Online information about Heguenau} <9>