Bus Company from Coach Charter Germany would like to show your team the capital of Franconia. Nuremberg is the city that has been through big world events. The Old Town is now surrounded by walls, and Kasierburg Castle is guarded on the north side of the promontory. Nuremberg was the unofficial capital of the Holy Roman Empire, and the castle has been the site of official ceremonies for hundreds of years. Nuremberg is also a term synonymous with the Nazi government, the Nuremberg Protests, the Racial Legislation and the Trials after the War. There is a strong Nazi regime museum in the Nazi Congress Hall on the rally grounds, and Courtroom 600 in the Palace of Justice is where people such as Hermann Göring have been prosecuted.
As a bus company with over 40 years of experience, Coach Charter Germany is your professional and versatile charter partner when it comes to planning your journey. We have a wide fleet of new tour busses of various sizes and amenities. You can make the most of our services and book an airport shuttle or charter bus for your sightseeing trips or a high-quality VIP tour bus for your business trips. Our Coach Charter Germany's charter bus Team is always at your fingertips and is happy to provide you with a personalized rental bus service. Only let us know and ask for a personal bid from Coach Charter Germany on a charter bus.
We have a few ideas for places to visit in Nuremberg for you:
1. Kaiserburg
On the steep sandstone cliffs on the north side of the Old Town of Nuremberg, there is a castle which, at the time of the Holy Roman Empire, carried real strength. The imperial courts met here, and any newly elected emperor was forced by decree to hold his first imperial diet in Kaiserburg. The castle of the circular Sinwell Tower dates back to the 14th century and is still a highlight. There is an observation platform on the top floor where you can marvel at the best view of the city. The Tie is housed in half-timbered houses in the courtyard below. The charter bus will drive you there.
2. Nuremberg Trials Memorial
Courtroom 600 in the Judicial Building, where high-ranking Nazis were brought to trial between 1945 and 1949, is still a functioning courtroom. It can be difficult to visit during the week unless you're in between sessions. The best time is on Saturdays, out of school, when English speakers will take a sober audio tour of a space reminiscent of history. A bus company is going to be a wise partner when you need a seat.
3. St. Sebaldus Church
Looking at it from the north foot, you can see that the Church of St. Sebaldus is in two halfs. The western face, including the ships and walls, is Romanesque and early Gothic, from the 13th century. The eastern side of the hall is Late Gothic and was designed about 100 years later. St. Sebald of the 8th century is the patron saint of Nuremburg, and in the fortress you will see his tomb, built in the 1510s by Peter Vischer the Elder, with early Renaissance bronze figurines portraying scenes. Bus company could take you to the church.
4. Documentation Center Nazi Party Rally Grounds
Due to its role in the Holy Roman Empire and its central role in the German-speaking world, Nuremburg was essential to the National Socialist regime. Well before they came to power in 1933, they chose Nuremberg for their annual mass propaganda meetings. In the 30s, they set out to construct a congress hall, an aspect of an unrealized master plan for the area. The hall, pierced on the north side by a futuristic metal framed glass pin, houses the show, "Fascination and Terror." You 're going through the motives, the evidence and the consequences of the Nazi regime. There is extra dimension to the Nuremberg riots and the city's architectural plans. You can hire a bus with our chartered bus and enjoy the trip to this spectacular and historic eyewitness interviews, videos, official documents and computer graphics.
5. Germanisches Nationalmuseum
The German National Museum is a kind of treasury for the German-speaking world, with more than 25,000 exhibits recording its cultural history. The gallery is composed of part of the Nuremberg Charterhouse and is filled with art dating back to the Middle Ages, as well as decorative artifacts, toys, wardrobes, books, scientific instruments, clothes, musical instruments, liturgical items, prehistoric and ancient archaeology, toys, and that's just a brief description.
6. German National Railways Museum
Nuremberg was the site of the first German railroad, the Bavarian Ludwigsbahn, which ran from here to the nearby Fürth. It therefore makes sense for the city to have a national museum on this subject. The attraction is also the oldest in the country and was opened as the Bavarian Railway Museum in 1899. Two of the other interesting exhibits are parts from King Ludwig II's Royal Railway, the Nordgau locomotive from 1853 and the DRG Class SVT 877 from Hamburg-Berlin, the fastest rail connection in the world at the time. The first and second floors are for displays displaying the construction of bridges and tunnels, as well as 160 models from 1882. You will watch a 10-minute example of the 80-square-metre rail layout on a half-hour stroke.
7. Schöner Brunnen
One of the wonders of medieval Nuremberg is the 19-metre Gothic fountain at the edge of the central market square. The fountain was designed between 1385 and 1396 and was the work of architect and stonemaster Heinrich Beheim. It was built like a Gothic church spire and has forty polychrome figures on four stages, all of which invoke the "worldview" of the Holy Roman Empire. The statues at the bottom represent the philosophy and the seven liberal arts, behind the four evangelists and the four church fathers. Above these are the seven Holy Roman senators, and the Nine Worthies, who were idealized historical and fictional figures. And finally, Moses and the seven prophets are at the end. In the Second World War, the memorial was covered in a concrete shell, and it came through unscathed.
8. City Walls
During the long history of the Nuremberg fortifications, the city was taken only once: by the Americans during 1945. Such walls were first constructed in the 1000s and had their current, streamlined appearance when they were modified for canons in the 1500s. Some four kilometers of the medieval walls are still intact, including the north castle and 67 defensive towers. The parapet is largely accessible to visitors, looks out into the Old Town and is covered by a wood-framed roof.
9. Nuremberg Toy Museum
One of the finest houses in the old town, and another stop on the historic mile, is the Renaissance Hallersche Haus. The Burgher House is named after the family that built it in 1517 and has a gabled front and a wooden gallery around the courtyard. The museum inside celebrates Nuremberg's reputation as a traditional toy-making capital in Germany and was also opened on Dürer's 500th anniversary in 1971. In the first three floors are pre-War games and toys such as dolls, dollhouses, magic lanterns, wind-up figures and another railroad model of incredible proportions.
10. Nuremberg Zoo
At 70 hectares, the Nuremberg Zoo is one of the largest in
Europe, and new enclosures are still added as the best zoos. The site is a former sandstone quarry a few kilometers east of the Altstadt. Many of the old stone pits have been kept as they are, as they act as natural enclosures for species such as the Siberian and Bengal tigers. There are also large forests in which bison, giraffes, deer and zebras live in semi-freedom, and generous outdoor areas for snow leopards and mane wolves.
Rent your bus with the driver and you will be picked up from the airport of Nuremberg by the airport shuttle bus or by the tour bus service of Coach Charter Germany. If you're visiting Nuremberg on a private visit or on a business trip, Coach Charter Germany is the bus company and charter bus rental expert that stands out. We give you a great service and listen to all your needs: safe and comfortable, a new charter bus and tour bus fleet, friendly and professional drivers, a caring and attentive Coach Charter Germany charter bus booking team. We look forward to hearing from you.