Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Ruhla Thuringian Forest. This part, situated around the town of Ruhla north of the Rennsteig, is geologically formed by the basement rocks of the Ruhlaer Kristallin, consisting of granites, gneiss, and schist. There is no pronounced ridge, summits on both sides of the watershed reach heights of 700 m (2,300 ft) or more.

  2. Culture. Museums. Museum of Thuringian Folklore. The former hospital director’s house accommodates the Museum of Thuringian Folklore, one of Germanys largest folklore museums, which has a wealth of exhibits of rural material culture: furniture, household items, tools, textiles, glass, ceramics, jewellery, religious objects and folk art and craft.

  3. This piece of Thuringia between Oberhof, Ilmenau, Masserberg and Suhl has been a UNESCO-recognized biosphere reserve since 1979. Today it is considered a model region for sustainable development and climate-friendly nature tourism. As one of 23 Destination Nature areas in Germany, you can travel here in an environmentally friendly way by train ...

  4. 9 de ago. de 2018 · 08/09/2018. Steeped in myth and legend, the forest has long held deep meaning and been a source of fascination. How did the woods become so symbolic for so many, from the romantics and the...

    • thuringian forest folklore1
    • thuringian forest folklore2
    • thuringian forest folklore3
    • thuringian forest folklore4
    • thuringian forest folklore5
  5. View of the Thuringian Forest from Wartburg Castle. Germany’s emerald heart, the Thuringian Forest, is a gem set within the circle of better-known and heavily-visited cities. Positioned behind the Iron Curtain until Germany’s 1990 reunification, the free state of Thuringia is regarded as the Green Heart of the country.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ThuringiiThuringii - Wikipedia

    Thuringii. Fibula found in Mühlhausen, 4th/5th century AD. Ancient Germanic bone comb, Thuringia. The Thuringii, Toringi or Teuriochaimai [1] were an early Germanic [2] people that appeared during the late Migration Period in the Harz Mountains of central Germania, a region still known today as Thuringia. It became a kingdom, which came into ...

  7. If most of the larger towns of Thuringia are about culture, the Thuringian Forest (Thüringer Wald in German) and the Saale Valley are about tradition, scenic landscapes, and winegrowing. These regions take in Eisenach, known for the Wartburg, the spectacular castle that has played such a central role in German history, and where Luther sought ...