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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › WiesbadenWiesbaden - Wikipedia

    wiesbaden.de. Logo of the city of Wiesbaden. Wiesbaden ( German pronunciation: [ˈviːsˌbaːdn̩] ⓘ; lit.'meadow baths') is the capital of the German state of Hesse, and the second-largest Hessian city after Frankfurt am Main. With around 283,000 inhabitants, it is Germany's 24th-largest city.

    • 115 m (377 ft)
    • Germany
    • Nerobergbahn
    • Neroberg
    • Kurhaus
    • Kurpark
    • St Elizabeth’s Church
    • Marktkirche
    • Kochbrunnen
    • Museum Wiesbaden
    • Wiesbaden City Palace
    • Biebrich Palace

    The train shuttling to the top of the Neroberg to the north of Wiesbaden is one of the only funicular railways in the world still using water ballast as a propulsion system. Water is pumped into the train at the top of the hill to make it heavier than the one at the bottom, and as this train descends the slope, a steel cable pulls the up-bound car ...

    You’ll know why you made the trip to the top of this 245-metre hill as soon as you arrive as there’s a superb view of the Rhine Valley as far as the city of Mainz to the south. In 1851 the architect Philipp Hoffmann built a small mountain park on the peak, dotted with monuments and amenities. The centrepiece is a Classical Monopteros temple, where ...

    Wiesbaden’s main spa building is glorious Neoclassical building with Art Nouveau flourishes, most memorably in the metal and glass dome. The building and its opulent ballrooms are put to a few purposes, as the venue for high-profile events, as well as Wiesbaden’s high-stakes casino and a posh restaurant. Most of the time you’ll be able to get insid...

    On the east side of the Kurhaus is the English-style Kurpark, which was landscaped in 1852. Right in front of the Kurhaus is the Kurpark Weiher, an ornamental lake with a fountain that shoots a water jet six metres in the air. You can hire boat for the lake and by the water on the west shore are benches, cafe terraces and an outdoor stage. When Ger...

    Also on Neroberg is a Russian Orthodox church completed in 1855. This was built by Duke Adolf of Nassau as a memorial to his Russian wife, Grand Duchess Elizabeth Mikhailovna who died in childbirth. Adolf built the church around her tomb and entrusted the designs to Philipp Hoffmann who studied Orthodox architecture especially for the project. The ...

    The central tower of this captivating Neo-Gothic church climbs almost 100 metres above Wiesbaden’s central Schlossplatz. When construction was finished in 1862 this was the largest- brick-built construction in the Duchy of Nassau. It had to be capacious to meet the needs of a population that had doubled in the previous 20 years. In the chancel you ...

    The best-known and hottest spring in Wiesbaden is Kochbrunnen (Cooking Fountain), which emerges on its namesake square at 66°C. There’s also a drinking water fountain on the square under a Neo-Baroque pavilion. The spring was first recorded in the 14th century, and that water is forced up from a depth of 2,000 metres, filtered through a processing ...

    The three-winged building for the Museum Wiesbaden took shape in the early 1910s, but its collection goes back at least a century before to the collections of writer and diplomat Johann Isaak von Gerning, a contemporary of Goethe. The three sections are an art museum shining for its 19th and 20th-century painting, a collection of antiquities put to...

    In order to show his affinity for Wiesenbad’s citizens and forge a link with his ancestors, William, Duke of Nassau moved his residence to Marktplatz in the centre of the city. Work Started on the city palace in 1835, but William died before it was completed in 1841. And from then on the Neoclassical building had an eventful century, almost being s...

    One of the most beautiful properties on the banks of the Rhine, Biebrich Palace is a Baroque residence begun at the start of the 18th century. The palace was commissioned by George August, Count of Nassau-Idstein, and after he died it became property of another branch of the family, the Nassau-Ussingen dynasty. Today the building is used for confer...

  3. Things to Do in Wiesbaden, Germany: See Tripadvisor's 37,136 traveler reviews and photos of Wiesbaden tourist attractions. Find what to do today, this weekend, or in May. We have reviews of the best places to see in Wiesbaden. Visit top-rated & must-see attractions.

    • Wiesbaden, Germany1
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  4. Wiesbaden, city, capital of Hesse Land (state), southern Germany. It is situated on the right (east) bank of the Rhine River at the southern foot of the Taunus Mountains, west of Frankfurt am Main and north of Mainz. The settlement was known as a spa (Aquae Mattiacae) in Roman times. Its earthen.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Kochbrunnen. If you're game to taste-test the hot spa waters for which the city is known (and named), which are said to have wonderful pharmacological powers, head to…
    • Schloss Freudenberg. Challenge all your senses at Schloss Freudenberg, a century-old mansion 3.5km southwest of Wiesbaden's centre that’s been turned into a hands-on,…
    • Museum Wiesbaden. Paintings from the 12th to 19th centuries and some 100 works by the Russian expressionist Alexej von Jawlensky (1864–1941), who lived in Wiesbaden for the…
    • Marktkirche. The Protestant neo-Gothic Marktkirche, built of bright red bricks between 1853 and 1862, was the first all-brick building to be built in the region.
  5. Wiesbaden is the capital of Hesse and a spa town with 26 hot springs, a casino, parks and a long colonnade. It also offers exclusive boutiques, galleries, cafés, festivals and vineyards in the Rheingau region.

  6. Wiesbaden is the capital of the German state of Hesse. Wiesbaden is a historic spa city which has catered to people from countries near and far for many centuries. At one time, Wiesbaden boasted 26 hot springs. Fourteen of the springs are still flowing today. Even the "old" Romans knew of the "Aquis Mattiacis".

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