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How do I arrive to Detmold?
Detmold isn't quite well connected with the rest of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
- Train: there are trains every hour to places like Paderborn (aprox. 40 minutes) and Bielefeld (aprox. 30 minutes).
- Bus: there are some buses to nearby places within the region of Lippe.
- Car: if you rented a car from Detmold it can be reached Bielefeld and Paderborn (aprox. 40 minutes), Soest (aprox. 1 hour 10 minutes), Dortmund (aprox. 1 hour 30 minutes), Düsseldorf (aprox. 2 hours) or Cologne (aprox. 2 hours 15 minutes). It can be reached from other places in Lower Saxony like Hamelin (aprox. 50 minutes), Osnabrück (aprox. 1 hour 10 minutes), Hannover (aprox. 1.5 hours) or Kassel (aprox. 1 hour 20 minutes) in Hesse.
History
What can I visit in Detmold?
Detmold is a bit of an out-of-the-radar destination, making it quite interesting to stop here (although it doesn't have too many things to do. It has a very nice street with traditional houses, Adolfstr.
These are Detmold's main attractions:- Detmold Castle (10-17 from Apr to Oct; 10-16 Wed-Sun Nov to Mar; guided tours by 6€/ 4€ adults/ reduced): 17th century Schloss, first built in the 13th century, that was the residence of the Principality of Lippe until 1918 (it still belongs to the House of Lippe). It has 4 very characteristic corner towers and is regarded as one of the most beautiful buildings of the Weser Renaissance.
- Lippe Regional Museum (10-18 Tue-Fri, 11-18 Sat-Sun; 5€/ 3.50€/ 2€ adults/ reduced/ people under 18): museum with a great collection of Lippe and extra-Lippe cultural assets from the fields of natural history, prehistory and early history, regional history, folklore, art, furniture design and cultures of the world.
- Russian-German Culture History Museum (14-17 Tue-Fri, 11-17 Sat; 4€/ 2€ adults/ kids): museum that shows sections of the common German, Russian-German and Russian history, a diverse history of immigration and integration, with interesting links to our current political situation.
- LWL-Detmold Open Air Museum (9-18 Tue-Sun Tue-Sat from Apr to Oct; 8€/ 4€/ free adults/ reduced/ people under 18): open-air museum that depics how traditional life used to be. There are workshops where you can watch blacksmiths, bakers and potters at work, gardens that are landscaped according to historic schemes and old and partially endangered domestic breeds such as Senner horses, Red Siegerland cattle or the Lippe geese.
- Hermannsdenkmal (9-18:30 from Apr to Oct; 9:30-16 from Nov to Mar; 4€/ 2€ adults/ kids under 15): 54 m high monument located in Teutoburg Forest, built in the 19th century by Ernst von Bandel to conmemorate Arminius (Cherusci war chief) and his victory at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest (9 AD) over Rome. The statue's base may be climbed, providing wide landscape views of the surrounding forest. The statue is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Germany with over 530,000 visitors a year. There are also combined tickets for Hermannsdenkmal and Externsteine (6€/ 3€ adults/ kids under 15).
- Falkenburg Ruins (guided tours on request; 4€/ 2€ adults/ kids under 15): ruins of a hilltop castle (used between the 12th and 16th centuries) that used to be the seat of government in Lippe, considered one of the largest medieval dynasty castles in Westphalia.
- Extersteine (9-19 from Jul to Aug; 10-18 from May to Jun and Sep to Oct; 10-16 Tue, Fri-Sun from Nov to Mar; 4€/ 2€ adults/ kids under 15): distinctive sandstone rock formation with several tall, narrow columns of rock which rise abruptly from the surrounding wooded hills. It's considered to be a sacred place for pagan Saxons (where Irminsul idol is thought to have been placed) and has the Externsteine relief, a medieval depiction of the Descent from the Cross. Both Hermannsdenkmal and Extersteine are quite linked to German nationalism (and during the Nazi regime too).
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Hermannsdenkmal |
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Detmold Castle |
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Bielefeld Town Hall |
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Westwerk of the Princely Abbey of Corvey |
Going on the other direction, in the border with Lower Saxony, it can be found the Princely Abbey of Corvey (10-18 from Apr to Oct; guided tours from Nov to Mar; 9.50€/ 5.50€ adults/ reduced) in the municipality of Höxter (28,824 inhabitants). This former Benedictine abbey was one of the half-dozen self-ruling princely abbeys of the Holy Roman Empire (until 1792, becoming a prince-bishopric and then was absorbed into Principality of Nassau-Orange-Fulda). Some of its highlights are the Carolingian westwerk (earliest standing medieval structure in Westphalia), but most of the abbey church is now Baroque. It was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2014.