The second largest city in Germany, Hamburg is a city-state in the northern part of the country that serves as a major transportation hub for the world. School trips to Hamburg, however, will show you that it is not just another city that is growing with industrialisation, but one that has a rich background of history and art and is a destination worth visiting in its own right.
The city takes its current name from the first building on the site, a large castle ordered to be built by the emperor Charlemagne in 801 AD. As you go into Germany's "Gateway to the world" there is no shortage of things to do or see. While you are there, you should take time to visit St Michael's Church, learn a bit more about the current government at the Rathaus, and then have a peep at some of the city's artworks at the impressive Hamburg Kunsthalle.
St Michael's Church - St Michael's Church is one of the five main Protestant churches and arguably the most famous church in the city. School trips including this church on the itinerary will take you to Englische Planke 1, to explore this landmark that was built between 1647 and 1669. [It has since had several re-builds due to fires and various damages over the years.] The church in its current form was completed in 1786 and its copper covered, 132 metre, Baroque spire is a prominent feature of Hamburg's skyline. The church itself is so famous that it has been replicated in no less than nine other cities in the world.
The city takes its current name from the first building on the site, a large castle ordered to be built by the emperor Charlemagne in 801 AD. As you go into Germany's "Gateway to the world" there is no shortage of things to do or see. While you are there, you should take time to visit St Michael's Church, learn a bit more about the current government at the Rathaus, and then have a peep at some of the city's artworks at the impressive Hamburg Kunsthalle.
St Michael's Church - St Michael's Church is one of the five main Protestant churches and arguably the most famous church in the city. School trips including this church on the itinerary will take you to Englische Planke 1, to explore this landmark that was built between 1647 and 1669. [It has since had several re-builds due to fires and various damages over the years.] The church in its current form was completed in 1786 and its copper covered, 132 metre, Baroque spire is a prominent feature of Hamburg's skyline. The church itself is so famous that it has been replicated in no less than nine other cities in the world.