|
|
|
Tours |
|
|
|
Other
Services |
|
|
|
Miscellaneous |
|
|
|
| Tours in
Germany
The following
are available only as private tours. Please contact us
for times, rates and booking information.
This tour will help you gain a better understanding of Berlin's
complicated and tragic history. Visit Fasanenstrasse, the seat of the Jewish community in Berlin.
The synagogue was
destroyed on November 9th 1938; only the portal has survived to this day. The tour includes the following sites:
Kufuerstendamm, the main shopping boulevard once berated by East German propaganda as a "symbol of Western opulence
The Kaiser Wilhelm memorial church, whose ruins serve as a reminder of World War II The Jewish Museum Complex -- housing .exhibitions on the history of Jewish culture in Germany |
Lindenstrasse, the address of another former synagogue
Checkpoint Charlie, the former East-West crossing point managed by U.S. troops -- the Checkpoint Charlie museum nearby is dedicated to various successful, unsuccessful and ingenious attempts to get from East to West
Remains of the Cold War and the Wall that divided Berlin for nearly 30 years
Potsdamer Platz -- a symbol of Berlin's renewal, it was The Centre of Berlin until it was consumed by the Wall, and has since been transformed from a strangely barren field into a showcase of 21st Century architecture |
|
The site of
Hitler's former bunker The site of the soon-to-be constructed Holocaust memorial
The Brandenburg Gate and the Reichstag (German Parliament) Berlin's Old Jewish Quarter and place of deportation to the concentration camps The New Synagogue and Jewish Cemetery The Nikolai
Quarter, the oldest part of Berlin The Gendarmenmarket, often complimented as the most interesting square in Berlin Unter den Linden boulevard
Charlottenburg palace and the site of the 1936 Olympic games. |

|
|
Though we will drive between sites, there will be plenty of walking so be sure to wear your walking shoes! |
|


|
Dresden
Just 2 hours from Berlin and 2 1/2 hours from Prague, a stop
in Dresden is a pleasant way to break up the ride; Dresden
also makes for a nice day-trip from either city. Besides
having a charming downtown, a visit to Dresden is essential for
understanding WWII history in Central Europe. The rococo
Palace Zwinger houses a major collection of Renaissance art;
the Gruenes Gewoelbe houses the richest treasury in Europe.
See the town that after half a century is still recovering
from WWII destruction. Only 30 miles (50 km) from Dresden
you can visit Meissen, home of perhaps the world's best
porcelain. If desired, you may visit the factory to see
production first-hand ... and perhaps find a bargain in
the factory store. |
Berlin
& Munich Tour
As both cities are major airline destinations, either city
may serve as the starting point of your tour.
Berlin, as the capital of Germany, always offers a rich
selection of cultural events -- concerts, operas, and
exhibitions. The city's art collections, such as the
Pergamon Museum, famous for its ancient Babylonian gateway,
are known world-wide. Visit the places famous and infamous
in our modern history (the reconstructed Reichstag,
Checkpoint Charlie, remainders of the Berlin Wall).
Munich is about a 6-hour drive from Prague and less than 2
hours from Salzburg. In addition to the city's many museums, visitors enjoy Munich's
typically Bavarian atmosphere.
The Jewish Museum in Munich displays the |

|
| complicated
history of the German Jews from its early beginnings,
through the Crusades and right up until the Holocaust
period. Within a year of coming to power, the Nazis
established one of its first concentration camps on the
outskirts of Munich. Till today this camp, Dachau, is an
important reminder of Nazi brutality. |
|

|
Passau
Driving south from Prague, you'll see the lovely contrast
between the mild countryside and the Šumava mountains. Passau, just 1 hour from the Czech border, was established
on a peninsula on the confluence of three rivers -- the
Danube, the Inn and the Ilz. The former Bishop's Castle
offers a striking view of the historical town. In addition
to its many monuments, Passau is famous for its rich
collection of Bohemian glass -- at 30,000 artefacts, the
oldest of which dates from 1780, the collection is in fact
the largest in the world. |
Regensburg
This one-day trip offers a nice opportunity to view the
similarities and differences between Bohemia and Bavaria.
Regensburg, a small city on the Danube untouched during
WWII, offers a typical mediaeval setting -- marketplaces
mingled with curved streets and tiny passages, with remnants
from the Roman period waiting to be discovered. Recent
archaeological research has discovered an old Jewish Ghetto and
Synagogue, destroyed during a riot in 1519. It was from
Regensburg that the first Jewish scholars came to Prague and
founded the first Yeshiva. |
|
|
|