City

The Hanseatic City of Lüneburg

Lüneburg

The Hanseatic City of Lüneburg lies 50 km to the south east of Hamburg
in the north of the Lüneburg Heath. The River Ilmenau flows through Lüneburg
 and later joins the Elbe.

The history of Lüneburg has many highlights. There are traces of human
settlement from as far back as the time of the Neandertals. Lüneburg was first mentioned
in records in the year 956 in a document of King Otto I regarding the
Kloster Lüne convent.

The town of Lüneburg was not destroyed in the Second World War, which
means it has one of the most beautiful old town quarters in Germany. The typical
gables of the “brick Gothic” style, the many tourist sites and anecdotes make it
very attractive for tourists. The history of the town can be viewed particularly
clearly in the Museum for the Fürstentum [Principality] of Lüneburg.

Lüneburg has become well known throughout Germany
due to the daily ARD television series
Rote Rosen [Red Roses], which is filmed on an almost daily basis in the
town and a hotel. If you are lucky, you can watch them filming outdoors.                                                  

The wealth of the town of Lüneburg is based on salt. A large part of
the town is undermined by a salt dome on which the town’s monopoly as supplier of
salt to the Hanseatic League was founded. Lüneburg was a very early and very rich
member of the League. The wealth is particularly visible on the buildings of the
town. In the
Salt
Museum
you can learn the entire history behind this.

The Sülfmeister (Master
Saltboilers), who today are elected annually at a major event, were the rulers of
the town back then. As a result of the town’s wealth, Lüneburg Town Council
was able to purchase comprehensive rights for the town. This means that the church
buildings in Lüneburg are, and have been, the property of the town, and not of the
Church, up to the present day.

As a reminder of the salt mining, a salt saw bone still
hangs today in the old chancery of Lüneburg Town Hall. The story goes that a hunter
was hunting a sow whose coat was covered in salt crystals. This is how the salt
came to be found in the ground and it was extracted using the boiling process.

Besides the wealth it brought, salt has also given the town problems.
Today the ground is sinking dramatically in the so-called subsidence area
area of the town over the salt dome and several buildings have already
been destroyed.

As well as a fabulous shopping experience, there is much to see in
Lüneburg.
Kloster Lüne, a convent
still in use today, preceded the town and helped give rise to it.

The other attractions in Lüneburg are
also well worth a visit.

In the historic Wasserviertel (Water Quarter),
where the salt was loaded onto barges in days gone by, there are numerous restaurants
and bars. As a university town, Lüneburg is today the town with the second highest
bar density in Europe. At the Stintmarkt
in the Water Quarter you can see the old crane
which was used for loading the barges.

Lüneburg Town Hall is one of the biggest in Northern Germany and
actually consists of several buildings along the entire street. On a guided tour
of the town hall you will hear incredible stories of the doings of councillors.
No tourist should miss this.

Next to the Town Hall is the Heinrich Heine House, in which the poet’s
parents lived from 1822 until 1826.
Heine wrote several of his poems here.

The schwangere
Haus
[pregnant house] in Waagestrasse resulted from
badly fired plaster, which then absorbed water over the course of time
and expanded. It is however apocryphal that couples desperate for a baby come here
and touch the wall of the house.

Pisa is not the only one with a leaning tower, Lüneburg has one too because the church tower of the St. Johannis church is 2.2 metres off the
perpendicular. However, the church is not only famous for its leaning tower but
also because the famous Johann Sebastian Bach learned to play the organ and to compose
here.

 

The Am Sande square next to the church was quite aptly named:
it was sandy. This is where merchants drew up their horse-drawn carts and sold their
wares. All around the square you can see particularly splendid gabled houses.

Lüneburg water tower,
with its 56 metre high panoramic terrace, gives you a fabulous view over the town.
In the weeks of advent it looks particularly splendid as Germany’s highest advent
wreath is installed there. By sending a text message you can get the lights turned
on whilst at the same time supporting a project to help children.

Lüneburg is well known today due to the ARD television series Rote Rosen, which has now become a significant factor
in attracting tourism to Lüneburg

In addition to an attractive town with many attractions, tourists
also find 
many events taking places in Lüneburg.
As well as the famous town festival, the Sülfmeistertage (Master Saltboiler Days) in particular are worth experiencing. You can find a summary of all events
here.