Hamburg: Monuments and Statues
Places and attractions in the Monuments and statues category
Categories
- Museum
- Theater
- Concerts and shows
- Park
- Church
- Specialty museum
- Shopping
- Nightlife
- History museum
- Cemetery
- Natural attraction
- Art museum
- Dancing
- Neighbourhood
- Shopping district
- Nature
- Street
- Square
- Architecture
- Vernacular architecture
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Area
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Outdoor activities
- Bridge
- Event space
- Monuments and statues
- Concert hall
- Shopping centre
- Historical place
- Lake
- Science museum
- Art gallery
- Music venue
- Opera
- Harbor
- Mosque
- Memorial
- Hill
- Universities and schools
Bismarck Monument
Monument to 1st German Chancellor The Bismarck Monument in Hamburg is a memorial sculpture located in the St. Pauli quarter dedicated to Otto von Bismarck. It is one of 240 memorials to Bismarck worldwide and is the largest and probably best-known of these Bismarck towers.
Beatles-Platz
The Beatles-Platz is a plaza in the St. Pauli quarter in Hamburg, Germany, at the crossroads of Reeperbahn and Große Freiheit. It is circular, with a diameter of 29 metres and paved black to make it look like a vinyl record.
Gänsemarkt
Gänsemarkt is a public square in Hamburg, Germany, located in the Neustadt quarter. The triangular urban square is accessible by streets of Jungfernstieg from the east, Dammtorstraße and Valentinskamp in the north west and ABC-Straße in the south.
Trostbrücke
The Trostbrücke spans the Nikolaifleet in Hamburg. It originally connected the Episcopal old town around the area of the cathedral and St. Peter's Church with the count's new town.
Hamburg Hauptbahnhof
Hamburg Hauptbahnhof is the main railway station of the city of Hamburg, Germany. Opened in 1906 to replace 4 separate terminal stations, today Hamburg Hauptbahnhof is operated by DB Station&Service AG.
Denkmal für die Gefallenen beider Weltkriege
The Hamburg Memorial, officially: Memorial to the Fallen of Both World Wars, is a stele with the relief Mourning Mother with Child. The relief was created in 1931 by Ernst Barlach in memory of the fallen of the First World War.