The amphitheater in Trier, with its size of 120 x 145 meters, is one of the largest Roman amphitheaters in the world today.
It is witness to an entertainment concept that has never been seen in this form again.
🗺️ Address:
Amphitheater
Olewiger Str. 25
54295 Trier
📫 contact:
Phone: +49 (0)651 73010
e-mail: info@trier-info.de
Web: www.zentrum-der-antike.de
🕑 Opening hours:
April - September: daily, 09.00 am - 18.00 pm
October and March: daily, 09.00 am - 17.00 pm
November - February: daily, 09.00 am - 16.00 pm
🎟️ Admission fees:
Adults: 4,00 EUR
Adults with discount*: 3,00 EUR
Children / teenagers (6-18 years): 2,50 EUR
Children under 6 years: free admission
Families 1**: 4,00 EUR, each additional child: 0,50 EUR
Families 2***: 8,00 EUR, each additional child: 0,50 EUR
Adults in groups**** ( for groups of 10 or more persons): 3,50 EUR
Children / young people in groups**** ( for groups of 10 or more, up to 18 years): 2,00 EUR
* Pupils over 18 years, students, trainees, FSJ-performers, pensioners, unemployed, severely disabled, each with proof.
** 1 adult with up to 4 children over 6 years
*** 2 adults with up to 4 children from 6 years
**** Group tickets must be purchased together by one person (tour guide, supervisor). Group tickets cannot be issued to individuals (including visitors in closed groups).
With alugha Points you see exciting videos about interesting places in your surroundings. These places are historically, politically or socially significant and may not be obvious anymore. Whether architecture, scene of historical events or current hotspots - with alugha Points you will always find a video in your language with all important information about the topic.
The Multihalle is a multi-purpose hall built for the German National Garden Show of 1975.
It is located in the Herzogenriedpark and can be visited there.
Herzogenriedpark Mannheim
Max-Joseph-Straße 64
68169 Mannheim
Opening times:
November - February: 9.00am - 4.30pm
March: 9.00am - 6.30pm
April:
The Jewish cemetery on the edge of the Mehlinger Heath in Rhineland-Palatinate was built in the 18th/19th century and served as a cemetery for the surrounding Jewish communities in Ottenbach, Mehlingen, Sembach, Frankenstein and Kaiserslautern. It has been destroyed and restored several times in his
The UNESCO Biosphere Reserve Palatinate Forest and Northern Vosges stretches across the German-French border and is home to dense forests, sandstone cliffs, castles and ruins, as well as streams and lakes.
🗺️ Address (office):
Biosphere Reserve Palatinate Forest Northern Vosges
Office Pfälzerwald