FOR MORE INFORMATION
likealocalguide.com/hannover/nightlife
in several places, including the Sprengel Museum. To mark her contribution, she was even granted an honorary citizenship and the renovated “underground” shopping passageway from the central station to Kröpcke was named “The Niki de Saint-Phalle Promenade”. The Lower Saxony State Museum
comprises four very diff erent departments exhibiting fi ne arts, archaeology, natural history and ethnology; its Renaissance and Baroque galleries bolstered by names such as Dürer, Rubens and Rembrandt. In other departments
there are Bronze Age jewellery and mummifi ed human remains from Lower Saxony’s moorlands along with models of dinosaurs and an aquarium in the natural history department. The nearby village of Bodenwerder hosts the home of Baron Munchhausen, the Hannoverian storyteller known for his extraordinary and often far-fetched tales about his eclectic life. Some of those tales were the basis for the collection The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, which are held about 20 km south-east of Hamelin. Hannover’s silhouette wouldn’t be the same without the 14th-century Marktkirche in the centre of the Altstadt which features a tower with four pointed gables. Legend has it the tower was supposed to be taller, but in the 1360s money ran low because of the Black Death and so a steeple was simply added to what had already been completed.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
thecrazytourist.com/25-best-things-hanover-germany
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