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FOR MORE INFORMATION likealocalguide.com/hannover/nightlife


named after the Café Kröpcke, (now Café Mövenpick) which sits behind it. On a wider level, Castle Marienburg 20km to the south is considered one of the most important neo-Gothic historical buildings in Germany, taking visitors back to the days of a typical Hannoverian court. Among the most famous tourist spots are the baroque gardens of Herrenhausen, created in the 17th century to mirror the Versailles Garden in France. It’s a visitor staple in the summer but its beauty is still very evident in the winter. It’s notable for another French


connection: a glimmering cave decorated by Niki de Saint Phalle whose work is evident in the Sprengel Museum. Hannover’s silhouette just wouldn’t be the same without the 14th-


century Marktkirche in the Altstadt which features a tower with four pointed gables. Legend has it that the tower was supposed to be taller, but money ran low because of the Black Death and so a steeple was simply added to what had already been completed. In the winter you will fi nd ice-skaters on the lake of Maschsee, although


the biggest in northwest Germany is the Steinhuder Meer Lake in Wunstorf, man-made but spectacular and surrounded by a nature park and noted for the Festung Wilhelmstein island in the middle which is accessed by ferry. Otherwise, there are a lot of fi reworks during the year. Which is no surprise in a city so full of spark.


FOR MORE INFORMATION thecrazytourist.com/25-best-things-hanover-germany


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