Germany
Germany, far from be the rigid monolith of Western Europe that
most people have in mind, is a country with a remarkable variety
of regions having vestiges of when the country was a patchwork
of independent states.
From the ancient ports of the north, following the plain fields,
woods and mountains of the south and many cities of varying size
are good examples of the variety of the country.
There are cities that seem to be national capitals. Cologne
has a large number of historical monuments and Munich, capital
of Bavaria, has good museums and galleries.
Berlin, the capital, has an electrifying atmosphere. Nuremberg
preserved samples of their past glory; Hamburg, totally destroyed
by fire in 1943 is now a pleasant town with lively nightlife.
Frankfurt, the economic pillar of the reconstruction, considers
itself as the real capital of Germany, which seek to snatch Stuttgart
and Düsseldorf, cities with tall skyscrapers. Finally Dresden,
a city crammed with baroque splendor.
Because all these cities were seriously damaged during the war
and reconstruction has not always been perfect, small populations
can become more enriching. Heidelberg and its university, Trier,
Bamberg, Rothenburg or Potsdam are worth places.
From a landscape point of view, we remark the Bavarian Alps (and
Munich), the Bodensee (Lake Constance), the Black Forest and the
Rhine valley, whose splendid path has generated many legends and
folklore.