Top 10 German museums

Top 10 German museums

Top 10 German museums
Top 10 German museums

We recommend Germany’s top museums for art, history, beer, and chocolate.Germany’s museums exhibit its rich history and culture. Museums for history, art, vehicles, and technology are available. See these top attractions.1. Deutsches Museum, Munich
2. Museum Island, Berlin
3. Terrortopography, Berlin
4. Berlin Holocaust Monument
5. Miniatur Wunderland, Hamburg
6. Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg
7. Mercedes-Benz Museum Stuttgart
8. Cologne Chocolate Museum
9. Munich Oktoberfest Beer Museum
10. Bonn Contemporary History Museum

1. Deutsches Museum, Munich

The Deutsches Museum in Munich has about 60,000 square metres of science and technology displays. It features 100,000 Stone Age to modern artefacts. They include a prehistoric stone axe, an Intercity Express train, and an old pocket sundial. There are also several interactive features. They include button-activated experiments, vehicle, aeroplane, and space travel demonstrations. A special display may be available when you visit. The Kids’ Kingdom will entertain young scientists. With so much to see, the museum attracts 1.5 million visitors annually.

2. Museum Island, Berlin

Museum Island is a must-see if you love art and history. Five of Berlin’s top museums are on this unique UNESCO World Heritage Site on the Spree. The Alte Nationalgalerie has 1,800 Romantic and Impressionist paintings and 1,500 sculptures. The Altes Museum displays ancient Greek stone sculptures, vases, crafts, and jewellery. The Pergamonmuseum will delight archaeologists and Egyptian history buffs. Greek and Roman architectural monuments are fully reconstructed here. The Bode-largest Museum’s world’s collection of antique sculptures holds other treasures. If you have time, a €16 ticket gives you entrance to all the island’s museums.

3. Terrortopography, Berlin

The Topography of Terror, Germany’s most visited museum, was built on the Gestapo and SS headquarters. 1.3 million people visited in 2018. The museum offers a sobering view into the tragic events that held Berlin in fear throughout World War Two. It may be distressing, so be advised.

4. Berlin Holocaust Monument

The Berlin Monument to the Murdered Jews of Europe will raise the hairs on your neck. The memorial honours the six million Jewish Holocaust victims near Brandenburg Gate in the city centre. 2,711 concrete slabs of various heights memorialise the period’s atrocities.

5. Miniatur Wunderland, Hamburg

Miniatur Wunderland in Hamburg will give you a sense of being on top of the globe. The world’s largest model railway layout located in the port city’s historic Speicherstadt. 15,400 metres of train tracks pass through model landscapes of the Alps, Austria, Switzerland, Scandinavia, Italy, and the American West. 1,040 trains, 9,250 automobiles, 42 planes, and 260,000 human miniatures are shown in nine areas.

6. Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg

Germany’s largest art and cultural history museum, the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nürnberg, with 25,000 pieces from prehistoric to modern times. They include weapons, armour, paintings, sculptures, and early scientific apparatus. The enormous collection shows German-speaking people’s daily lives. Visitors can see 300 authentic clothing items from three centuries, 16th-century home music instruments, and Middle Ages hunting weaponry.

7. Mercedes-Benz Museum Stuttgart

The Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart has a massive automotive collection that will impress everyone. The huge cloverleaf-shaped German museum has drawn thousands of visitors since 2006. It’s obvious. The museum has about 1,500 artefacts and 160 vehicles, some from the early days of the motor engine, in 16,500 square metres on nine floors.

8. Cologne Chocolate Museum

Cologne’s museums, restaurants, bars, and UNESCO-listed cathedral make it one of Germany’s most visited cities. Germany’s largest chocolate museum makes the lovely city even more appealing to chocolate lovers. The Chocolate Museum Cologne is a chocoholic’s heaven at 4,000 square metres. The nine display sections have 2,000 exhibits. A waffle-dipping chocolate fountain is 3 metres tall. See the Mayans and Aztecs’ 3,000-year-old chocolate culture and history.

9. Munich Oktoberfest Beer Museum

Munich’s Beer and Oktoberfest Museum will delight beer lovers. The city’s oldest mansion, built in 1340, houses the museum, which explores Bavarian beer production and Oktoberfest. If you’re tall, beware of the 43-step staircase that leads to its four levels.

10. Bonn Contemporary History Museum

Bonn’s Museum of Contemporary History covers Germany’s history since World War II. The Cold War dominates this. The exhibitions are arranged chronologically. Almost 4,000 square metres of contemporary settings house 7,000 pieces. There are also many period papers, photos, sound recordings, and films.

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