Wilhelm Schacht has written: 'Wilhelm Schacht, 1872-1951, im Reichsstadtmuseum Rothenburg ob der Tauber' -- subject(s): Art, Catalogs, Reichsstadtmuseum Rothenburg ob der Tauber (Germany), Rothenburg ob der Tauber (Germany) in art
About 113 miles (183 km).
Stefan Hayn was born in 1965, in Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Bavaria, West Germany.
Friedrich Mader has written: 'Rothenburg ob der Tauber' -- subject(s): Description and travel
Vincent Mayr has written: 'Evang.-Luth. Pfarrkirche St. Jakob in Rothenburg ob der Tauber'
Tessa Obrusnik was born on June 20, 1993, in Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Bavaria, West Germany.
Karl Walther Schuster has written: 'Rothenburg ob der Tauber' -- subject(s): Pictorial works
From Frankfurt, follow directions for Würzburg then head south to Rothenburg ob der Tauber.The driving distance between Frankfurt and Rothenburg ob der Tauber is 183 km with a driving time (depending on traffic) of 1h 48min.Travel out of Frankfurt on the B3 and head towards Würzburg on the A3 Autobahn (for 74.3 miles)Leave A7 at junction Anschlussstelle Rothenburg ob der Tauber (108) and join ST2250 which will take you straight into Rothenburg.For full directions and map enter start and finish point (only town name required) into the attached links.I lived in the area where you are going for 5 years and there are many things to see. Make a stop in Wurzburg. It is a beautiful city with a great musuem and the castle on the hill above the city. Rothenburg is the oldest walled city in Europe. I lived about 20 miles from it and the surrounding area is also interesting. On your route to Rothenburg you will find many small villages and you may want to stop in one for lunch.
If you are talking about Rothenburg ob der Tauber, it is 260 kilometres taking this route:Take A7 ULM, from Rothenburg, to A96 MÃœNCHEN at JUNCTION 128 (KREUZ MEMMINGTON).Take A96 across to JUNCTION 30 (INNING a AMERSEE). Turn left off the exit ramp.Go down the street to the road that leads to SEEFELD. Follow signs.Take the roadway to Seefeld.
the Black Forest, Munich, Bavaria and of course Heidelberg!! Explore the Romantische Strasse (Romantic Road) in Franconia (northern Bavaria) and especially these three old towns: # Rothenburg ob der Tauber # Noerdlingen # Dinkelsbuehl
Brandenburger Tor, Berlin Reichstag, Berlin Schloss Neuschwanstein, Bavaria Hermannsdenkmal, Northrhine-Westfalia Schwarzwald, Baden-Württemberg North and East Sea, Lower Saxony/Schleswig-Holstein/Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Baden-Württemberg Etc. Every place in Germany is an attraction =)
Rothenburg, Germany. The walls are still intact and the streets/buildings as they once were.Answer 2Rothenburg ob der Tauber (there is more than one Rothenburg in Germany) is on the "must see" list and overun with tourists, but it is merely one of many.IMHO I vote for Brugge. There are lots more which are less touristy: Dinkelsbühl, Brielle (NL), Canterbury, Kaysersberg (Alsace), Mont St. Michel (not strictly speaking a city), Cracow, Freiburg im Breisgau Those are just a few random ones.