1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Visit Goslar

July 30, 2012

Goslar is located right in the middle of the Harz region. Some five million tourists visit this small town annually to admire the medieval Old Town and the nearby Rammelsberg mine. Both are UNESCO World Heritage sites.

https://p.dw.com/p/14Bmz
Goslar is located right in the middle of the Harz region. Some five million tourists visit this small town annually to admire the medieval Old Town and the nearby Rammelsberg mine. Both are UNESCO World Heritage sites.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa

For a long time during the Middle Ages, Goslar was an imperial palatinate where the Holy Roman Emperors held their court councils. The old town center has been a UNESCO World Heritage site since 1992. Two thirds of its buildings are historically listed. Their elaborate ornamentation testifies to the status and wealth of their former owners. The Old Town still has about 1500 half-timbered buildings crowded into an area a mere square kilometer in size.

The town owes its rise and wealth to a rich vein of metallic ore discovered on Rammelsberg mountain, about two kilometers away. The mine was decommissioned in 1988. Now it's a museum and also a World Heritage site. In the permanent exhibition there's a sculpture by the American artist John Chamberlain. It depicts a horse whose hooves, legend has it, laid bare the mountain's vein of ore when he pawed the ground waiting for his master, a knight called Ramm. The mountain was named Rammelsberg in the knight's honor.

Rammelsberg Ore Mine Museum
Rammelsberg Ore Mine MuseumImage: picture-alliance/dpa

Goslar also has a soft spot for modern art. The Mönchehaus Museum houses works by Georg Baselitz, Joseph Beuys and Max Ernst. It also displays works by the winners of Goslar's Kaiser Ring Award, presented annually to deserving artists.

Goslar - Three travel tips

From Visit Germany
Editor: Sue Cox