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Island Rügen
germany |
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| 01
Prora |
02 St. Mary’s Church at
Bergen |
03 Altenkirchen Parish
Church |
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| 04 St. John’s Church at
Schaprode |
05 St. Mary’s Church in
Waase on Ummanz |
06 St. Michael’s
Church, Sagard |
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| 07 Bobbin Church |
08 Poseritz Church |
09 Vilmnitz Church |
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| 10 St. George’s Church
in Wiek |
11 The Gross Zicker
Church |
12 Church of Landow |
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| 13 St Andreas Church in
Lancken Granitz |
14 St Andrea's Church
in Rappin |
15 St Jacob's Church in
Gingst |
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Germany´s largest and most beautiful island
Rügen is the largest German island. With its nature and landscaped parks
of extraordinary beauty which include the Jasmund and West Pomeranian
Lake District National Parks as well as the South East Rügen biosphere
reservation, the island has also traditionally been one of Germany’s
favourite domestic holiday destinations. Rügen is home to many cultural
monuments, some of which date back to the days of the Slav rulers. The
first village churches were built in the 12th century when the
conversion of the island’s population to Christianity started. Later
periods saw the construction of many stately homes and castles. The
island’s modern look is heavily influenced by the classicist spa resort
architecture which is so typical for the 19th century. Early examples
(from the middle of the 19th century) include the bath houses in the
resort town of Putbus.
Contact
Tourism Centre Rügen
Markt 4
18528 Bergen auf Rügen
Phone: +49 (0)3838-807780
Fax: +49 (0)3838-254440
Email: info@ruegen.de |
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Rügen or Rugia is Germany's largest island. It is located in the Baltic
Sea off the coast of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Rügen makes up the vast
part of the Rügen District, which also includes the neighboring islands
Hiddensee and Ummanz, as well as several small islands. Rügen is located
in of the most popular holiday and recreation areas within Germany,
comprising such seaside resorts as Binz and Sellin and has more tourists
per resident than any other location in Germany.
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Geography
Rügen is located in northeastern Germany in the Baltic Sea and its shape
is distinguished by many smaller peninsulas. The Rügendamm bridge, which
connects the island by road and rail with the city of Stralsund on the
mainland, crosses over the Strelasund. There are also ferry connections
from Stralsund, Greifswald and Wolgast.
The climate is in the temperate zone. The winters are not particularly
cold with mean temperatures in January and February of 0.0 °C and the
summers are cool with mean temperature in August 16.3 °C. There is
average rainfall of 520-560 mm and approximately 1800-1870 hours of
sunshine annually.
Two of Germany's national parks are on the Isle of Rügen: Vorpommern
Lagoon Area National Park in the west (also including Hiddensee) and
Jasmund National Park, a smaller park including the famous chalk cliffs
(Königsstuhl). There is also nature reserve, Southeast Rügen Biosphere
Reserve, consisting of the peninsulas in the southeast.
History
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Romanticist painter Caspar David Friedrich's caption of the Kreidefelsen
(chalk cliffs)
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Ralswiek Castle
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Binz
Rügen was first populated about 4000 BC. The migrants were probably
members of the Funnelbeaker culture, which exploited Rügen's flint
deposits.
In the beginning of the first millennium, the island and the surrounding
continental areas were settled by the Germanic Rugians, who might have
come from Scandinavia or evolved from autochtone tribes and gave their
name to the island. In the 7th century, West Slavic R(uj)ani settled
Rügen, assimilating the Germanic population which had not migrated
southward in the Migration period, thereby adopting their name (Rugians
--> Rujanes). Many traces of their life can be found today. Rügen became
a Slavic principality, stretching from the Recknitz to the Ryck River,
with the political center in the ancient town of Charenza, and a
religious center in the fortified temple of Svantevit at Cape Arkona,
the northernmost point of Rügen. In 1168 the area was conquered by
Danish invaders. The then-weakened principality underwent
Christianisation. The former monarchs became Danish dukes of Rügen. In
1325, Rügen was inherited by the Dukes of Pomerania.
Rügen was a part of Swedish Pomerania from 1648 to 1815; afterwards it
became a part of the Kingdom of Prussia. In 1816 the first bathing
resort was founded at Putbus. Later more resorts were established, and
Rügen remained the most famous holiday resort of Germany until World War
II.
In 1936 the bridge connecting Rügen with the mainland was constructed.
The Nazis added a large resort: Prora, planned by the Strength Through
Joy organisation, which aimed to occupy people's free time. However,
Prora was never completed.
Rügen was a major summer holiday destination in the German Democratic
Republic. Rügen remained a holiday island after German reunification; it
has now surpassed Sylt as the most popular German island again.
In February 2006, dead swans found on Rügen tested positive for H5N1
(the avian influenza virus subtype that is a pandemic threat). A house
cat was found dead with the H5N1 strain, marking the first known case of
H5N1 in mammals in the European Union.
Tourism
Rügen is one of the most requested holiday destinations in Germany. The
island has many popular seaside resorts along the eastern coast, such as
Binz, as well as quieter locations in the west. Several of the holiday
resorts are accessible via a historic narrow gauge railway employing
steam locomotives, called Rügensche Kleinbahn. Tourists come both to
enjoy the beaches and to explore the island's diverse landscape.
The most popular locations are Binz, Sellin, Sassnitz and Bergen auf
Rügen as well as Cape Arkona.
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panorama view of Rügen
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Jasmund National Park chalk cliffs
Trivia
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The pier of Sellin at night
The title given to the operation commanded by Wolfram Freiherr von
Richthofen which saw the town of Guernica bombed during the Spanish
Civil War was named after the island. An Abwehr SIGINT Operation during
the same conflict was titled Bodden after the strait separating Rügen
from the German mainland.
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www.essential-architecture.com
the architecture you must see
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