Things To Do in Wurzburg
Wurzburg Attractions
You can easily get around Würzburg on foot, though you may want to board the nunber 9 bus for the uphill climb to the Marienberg Fortress. The town center is the Marktplatz (marketplace), where vendors sell produce and dispense sausages in the shadow of lovely red-and-white Marienkapelle (St. Mary’s Chapel), built in the 14th and 15th centuries and dedicated to the city’s patron saint. A few blocks to the south is another gathering spot, Rückermainstrasse, where an 18th-century fountain enhances the appearance of the distinctively tall and slender Rathaus (Town Hall). Just to the west, the Alte Mainbrücke (Old Main Bridge), completed in 1543, crosses the Main River with a flourish, adorned as it is with twelve enormous Baroque saints sculpted out of sandstone. From the end of the bridge a well-marked footpath climbs through the vineyards to the Marienberg Fortress. The Residenz is a short walk east from the Marktplatz.
Würzburg’s master Carver
Tilman Riemenschneider (1460–1531) lived and worked in Würzburg for 48 years, serving as both a councilor and mayor while gaining considerable fame for his sculptures and carvings. He married four times, oversaw a household of nine children and stepchildren, and owned several houses as well as vineyards. During the Peasants’ Revolt of 1525, this master woodcarver sided with the rebels and incurred the wrath of the prince-bishops. As a result of his political views, Riemenschneider was imprisoned and tortured, and his hands were broken, ending his artistic career. He died shortly after being released from prison, leaving behind his incredibly expressive wood sculptures that adorn churches and museums in Würzburg and elsewhere along the Romantic Road.
Fighting the Protestant Menace
Würzburg remained faithful to the Roman Catholic Church throughout the Reformation, partly through the efforts of Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn, a 17th-century prince-bishop (you’ll see an elaborate tapestry tracing his family line in the Fürstenbaumuseum in the Marienberg Fortress). Von Mespelbrunn staunchly defended Würzburg against protestant incursions by banishing Lutheran preachers and demanding that public officials be Catholic. Würzburg still has a large Catholic population and is known as “the town of Madonnas” because of the more than 100 statues of its patron saint that adorn the house fronts. The best known is the baroque “Patrona Franconiae,” the so-called Weeping Madonna, standing among other Franconian saints along the buttresses of the 15th-century Alte Mainbrücke.
- Religious Site
Dom St. Kilian
Würzburg’s prince-bishops worshipped and were laid to rest in this 11th-century Romanesque church, where a large menorah near the entrance pays tribute to Christianity’s roots in Judaism. What you see here today is the result of a massive restoration effort that raised the church… - Historic Site
Festung Marienberg (Marienberg Fortress)
It’s a 30-minute trek along a well-marked footpath through hillside vineyards up to this mighty fortress, affording views of the city and surrounding vineyards (bus no. 9 also climbs the hill). From 1253 to 1720 the hilltop fortress/palace, surrounded by massive bastions, was home to… - Religious Site
Marienkapelle
Built by merchants in the 14th and 15th centuries, this red-and-white church on Marktplatz is dedicated to the city’s patron saint. Interestingly, a synagogue stood here until 1349, when plague decimated the city and the blame fell on members of the sizeable Jewish community, who… - Historic Site
Residenz (Palace)
Prince-Bishop Johann Philipp Franz von Schönborn had a passion for elegance and splendor that the staid, musty salons of the Marienberg Fortress could not satisfy. So in 1720 he commissioned what over the next 50 years was to become one of Germany’s grandest and most elaborate…
Wurzburg Nightlife
Much of Würzburg's nightlife takes place in its numerous Weinstuben (wine cellars). For music and cultural happenings, scan the flyers posted in the Studentenhaus (student center) on Am Exerzierplatz at Münzstrasse.
The city's oldest jazz club, Omnibus, Theaterstrasse 10 (tel. 0931/56121; www.omnibus-wuerzburg.de; bus: 14 or 20), has been packing them in for live acts for over 3 decades. This cellar-level joint is also where people come to drink and play chess. It's open Monday to Thursday 8pm to 1am, and Friday and Saturday 9pm to 3am. Cover charges for performances range from 8€ to 16€. A place for a cheap meal or a drink, Standard, Oberthürstrasse 11a (tel. 0931/51140; www.standard-wuerzburg.de; bus: 14 or 20), is open daily 10am to 2am. It occasionally has a live band on the weekend. Kult Statt Kneipe, Landwehrstrasse 10 (tel. 0931/53143; www.kult-wuerzburg.de; tram: 1, 3, or 5), keeps the stereo cranking. It's open Monday to Friday 9am to 1am (Fri until 2am), Saturday 10am to 2am, and Sunday 10am to 1am.
The Weinstuben Juliusspital, Klinikstrasse 1 (tel. 0931/3931400; www.weingut-juliusspital.de), is one of the many top addresses for wine connoisseurs, with an array of characteristic Franconian vintages. Meals are also served. It's open daily 10am to midnight.
