Emden

Emden is a city of 50,000 people (2020) in Lower Saxony. The 1,200-year history of the city is closely linked to the seaport. The cityscape of Emden is characterized by 150 kilometers of canals and the typical brick buildings. The city can be explored very nicely by canoe or pedal boat ride from the water. For those who like it easy, there are harbour and canal cruises.

Understand

Emden is primarily known in Germany as the "capital" of the region East Frisia and for its most famous son, comedian Otto Waalke, who frequently alludes to his East Frisian heritage. While Emden does have a somewhat important harbour, it is a rather small city in a mostly rural area and struggled economically in the early 2010s. Besides the harbour and a big Volkswagen car plant the main economic draws in the area are tourists who pass through on their way to Borkum and the production and sale of windmills for the generation of energy.

History

Alongside Geneva and Wittenberg, Emden was one of the most important sites of the Reformation in the 16th century. The baptism of 300 adults in an antechamber of the Great Church marked the beginning of the Anabaptist movement in north-west Germany and the Netherlands. The Synod of Emden (1571) was the first national synod of the Dutch Reformed Church.

Get in

By train

Emden sees regular hourly train service from Bremen. There is also Inter-City service from further away with direct service to/from Cologne and Leipzig among others.

By car

A31 connects the city to the German Autobahn network.

By plane

If you are arriving from farther away, Bremen (BRE IATA), Groningen (GRQ IATA) and Amsterdam Schiphol Airport (AMS IATA) are your best bet.

By boat

AG EMS runs ferries to Borkum and a couple of other places. The ferry to Borkum is able to carry cars.

Get around

See

  • ๐ŸŒ Dat Otto Huus (Otto Waalkes' House), GroรŸe StraรŸe 1, โ˜ +49 4921 22121. Shop and museum of the German actor and comedian Otto Waalkes. The house itself is an attraction, with Waalkes' "Ottifant"-character appearing to burst through the brick wall. See also the nearby traffic lights with the character on them.
  • ๐ŸŒ Mini-bahn Emden (Mini-dampfbahn). April-October: Sundays, 10-17. Just by the train station, behind the full size steam locomotive, there is a miniature steam engine railway that is open on sundays. Even if it's closed, it is interesting to explore the tracks.
  • ๐ŸŒ Leaning Tower of Suurhusen. The village church steeple in Suurhusen was a previous Guinness World Record holder for having the largest angle of unintentional tilt. It beat the Leaning Tower of Pisa by over a degree.
  • ๐ŸŒ Bunkermuseum Emden. May to October. Open since 1995, it's likely the first museum in an air raid shelter of Germany. In 26 rooms, each with a different thematic focus, it shows the history of the bunkers, the persecution and oppression by the National Socialists in the city of Emden from 1933 to 1945 and the post-war period up to the early 1950s.
  • ๐ŸŒ Ostfriesisches Landesmuseum Emden. The art, cultural and regional history museum of the East Frisia region. Special exhibitions on various art and cultural-historical topics are regularly presented.
  • ๐ŸŒ Crossed Locks in Emden (Kesselschleuse (Emden)). A waterway junction.
  • ๐ŸŒ Rathaus Emden (City hall).

Do

Eat

Sleep

  • Heerens Hotel, Friedrich Ebert StraรŸe 67, โ˜ +49 4921 23740. Free Wi-fi for guests. single from โ‚ฌ77 double from โ‚ฌ95, suite from โ‚ฌ90 (one person) or โ‚ฌ118 (two people).

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