Category
page 1Ruins in Germany
Upper German-Raetian Limes
portion of the Roman limes in Germany
Hirsau Abbey
former Benedictine abbey in Calw
Limburg Abbey
monastery in Germany

Hortus Palatinus
Castle garden in Heidelberg, Germany
Test Stand VII
Rocket testing site used by Nazi Germany during World War II
Heisterbach Abbey
also Petersthal, formerly Petersberg, near Oberdollendorf, after which the Hotel Petersberg is named
Liubice
Liubice, also known by the German name Alt-Lübeck ("Old Lübeck"), was a medieval West Slavic settlement near the site of modern Lübeck, Germany. Liubice was located at the confluence of the Schwartau with the Trave across from Teerhof Island, approximately four kilometres north of Lübeck's island old town. The residence of Henry, the Christian prince of the Obotrites, Liubice was destroyed after his death by the Rani pagans of Rugia.
Monastery of St. Michael
building in Heidelberg, Karlsruhe Government Region, Bade-Württemberg, Germany
Waldsteinburg
The Waldsteinburg, also called the Red Castle () is a ruined castle on the summit of the Großer Waldstein in the Fichtel Mountains of Germany. It is also known as the Westburg ('west castle') to distinguish it from the older ruins of the Ostburg ('east castle').
Reifenstein Abbey
Cistercian abbey near the present village of Kleinbartloff, Germany
Weingut I
German WW2 bunker construction project
Bucu
Bucu or Buku is a hill island surrounded by the Trave and Wakenitz Rivers in Lübeck, Germany. It is also the name of a medieval Slavic castle, now ruined, on the island. Count Adolf II of Holstein founded Lübeck on the island in 1143. The Burgkloster, or fortified monastery, of Lübeck is located atop the ruins of Bucu. "Bucu" is also the name of a hill.