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zum Heiligen Wolfgang

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The places in ‘Wolfgang's’ footsteps...

Pfullingen

Pfullingen is a small German town in Baden-Württemberg at the foot of the Swabian Alb. It is part of the Neckar-Alb region and the European metropolitan region of Stuttgart. It borders directly on the south-east of the district town of Reutlingen.

Pfullingen, with a population of just under 19,000, is one of the towns that characterise the district of Reutlingen. Framed by the Alb, Georgenberg and Schönberg mountains, the town lies at the entrance to the upper Echaz valley.

Pfullingen

Regensburg

Since 2006, Regensburg's Old Town and Stadtamthof have been a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Even today, around 2,000 years of historical development and over 1,000 individual monuments can be seen in the Old Town.

The narrow, winding alleyways, courtyards and squares with their Mediterranean atmosphere also give Regensburg its typical Italian flair. It is not for nothing that Regensburg is known as the northernmost city in Italy.

Regensburg

Straubing

Onion domes, brick towers, small and large towers in different colours. Even the early travellers, the first ‘tourists’ of the 19th century, were enchanted by the beauty of Straubing. The location on the banks of the Danube, the colourful town square, the many churches and monuments still inspire visitors today.

Immerse yourself in the relaxed Bavarian attitude to life and go in search of traces of Straubing's centuries-old history.

Straubing

Vilshofen an der Donau

The town of Vilshofen an der Donau is picturesquely situated at the entrance to the Lower Bavarian-Upper Austrian Danube gorge, where the Vils, Wolfach and Pfudrach rivers flow into the Danube. From the opposite bank, it looks like an island
island floating on the river. The imposing double-towered monastery building of the Benedictine Schweiklberg Abbey towers above it.

Vilshofen an der Donau is a school town, with small and medium-sized businesses forming the economic backbone.

Vilshofen

Braunau am Inn

The border town of Braunau combines old Bavarian cosiness with the Austrian way of life. For most of its history, namely until 1779, it belonged to Bavaria, since then to Austria. Like all towns in the Inn-Salzach region, its centre consists of an elongated, spacious town square whose houses, like those in the side streets, largely date back to the 14th and 15th centuries. Braunau is known as the ‘Gothic town’ and there is hardly anywhere else where the number of picturesque old buildings is as high as here.

Braunau am Inn