Oppenheim
Understand
Oppenheim once was home to a small Jewish community, which was scattered by the atrocities before and during WWII. Several families named 'Oppenheim' or 'Oppenheimer' can be found in the USA and other parts of the world.
Get in
By train
Fast trains (ICE, IC, RE) won't stop in Oppenheim. Visitors have to take the slow train (RB, Regionalbahn). 'RB44' runs from Mainz via Oppenheim and Worms to Mannheim (or vice versa) every half an hour during normal hours on work days and once per hour on weekends. If you're coming in from nearby Frankfurt airport then take a train to Mainz first and change there.From Oppenheim's train station it is only a 5-10 minutes walk to the Old Town. (There is a city map across the street in front of the former station building.)
By car
The B9 state road connects Oppenheim to Mainz and Worms. Just north of the town is the Nierstein car ferry across the Rhine in the direction of Darmstadt. The B420 provides connections from the A61 and A63.Get around
There is no public transportation (the only buses are school buses), but the city, particularly the Old Town, is so small you can walk everywhere within minutes.
City maps are downloadable from Oppenheim's homepage.
See
- The Old Town with its marketplace and the Town Hall, just below the church.
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phone: +49 6133 2381address: Katharinen Street 1built 1220-1439, often named 'the most outstanding Gothic church on the Rhine between Cologne and Strasbourg'. Most of the stained glass windows are still genuine from the 14th(?) century. Sometimes the church's main tower is open for visitors. If you get a chance, do climb it. The effort of the many stairs is rewarded by a spectacular view of the town.
The OssuaryBones of 20,000 people neatly stacked are a creepy view .
St Bartholomäus Church
Landskrone CastleRuin of castle built in the 16th century on the remains of an even older (11th century?) castle, destroyed in 1689. Located at the very top you can get a great view of the town and the surrounding countryside. During summer the ruin is sometimes used for theatre performances. If you walk from the ruin past the Ruprechtsturm downstairs to the Clock Tower (Uhrturm, near the train station) you might notice a huge chunk of curved brickwork (to the left of a small viewing balcony). This is a piece of the castle's round main tower. Despite weighing several tons, it was hurled hundreds of meters when the tower was blown up in 1689.
Gautora gate building in the town's old fortifications.
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address: Merianstraße 2under the Old Town, sometimes also called Stadt unter der Stadt (City beneath the city). Spurred by the city's uneasy past and the soft yet sustainable soil, Oppenheim's medieval inhabitants dug at least 40 km worth of tunnels and rooms beneath the 'visible' city. Among other things, the St Catherine's Church's stained glass windows survived here not only several medieval wars but also WWII bombings. A part of the tunnels have been made accessible to the public. Guided tours (in several languages) are offered by the town’s tourism and festival play bureau. The underground rooms also sometimes host theatre performances and other events.
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Town Museum
address: Merianstr. 4 -
address: Wormser Str. 49Showing old methods and tools for wine production.
Do
Buy
Eat
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phone: +49 6133 571971address: Merianstraße 7
Sleep
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phone: +49 6133 94940address: Wormserstr. 2
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Hotel Gold'ne Krone
phone: +49 6133 94110address: Am Markt 4 - There are also a number of holiday apartments to rent; see the town's website.
Connect
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Tourism and festival play bureau
phone: +49 6133-4909-19address: Merianstr. 4
Go next
- Along the Rhine by bicycle, e.g. to Nierstein, Nackenheim or the Kühkopf island near Guntersblum.
- Nierstein (3 min by train)
- Nackenheim (7 min by train)
- Mainz (20 min by train)
- Worms (20 min by train)
- Frankfurt
- Mannheim (1 hour by (slow) train)
- Darmstadt
- Heidelberg