Bautzen (Sorbian: Budyšin) is an old city in Saxony, Germany. It is a well preserved medieval city and the cultural center of the Sorbian community in Germany.
Understand
[edit]While an eastern Germanic settlement existed in the 3rd century AD and archaeology finds habitation back to the late Stone Age, the oldest written records date from 1002, when the Sorbian fortress of "Budusin" was mentioned as the centre of Upper Lusatia. One of the battlefields of the Napoleonic War Battle of Bautzen in 1813 and the World War II Battle of Bautzen, the town has at various times been part of Poland, Bohemia, Hungary, Saxony, Germany or East Germany.
Bautzen was infamous throughout East Germany for its penitentiaries. During World War II, a subcamp of the Groß-Rosen concentration camp operated in Bautzen; in Cold War Europe, Bautzen I was an official prison (which remains operational today) while the secret Bautzen II imprisoned prisoners of conscience. Since 1993, Bautzen II has served as a memorial.
Bautzen's medieval town centre is defended by a city wall on the steep embankment to the river Spree. St. Peter's Cathedral is Eastern Germany's only historic interdenominational church edifice; the Hexenhaus (Witch's House, built 1604) is the oldest preserved residential building. The Reichenturm is one of the steepest leaning towers north of the Alps to still be passable. The Old Waterworks (built 1558), an architectural monument and museum, is one of the oldest preserved waterworks in central Europe. Other sites of interest include Ortenburg Castle and four museums including the Stadtmuseum Bautzen ("Bautzen city Museum") and the Sorbisches Museum ("Sorbian Museum", Sorbian: Serbski muzej).
Get in
[edit]By train
[edit]By car
[edit]Bautzen can be reached without problems by car from the rest of Germany. It is connected with the German highway system via motorway A4. The best way to get there is from Dresden.
By bus
[edit]By plane
[edit]Besides flying into the close-by major airports of Dresden (DRS IATA), Berlin (BER IATA) or Prague (PRG IATA) there is also a small general aviation airfield
- 2 Flugplatz Bautzen.
Get around
[edit]The best way of getting around is on foot. The city center is compact. You can also easily use a bus or bicycle. If you got in by car, it is best to park it outside the city wall or at Schliebenstraße and walk.
See
[edit]
Above all Bautzen is renowned for its historical town centre with its skyline of medieval towers.
Some examples:
- 1 The Reichenturm, at end of the Reichenstraße (at eastern edge of old town). Open Apr-Oct. One of the steepest leaning and still passable towers north of the Alps stands on the Kornmarkt , opposite the Liebfrauenkirche.
- 2 Ortenburg Castle. A tenth-century castle in Bautzen's old town on a rocky plateau overlooking the Spree River.
- 3 Hexenhaus, Vor der Fischerpforte. The Hexenhäusel (aka Hexenhäuschen or Hexenhäusl) is one of the oldest residential buildings in Bautzen. A former fisherman's house built before 1604, it survived the great 1634 fire which caused great damage to the city; it also survived subsequent fires and wars. According to popular lore, the house was said to have withstood all fires because it was protected by a Gypsy's spell. A distinctive listed historic building widely depicted in postcards circa-1900 and reconstructed in 1959/60, it has old-style wooden roof shingles and wooden gutters.
- 4 The Old Waterworks (Alte Wasserkunst). Architectural monument and museum; landmark of Bautzen.
- 5 Saint Peter's Cathedral. Germany's oldest and Eastern Germany's only historic interdenominational church edifice. The tower is passable, take the door at west side.
Bautzen is the most important cultural center of the Sorbs, who make up 10% of the city population. You will find many places of Sorbian cultural importance in the city. As a result the city uses bilingual signs with street names both in German and Sorbian.
In the Kleinwelka subdivision of Bautzen, you can visit the largest maze of Germany.
- 6 Saurierpark Kleinwelka.
- 7 Bautzen Memorial, Weigangstraße 8a, ☏ +49 3591-40474, fax: +49 3591-40475. M-Th 10:00-16:00, F 10:00-20:00, Sa Su 10:00-18:00. The former Stasi prison, Bautzen II commemorates victims incarcerated in the Bautzen prisons under inhuman conditions during the Soviet occupation and communist dictatorship. See detention cells, the isolation tract, exercise yards and permanent exhibitions documenting victims' suffering and the political and historical context. Free public guided tours F 17:00, Sa Su 11:00 and 14:00. Individual guided tours €60 (in English €70) by appointment.
- 8 Sorbisches Museum, Ortenburg 3 (in Ortenburg Castle), ☏ +49 3591-270870-0, fax: +49 3591-270870-13. Tu-Su 10:00-18:00. Sorbian trade and traditional costumes, music and religious faith, settlement history and contemporary art. €2.50.
- 9 Museum Bautzen.
Do
[edit]- Go on a tour through town or rest at romantic places, go into the museums (city museum or Sorbian museum) or go shopping
- Visit the notorious Stasi prison
- The city nestled in the heart of Upper Lusatia offers plenty of opportunities for memeroable hikes and day trips. The biosphere preserve "Upper Lusation Pond and Heath Region" extends an area of 21,800 hectares with over 240 ponds. You can easily do day trips to the Upper Lusatian Highlands.
- Do water sports at the Bautzen reservoir
Events
[edit]Bautzen is often called the "Easter capital". Sorbian and German customs, including famous processions during Easter, meet with a great deal of interest.
Easter events:
- Easter eggs market (the Sorbian Easter eggs are known for their beauty and are made with special techniques)
- Easter riding in Bautzen and the villages around
- "Eierschieben"
Other events:
- Wedding of the Birds ("Ptači kwas"; January 25th)
- Bautzen has an important summer open air theater
- street festival "Bautzener Frühling"
Buy
[edit]- Easter eggs
- Bautz'ner Senf (mustard) - one of East Germany's best-known specialities. In fact if people hear Bautzen, they usually think one of two things: the notorious Stasi prison - or mustard.
Eat
[edit]Sorbian and traditional German-Lusatian cuisine.
- Mönchshof, Burglehn 1, ☏ +49 3591 490141. "Medieval" style restaurant with occasional live music. Website in German and English. €10-15 for a main course.
- Wjelbik, Kornstraße 7, ☏ +49 3591 42060. Sorbian restaurant with traditional food. €15-20 for a main course.
Drink
[edit]Bautzen beer is only obtainable in only a few places in the city, but it's worth trying.
Sleep
[edit]The Youth Hostel is in an old bastion. There are also some rooms of a hotel in another bastion. There are many other places to stay in Bautzen.
Budget
[edit]- Hotel Alte Gerberei, Uferwerg1, ☏ +49 3591 272390, info@hotel-alte-gerberei.de. All room prices include breakfast. The hotel is close to the river. Single from €54, double from €74.
- Spreepension Bautzen, Fischergasse 6 (weitere Innenstadt), ☏ +49 3591 48960, fax: +49 3591 489644, Frenzel.pension@t-online.de.
- Pension Am Schloss, Schlossstr. 11 (innerer Altstadtkern), ☏ +49 3591 40921, fax: +49 3591 40921.
Mid-range
[edit]- Pension Dom-Eck, Breitengasse 2 (innerer Altstadtkern), ☏ +49 3591 501330, fax: +49 3591 501334, info@wjelbik.de.
- Pension Schloss-Schänke (innerer Altstadtkern), ☏ +49 3591 304990, fax: +49 3591 490198, info@schloss-schaenke.net.
- Best Western Plus, Wendischer Graben 20 (Innenstadt), ☏ +49 3591 492-0, fax: +49 3591 492100.
Splurge
[edit]- Hotel Goldener Adler, Hauptmarkt 4 (innerer Altstadtkern), ☏ +49 3591 48660, fax: +49 3591 486620, kontakt@goldeneradler.de.