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Siegen is a city of 103,000 people (2019) in eastern North Rhine-Westphalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen). It is home to the University of Siegen and a campus of FOM University of Applied Sciences for Economics and Management. Its approximately 20,000 students give the city a young and lively feeling.

View on Siegen's upper town

Understand

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It lies within the Westerwald low mountain region.

Get in

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By plane

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The closest airports to Siegen are:

Cologne Bonn Airport (CGN IATA). It handles international and domestic flights and is a hub for the low-cost airlines. The airport is approximately 1½ hours away by car.

Frankfurt Rhein Main International Airport (FRA IATA). This is the largest airport in Germany, served by all major international airlines. It takes about two hours by car.

  • 1 Siegerland Airport (SGE  IATA) (near Burbach). Germany's second highest airport, but only approached by charter flights. Siegerland Airport (Q685497) on Wikidata Siegerland Airport on Wikipedia

By train

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Siegen is served by Siegen Hauptbahnhof. Trains arrive from Cologne (about 1½ hours), Frankfurt (about 2 hours), and Hagen (about 1½ hours).

By car

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The motorway A45 connects Siegen to Frankfurt (1½ hours) and Dortmund (1 hour), while the motorway A4 connects to Cologne (1 hour).

Get around

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Map
Map of Siegen

The Rothaar Railway (Rothaarbahn) connects to Bad Berleburg, running through the scenic mountainous area. In the south of the district in the community of Burbach lies Siegerland Airport, which offers scenic flights, although no scheduled connections.

See

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Oberes Schloss
Museum of Contemporary Art

Siegen is Peter Paul Rubens' birthplace. Oberes Schloss houses some of his paintings. The Schloss has a fine exhibit of Siegen's mining heritage with an under tunnel.

  • Beatles-Museum (is found in Geisweid). It is run by Harold Krämer. According to the 2000 Guinness Book of Records, the 27-m² museum is the smallest public museum in the world devoted to the four Liverpudlian musicians. The collection consists of more than 17,000 sound storage media, souvenirs, film posters, autographs and quite a few other things.
  • Oberes Schloss. The castle on the Siegberg was first mentioned in a document in 1259 and was the family seat of the House of Nassau. Since 1905, the Siegerlandmuseum has been here. Alongside regional exhibits – among them an artificial demonstration mine – are many paintings. The centrepiece of this collection is made up of works by the man who is arguably the best known son of the city, Peter Paul Rubens. There is also quite a comprehensive collection of portraits of members of the Houses of Nassau and Orange. The top floor is devoted to 19th-century home décor. A kitchen from the Siegerland, a bedroom and many pieces of furniture from the Biedermeier era give one an impression of life in the region in bygone days.
  • Unteres Schloss. Late in the 17th century, the Lower Stately Home came into being in its current form, somewhat like an open rectangle. The Evangelical line of the House of Nassau-Siegen resided here. Also belonging to the Schloss is the "Dicker Turm", or "Fat Tower" with a carillon. In 1959, the then town of Siegen built a memorial for victims of war and tyranny. Inside the Schloss is also found the crypt of the Evangelical branch of the Nassau princely house. Today, the Schloss serves as a state authority building in which the North Rhine-Westphalia Building and Property Establishment, the State Environment Office, the Office for Occupational Health and Safety and the Attendorn Correctional Facility (Siegen Branch Facility) are all housed. By the city's plans, a university is supposed to move into the Unteres Schloss within the next few years, but at this time, the plan is failing to find any financial backing.
  • Martinikirche. The dating from the 11th century and the Nikolaikirche at the marketplace with its unusual eight-sided shape and its golden Krönchen ("coronet") – the city's landmark – on the church tower, which is a prominent feature of Siegen's skyline (Siegen is sometimes called Krönchenstadt for this unusual feature).
  • Marienkirche. It was built by the Jesuits between 1702 and 1729.

Also worth seeing are Siegen's Old Town and several museums in the city core.

  • Gasometer. Protected gasholder.In the southwest of the city core, at the foot of the Ziegenberg, is a spherical gasholder, or gasometer, which is protected by law as a monument. It is one of the oldest spherical gasholders still preserved. Another peculiarity is its riveted casing. Only three other such gasholders are known to exist worldwide (all in Germany, in Schwerte, Offenburg and Bielefeld). The holder had to be moved a few metres owing to construction on the municipal Autobahn, the Hüttentalstraße, and in the residential area of Ziegenberg, and it now forms the symbolic sun as part of a scale model of the planets above the gasholder.

Do

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Visit the seven hills surrounding Siegen, which locals humorously compare to Rome's:

  1. Häusling
  2. Rosterberg
  3. Giersberg
  4. Wellersberg
  5. Siegberg
  6. Fischbacherberg
  7. Heidenberg

Buy

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The best known export from Siegen is beer.

Eat

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Riewekooche

Siegen has some special dishes, which are more or less unique.

  • Riewekooche (bread made from grated potatoes, distinct from Reibekuchen—potato pancakes—of other German regions)
  • Siegerländer Krüstchen (breaded boneless pork chop on toast and egg sunny side up on top)
  • Schanzenbrot (sourdough rye bread)
  • Krebelcher or Krebbelchen (a kind of doughnut made with curd cheese)
  • Groffbroat (dark rye bread specialty)
  • Siegerländer Debbekooche (a savoury pie made of grated potatoes, onions, eggs, bacon, sausages and baloney; which poor people used to eat on holidays instead of roast meat)
  • Siegerländer Bäckel
  • Duffelnsobbe (potato soup)
  • Grenge (cracknel)
  • Grinnchesbroare (roast rabbit)
  • Kiernmelchsoabbe (buttermilk soup)
  • Suerambe (sorrel)
  • Siegerländer Hirtentopf ("shepherd's stew", a kind of goulash with beans, bell peppers and tomatoes)
  • Aejjerkaes (egg curd; served with bread or yeast cake)
  • Schampe (beef paunch in sauce)

Drink

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Siegerland is famous for its clean water; making it a region were several successful breweries operate, including Krombacher (one of Germany's best-selling beer brands). Who thinks that this mass product is too "mainstream", can try one of several beer specialties made at the local, family-owned Irle-Brauerei established in 1693.

Sleep

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Nearby

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Half-timbered houses in Hilchenbach

Worthy of recommendation for tourists are hiking tours and outings in Siegen's scenically charming environs. Also worth a visit are a few small towns around Siegen, such as Hilchenbach (19 km northeast of Siegen), Burbach (22 km to the south), or Freudenberg (18 km to the west). Furthermore, there are a few well-known breweries in the area that can be visited, for instance Krombacher and Eichener Brauerei in Kreuztal (12 km to the north), along with other smaller breweries.

Swing bridge on the Rothaarsteig

Since 1963 the nature reserve Rothaar Mountains (Rothaargebirge) is a 1355 square kilometers nature park. The Rothaarsteig is a hiking trail in the park, which runs on the territory of the villages Burbach, Wilnsdorf, Netphen and Hilchenbach.

The Pfannenberg tower on the 499-m-high mountain in Salchendorf (9 km south of Siegen) is a 20-m-high observation tower, which is a listed building since 1993. It was built as a mining tower a few kilometres from the town. After the closing of the mine in 1932, it was set up again two years later. The Kindelsberg tower was built in Kreuztal 1905-1907, is 22 m high and is a listed building. On clear days you can see to Bonn.

Junkernhees Castle

Castle Junkernhees near Kreuztal (12 km to the northwest) dates back to 1523. The castle is now a listed building and is used as a hotel and the great hall of the building as a restaurant. At irregular intervals in the castle also hosts art exhibitions.

The Obernau dam at Netphen (15 km to the northeast) has a 9.6-km-long path for walking and cycling. Since the dam serves the drinking water supply, no recreational activities in the water are possible. The Breitenbach dam near Hilchenbach provides a 5.3-km-long cycle path around the dam.

The moated Hainchen castle near Netphen (16 km to the east) dates back to 1290. In 1864 the last of the ruined castle towers were demolished. Since the 1970s, the castle has been rebuild. Meanwhile, the castle is used for disabled and elderly people.

The ruins of Ginsburg in Hilchenbach (20 km to the northeast) stand 580 m above sea level. It dates from the 12th Century and served the House of Nassau as a border fortress. The castle fell into disrepair until it was secured in 1961 and partially restored.

Go next

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  • Westerwald, low mountain range south of Siegen, spanning across the tri-state-area of Hesse, Rhineland-Palatinate and North Rhine-Westfalia
  • Herborn, in neighbouring Hesse, 40 km to the southeast (half an hour by car)
  • Gummersbach, 50 km to the west (40 minutes car-drive)
  • Winterberg, popular skiing resort, 70 km northeast of Siegen (nearly one and a half hours car drive)
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