For passionate travelers
Private tours according to individual arrangements
Recommended tour guide by Rick Steves' guidebook
"Germany" and Rick Steves' Snapshot "Munich, Bavaria Salzburg"
Collection Brandhorst
Munich's new museum for contemporary fine art
In summer 2009 Munich’s already impressive museum quarter was enriched by yet another atrtraction, the excitingly colourful architecture by Sauerbruch Hutton, a large-scale museum that is home of numerous masterpieces of modern and contemporary fine art. Paintings and installations by Cy Twombley, Sigmar Polke, Bruce Nauman and Andy Warhol make this private collection of modern art one of the best and most highly regarded of its kind. The guided tour will also explain at what special point the history of fine art has arrived today. An ideal addition to a visit of the Pinakothek der Moderne right opposite.
66 years after World War II
Historical tour about Nazi dictatorship in Munich
After World War I Munich was the place where Adolf Hitler founded the Nazi Party. Munich became base for his troops’ operations and therefore was named “Capital of the Nazi Movement” by Hitler himself. You will get an insight into the political ambiance in the Munich of the 1920s and 1930s, when crises, frustration and incertitude led to radicalism and allowed for Hitler’s reign of terror to be established. We will follow the route of the main propaganda parades, from the old town hall, where in 1938 the ‘Night of Broken Glass’ started. You will also be given information on the daily living under Hitler’s dictatorship, on resistance activities and on Jewish life in Munich then and today.
66 years after Liberation
Half-day tour to the Concentration Camp Memorial Site of Dachau
On March 20th 1933 Heinrich Himmler announced the opening of the first Concentration Camp at Dachau near Munich. Two days later the first prisoners arrived. The camp where over 30.000 people came to death epitomizes daily terror, torture and barbarity. This tour to Dachau not only leads you to an extraordinary sad place of history but also explains how the Nazi past was treated since the end of WW II. Can Dachau Memorial Site become a place of hope today?
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