A report on Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart and Ludwigsburg
Stuttgart (Swabian: Schduagert ; names in other languages) is the capital and largest city of the German state of Baden-Württemberg.
- StuttgartLudwigsburg is a city in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, about 12 km north of Stuttgart city centre, near the river Neckar.
- LudwigsburgThe largest city in Baden-Württemberg is the state capital of Stuttgart, followed by Mannheim and Karlsruhe.
- Baden-WürttembergThe residential (court) towns of Ludwigsburg and Karlsruhe, the spas and casino of luxurious Baden-Baden, the medieval architecture of Ulm (Ulm Münster is the tallest church in the world), the vibrant, young, but traditional university towns of Heidelberg and Tübingen with their old castles looking out above the river Neckar, are popular smaller towns.
- Baden-WürttembergFor the first time in centuries, Duke Eberhard Ludwig moved the seat of the Duchy out of the declining city of Stuttgart in 1718 to Ludwigsburg, founded in 1704, while the namesake Baroque palace, known as the "Versailles of Swabia", was still under construction.
- Stuttgart1 related topic with Alpha
Neckar
0 linksThe Neckar is a 362 km river in Germany, mainly flowing through the southwestern state of Baden-Württemberg, with a short section through Hesse.
Rising in the Schwarzwald-Baar-Kreis near Schwenningen in the Schwenninger Moos conservation area at a height of 706 m above sea level, it passes through Rottweil, Rottenburg am Neckar, Kilchberg, Tübingen, Wernau, Nürtingen, Plochingen, Esslingen, Stuttgart, Ludwigsburg, Marbach, Heilbronn and Heidelberg, before discharging on average 145 m3/s of water into the Rhine at Mannheim, at 95 m above sea level, making the Neckar its 4th largest tributary, and the 10th largest river in Germany.