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Once upon a time... Exciting audio tour through the history of Cologne

von histomich · Köln · 34 Stationen · 90:04 min · 7.23 km · Zu Fuß

1. Brief outline of the history of Cologne

6:24 min · We want to start our tour at one of the oldest places in Cologne. First, I would like to give you a brief outline of the history of Cologne. From...
4 m

2. Römerturm (Roman tower)

2:30 min · It all started with “CCAA”…at least in Cologne… The abbreviation stands for “Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium”, where “Colonia” means Roman colo...
827 m

3. Pfaffenpforte (Römisches Nordtor), Pfaffenpforte (Roman North Gate)

2:06 min · Originally equipped with 3 archways, the north gate, also called the “Pfaffenpforte”, was part of an 11 m long tunnel system in Roman times, throug...
33 m

4. Kölner Dom (Cologne cathedral)

2:34 min · The people of Cologne are also always magically drawn to it, the Cologne Cathedral. It rises majestically right next to the train station and invi...
125 m

5. Dreikönigsschrein (Shrine of the Epiphany)

2:11 min · The Shrine of the Three Kings in Cologne Cathedral shines magnificently, and not just at Christmas time. The supposed relics of the Three Kings we...
29 m

6. Gerokreuz

1:31 min · The 2.88 m high “Gero Cross” shines in the Cross Chapel of Cologne Cathedral. It already had its place in the “Old Cathedral” and is dedicated to i...
344 m

7. Heinzelmännchenbrunnen (Heinzelmännchen fountain)

1:29 min · Who wouldn’t want them to come, the elves, to do the housework quietly and secretly at night? The Cologne legend, which was written in 1826 by Col...
387 m

8. WDR

2:42 min · The WDR logo can be seen from afar on one of its 9 main buildings above the North-South route in Cologne. The WDR, a broadcasting company of the AR...
79 m

9. Die Maus (The Mouse)

2:45 min · Over 50 years old and wise from the start…that’s how we know her, the WDR mouse from probably the most famous show on German television. For half a...
84 m

10. 4711

3:07 min · Did “4711” really invent the real cologne, which has been said to have miraculous and healing powers for 300 years, or were product pirates at work...
400 m

11. EL-DE-Haus

2:32 min · It is difficult to imagine that people were imprisoned and tortured in this actually harmonious-looking house for almost 10 years. From December 1,...
627 m

12. Willy Millowitsch

2:23 min · Acting was almost in Willi Millowitsch’s blood. In 1922, at the age of 13, the stage was his profession. In 1940, he took over the Millowitsch Thea...
569 m

13. Hahnentor

1:54 min · It was not the roosters who went through the Cologne Hahnentor, but the kings after their coronation in Aachen, who then made a beeline for the Shr...
371 m

14. Konrad Adenauer

4:44 min · Since July 1995, the city of Cologne has honored its “great” son Konrad Adenauer with this bronze monument. Adenauer has not only rendered great s...
19 m

15. St. Aposteln

2:54 min · If you want to take a short break from the stress of shopping in Cologne, St. Aposteln offers the best opportunity. In St. Aposteln you can escape ...
235 m

16. Neumarkt

2:48 min · The Neumarkt in Cologne can tell of a very eventful history: As the name suggests, from 1076 onwards it was used to “relieve” the “Alter Markt” an...
348 m

17. Schildergasse/Antoniterkirche

3:23 min · It was not the numerous advertising signs above or in front of the shops in Schildergasse that gave the street its name. It was the sign and coat o...
479 m

18. Farina Duftmuseum (Farina Fragrance Museum)

2:43 min · Only genuine with a red tulip, for purity and quality…that’s what the Farina house guarantees for its “Eau de Cologne”. Wait a minute, isn’t there...
15 m

19. Jüdisches Viertel (Jewish Quarter)

4:13 min · The “Black Death”, as the plague was reverently called in the late Middle Ages, did not stop at Cologne either. The wealthy citizens in particular ...
205 m

20. Gürzenich

1:54 min · The Cologne Gürzenich has already seen a number of celebrities… The reception of Charles V after his coronation as emperor in 1520, the announcemen...
5 m

21. Kölner Karneval (Cologne Carnival)

2:54 min · Cologne can look back on more than 200 years of carnival history, although people had already celebrated exuberantly on the eve of Lent in the Midd...
133 m

22. Reiterdenkmal (equestrian monument)

2:12 min · Seven sculptors were involved in completing the bronze equestrian monument as it stands today on the Heumarkt. The sculpture, which stands on a pe...
55 m

23. Heumarkt

2:04 min · The Heumarkt owes its name to the earlier trade in hay, which was sold here alongside grain, fish and vegetables. It wasn’t long before rich merch...
129 m

24. Hänneschen Theater

2:13 min · The Hänneschen Theater moved 17 times within Cologne until it reached its current location on the Eisenmarkt in the old town. It was founded in 18...
97 m

25. Grinköpfe (grinning heads)

1:20 min · It’s a little scary in Cologne’s old town when you see the so-called “grinheads” on some of the house facades. According to legend, these stone fa...
372 m

26. Rathaus (City hall)

2:33 min · Every hour on the hour, the “Platzjabbek” sticks out his tongue at the Cologne town hall tower, the “floppy hat” only wants to show self-confidence...
132 m

27. Tünnes und Schäl

3:19 min · How many jokes have been told over the past 170 years about these two Cologne originals: Tünnes and Schäl. The two never actually existed in real l...
41 m

28. Groß St. Martin

2:01 min · Where Roman warehouses once stood, a Benedictine monastery was built in the Middle Ages in honor of Martin of Tours. The monastery was the predeces...
80 m

29. Alter Markt

2:04 min · The “Alter Markt” was mentioned in the Cologne chronicles around 150 years before the Neumarkt. In the old days, the area here was very swampy, an...
22 m

30. Jan von Werth

2:28 min · “Griet, if she had done it!” “Jan, if he had known!” This is the legend of Jan, the glorious cavalry general and Griet, the market woman. On the A...
365 m

31. Stapelhaus (stacking house)

1:46 min · For a whole 3 days, goods that were transported by ship had to be offered for sale to the people of Cologne, a clear advantage for the trading metr...
31 m

32. Rheinschifffahrt (Rhine shipping)

2:44 min · If Cologne and Düsseldorf appear together in the name, there must be a historical reason for it. But joking aside: The Cologne-Düsseldorfer, also a...
246 m

33. Hohenzollernbrücke (Hohenzollern Bridge)

2:35 min · The Prussians had themselves immortalized with four equestrian statues on Cologne’s Hohenzollern Bridge: Emperor Wilhelm II ceremoniously inaugurat...
339 m

34. Hauptbahnhof/Alter Wartesaal (central station/old waiting room)

3:04 min · It is hard to imagine that there used to be a botanical garden on the site of today’s Cologne Central Station. In 1857, construction work began on...

19. Jüdisches Viertel (Jewish Quarter)

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4:13

Jüdisches Viertel (Jewish Quarter)

The “Black Death”, as the plague was reverently called in the late Middle Ages, did not stop at Cologne either.
The wealthy citizens in particular accused the Jews of poisoning the wells and of being the cause of this “punishment from God”.
And so on August 23 and 24, 1349, devastating acts of violence against the Jewish population in Cologne occurred, months before the plague actually spread in the city:
There was already “news” of the “Black Death” in southern Europe and southern Germany and the Jews were quickly identified as the culprits.
The persecution of the Jews benefited many, especially those who took out loans from Jewish bankers:

Since 1266, the so-called “Jewish privilege” had been in place, which allowed Jews to lend money at interest.
But those who wanted to keep the Jewish wealth for themselves were also instigators and supporters, although the church largely held back.
Here in the former Jewish quarter, the mob raged in August 1349.

Did you know that the Jewish community in Cologne is the oldest north of the Alps? As early as 331, the then Emperor Constantine allowed Jews to be appointed to the city council.

By the Middle Ages, a synagogue, hospice, wedding house and around 70 Jewish homes were built near today’s town hall.

So in the Middle Ages, equality and peaceful coexistence with Christians were over for the time being: I have just told you about the terrible plague pogroms of 1348-1350 and the background to them.

Most of the Jewish quarter was destroyed.

Until 1798, Jews were not allowed to settle on the left bank of the Rhine in Cologne, and so Jewish communities were established in Deutz.

It was only the Prussians who brought the Jews back to the left bank of the Rhine in Cologne, and so the Jews settled here again, but this time in a decentralized manner. Cologne owes a lot to the Jewish Oppenheim family in particular, as Abraham Oppenheim co-financed a large part of the completion of the cathedral and the construction of a synagogue in Glockengasse at the end of the 19th century. When mentioning well-known Jewish citizens of Cologne, one should not forget Jacques Offenbach, the famous composer.

As in other parts of the German Reich, Jews in Cologne were persecuted, expropriated and killed during the Nazi era. From October 1941, the systematic extermination of Jews began in Cologne with the first deportations to concentration camps.
The six Cologne synagogues and other places of worship were also largely destroyed by the Nazi pogroms and bombings during the Second World War.
Only about 8,000 of the 19,000 Jewish citizens survived Nazi terror and the Holocaust.

According to current plans (September 2024), a museum called “MiQua” will be built on this site of the former Jewish quarter from 2027:
Cologne’s history will then be brought to life above and below ground (up to the town hall). The city’s Jewish history will also be presented in the area of ​​the former Jewish quarter.

You can find out more about Jewish history in Cologne here.

Podcast “Between tolerance and persecution: Jewish life around 1100”

*Our next destination is the Gürzenich, which is known far beyond Cologne’s city limits, where I will also tell you interesting things about the history of the Cologne Carnival. Follow the route shown here for about 200 m on foot *

Image source 1st image: June 2014: Excavation area, By © Raimond Spekking / CC BY-SA 4.0 (via Wikimedia Commons), CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=33463857
Image source 2nd image: The Jewish privilege in Cologne Cathedral, By © Superbass / CC BY-SA 4.0 (via Wikimedia Commons), CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=61632828
Image source 3rd image: By author unknown - own photo in the EL-DE House, public exhibition, public domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3286677

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