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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...

1. Brief outline of the history of Cologne

0:00
6:24

Brief outline of the history of Cologne

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 the Romans to the Shrine of the Three Kings

Agrippina the Younger is said to have asked her husband Emperor Claudius in 50 AD to make Cologne a Roman colony. After Germanic tribes repeatedly invaded Cologne in the 4th and 5th centuries, Cologne finally became part of the Frankish Empire in 455. Charlemagne then made Cologne an archbishopric in 795.

From 983 to 991, Theophanu, the mother of Emperor Otto III, ruled from Cologne. After her death, she was buried in St. Pantaleon.

Two archbishops made headlines in the following years:

Archbishop Anno had to defend himself against the citizens of Cologne around Easter 1074, but was able to defeat them a few days later. In 1164, Archbishop Rainald von Dassel brought the supposed bones of the Three Kings to Cologne, ensuring that from 1248 onwards they were given a stately place of worship, the Cologne Cathedral.

From battles to the Free Imperial City

Until the 14th century, Cologne again had no peace due to battles. In 1268, it was the Overstolzen, a patrician family, who sought to conquer Archbishop Engelbert II of Falkenburg. In 1268, it was the citizens of Cologne who turned against Archbishop Siegfried of Westerburg in the Battle of Worringen.

From 1396 onwards, guilds of craftsmen were included in the city council, and this was regulated in the so-called Gaffel Constitution.

From 1475, Cologne was a free imperial city thanks to Emperor Frederick III. From then on, Cologne was subject only to the emperor and no other secular or spiritual ruler.

From Reformation to Adenauer

Cologne successfully fended off reformation efforts in the 16th century and, together with the Jesuits, was even a strong advocate of the Counter-Reformation.

Through clever neutral politics, Cologne was able to avoid being occupied during the Thirty Years’ War.

The invasion of the French in 1794 was both a blessing and a curse for Cologne. On the one hand, church and cultural assets were confiscated and destroyed. On the other hand, the French also ensured cleanliness and order, e.g. with the stringent numbering of streets. With Napoleon’s invasion in 1804, the Code Civil was introduced in Cologne, which was the legal basis for the following 10 years of occupation.

After the victory over Napoleon, the Rhineland and thus Cologne fell to Prussia. Not least, this led to bitter disputes between Catholics and Protestants in the years that followed, also known as the Kulturkampf from 1871-1878.

After around 330 years of construction interruption, Cologne Cathedral was finally ceremoniously inaugurated by Emperor Wilhelm I in 1880.

With the demolition (demolition) of the medieval city wall in 1881, new residential and industrial sites were created around Cologne.

A great man of this city, Konrad Adenauer, took over as mayor in 1917. However, he was removed from his post in 1933 when the Nazis seized power.

Cologne during the 2 World Wars

As a result of the defeat in the First World War, Cologne was occupied by British troops from 1918-1926.

On March 7, 1936, the Wehrmacht symbolically marched over the Rhine bridge into the demilitarized Rhineland, thus the German Reich breaking the Treaty of Versailles.

From 1940 onwards, Jews as well as Sinti and Roma were systematically deported from Cologne. On May 31, 1942, the Allies began bombing Cologne. By the end of the war, around 80% of the city was destroyed. Miraculously, Cologne Cathedral survived the bombings largely unscathed. On April 12, 1945, American troops marched into Cologne, followed by the British as occupying forces on June 21.

From reconstruction to the new Rheinauhafen

Immediately after the war, Cologne began reconstruction. The aim was to restore the infrastructure as far as possible, preserve the historical substance if possible, and promote car traffic. Many residential buildings also had to be built quickly in the center, although often without preserving the historical building substance.

After years of restoration, Cologne Cathedral was finally able to reopen in 1956.

While the championship title for 1. FC Cologne in May 1962 was a nice event, a sad chapter in Cologne’s city history was written in September 1978 with the kidnapping and later murder of the employers’ president Hanns Martin Schleyer by the RAF.

In 1980 and 2005, two popes visited Cologne, first John Paul II in 1980 and then Benedict XVI for World Youth Day in 2005.

In 2012, the renovation work on the Rheinauhafen was completed and it can now be used for strolling, enjoying and living in the new, modern and listed ambience.

Image source: CCAA: Marking on the Roman North Gate, by Anonymous - Scan / Cutout and optimized from illustration by HOWI, public domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2361170

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