German Clock Road Explained
The German Clock Road (de|Deutsche Uhrenstraße) or German Clock Route is a holiday route that runs from the Central Black Forest through the Southern Black Forest to the Baar region and thus links the centres of Black Forest clock manufacturing. It is about long.[1]
Towns, villages and counties
The towns and villages along the route (in alphabetic order) are Deißlingen, Eisenbach, Furtwangen, Gütenbach, Hornberg, Königsfeld, Lauterbach, Lenzkirch, Niedereschach, Rottweil, Schönwald, Schonach, Schramberg, Simonswald, St. Georgen, St. Märgen, St. Peter, Titisee-Neustadt, Triberg, Trossingen, Villingen-Schwenningen, Vöhrenbach, Waldkirch.
The counties through which the German Clock Road runs are Schwarzwald-Baar, Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald, Rottweil, Tuttlingen, Emmendingen and Ortenau.[2]
Attractions en route
With a clock theme
Other attractions
- Triberg Waterfalls, which is one of the highest and best known waterfalls in Germany
- Black Forest Railway, a technically unusual mountain railway with 40 tunnels
- Titisee, the largest natural lake in the Black Forest
- Baroque churches and abbeys in St. Märgen and St. Peter
- German Harmonica Museum in Trossingen
Literature
- Rüdiger Gramsch: Wo die Stunde schlägt. Mit Hansy Vogt unterwegs auf der Deutschen Uhrenstraße. Silberburg Verlag GmbH, Tübingen 2017. . (Stationen an der Deutschen Uhrenstraße). (in German)
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: e.V. Deutsche Zentrale für Tourismus. German Clock Route – A history of timepieces from the Black Forest. 2020-09-01. www.germany.travel. en.
- Web site: German Clock Route Stands The Test Of Time. 2020-09-01. en-US.
- Web site: Parallelus. On the trail of the Black Forest Cuckooclock » Black Forest Clock Association. 2020-09-01. en-US.