Schillers Wohnhaus Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
Write a Review
Trip.com
(247 Reviews)TripAdvisor
247 Reviews
potaracke
Wonderful place to do a self tour
We were very impressed with the Schiller home and the history therein. Part, if not most of learning about Schiller, was his personal history. ...forced to depart his family home and then gaining noto...
A Fantastic Introduction to Friedrich Schiller (1759 - 1805)
As an American, I knew almost nothing about Schiller before visiting this museum. Between the house and the modern museum building in the rear, you can become quite familiar with Schiller's biography ...
It was in the year 1802, that Schiller and his family moved into this spacious house, located on the Esplanade that had been built in the year 1777. After his early death in the year 1805, his wife C...
Shillerstrasse is a residential street. In its original form only the house of Schiller was preserved, it is his name and the street was named. Today it is the pedestrian area of the city. Many cafes and shops. known ...
Wonderful place to do a self tour
We were very impressed with the Schiller home and the history therein. Part, if not most of learning about Schiller, was his personal history. ...forced to depart his family home and then gaining noto...
A Fantastic Introduction to Friedrich Schiller (1759 - 1805)
As an American, I knew almost nothing about Schiller before visiting this museum. Between the house and the modern museum building in the rear, you can become quite familiar with Schiller's biography ...
Visit Weimar.
It was in the year 1802, that Schiller and his family moved into this spacious house, located on the Esplanade that had been built in the year 1777. After his early death in the year 1805, his wife C...
Shiller 's house on the Hillerstrasse
Shillerstrasse is a residential street. In its original form only the house of Schiller was preserved, it is his name and the street was named. Today it is the pedestrian area of the city. Many cafes and shops. known ...
The Hymne à la Joie: it's him! Guillaume Tell too.
This house where poet Schiller lives the last few years of his short life, tells us the context in which we could live in Weimar in the 19th century.