Weimar, Germany

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Weimar (population ~65,000) is Germany's most culturally loaded small city — two consecutive UNESCO inscriptions in a decade (Classical Weimar 1998, Bauhaus 1996), the hometown of Goethe, Schiller, Liszt, and Nietzsche, and the birthplace of the Bauhaus and the Weimar Republic. Eight kilometres to the north-west, on the Ettersberg hill, the Buchenwald concentration camp memorial is an unavoidable counterpoint. All of this in a city 15 minutes from Erfurt by regional train.

Classical Weimar — Goethe, Schiller & the Enlightenment

UNESCO 1998 — Goethehaus (Frauenplan), Schillerhaus, Duchess Anna Amalia Library (rococo hall, timed entry, book well ahead), Park an der Ilm with Goethe's garden house, and the Liszt-Haus. Managed by the Klassik Stiftung Weimar.

Bauhaus — Gropius's Original School

UNESCO 1996 — Gropius school building on Geschwister-Scholl-Straße (part of the functioning Bauhaus-Universität), Haus am Horn (only surviving Bauhaus demonstration building from the Weimar period), and the Bauhaus-Museum Weimar with the world's largest original Weimar Bauhaus collection.

Buchenwald Memorial

Gedenkstätte Buchenwald — 8 km from Weimar on the Ettersberg hill (bus 6, 15 min). One of the largest Nazi camps on German soil (1937–1945, ~43,000 deaths). Free entry. Allow 2–3 hours minimum. Essential counterpoint to Weimar's classical heritage.

Weimar Republic — Democratic History

Deutsches Nationaltheater where the 1919 Weimar Constitution was adopted. Goethe-Schiller monument on Theaterplatz. Stadtmuseum permanent exhibition on the republic's rise and fall. The city that gave a fragile democracy its name.

Park an der Ilm — UNESCO Landscape

58-hectare English landscape garden along the Ilm river, designed by Goethe from 1778. Free entry to the park; timed tickets for Goethe's Gartenhaus and the Roman House (Römisches Haus). Best in spring (cherry blossom) and autumn.

Music & Festivals — Liszt, the Kunstfest & Concert Season

Hochschule für Musik Franz Liszt Weimar — year-round concerts. Weimarer Kunstfest (performing arts, three weeks in August). National Theatre season September–June. Liszt-Haus visits. The Nietzsche Archive at Villa Silberblick.

Practical Info

Safety: Weimar is a very safe city. The historic centre and park areas are well-maintained and frequently visited. Standard precautions apply when visiting the Buchenwald Memorial site — respectful behaviour is expected throughout the grounds. Language: German throughout. English spoken at major Klassik Stiftung sites (Goethehaus, Anna Amalia Library, Bauhaus-Museum), at the Buchenwald Memorial (English-language audio guides and exhibition text), and at the tourist-oriented restaurants around Theaterplatz and Frauenplan. Currency: Euro (EUR). ATMs on the Markt and near Goetheplatz. Klassik Stiftung tickets (combination ticket) are purchaseable online and at the box office. The Anna Amalia Library rococo hall timed ticket sells out — online booking in advance is essential in summer.
Travel Overview

Weimar is the city where German cultural history concentrates most densely. In the late 18th century, Duke Karl August of Saxe-Weimar assembled the greatest writers of German Enlightenment at his court — Goethe arrived in 1775 and stayed until his death in 1832; Schiller lived here from 1799 to his death in 1805; Herder and Wieland joined them. The four together constitute the Weimarer Klassik — the German literary classical period that defined the national intellectual canon. A century later, in 1919, two events converged in Weimar: the founding of the Bauhaus school (Walter Gropius's synthesis of fine art, craft, and industrial design, which became the most influential design school of the 20th century) and the drafting of the Weimar Republic constitution in the National Theatre on the Theaterplatz. Both the Goethe era and the Bauhaus era left their UNESCO-listed physical mark on the city. The practical scale of Weimar makes it a two-day destination at minimum — but a very concentrated one. The Klassik Stiftung Weimar manages all the major sites: the Goethehaus at Frauenplan, the Schillerhaus at Schillerstraße, the Duchess Anna Amalia Library (its rococo book-hall severely damaged by fire in 2004 and restored by 2007), the Weimarer Schloss museum, and the landscape Park an der Ilm with Goethe's garden house. The Bauhaus cluster on the opposite end of town includes the original Gropius-designed school building on Geschwister-Scholl-Straße and the Haus am Horn. A separate ticket covers the Bauhaus-Universität and related spaces. The Buchenwald Memorial (Gedenkstätte Buchenwald) on the Ettersberg hill 8 km north-west of Weimar is not optional for a Weimar visit — the proximity of one of the largest Nazi concentration camps (1937–1945, approximately 43,000 deaths) to the city of Goethe and Schiller is the central unresolved question of German cultural memory, addressed directly in the memorial's permanent exhibition. The bus from Weimar Hauptbahnhof takes 15 minutes.

Discover Weimar

The Goethehaus at Frauenplan 1 is the centre of Weimar's Classical UNESCO ensemble — Johann Wolfgang von Goethe lived here from 1782 until his death in 1832, and the building preserves his domestic and working spaces in extraordinary original detail: the reception rooms he designed in the neoclassical style he favoured after his Italian journey (1786–88), the private apartments, and the study where he wrote much of Faust Part II. The house was managed as a museum from 1885 onwards and has been a UNESCO site since 1998 as part of the Classical Weimar ensemble. The Schillerhaus (Schillerstraße 12), where Friedrich Schiller lived for the last three years of his life (1802–1805) and wrote Wilhelm Tell and Die Braut von Messina, is a ten-minute walk away — a modest townhouse with Schiller's original study preserved, contrasting with the more elaborate Goethe residence. The Duchess Anna Amalia Library (Platz der Demokratie), the library of the Weimarer Klassik, is the ensemble's most visually spectacular element — its 18th-century rococo book-hall (the Rokokosaal), two storeys of books on curved galleries, was severely damaged in a fire in September 2004 (which destroyed 50,000 volumes and damaged 118,000 more) and restored to its original appearance by 2007. The rococo hall requires a timed ticket, capacity-limited — the most sought-after in Weimar and worth booking weeks in advance in summer.