Dinkelsbühl
Dinkelsbühl is a town of Germany, in Bavaria, in the district of Ansbach, on the Romantic Route sprinkled by the Wörnitz.
Dinkelsbühl is an interesting medieval city, always surrounded by ramparts and turns. One of the most remarkable houses is the " Deutsches Haus" , the house of the counts de Drechsel-Deufstetten, typical of the German Rebirth. Let us note also the monument with Christophe von Schmid (1768-1854), author of stories for the children.
Strengthened by the emperor Henri V, Dinkelsbühl received into 1305 the same municipal rights as Ulm, and obtained in 1351 the title of imperial city free up to 1802, when it was integrated into the Bavaria. Its municipal code, Dinkelsbühler Recht, published in 1536, and revised in 1738, contained an important collection of public and deprived laws.
Each Dinkelsbühl year celebrates the rendering of the city to the Swedish troops during the Guerre Thirty Year old. This reconstitution is played each summer by the population of the city.
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