TravelTill

Culture of Cochem


JuteVilla
stered building, mid to late 19th century

Ravenestra�e 17 � so-called Landratsvilla (Landrat is the title given the head of a district council in Germany); Late Classicist plastered building, 1876

Ravenestra�e 32 � quarrystone building, from 1907

Ravenestra�e 38 � quarrystone building 1900

Ravenestra�e 39 � Amt court; building with half-hipped roof, crow-stepped gable risalto, 1891�1893, government building councillor NN

Ravenestra�e 41 � plastered building, partly timber-frame, early 20th century

Ravenestra�e 43 � three-floor plastered building, Renaissance Revival, about 1900-1910

Schlaufstra�e 5 � three-floor timber-frame house, partly solid, 17th century

Schlaufstra�e 7 � three-floor timber-frame house, partly solid, 18th century, expansion in 19th century

Schlo�stra�e 11, 13 � former school, 18th/19th century; three-floor plastered building; pavilion, mid 19th century

Weinbergsh�uschen ("Little Vineyard House"); one-floor quarrystone building, mid 19th century

Chapel; aisleless church, from 1892, Piet�, 18th or 19th century

Way of the Cross to the Chapel at the Three Crosses; Bildstock type with sandstone reliefs, about 1900; chapel, quarrystone building, from 1856

L�scher Hof � Lescherlinde (limetree), chapel and grave crosses; chapel, 19th century

former Cochem Imperial castle, whole complex; begun possibly in the 10th century or about 1020, expanded in 1051 and in the earlier half of the 14th century, blown up in 1689, reconstructed in 1868 and between 1874 and 1877; Gothic Revival castle, mediaeval keep, inside from the earlier half of the 11th century, encased in the 14th century; garden pavilion, 19th century

Ruin of the Winneburg (castle)

Below Cochem castle in the woods � Jewish graveyard; seven gravestones, the oldest from 1836�1837
JuteVilla