Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg

WHS Score 3.17
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Votes for City of Luxembourg

0.5

  • Lisap
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1.0

  • GZ
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1.5

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  • Gordon Mitchell
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2.0

  • Alexander Lehmann
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  • Daniel C-Hazard
  • Dennis Nicklaus
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  • João Aender
  • Lucio Gorla
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  • Walter
  • Zoë Sheng

2.5

  • Adrian Turtschi
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  • Cezar Grozavu
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  • Clyde
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  • David Berlanda
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  • J. Stevens
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  • Shandos Cleaver
  • WILLIAM RICH

3.0

  • Alex Marcean
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  • Zoe

3.5

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4.0

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4.5

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5.0

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City of Luxembourg: its Old Quarters and Fortifications includes the remains of a fortified city that played an important role in European history for centuries.

The rocky environment provides a natural fortress, which has been further fortified over the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries by Spanish, Austrian, French, and Prussian rulers. The majority of the fortifications were demolished after 1867, but many of the gates, forts, bastions, redoubts and casemates remain visible.

Community Perspective: while US/UK reviewers seem to fall in love with its “almost perfect” setting, cobbled streets, and Christmas markets incorporated within the military vestiges, those of neighbouring countries find it “somewhat dull”. Be aware that its core zone covers a really small part of the city.

Site Info

Official Information
Full Name
City of Luxembourg: its Old Quarters and Fortifications (ID: 699)
Country
Luxembourg
Status
Inscribed 1994 Site history
History of City of Luxembourg
1994: Inscribed
Inscribed
WHS Type
Cultural
Criteria
  • iv
Links
UNESCO
whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org
Related Resources

Community Information

  • Community Category
  • Urban landscape: Latin American
  • Urban landscape: Post-medieval European
Travel Information
Nancy hotspot
Nancy hotspot
1.5h by direct train
Recent Connections
View all (49) .
Connections of City of Luxembourg
Individual People
  • Napoleon was here
    Napoleon visited the Bock casemates in 1804.

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Charles V
    The duchy and the city passed by inheritance to Charles V who, as a child, bore the title of Duke of Luxembourg. Through him, Luxembourg passed to the Habsburgs of Spain.

    See fr.wikipedia.org

  • Goethe
    "The mighty structures of the former Luxembourg fortress (...) were so impressive that Goethe, while on a short visit to the city in 1792, was inspired to write the following words: "He who has not seen Luxembourg simply cannot picture these war structures, juxtaposed and superimposed as they are (...)." The famous writer expressed his greatest awe of the city of Luxembourg, however, in the following comment: "There is so much greatness and grace here, so much gravity combined with gentleness, that one wishes Poussin had employed his wonderful talent in such an environment.""

    See www.luxembourg-city.com

  • Louis XIV
    "In 1684, on behalf of Louis XIV, Vauban succeeded in capturing the city of Luxembourg during a month-long siege under which the Bock fortifications were completely flattened."

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Mapped or Illustrated by Blaeu
    Illustration from 1649

    See commons.wikimedia.org

  • Painted by JMW Turner
    "The English landscape painter William Turner captured the bold defence structures in expressive watercolours."

    See www.luxembourg-city.com

Geography
Trivia
  • On Banknotes
    Luxembourg; 100 Francs; 1970 and others

    See robertsworldmoney.com

  • Total Solar Eclipse since Inscription
    11 August, 1999
  • Built or owned by Spanish
    The Spaniards conquered the fortress in 1555. "As time passed, the fortifications needed to be adapted to new methods of war based on increasingly strong firepower. During the 1640s under the Spaniards, the Swiss engineer Isaac von Treybach significantly reworked the defences. The Bock was also strengthened with three forts, the Large Bock, Middle Bock and Small Bock (from west to east), separated from each other by cuts in the rock and linked by bridges. As a result, little remained of the medieval castle."

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • On Euro coins
    Grand Ducal Palace and Berg Palace on Luxemburgian 2007 and 2008 comemorative 2 Euro
  • Built or owned by French
    Sun King Louis XIV besieged the city and annexed the duchy (Vauban then augmented the fortifications of the city of Luxembourg). After being regained by the Austrians, France annexed Luxembourg again under the 1st Republic and until the downfall of Napoleon.
History
  • Habsburgs (Austrian)
    As part of the Austrian Netherlands, Luxembourg was part of the Austrian Empire (1713–1792). The Austrians enlarged the casemates in the 1730s and 1740s

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Sieges and Battles
    The City and its fortifications were besieged many times in their history. The castle "was damaged, destroyed, captured and rebuilt on several occasions as the Burgundians (1473), the Habsburgs (1477), and the Spaniards (1555) attacked and took the fortress. (...) In 1684, on behalf of Louis XIV, Vauban succeeded in capturing the city of Luxembourg during a month-long siege. (...) In 1794 during the French Revolutionary Wars, the city held out against a French siege for seven months.

    See en.wikipedia.org

Architecture
  • Baroque
    Saint Michael's Church "unites Romanesque and Baroque architectural styles, pre-dating the national Moselle Baroque style."

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Designed by Vauban
    Responsible for the enlargement of its fortifications
  • Gothic
    The Notre-Dame Cathedral "is a noteworthy example of late gothic architecture".

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Brick architecture
    The towers, fortifications and bridges, e.g. the Pont du Château, are made out of brick.

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Renaissance
    Renaissance architecture is prominent in the Notre Dame cathedral, The rood screen decorated with alabaster statues dating from the late Renaissance .. (wiki.fr).
World Heritage Process
Religion and Belief
  • Protestantism
    "Trinity Church, also known as the Protestant Church, has been used since 1817 for Protestant services in the city of Luxembourg. It is located on Rue de la Congrégation in the old town."

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Legends and Folk Myths
    "The Counts of Luxembourg (...) claimed descent from Melusine through their ancestor Siegfried." Melusine magically made "the Castle of Luxembourg on the Bock rock (...) appear the morning after their wedding. On her terms of marriage, she too required one day of absolute privacy each week. Alas, Sigfrid (...) "could not resist temptation, and on one of the forbidden days he spied on her in her bath and discovered her to be a mermaid. When he let out a surprised cry, Melusina caught sight of him, and her bath immediately sank into the solid rock, carrying her with it. Melusina surfaces briefly every seven years as a beautiful woman or as a serpent, holding a small golden key in her mouth. Whoever takes the key from her will set her free and may claim her as his bride.""

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Jesuit Order
    The Notre-Dame Cathedral "was originally a Jesuit church".

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Benedictines
    "The old Altmünster Benedictine abbey was destroyed in 1542 so that the Benedictine monks built a new abbey in the suburb of the Grund. The Neumünster Abbey consisted of a church and four wings enclosing an inner courtyard. At the end of the 18th century, (...) the abbey was altered so as to house a military hospital which functioned until 1867."

    See www.luxembourg-city.com

  • Dominican Order
    "In 1602, the Dominicans built a monastery around the Trinity Church. When the Jesuits established themselves nearby and built the Athénée de Luxembourg and the Jesuit church, (...) the Dominicans moved to the Fishmarket, and in 1628 sold the monastery and church to the Congrégation Notre-Dame des chanoinesses de Saint-Augustin."

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Marian Shrines
    Notre-Dame Cathedral: "At the end of the 18th century, the church received the miraculous image of the Maria Consolatrix Afflictorum, the patron saint of both the city and the nation." The statue of the Virgin Mary is an object of pilgrimage and is carried around in the yearly procession during the Octave, the largest religious festival in the Grand Duchy.

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Christian Pilgrimage Sites
    The Octave is the largest religious festival in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. It is accompanied by pilgrimages from the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, Belgian Luxembourg, North Lorraine and the Eifel to Luxembourg Cathedral. It is a Marian feast, which ends with a Catholic procession attended by the Grand Ducal family and authorities of Luxembourg.

    See nl.wikipedia.org

  • Cathedrals
    Notre Dame
Human Activity
Constructions
WHS on Other Lists
Timeline
  • Built in the 17th century
    Much of the remaining main components were (re)built during the 17th century: the casemates, Grand Ducal Palace (1683), Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Luxembourg (1621), Vauban designed military barracks (1684). The fortifications date from medieval times (12th-15th century).
WHS Hotspots
WHS Names
  • Country named after them
    The castle at the heart of the country was originally called "Lucilinburhuc" (possibly meaning "small fortress") when acquired by Siegfried Count of Ardennes in 963. This castle grew into a town and became the centre of the small state named after it.
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Community Reviews

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First published: 30/12/21.

Els Slots

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Els Slots

Generally, I find it hard to prepare for sites within my own region with the same level of detail as I do for more exotic WHS. For example the City of Luxembourg: I had been there in 1984 and 2001, but couldn’t tell you more than I liked the panoramas. Most of the other reviews to date are also fairly superficial. A breakthrough in the knowledge of this WHS came when Jurre recently suggested some 25 new connections for it. During a 3 night revisit right after Christmas 2021, I further discovered that from a WH perspective it has at least 3 remarkable features: its boundaries, a list of 20 notable monuments, and controversy before inscription.

The boundaries

Although Luxemburg’s city centre is only small already, the core zone of this WHS covers an even smaller part. There is a hugely detailed official map available, but on the ground, the borders between core and buffer zones are hard to distinguish. Unfortunately, not everything that looks like an old rampart is included, neither is every 19th-century public building. Previous reviewers mentioned Fort Thüngen, Place Guillaume, and Place d'Armes but these are all outside of the core zone, as are most of the bridges and parts of the Wenzel Circular Walk.

I found the WH plaque at a viewpoint in the Chemin de la Corniche, directly below St. Michael’s Church. The WH certificate is in a drawer in the City Museum. The museum includes a "UNESCO visitor center" too, …

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First published: 28/09/19.

Travel Addicts

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Travel Addicts

Luxembourg was never really on our radar until we had a chance to visit in 2017 and then a second trip in 2018 for Christmas. Luxembourg is the 28th smallest country in the world packs a big punch!

The highlight is the old city of Luxembourg. We fell in love with this city from the first moment of our visit. Built on bluffs above a river, the military fortifications are over 1,000 years old and offer impressive views. There are nearly 20km of underground tunnels, catacombs, and subterranean storage, making this a city within a city. Luxembourg was the greatest fortified city in Europe. We loved walking along the walls and imaging what this city was like hundreds of years ago.

But Luxembourg city is really two cities in one: the stoic upper city of culture and government, and the lower city of restaurants and nightlife. We loved both! They are connected by an elevator and a network of paths.

Our second trip to Luxembourg City came the week before Christmas in 2018. We spent a week enjoying the Luxembourg Christmas markets and holiday festivities. The Christmas markets are incorporated within the military vestiges and highlight the beauty of the old quarters.

We used Luxembourg City as a base to explore the rest of the country. One of the coolest things to discover in the country of Luxembourg was the castle Clervaux. Here, is the permanent home of the “Family of Man” exhibition – a UNESCO …

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First published: 11/07/19.

Jakob Frenzel

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Jakob Frenzel

August 2018 - after visiting the Saarland we made another small loop, to visit the smallest EU country and another WHS. Luxembourg was never on my favourite list, but why not take the chance.

The fortress and placement of the city is quite interesting, however the old city is quite boring and only some houses in between are remarkable and add to the justification of the whs status. Of course every member state somehow deserves to have a whs. And there are way less significant cities in europe that would not deserve the status.

We had our folded bikes with us, parked outside the core city and drove around the city visiting the cathedral, the palace and some old building. When it started raining we continued our journey back to Germany, not without filling the car with cheap gas.

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First published: 30/08/16.

Kbecq

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Kbecq

Although Luxembourg is considered to be a somewhat dull city in Belgium, we visited the city center (Oberstadt) a couple of years ago and found it quite nice.

So a few weeks ago we drove to Luxembourg again, this time to do the Wenzel walk. This approx. 5km circular walk mainly leads you through the Grund quarter, along the city's fortifications / old city walls and also includes a number of good viewpoints.

With some time left, we also visited the Grand-Ducal's palace which is possible by guided tour in the summer months (but no pictures allowed inside).

Luxembourg is not a big city but certainly worth a one or two day visit.

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First published: 04/09/15.

Tom Livesey

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Els Slots

My best friend lived in Luxembourg for a year and a half, and I went over to visit him on three occasions: in October 2013, April 2014 & November 2014.

There is a municipal lift that takes you from the upper levels to the lower levels. This is necessary because of the rocky promontories on which the city was built. We found it rather hard to track down, but got there in the end.

The grandest building in Luxembourg is the Notre-Dame Cathedral, which is just impossible to photograph in its entirety because of the number of large buildings that have since sprung up around it.

On my second visit we went to Fort Thüngen, which is pretty much a reconstruction. The original fort was destroyed after the 1867 Treaty of London, which required Luxembourg’s fortifications to be torn down. Across the valley you can see the Bock casements. These were tunnels built into the cliff by the Austrians, with openings every so often for cannon emplacements.

On my final trip we had a good old fashioned WHS drinking session on the cobbled streets of Luxembourg’s Grund area. A highlight of the city is the Luxembourg National Museum of History and Art. The next morning we took a train out into the countryside with the intent being to visit Vianden Castle (on the Luxembourg T-list), close to the German border.

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First published: 07/09/12.

Clyde

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Clyde

I visited this WHS in June 2010. The highlight of my trip was the meandering river close to the fortifications of the city. I visited several other times but it is quite rare to enjoy a warm sunny day here!

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First published: 28/06/11.

Anonymous

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Els Slots

March 2003: I visited Luxembourg by train from Brussels and spent two days wandering the city. One of the main things you will notice about LUX is how exceptionally clean and tidy it is and every morning (at around dawn) street sweepers will be out in full-force. The city itself is rather bland, as far as entertainment goes, but it's worth at least a day to walk around the different city sections (which is easily manageable on foot) and which are separated by a short, but prominent bridge (below the bridge is an area called "The Grund" which houses the majority of the nightlife). I left the country by train again to Munich.

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First published: 24/06/11.

Ac

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Els Slots

I made it there in September 2009.

I had decided to make Luxembourg the last stop on my trip. The stop before this was Trier. And I will always remember what I saw just after the train left Luxembourg station. What I saw was like something from a fairy tale. It was all misty looking (it was in fact raining) and then there were all these gorgeous historical buildings all around the valley.

My favourite spot was at this lookout point from which I got a fantastic view of the Grund and the buildings along the Chemin de la Corniche.

I found this city simply beautiful.

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First published: 07/05/10.

John Booth

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by john booth

This has to be one of the most congested cities in Europe, and finding parking is a nightmare. On my first visit the only parking we could find was at the Hamm military cemetery several km from the centre.

So last year I went by train and found the Wenzel Circular Walk which made seeing the city on foot so much easier. Another advantage of travelling by train was the cheaper hotels were across from the station in rue Strasbourg.

I used Luxembourg as a base for visiting Trier, Volklingen, Nancy and Longwy.

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First published: 28/12/05.

Joyce Van Soest

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Joyce van Soest

The view from the old city wall is beautiful and you can easily spent some time hanging around there. When you get up early and go to the city wall the city looks beautiful in the foggy morning light. Visit the Casemates (the fortified wall) where you can actually walk inside the wall since it used to be a castle.

Downtown, the Place d'Armes and the Place Guillaume are interesting and a place where lots of people gather. The city is beautiful, with nice little streets and squares, beautiful buildings and parks. It really shows the people have a lot of money, you hardly see any small cars and I didn't see any homeless people at all.

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First published: 01/05/05.

Ian Cade

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Ian Cade

Luxembourg is a real treat. I was not expecting much of it but it turned out to be one of my favourite European capitals so good I decided to go back! The setting is almost perfect with the historic centre surrounded by a valley which has some nice bridges and parks at the bottom all of which are lit up spectacularly at night. It is also one of the cleanest places I have ever been to and whilst the centre is not stocked with monumental buildings there are lots of nice little places (the smallest parliament building I have ever come across) and the square in centre seems to have lots going on there! I have seen two classical concerts and a Brazilian dance troupe and I have only spent two nights here!

I have still to see the tunnels and casemates properly which are one of the main reasons for its inclusion on the list as the tours have seemed to be sporadic whilst I have been there.

If you want to add another UNESCO site and country then it is about 30 minutes by train to Trier in Germany, a lovely ride through the vineyard lined Mossel Valley resulting in some very good wines especially the dry Rieslings!

The one problem is that there is very little budget accommodation, one hostel and the hotels are catering for business travellers mostly so you will have to book in advance or go for a bit of a trip up country! …

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First published: 01/05/05.

Klaus Freisinger

City Of Luxembourg

City of Luxembourg (Inscribed)

City of Luxembourg by Els Slots

I only saw Luxembourg on a daytrip from Brussels, but it was a very nice experience. On the one hand, Luxembourg is a European capital with lots of banks and office buildings in a multi-cultural and multi-lingual environment, on the other hand its old town is very well preserved and interesting, especially the cathedral and all the fortifications. Luxembourg was once the most heavily fortified place in Europe, and it shows. Not all remains, but what you can still see gives you a great impression of military architecture, of forts and castles, ramparts, walls, cannon, etc. A worthwhile trip not only for history buffs.

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