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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MünsterMünster - Wikipedia

    Münster is one of the 42 agglomeration areas and one of Germany's biggest cities in terms of area. But it includes substantial sparsely-populated rural districts which were formerly separate local government authorities until they were amalgamated in 1975.

  2. Salzstrasse, Münster's oldest mercantile street, the Baroque treasures of Erbdrostenhof Palace, the Dominican Church and St. Clement's Church are all within walking distance. And the Picasso Museum is just a stone's throw away in its magnificent home in the Druffel'scher Hof.

    • North Rhine-Westphalia
    • Münster Cathedral. The city’s emblem is a stirring medieval cathedral from the 12th and 13th centuries. The oldest architecture is the monumental pair of Romanesque towers that forms the westwork from the 1100s.
    • Historical City Hall. On the east side of Prinzipalmarkt, the Historical City Hall is another symbol for Münster and one of the finest examples of secular Gothic architecture anywhere.
    • Westphalian State Museum of Art and Cultural History. On Domplatz a few paces from the cathedral is the state museum, blessed with art from the Middle Ages to the present.
    • Prinzipalmarkt. The square around the City Hall can tell you all you need to know about Münster’s prestige in Medieval and Renaissance times. On the west side there’s a continuous row of gabled Renaissance houses made from Münster’s characteristic limestone and footed by arcades.
  3. Getty Images. Münster. Germany, Europe. There are some 500,000 bicycles in Münster – and that's just one example of the exuberance found in this captivating city, one of the most appealing between Cologne and Hamburg. Its historical centre was rebuilt after WWII and features many architectural gems. Yet Münster is not mired in nostalgia.

  4. Welcome to Münster. Münster is a multi-faceted city. It is a city of science and learning, the City of Westphalian Peace, the capital city of bicycles and Germany’s Climate Protection Capital. Westphalia’s longstanding regional capital is a young city, not least thanks to its 50,000 students.