Sondershausen is a town in
Thuringia,
central Germany, capital of the
Kyffhäuserkreis district, situated about 50 km north of
Erfurt. On 1 December 2007, the former municipality
Schernberg was incorporated by Sondershausen.
Sondershausen is situated in North Thuringia and lies in low mountain range between Hainleite (in the north) and Windleite (in the south). The highest mountain is the Frauenberg to the west of the town. A little river called Wipper flows through Sondershausen. Around the town there are mixed forests (especially with beech trees).
In the
Sondershausen Palace there is a large museum with three different exhibit areas. Special exhibits are the Golden Coach, the only of its kind in Germany, and the legendary Püstrich.
There are possible special guided tours of demonstrationdepot, cellar, tower and park of the castle, too.
Under the city there is a mine to visit.
To visit is a Jewish bath from the 14th Century since 1999 under the gallery on the Schlossberg.
Buildings
Sondershausen Palace, with natural history and antiquarian collections. Adapted as Palace in Renaissance times, it was later expanded in
Baroque forms (1764–1771). Especially noteworthy are the "Blue Hall" and the gardens.
The Old Princes' Palace (1721–1725), a residence of the princes from 1835 to 1851. It currently houses the district administration office of the Kyffhäuserkreis.
The Octagonal House
"Alte Wache"
"Geschwister-Scholl-Gymnasium Sondershausen" building I. (a grammar school)
mikveh
theatre "Haus der Kunst" (translated: "house of art")
Rathaus (city hall)
Gottschalcksches Haus (House of Gottschalck)
Churches
The Baroque Trinitatiskirche, a Lutheran church, with the mausoleum (1892) of the reigning princes.
Crucis Church, the oldest building of Sondershausen.
St. Matthias Church, the historicist construction is considered one of the most beautiful churches in the region