Rendsburg's foundation date is unknown. Rendsburg was first mentioned in 1199. An old form of its name in Danish was Reynoldsburgh.
It became a part of Holstein in the 13th century, but was transferred to Schleswig in 1460. Many times the town passed from Danish to German control and vice versa. In the German-Danish War in 1864 Rendsburg was finally seized by Kingdom of Prussia and Austria. After 1866 the town was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia. Since that time it has remained part of Germany.
Although the Eider is navigable for small craft from its mouth on the North Sea to Rendsburg, the town's importance rose in 1895, when the Kiel Canal was finished. The much larger ships that could navigate the Kiel Canal meant that, although it is inland, Rendsburg became a seaport and a dockyard.
54.29359.682631Rendsburg High Bridge. The longest railway bridge in Europe, it is made of steel, 2,500 metres in length and 41 metres in height. It is one of only 13 transporter bridges in the world: it has a gondola to carry passengers and cars across the river. (updated Dec 2024)
54.30479.66442Rathaus (town hall), Am Gymnasium 4, ☏ +49 4331 2060. (updated Nov 2023)
54.28469.64173Longest bench in the world. A 575.75 m (1,888.9 ft) long wooden bench along Kiel Canal.
54.29069.66424Kiel Canal Pedestrian Tunnel. Longest pedestrian tunnel in the world. Four escalators (each 55 m (180 ft) long) and a 130 m (430 ft) long tunnel tube.
54.30219.690665Rendsburg railway loop (Rendsburger Schleife). A perhaps bizarre consequence of the construction/expansion of the Canal is this railway loop in the middle of famously flat as a pancake Schleswig Holstein. The Kaiser wanted his newest warships to pass through the canal and as such bridges had to achieve a height of 50 meters or more. But as the existing station was not supposed to be moved, some method had to be devised for trains to gain fifty meters of altitude over a relatively short stretch of distance. This loop is, to the delight of railway enthusiasts, the consequence. (updated Apr 2018)
54.29429.682996Schiffsbegrüßungsanlage. Built in the 1990s, this is one of only two "ship welcoming machines" in Germany. It plays the anthem and does a thing with the flag of the country of the ships that pass. (updated Apr 2018)
54.30299.65341Schwimmzentrum Rendsburg, An der Untereider 29-31, 24768 Rendsburg, ☏ +49 4331 209600, [email protected]. 09:00 - 19:00 (on some days 06:00-21:00). A beautiful swimming centre with an indoor pool with Caribbean flair and an outdoor pool with a water temperature of at least 25 °C, an 80-m giant slide and a spacious sauna area consisting of 3 log cabins and an outdoor pool on the Eider. €5, €2.50. (updated Oct 2016)
54.300299.666231Hauptwache, Paradeplatz 1, 24768 Rendsburg, ☏ +49 4331 23456, [email protected]. A cozy pub and restaurant with a large wooden oven in the middle of the restaurant.
Rathaus (town hall)54.349.74982Brauer's Aalkate, Schirnauer See 5, 24790 Rade, ☏ +49 4331 91561, fax: +49 4331 91297, [email protected]. 1 May-4 Oct: daily 11:00-21:00; 5 Oct-12 Mar: W-Sa 11:30-14.00 & 18.00-21:00, Su: continuously. A fish restaurant with its own smokehouse, direct fish sales, tours with the Börte boat, herring festival (at the end of March/beginning of April) on the canal.
54.29449.683273Brückenterassen, Am Kreishafen (at the Canal next to the Hochbrücke), ☏ +49 4331 22002, [email protected]. From 09:00. One of their attractions is the "ship welcoming facility" (Schiffsbegrüßungsanlage) that gives information about every passing ship and "greets" it with the national anthem of the flag state. lunch from €7.50. (updated May 2016)
54.2998819.6688422Hotel 1690, Herrenstr. 6, ☏ +49 4331 770290. Breakfast included. Free Wi-Fi available. from €74 per night for a single room. (updated Nov 2023)
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