
Luxembourg
- Luxembourg
- Categories:Reference
- Language:English(Translation Services Available)
- Publication date:June,2024
- Pages:256
- Retail Price:17.09 GBP
- Size:135mm×216mm
- Publication Place:United Kingdom
- Words:(Unknown)
- Star Ratings:
- Text Color:(Unknown)
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Review
-Simon Calder, The Independent
Description
This diminutive European state punches above its weight and is celebrated for everything from its early pioneering of commercial broadcasting with Radio Luxembourg to the fact that it has won the Eurovision song contest five times and no fewer than four Luxembourg riders have won the Tour de France. A foodie paradise, the country offers its own unique cuisine (a fusion of French and German influences) and perhaps the densest collection of Michelin-starred restaurants in the world.
Short distances and easy travelling (whether by public transport or driving) mean a lot can be covered on a relatively brief visit, from sixty medieval castles to plentiful opportunities for outdoors enthusiasts, including long-distance international walking trails linking with the Belgian Ardennes and German Eifel. Military history is also covered, notably the sites of the Battle of the Ardennes and Hamm American Military Cemetery (burial place of General Patton), as are details of the most popular sites such as Vianden, Bock and Luxembourg City’s Museum of Modern Art.
New for this edition are the new Royal-Hamilius complex in Luxembourg City (designed by architect Sir Norman Foster); the post-renovation, UNESCO-listed Pétrusse Casemates; infrastructure upgrades such as extensions to the City’s tram line and ever-easier train and aeroplane access; details on the new cultural and art spaces in Esch-sur-Alzette (a European City of Culture in 2022); new wine-related events in the Moselle; and the inclusion of the Natur- & Geopark Mëllerdall in UNESCO’s network of Global Geoparks.
With so much in Luxembourg to surprise you, Bradt’s Luxembourg is the perfect travel companion.
Author
Tim Skelton (skeltonink.eu) travelled extensively throughout Europe, Asia, the Americas and Australia before finally settling in the Netherlands in the mid-1990s. Skelton soon realised that the region’s three member nations (Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg) were markedly different from one another; indeed, the only thing they shared was that they were all ‘quite small’. As he got to know Luxembourg, he kept finding more and more things to do, and began to wonder what it was the country had done to deserve being deemed no more than an afterthought to Belgium in most travel guides. Bradt’s Luxembourg represents Skelton’s ongoing endeavour to rectify the situation: after 35 years’ of visits, he is still discovering new places. He is also the author of Around Amsterdam in 80 Beers and Beer in the Netherlands 2, has contributed to travel guides about the Netherlands and Belgium, and writes for expat, energy and travel publications.
Contents
PART ONE GENERAL INFORMATION
Chapter 1 Background Information
Chapter 2 Practical Information
PART TWO THE GUIDE
Chapter 3 Luxembourg City
Chapter 4 Around Luxembourg City
Chapter 5 The Industrial South
Chapter 6 The Moselle Valley
Chapter 7 The Müllerthal
Chapter 8 The Ardennes
Appendix 1 Language
Appendix 2 Further Information
Index