The Lost Fort

My Travel and History Blog, Focussing mostly on Roman and Mediaeval Times


21 Oct 2025
  The Zoo by the Sea in Bremerhaven – History

I’ve not much experience photographing animals since I seldom have the chance, but when I was in Bremerhaven (on the way to Norway), the local zoo was close to my hotel and thus I visited. I did not manage to take photos of all the species – they are often under water, in the retirement areas, or just too fast to catch on camera –, but I got a collection of ok-ish photos of some of them.
View over part of the zoo to the Weser

The Zoo am Meer (Zoo by the Sea) in Bremerhaven, situated at the Weser estuary close to the North Sea, is a rather small zoo, with a basis ground of only 8,600 m2 that by the clever mountain-like architecture was expanded to 11,800 m2, and focusses – mostly – on animals from the polar regions. The zoo is part of the World Association of Zoos and Aquaria.

Polar fox Fenja

In this post I will tell you about the history of the zoo and some of the animals (in those cases I found information on the website or got it from the zoo keepers). The post turned out longer than I thought and is all over the place, mixing history and information about the animals and zoo technology – I hope you won’t get confused.
Fenja, posing

The first animal I met was a polar fox. Fenja joined the zoo in in July 2022 as nubile fox maiden, so to speak. She’s quite the model girl and knows how to look cute – she stood up and walked to the other side of the enclosure where I could photograph her again (with some twigs in the foreground). Her mate Milan, with a darker fur like frosted graphite, was not ready to remain standing in a good spot for a photo.
"Is there something edible in the pond?"

The history of the zoo began with an aquarium.

By the early 20th century, Bremerhaven had developed into one of the main harbours for freight and passengers in Germany. In 1897, the at the time largest chamber lock in the world and a new turning bassin had been built. Bremerhaven became a port for large-scale shipping; the Imperial Ports II and III, the Imperial Dock II (Kaiserhafen, all named for Emperor Wilhelm II) and the connecting port were constructed – they can still be seen during a harbour cruise. The municipality depended on fishing and shipping, though, and that meant the Lloyd company.
The modern aquarium: The sea around Helgoland

Thus the landing stage for the steamships of the Northern German Lloyd not only got a luxurious waiting hall with a fish food hall and restaurant for the passengers, but also an aquarium displaying fishes that could be found in the North Sea as additional attraction.

Once the city council decided on the new project, they got zoologist and teacher Dr. Heinrich Lübben as consultant for everything that had to do with the aquarium, technical equipment, budget, picking the staff etc. The aquarium in the cellar of the waiting hall opened in August 1913; Lübben became the first director.
Polar bear Lara

Lübben had ideas that went beyond an aquarium; he wanted to show animals as well, but he had to wait until after WW1. A wadden sea beach with some birds, and a bassin for seals were the first concept. It could be realised in 1921; two seals were caught in the wild – not unusual at the time.

After more years of financial strain for the town of Bremerhaven, the Tiergrotten (Animal Grottos) – called thus due to the artificial rock formations which housed the animals – were finally opened in 1928. Lübben wanted to concentrate on animals from the polar regions: The grottos showed polar bears, sea lions, seals, gannets, and later penguins as well. But the zoo also took in animals as gift, or confiscated from incoming ships, like chimpanzees and monkeys which had been sailors’ pets. This list of the first animals also included indigenous fauna like badgers and foxes.
Lara

20 year old Lara joined the zoo mid-July. The other she bear, Valeska, had finally told her grown up twin cubs to get a job and move out of the basement (they went to Brno in Czechia). Lara was introduced to keep Valeska company, but by early September when I visited, both ladies still kept to separate parts of the enclosure.

No boyfriend for Valeska after the male bear Lloyd had moved out in 2022, since her bloodline is already well represented in zoos worldwide, therefore she’s not supposed to breed again (she got several cubs over the years).
Valeska, “is this fish by the window worth the walk?”

The polar bear breeding program became one of Bremerhaven’s main successes already in the 1930/40ies – which is the more remarkable since no one had any experience with breeding polar bears in captivity, and the first enclosures were not species appropriate and much smaller than the space they got now.

One idea that helped was to sound-insulate the breeding cave with thick planks, and make sure the keepers would only whisper when near mommy bear. Polar bears turned out to be very sensitive to disturbances and sometimes refused to care for their cubs.
A parliament of penguins

Humboldt penguins are a highly endangered species with only 20,000 exemplars remaining in the wild.

The group was gathering in expectation of some juicy fish distributed by the keepers. Hand feeding has the advantage that the keepers can control the amount of food each animal gets and take a look at them as well.
"They’re talking nonsense over there."

The first pengiuns in the zoo were African penguins (breeding successes included), another species that is now endangered. I could not find information why the zoo changed to Humboldt penguins; one reason may be that African penguins prefer warmer water, while the modern bassins at the Weser estuary are filled with cold water, thus extra heating would have been required to keep African penguins. There are also world wide breeding programs that decide which zoo may be the best fit for a particular species or animal.
Juvenile cormorant

Cormorants are not endangered, but the zoo also shows some animals – including most of the fishes, the seals and more – that are just part of the arctic fauna. They had reindeer in the early years, for example.

The cormorants share an enclosure with the northern gannet and some other birds.
Northern gannet

The northern gannet was another early breeding success. The German name is Basstölpel (ʹTölpelʹ meaning someone clumsy, the ʹBassʹ part refers to the Bass Rock in Scotland, one of the main colonies of gannets).

Northern gannets are the largest and most northern species in the gannet family. They were endangered because they’ve been hunted for meat and their eggs collected, but since the hunt has been forbidden, the population has been increasing again since the 1990ies. But there is a new danger: Fishing nets. The birds get entangled in the plastic wires, or bring them to build their nests.
Kea

The keas got their own place, though. They are an endangered species. They were killed by New Zealand farmers who – mistakenly – thought they were killing sheep until the 1970ies. It is now forbidden, but still happens now and then. Another problem are introduced predators not part of the original New Zealandian fauna like rats and cats which will steal the eggs and chicks of the ground breeding keas.
South African fur seals

South African fur seals (called Seebären, ʹsea bearsʹ in German) are protected by the Washington Convention.

The water in the bassins for the various seals is exchanged every spring, and the underwater windows get a swipe down as well. 2.7 million litres of water are pumped into the Weser river The water is clean because the zoo today got one one of the most powerful seawater treatment plants in Europe; a total of 3.5 million litres of salt water can be filtered every hour. When the bassins are empty, the technical equipment like pumps, shut-off valves and pipe connections, is checked and repaired if needed. Afterwards, the bassins are filled again to ¾ with tap water, added to this is 27% brine until a seawater salt concentration of 3.5% is reached. The animals stay in the stables during the process.
"Hello, let me tell you more about the zoo’s history."

The zoo soon became popular with the inhabitants of Bremerhaven. But the first grottos left a lot to be desired; there were no water bassins – except for the seals that were kept in a fenced-in area near the harbour – and winter shelters; the room for the keepers had no heating etc. More money than the admission fees was needed. Heinrich Lübben was successfully advertising for donations, but then double bad luck hit the fledging zoo: Lübben died unexpectedly, and the Great Depression struck.
Another fur seal

The new director, Dr. Otto Stocker, had his work cut out after the Great Depression. The infrastructure of the zoo was in a bad shape – which makes me wonder what mediocre materials had been used in 1928 – and the zoo was somewhat short of animals. Stocker got that sorted out and achieved his goal to have many different species living in natural groups with adult and young animals. That was a different way to present them compared to the single (or nursing mother) ʹpresentationʹ in cages that had been the standard.

Stocker and his successor Hermann Junker had considerable success in breeding several of the species, especially polar bears and seals, so the zoo became known in the professional world.
South American sea lions

During WW2, Bremerhaven was a main target for Allied bomb attacks because of the harbour. The zoo was damaged during those attacks, and a number of animals killed, or died in cause of the stress (an ice bear killed her cubs) or malnutrition (several seals); fresh herring was hard to come by. There was also a problem to get materials to repair the damaged enclosures, and the office building went up in flames, with many papers like breeding registers been lost.

Fortunately, the allied soldiers became very fond of the zoo and its inhabitants (among them the only sea lions and penguins to survive in German zoos). The military administration organized building materials like concrete, bricks, timber, roofing felt, and – most important – fresh fish for the seals and penguins, so the Animal Grottos could be opened to the delighted Bremerhaven citizens already in July 1945.
"Monday morning? – No I feel like that all the time."

Junker who had guided the zoo and the aquarium through the difficult times of war and post-war, retired in 1953. His successor was Dr. Kurt Ehlers who brought the zoo back to an internationally acknowledged level. One of his successes was not only the breeding of seals and polar bears, but the raising of abandoned baby seals (called Heuler in German). The poor little things often died until he got the idea to replace the rearing milk with herring fillets and extra vitamins. I suppose the nursing milk avaliable in the 1960ies was not rich enough for baby seals – seal milk contains 45% fat (cow milk has less than 4%). Today, there is a station caring for baby seals in nearby Friedrichskoog.

Harbour seals under water

On Februar 16th/17th 1962, the great North Sea flood hit Bremerhaven. Gusts of up to 200 km/h pushed the water into the German Bight, flooding the dykes along the coast and surging up the rivers of Weser and Elbe – the flood hit Hamburg 100 km inland especially hard. The coastal land is rich in grazing, so many animals – cattle, sheep, horses – died, and 347 people (most of them in Hamburg, the settlements near the coast mostly evacuated in time). 60,000 people were unhomed.

The brick flood wall protecting the zoo was destroyed and parts of the zoo flooded, so many animals that could not swim well, like monkeys and raccoons, died in the flood. Nevertheless, director Ehlers and main keeper Bartmann and his wife managed to save several animals, risking their own lives. Bremerhaven itself got off rather well thanks to not only the fire fighters, police and volunteers, but also the US Army stationed there who all joined efforts to strengthen and repair the dykes with sandbags.
Sea lion yoga

The Animal Grottos were renamed Zoo by the Sea in 1984, but the inhabitants of Bremerhaven called their Zoo ʹTiergrottenʹ still for a long time. They were not the only visitors; since the 1960ies, more and more guests came from Germany and soon from abroad as well.

But despite ongoing repairs and attempts to change the enclosures to better fit the requirements of the animals, it became clear that the zoo needed a general overhaul. By they 1990ies, the technology (like the water filtering system) was old-fashioned, the building structure derelict, and the enclosures and bassins too small. The new directress, Dr. Heike Kück, would have to supervise a complete rebuilding of the zoo.
Asian small clawed otter

The municipal property company of Bremerhaven bought the ground of the zoo (and an additional piece of land), so the financial strain was divided between the company and the zoo, with a subsidy by the EU. After the usual discussions about budgets, architectural plans, ideas (an idea from an US company to turn the zoo into a part of an entertainment park was fortunately not accepted), responsibilies and whatnot, the complete reconstruction of the zoo started in January 2001, first on the additional bit of land. Already in November 2002, the chimpanzees, polar bears, polar foxes and all species of seals could move into their new enclosures. The next step took place from March 2003 (the animals were put in preliminary quarters either within the zoo or in other zoos), and in March 2024, the entire zoo was reopened for the public.
Asian small clawed otters Bonnie and Clyde

Some of the cutest inahbitants: Two young Asian small clawed otters, another species protected by the Washington Convention.

I was lucky since they had joined but a few days before my visit. The prior couple had to be taken down due to illness within a few months of each other at the age of 18/19 – much older than they would ever get in the wild. But it was always clear that the zoo would take in new otters; they’re very popular.
Peek-a-boo

The zoo today (by January 2025) houses 1,164 animals of 109 species. Most of them are fishes, though; there are only 13 species of mammals in the zoo (plus birds, turtles, snakes, and a green iguana). I didn’t manage to takes photos of all the species, though (too fast, hiding, reflections in the glass windows esp. in the aquarium, etc.).

The visitor number for 2024 was 305,113, a good average. 70% of the zoo's running costs are covered by admission fees and the sale of souvenirs in the zoo shop. The zoo receives the remaining 30% as institutional funding from the city of Bremerhaven. Additionally, legacies and sponsorships are used to finance educational and research work to increase the zoo's attractiveness, such as new enclosures.
Russian red tree squirrel

The otters and the Russian red squirrel – which suffers the same fate as the European red squirrel in Great Britain, being replaced by the larger grey squirrel in its habitat – were added to the zoo after the rebuilt. Other than European red squirrels, the Russian variant changes to a whitish winter fur.
Mountain lion

There are two mountain lions, Makiri and Yakawi, but I don’t know who’s who on the photos.

The modern enclosures are much larger, imitating the natural habitats of the animals, with glass fences wherever possible, and windows to watch them under water. Most enclosures have several spots – sometimes high enough to offer an overview – where you can watch the animals. They also got places to hide from the public, and all enclosures have outdoor and indoor spaces, though on a warm September afternoon, most of the animals were outdoors.
Catwalk

There are no public performances, except for the feeding of seals and penguins that can be watched. Some animals learn a few tricks, but that serves to mentally stimulate them and to make it easier for the vet to get close without sedating the animal.

There are programs teaching about species protection, biodiversity, and the dangers of environmental destruction, many of them specially aimed for kids. The zoo also offers guided tours with different thematic focal points.
Aquarium, bassin ʹWeser estuaryʹ

During the rebuilding of the zoo, the aquarium that had started everything had to go, and the zoo was reopened in 2004 without an aquarium. But visitors missed it – a zoo with a focus on Nordic and water loving animals should have an aquarium.

There was another argument in favour: Due to the focus of the zoo on Polar regions, there are no warmhouses and spots for the visitors to get out of cold and wet weather, thus the visitor numbers decreased in winter. An aquarium would offer a sheltered spot.
Bassin ʹharbourʹ

Conditions were good: There was an empty area of 325 m/2 beneath the polar bear enclosure, access to natural sea water, and modern filter technology avaliable (see above).

Thus, in 2013, a new aquarium world opened, specialising on the marine life of the North Sea, and the visitors numbers during winter increased, as it was hoped. The light and colours in the hall give you an impression of walking under water yourself.
Skagerrak underwater landscape

There are 9 aquariums with a water volume ranging from 1,000 to 100,000 litres. The shell is 24 cm waterproof concrete, the acrylic glass panes are up to 90 mm thick, the largest measures 4.40 x 1.75 metres. Add to that the various light spots and reflections, and it’s photographer’s hell, though the underwater landscapes and fish and other critters are pretty to watch.

Besides a lot of different fish (among others: eel, rudd, gobio, stickleback, mullet, goldsinny wrasse, dragonet, catshark, thornback ray, Atlantic wolffish, sea robin - but don't ask me who's who, lol), you’ll also find crabs, lobster, mussels, sea urchins, starfish, sponges, corals and other creatures that live in the North Sea. Though you won’t find some of the larger fish that eat smaller fish, like cod, for obvious reasons.
Seagrass meadow

Seagrass meadows are some of the most productive marine habitats. They filter pathogens and sediments from the water, and fix large quantities of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide. They also offer a home for a large number of small animal species. Unfortunately, they are in decline in many regions.

There are several examples of non-indigenous fish – including seahorses – in the various bassins to give an image of the North Sea as it is now, with species moving in either because the water gets warmer, or because they traveled with ships – often as larvae – and like the North Sea.
West African chimpanzees

Chimpanzees have always been part of the zoo. Several members of the current group were taken in after confiscations in the 1980ies (one was caught when the mother was shot and ended up a ship mascot); they had been brought up in contact with humans and did not display proper chimpanzee behaviour, though the chimpanzees in Bremerhaven eventually developed into a functioning group. It was considered moving them to some place specialising in primates when the zoo was renovated in 2004, but that would have proven a lot of emotional stress for the chimpanzees, so it was decided to keep them.

This West African species is endangered, and the bloodline of the zoo is a rare one since it goes back directly to chimpanzees captured in the wild.
Emperor tamarin

That tail is too long to fit on the photo.

Monkeys also have been part of the zoo since its beginning. They usually came as gifts, former sailors’ pets and ship monkeys kept for good luck.

The zoo continues to breed some non-polar animals since every zoo participating in breeding programs expands the genetic stock of animals that are, or may soon be, counted as endangered species. The emperor tamarins live at the Amazonas where the rainforest is decreasing rapidly; they are not yet endangered but their habitat is getting smaller every day.
Horst, the two-toed sloth. Sleeping again.

The latest addition to the park is a sloth called Horst who joined just a few days before my visit. He was born in the Weltvogelpark Walsrode (World Bird’s Park Walsrode) that has kept sloths for years. He shares the Amazonian rainforest habitat with the tamarins, like he would in the wild.

One reason to keep those roommates of tamarins, turtles, a green iguana, and a sloth may be the plans to build a Biodiversity Center (see below) that would focus on the Amazonian rain forest; the animals could then be moved to a habitat there.
Aquarium, cold water species

The Zoo am Meer is part of the Havenwelten quarter in Bremerhaven, situated around the remains of the Old Harbour (1830) and New Harbour (1852) – both are no longer used as habours for large ships, though the New Harbour has a marina. The Havenwelten include several museums: The Deutsches Schifffahrtsmuseum (German Maritime Museum), the Deutsches Auswandrerhaus (German Emigration Center – Bremerhaven was a main port for ships going to America) and the Klimahaus Bremerhaven (Climate House).

There are plans for another educational center, a "Biodom Bremerhaven" focussing on biodiversity and its challenges by example of the Amazonian rain forest. The center is intended to be connected to the zoo. But what exists until now are some pretty plans and models, with only vague ideas about the financing (planned: 48 million €, if you have something to spare *grin*).
Sea lion bassin with the Weser estuary behind

Sources

Zoo Website
80 Jahre Zoo am Meer
 
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The Lost Fort is a travel and history blog based on my journeys in Germany, Great Britain, Scandinavia, the Baltic Countries, and central Europe. It includes virtual town and castle tours with a focus on history, essays on Roman and Mediaeval history, hiking tours, and photography.

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I'm a blogger from Göttingen, Germany, with a MA in Literature and History, interested in everything Roman and Mediaeval, avid reader and sometimes writer, opera enthusiast, traveller with a liking for foreign languages and odd rocks, photographer, and tea aficionado. And an old-fashioned blogger who refuses to get an Instagram account.
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A Tour of the Town

St. Petersburg (Russia)
Impressions from the Neva River


Landscapes and Geology

Germany

Baltic Sea Coast
Flensburg Firth
Impressions from Rugia
Rugia: Flint Fields
Rugia: Jasmund Peninsula and Kap Arkona
Rugia: The Pier of Sellin
A Tour on the Wakenitz River

Lüneburg Heath
Hiking in the Lüneburg Heath

Harz National Park
A Collection of Tours
Arboretum Bad Grund / Hübichenstein
Bode Valley and Rosstrappe Cliff
Daneil's Cave
Devil's Wall
Ilse Valley and Ilse's Rock
Klus Rock
Lonau Falls
Oderteich Reservoir
Rappbode Reservoir
Rhume Springs
Southern Harz Karst

National Park Hainich
Oberderdorla and Hainich National Park

Nature Park Meissner-Kaufunger Wald
Blue Dome near Eschwege
Hiking in the Meissner
Hessian Switzerland
Rossbach Heath
Salt Springs at the Werra

Nature Park Reinhardswald
Old Forest at the Sababurg

Nature Park Solling-Vogler
The Forest Pasture Project
Hannover Cliffs
Raised Bog Mecklenbruch

Pretty Places in Göttingen
Spring in the Parks of Göttingen
Winter Impressions

Rivers and Lakes
Autumn at Werra/Weser
The Danube in Spring
Edersee Reservoir
A Rainy Rhine Cruise
Vineyards at Saale/Unstrut
Weser River Ferry
Weser Skywalk

Wildlife
Zoo am Meer Bremerhaven
Harz Falcon Park
Ozeaneum Stralsund: Baltic Sea Life
Ozeaneum Stralsund: North Sea Life
Red squirrels

Fossils and Rocks
Fossilized Ammonites


Baltic Countries

Baltic Sea Cruise

Lithuania
Beaches at the Curonian Spit
Geology of the Curonian Spit


Central Europe

Fossils and Rocks
Loket Meteorite (Czechia)


Great Britain

The East Coast
By Ferry to Newcastle
Impressions from the East Coast

Scottish Sea Shores
Crossing to Mull
Mull: Craignure to Fionnphort
Dunollie and Kilchurn
Highland Mountains: Inverness to John o'Groats
Pentland Firth
Staffa
Summer in Oban

Scotland by Train
West Highland Railway

Wildlife
Sea Gulls


Scandinavia

The Hurtigruten-Tour
A Voyage into Winter
Light and Shadows

Other Norway Cruises
The Fjords of South-Western Norway

Norway by Train
From Oslo to Bergen
From Trondheim to Oslo

Wildlife
Bearded Seals
Dog Sledding With Huskies
Eagles and Gulls in the Trollfjord


Photo Parades

Photo Parade 2023
Photo Parade 2024

Medieval History

Medieval Life

Warfare
Trebuchets
Late Medieval Swords

Medieval Art
The Choir Screen in the Cathedral of Mainz
The Gospels of Heinrich the Lion
The Hunting Frieze in Königslutter Cathedral
Medieval Monster Carvings
The Viking Treasure of Hiddensee

Craftmanship
Goldsmithery
Medical Instruments

The Hanseatic League

History of the Hanseatic League
Introduction and Beginnings

Hanseatic Architecture
Examples of Brick Architecture
Hall Houses (Dielenhäuser)

Goods and Trade
Stockfish Trade

Towns of the Hanseatic League
Riga
Stralsund
Tallinn / Reval

The Order of the Teutonic Knights

The Northern Crusades
The Conquest of Danzig
The Siege of Vilnius 1390

Vikings

Viking Material Culture
The Viking Treasure of Hiddensee

Viking Ships
The Nydam Ship


Germany

Geneaology

List of Medieval German Emperors
Anglo-German Marriage Connections

Kings and Emperors

The Salian Dynasty
King Heinrich IV

Staufen against Welfen
Emperor Otto IV

Princes and Lords

House Welfen
Heinrich the Lion's Ancestors
The Dukes of Braunschweig-Grubenhagen
Otto I of Braunschweig-Göttingen

The Landgraves of Thuringia
The Ludowing Landgraves of Thuringia
Albrecht II and Friedrich I of Thuringia

Dukes and Princes of other Families
Prince Wilhelm Malte of Putbus

Counts and Local Lords
The Marshals of Ebersburg
The Counts of Everstein
The Counts of Hohnstein
The Lords of Plesse
The Counts of Reichenbach
The Counts of Winzenburg

Feuds and Rebellions

Royal Troubles
Otto IV and Bishop Adalbert II of Magdeburg

Local Feuds
The Lüneburg Succession War
The Thuringian Succession War
The Star Wars


Great Britain

Kings of England

House Plantagenet
Richard Lionheart in Speyer
King Henry IV's Lithuanian Crusade

Normans, Britons, Angevins

Great Noble Houses
The Dukes of Brittany
The Earls of Richmond

Kings of Scots

House Dunkeld
Malcolm III and Northumbria
Struggle for the Throne: Malcolm III to David I
King David and the Civil War, 1
King David and the Civil War, 2

Houses Bruce and Stewart
The Early Stewart Kings

Welsh Princes

The Princes of Gwynedd
The Rise of House Aberffraw

Scotland and England

The Wars of Independence
Alexander of Argyll
The Fight for Stirling Castle

Wales and England

A History of Rebellion
Llywellyn ap Gruffudd to Owain Glyn Dŵr


Scandinavia

Kings of Denmark

House Knýtlinga
Harald Bluetooth's Flight to Pomerania

Kings of Norway

Foreign Relations
King Eirik's Scottish Marriages
King Håkon V's Swedish Politics
Beginnings of the Kalmar Union

Danish Rule in the Baltic Sea

The Duchy of Estonia
Danish Kings and German Sword Brothers

Feuds and Rebellions

Alv Erlingsson of Tønsberg


Livonia and Lithuania
(Livonia: Latvia and Estonia)

Lithuanian Princes

The Geminid Dynasty
Troublesome Cousins - Jogaila and Vytautas

The Northern Crusades

The Wars in Lithuania
The Siege of Vilnius 1390

Conflicts in Livonia
The History of Riga
The History of Reval (Tallinn)


Poland

Royal Dynasties

The Jagiełłonian Kings
Władysław Jagiełło and the Polish-Lithuanian Union

The Northern Crusades

The Conquest of Pomerania and Prussia
The Conquest of Danzig


Bohemia

Royal Dynasties

The Bohemian Kings of House Luxembourg
King Sigismund and the Hussite Wars


Luxembourg

House Luxembourg
King Sigismund


Roman History

The Romans at War

Forts and Fortifications

The German Limes
The Cavalry Fort Aalen
Limes Fort Osterburken
Limes Fort Saalburg

The Hadrian's Wall
Introduction
The Fort at Segedunum / Wallsend

Border Life
Exercise Halls
Mile Castles and Watch Towers
Soldiers' Living Quarters
Cavalry Barracks

Campaigns and Battles

Maps
The Romans in Germania

The Pre-Varus Invasion in Germania
Roman Camp Hedemünden
New Finds in 2008

The Battle of the Teutoburg Forest
Museum Park at Kalkriese

The Battle at the Harzhorn
Introduction

The Batavian Rebellion
A Short Introduction

Roman Militaria

Armour
Early Imperial Helmets
Late Roman Helmets
The Negau B Helmet

Weapons
Weapon Finds at Hedemünden
The pilum
Daggers
Swords

Other Equipment
Roman Saddles


Roman Life and Religion

Religion and Public Life

Religion
Curse Tablets and Good Luck Charms
Isis Worship
Memorial Stones
The Mithras Cult

Public Life
Roman Transport: Barges
Roman Transport: Amphorae and Barrels
Roman Water Supply

Architecture
Roman Public Baths

Domestic Life

Roman villae
Villa Urbana Longuich
Villa Rustica Wachenheim

Everyday Life
Bathing Habits
Children's Toys
Face Pots


Other Times

Neolithicum to Iron Age

Germany

Development of Civilisation
European Bread Museum, Ebergötzen
The Hutewald Project in the Solling
Open Air Museum Oerlinghausen

Neolithic Remains
Stone Burials of the Funnelbeaker Culture
The Necropolis of Oldendorf

Bronze Age / Iron Age
The Nydam Ship

Scotland

Neolithic Orkney
The Neolithic Landscape of Orkney
Ring of Brodgar
Skara Brae
Life in Skara Brae

Bronze Age / Iron Age
Clava Cairns
The Brochs of Gurness and Midhowe - Their Function in Iron Age Society

Scandinavia

Bronze / Iron Age
The Ship Setting of Gnisvärd / Gotland


Post-Medieval History

Development of Technologies
Otto von Guericke and the Magdeburg Hemispheres
Attempts at Raising the Vasa Wreck

Explorers
Fram Expedition to the North Pole
Fram Expedition to the South Pole

Arts and Literature
The Weimar Classicism