Frankfurt Escorts
Escorts in Frankfurt
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- London

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Frankfurt Museums
- The Museumsufer (Museums Embankment) along the Schaumainkai in the Sachsenhausen area is known as such due to seven different museums that can be found here. These include the Deutsches Architektur Museum (German Architecture Museum) which features a fascinating ‘House in House’, large scale models, exhibitions and architectural sketches by masters of design such as Gehry and Mies van der Rohe. The museum charts the history of abodes from the earliest dwellings to the high-rise skyscrapers of today.
Another museum on the Museumsurfer is the Deutsches Filmmuseum (German Film Museum) which charts the beginnings of modern cinema right up until the present day. A highlight of the museum is the in-house movie theatre where you can watch all manner of classic films from silent films to the innovative ‘talkies’. A further museum on the Embankment is the Museum für Kommunikation (Communication Museum), which features many hands-on exhibits charting all manner of communication from banging drums to mobile phones and the internet. An added bonus is that admission is free!
The Goethehaus & Museum is housed in the former home of Goethe, Germany’s finest literary master, on Großer Hirschgraben. Although the house is actually a reconstruction, the original having been razed in WW2, visitors can still get a highly accurate impression of what life would have been like for Goethe living here. The writer lived here from his birth in 1749, and the house contains authentic period furniture, including the desk at which he wrote many of his works such as The Sorrows of Young Werther. The adjoining museum houses many of his hand-written manuscripts, as well as portraits of the writer.
The Historisches Museum (City Historical Museum) located on Saalgasse, charts the history of the city back more than 1200 years. One of the highlights of the museum is the model of the old town centre as it looked before its mass destruction during World War Two. The Jüdisches Museum (Jewish Museum) situated on Untermainkai depicts the history of the city’s Jewish population from the 12th century up until their deportment to the concentration camps in the Holocaust. The Kaiserdom Museum situated on the Domplatz, adjoining the magnificent cathedral contains many religious artefacts, including a silver bust of the legendary St Bartholomew who was skinned alive. Explora situated on Glauburgplatz is a fun interactive science museum, with the Rock ‘n’ Roll machine a particular highlight.
The spectacular Altes Schloss Höchst (Höchst Old Castle) situated on Schlossplatz, contains two very different museums, the Hoechst AG Company Museum, which charts the history of the pharmaceutical company which played a pivotal role in leading the city to economic prosperity; and the Historical Museum, which contains a magnificent array of antique porcelain. To see the history of how these magnificent porcelain pieces were made, visit Kronberger Haus located on Bolongarostraße, in which the history of Höchst’s porcelain making tradition is depicted. The company who began the process, Höchst Porcelain is the third-oldest manufacturer of porcelain in Europe, having established the company in 1746. In the museum there are exhibits of over a thousand pieces of faïence and porcelain from the Rococo and Neo-Classical eras, as well as collections of paintings, textiles and coins.
The Senckenberg Museum (natural history museum), located Senckenberganlage, is one of Frankfurt’s most popular museums, and one of the biggest and pivotal natural history museums in Europe. Fronted by an enormous Tyrannosaurus Rex outside the building, the museum also includes the spectacular Dinosaur Hall, where exhibits of each dinosaur group are on display; demonstrations of finds from the renowned Messel Fossil Pit; a fascinating display of an anaconda swallowing a capybara; a wonderful exhibit on human evolution; a mammal section and an interesting display of crustaceans and spiders.