Home / Berlin Escorts
Credit cards accepted

Berlin Escorts

Escorts in Berlin

We currently have no escorts based in Berlin.

Escorts available to travel to Berlin

Varying notice is required to book the following escorts for Berlin.



  • Berlin Museums

  • Most of the city’s museums are located on the Museuminsel (Museum Island). The Pergamonmuseum located on Bodestraße and Am Kupfergraben, is the most famous of these museums and houses the most spectacular collection of antiquities in Europe. The museum gets its name from the stunning Pergamon Altar, dating from 107 BCE, which adorns the main hall, complete with its original friezes depicting a battle between the gods and the giants. The museum was built between 1912 and 1930 and is renowned for its reconstructions of ancient towns, such as the magnificent Assyrian palace interior dating from the 12th century, and the 15th century Aleppo Zimmer, a stunningly colourful panelled room from a merchant’s house in Aleppo, Syria. The museum also houses an amazing collection of Greek, Roman and Asian art, contained within its three internal museums, the Museum of Antiquities (Antikensammlung), the Museum of Near Eastern Antiquites (Vorderasiatisches Museum) and the Museum of Islamic Art (Museum für Islamische Kunst). The antiquities are all gleaned from massive archaeological excavations in the Near and Middle East by German explorers in the late 19th/early 20th centuries. Highlights include the statue of the goddess Athena, a Roman mosaic from the 3rd/4th century, and the façade of the Mshatta Palace dating from 744 CE, which was donated to Wilhem II by Sultan Abdul Hamid of Ottoman in 1903. Other treasures are the huge 16m high Miletus Market Gate, dating from around 120 CE from a Roman town in Asia Minor, and the mammoth Ishtar Gate from Babylon, dating from the 6th century BCE, with its magnificent original glazed bricks in a rainbow of colours.

    The Bodemuseum, also located on the Museuminsel, on Monbijoubrücke, has a spectacular rounded corner, topped with a magnificent dome, which juts out on to the water surrounding the island creating a stunning visage. This spectacular museum was completed in 1904, and became the fourth museum on the island, and was designed specifically to fit the wedge-shaped north-western end of the island. The museum gained its name from the art historian and director of the Berlin state museums Wilhem von Bode, who helped design the interior. The museum has a fabulous collection of coins, medals, Byzantine art and sculptures, including those by renowned masters Donatello, Bernini and Canova. Other museums on the island include the Neues (New) Museum, located on Bodestraße, which was completed in 1855 to house a collection mainly made up of Egyptian art. Today the building still contains these exhibits, as well as the Museum of Early History. Another museum on the island is the Altes (Old) Museum, situated on the corner of Am Lustgarten and Bodestraße, the corners of which contain statues of Greek mythological figures Castor and Pollux. This museum is renowned as one of the world’s most stunning Neo-Classical buildings, featuring an enormous 87m high portico containing 18 Ionic columns. The museum was purpose built in 1830 to house the royal collection of art and antiquities. From the years after WW2 until 1998 it was only used for temporary exhibitions, but since then it has been used to house a spectacular collection of Greek and Roman antiquities. In 2005 some exhibits from the Ägyptisches (Egyptian) Museum were moved here.

    The magnificent Neo-Gothic style church of the Friedrichswerdersche Kirche, located on Werderscher Markt was designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in 1824, and is now home to the Schinkel-Museum, dedicated to the phenomenal architect. The petite church was the first to be built in Berlin in the Neo-Gothic design, and features a spectacular façade incorporating two towers. Following the Second World War, when the interior was mainly destroyed, the church was turned into a museum after its restoration. The museum also currently houses the Nationalgalerie’s permanent sculpture exhibition, of which the highlight is Johann Gottfried Schadow’s sculpture of the Princesses Friederike and Luise (later Queen of Prussia).

    The Jüdisches Musuem (Jewish Museum), located on Lindenstraße, charts the history of Berlin’s Jewish population. Polish-Jewish architect Daniel Liebskind’s design is a magnificent 20th century masterpiece of steel-clad walls, which incorporate an emblematic broken Star of David within their structure; a poignant testament to the city’s lost Jewish citizens and the contribution they made to Berlin society. The moving theme of the museum is continued with the huge empty crack which dominates the inside of the building, and the barren corridors which lead to the stark windowless Holocaust tower. The museum features displays on Jewish history and art, and of artefacts that were used in everyday Jewish life by the city’s residents.

    The Deutsches Historisches Museum (German History Museum) is housed in the spectacular Baroque building of the former Zeughaus (Arsenal) on the Unter den Linden. The building was built in 1706, with its two wings enclosing an ornate courtyard. The exterior is enhanced by the spectacular statue of Minerva, the goddess of wisdom, and by the masks of dying warriors which adorn its front. The building has housed the museum since 1952, and was renovated in 2002. A new wing of the museum, designed by I M Pei, houses temporary exhibitions and a new, wide-reaching exhibit on German history.

    The Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin (Technical Museum) located on Trebbiner Straße, was begun in 1982 on the site of the former trade hall. The huge size of this building enables the display of the bigger of the museum’s exhibits, such as the trains and railway carriages from many different eras, the water towers, the vintage cars, the aircraft, the engines and the storerooms. There are many different exhibitions on different themes, such as flying, the history of paper manufacture, printing, weaving, electro-technology and computer technology, with the Spectrum exhibition with its hands-on displays a particular favourite. This magnificent museum also contains two windmills, an old forge and the Historical Brewery. This building was once used by the Tucker Bräu brewery for storing beer but was destroyed in WW2; it was rebuilt in 1995 on four levels as a reconstruction brewery.

    The Musikinstrumenten-Museum located on Tiergartenstraße, behind the spectacular Philharmonie, contains a magnificent collection of musical instruments dating from the 1888 to the 20th century. The museum also charts the development of each particular instrument from the 16th century to the current day. Opened in 1984, the museum has many spectacular pieces, such as an exceptional clavichord in pristine condition, however the most impressive piece has to be the 1929 Wurlitzer cinema organ still in fine working order. Live demonstrations take place every Saturday which attract huge crowds to the museum which also contains an archive and a library.

    The Kunstgewebemuseum (The Museum of Arts and Crafts) located on Tiergartenstraße, contains a magnificent array of stunning decorative art pieces, ranging from the Middle Ages to the present day. Metal and goldworks are particularly prominent, whilst the medieval goldwork collections from the church of Enger and the Guelph treasury are amongst the most precious. There is also a large collection of Gothic and Renaissance silverware, such as the stunning elaborately-carved silver and ivory tankard from the 15th century, as well as a spectacular display of Italian majolica. The museum also contains beautiful examples of 18th and 19th century glass, porcelain and furniture from Germany, France and Italy.

    The Berlin Film Museum otherwise known as the Deutsche Kinemathek - Museum Für Film and Fernsehen, is located in the Filmhaus in the Sony Center, situated on Potsdamer Straße in the new bustling commercial centre, the Potsdamer Platz. The museum covers the whole history of cinema – from the first silent pictures to current digital film, and has an exceptional special exhibition dedicated to Marlene Dietrich.

    Free Membership

    What you get:

  • Receive news updates
  • Free access to public gallery
  • Secure online credit card payments
  • Bookings at short notice
Apply for free membership

    Full Membership

    What you get:

  • Access to private gallery with exclusive photosets
  • Each escort portfolio has up to 8 photos with faces unblurred.
  • Priority arrangement of appointments
  • No credit card surcharge using secure online payment
  • Receive news updates
  • Incalls when available
Apply for full membership
Login Form Join Forgotten password?