It's really cool to see an English speaker talking about Bremen to international crowd. As I live in Bremen I know most of the stories and the places but it's still fun to watch and I actually learned new things. Really good video!
Fun fact: the Bremerhaven part of the state also has its own exclave surrounded by Niedersachsen, which is separated from the rest of the city (and therefore the state) by a corridor that's 30-31 meters at its narrowest
13:30 "… before the railways meant travellers could easily plan to get to bremerhaven on the day they were due to set sail." Ah, those were the days, when you could plan to travel by train and yet arrive at your destination on time.
Bremen - my hometown! I like your precise and clear style. Learned something new. Remarks: Bremerhaven is an important fishing harbor. They call themselves „Fishtown“. Their ice hockey team are the „Fishtown penguins“. Roughly half way between Bremerhaven and Bremen lies Bremen-Vegesack which is a very interesting part of the state of Bremen with its own identity. They had a whaler’s and herring fisher‘s fleet.
The ice hockey team decided to go full denglish and are called "Fischtown Pinguins", using the german spellings of fish and penguin but english town and the plural s. Fittingly, their official logo is written in comic sans. Ouch.
Nicht zu vergessen: Vegesack ist innerhalb von Bremen-Nord eine Besonderheit. Anders als der Rest gehört Vegesack nicht erst seit 1938 zu Bremen (im Austausch zu dem Verlust von Bremerhaven wurde ja Bremen-Nord eingemeindet.).
@@rogink Citizen of Bremen here - Who would drink that pisswasser that is brewed by an american company (The one that also brews the pisswasser called budweiser and promotes their beverage via a trans-clown to kids)?
I “immigrated” to the US from Germany via Bremerhaven. I was born in Frankfurt am Main in 1958 (father was in the US Army). My family went back to the US in 1961 on a ship that departed Bremerhaven.
@@invalidavatar Because although I was born in Germany, I was born to US Citizens in a US Army hospital and did not actually immigrate to the US. I was a US Citizen at birth. I used “immigrated” because I went to the US from Germany for the first time in 1961.
concerning the random tourist attraction: Bud Spencer and Terrence Hill are very highly regarded in Germany. Most people born last century grew up on those movies
The Synchronisation is also part of it. They decided to deviate quite a bit from the source material resulting in lots and lots of absolutely famous jokes and qoutes. The german Synchro is very famous.
Worth mentioning that after WWII, Bremen and Bremerhaven were actually exclaves of the American occupation zone surrounded by the British occupation zone because the American occupation zone was inland, and so the Americans wanted a supply port for the US zones of occupation in west Berlin and southern Germany. Another city with interesting geography is New York City! Like if you draw a line from the southernmost point of NYC on Staten Island to the northernmost point in The Bronx, it's around 36 miles, but if you redraw this 36-mile line towards NJ, it goes past Trenton and into Pennsylvania! Or how almost every borough of NYC is on an island except for The Bronx which is on a peninsula! Or how there is a part of Manhattan surrounded by The Bronx called Marble Hill! This is because Marble Hill was once part of Manhattan Island, but it became its own island in 1895 as the result of the Harlem Ship Canal. Then in 1914, it became attached to the Bronx as the result of the Harlem River on the north side of Marble Hill being fully diverted to the canal. The name of Marble Hill was conceived when Darius C. Crosby came up with the name in 1891 from the deposits of dolomite marble underlying it known as Inwood marble. The marble was quarried for the federal buildings in Lower Manhattan when New York was the national capital in the 1780s. But the most interesting fact about NYC geography is how the city has exclaves within New Jersey, on Ellis Island and Liberty Island! After the British took the region in 1664, NJ was founded as its own entity from the Province of NY. But this came with an unusual clause that stated it "was westward of Long Island, and Manhitas Island and bounded on the east part by the main sea, and part by Hudson's river". This clause didn't say the river's midpoint, so the border remained disputed. As early as 1804, attempts were made to resolve the status of the state line, and NYC claimed the right to regulate trade on all waters, effectively controlling NJ's ports. This was contested in the case Gibbons v. Ogden, where it was decided that the regulation of interstate commerce fell under the authority of the federal government, thus influencing competition in the newly developing steam ferry service in New York Harbor. In the 1830s, New Jersey planned to bring suit to clarify the border, but the matter was resolved with a compact between the states, ratified by Congress in 1834. This stated that the island was NY's, but the submerged land around it was NJ's. This set the boundary down the middle, but NY was still guaranteed jurisdiction of ALL waters of the Hudson, which enraged NJ. And it was between 1890 and 1934 that Ellis Island was expanded for immigration, so NJ kept on fighting until another Supreme Court case in 1998 which decided 6-3 in favor of NJ, stating that as the 1834 agreement was with the original outline of Ellis Island, the original outline of the island would be NY, while the rest of it was NJ's. Although NJ owns most of Ellis Island, the main museum and gift shop is still in NY!
I'm from the Netherlands, and we made a school trip to Bremerhaven and Bremen (two different trips). We visited the Klimahaus and the Zoo am Meer. I don't really remember much about our trip to Bremen, except that I stroke the Bremer Stadtmusikanten for good luck, threw some money in a fountain, and had ice cream in Lloyd's passage.
I mean i like my hometown Bremen, also was on School Trip in the Klimahaus & Auswandererhaus/Emigrant house (Museum about German Immigration to Usa+) but for a its quite a scam from the Netherlands to drive there. But Schools have always so questionable destinations for Trips/School excursions like one Class goes to Berlin or Prag & the other to a little Village where is nothing, of course you still have fun there, but when others go to italy or bigger cities.😅
i was born in bremerhaven and lived here for the entirety of my life and its surreal that other people, especially from other countries, sometimes end up visiting our city.
Finally my birthplace, the city of Bremen! After an absence of just about 30 years, I just remigrated here last september. So maybe surprisingly, although I am quite interested in local history, there was still a lot I learned from this video. I really should take some local city tours... but that feels dirty and touristy
That's not necessarily a bad thing. I occasionally go on a tour through Brussels, the city I call home since 2007. Sometimes it's good to see the city through the eyes of a visitor.
About 40km to the north of Bremerhaven, in the middle of the Wadden Sea you can find 3 tiny islands that belong to Hamburg, which is a 100km away. The 2 uninhabited islands, Nigehörn and Scharnhörn and the inhabited island of Neuwerk.
When I took part in a working group within the trilateral cooperation about the (mostly ecological) status of the Wadden Sea, we also had a representative of Hamburg. He did the surveys on those islands. Nigehoern is a man-made island, by the way, constructed when it looked like Scharhoern was going to be lost to erosion.
Hamburg used to have its own Bremerhaven- Cuxhaven for one, which it held over 500 years till 1937 de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gro%C3%9F-Hamburg-Gesetz#/media/Datei:Cuxhaven.png
Bremen has a cool "easteregg". When standing on the old marketplace you can find a manhole cover. When throwing money inside it you can hear on of the four animals from the "bremer stadtmusikanten". The money will be collected and donated to charity after a while. Also the "Böttcherstraße" that you showed while playing the bell tunes, a part of the wall moves which straight up looks like its from harry potter
Enclaves/exclaves are quite interesting! The commune of Campione d'Italia stands out in that it's an Italian enclave and exclave surrounded by Switzerland! Why is it Italian? Well in the first century BC, the Romans founded the garrison town of Campilonum to protect their territories from Helvetii invasions. In 777, Toto of Campione, a local Lombard lord, left his inheritance to the archbishopric of Milan. Ownership was transferred to the abbey of Sant’Ambrogio. In 1512, the surrounding area of Ticino was transferred from the ownership of the bishop of Como to Switzerland by Pope Julius II, as thanks for the support in the War of the Holy League. However, the abbey maintained control over what is now Campione and some territory on the western bank of Lake Lugano. When Ticino chose to become part of the Swiss Confederation in 1798, the people of Campione chose to remain part of Lombardy. In 1800, Ticino proposed exchanging Indemini for Campione. In 1814 a referendum was held, and residents opposed it. In 1848, during the wars of Italian unification, Campione petitioned Switzerland for annexation, but this was rejected due to the Swiss desire for neutrality. After Italian unification in 1861, all land west of Lake Lugano and half of the lake were given to Switzerland so that Swiss trade and transport would not have to pass through Italy. The d'Italia was added to the name of Campione in the 1930s by Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and an ornamental gate to the village was built, both to assert Italian character. During World War II, the US Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the CIA, maintained a unit in Campione for operations in Italy. At the time the Italian fascist regime did not have control over the enclave. The Swiss ignored the situation as long as the Americans kept a low profile. Campione's biggest employer is the Casinò di Campione which was originally founded in 1917 as a site to gather information from foreign diplomats during the First World War. It closed in 2019 after a bankruptcy in 2018 that led to financial distress of the municipality and dissolution of the city council that were only elected the year before, but the casino re-opened in 2022.
Absolutely great summary of my hometown and its completely crazy history of two cities. Very great and enjoyable to listen to and you got to the heart of the matter. Please keep up the good work!💚
I live in Grimsby which is twinned with Bremerhaven. I’ve been to Bremen, the main tea centre in Germany. Cleethorpes is twinned with Konigswinter. The Humber is the nearest point in the U.K. to the German Coast
And Neuwerk is part of Hamburg (so, what's the greatest distance of two locations in Hamburg? Almost 130 km!), and Helgoland lies in the district of Pinneberg near Hamburg.
"Schnur" - it's also a word in modern German. Another synonym is "Faden". They mean "string". The long and narrow nature of the street makes the naming choice intuitive.
Die Einheimischen trinken auch Hemelinger. Nebenbei: Bremen-Nord auch zu behandeln, wäre vermutlich zuviel gewesen. Aber auch da gibt es interessantes zu sehen.
My great-great-great-great-grandparents from Bavaria boarded their ship at Bremerhaven in 1847. Their vessel, the F.J. Wichelhausen, was named after the US Consul-General stationed at Bremen from 1796 to 1832. It was a triple-masted frigate, and their journey to Philadelphia took two months. Three grown children traveled with them, along with the oldest one's fiancee. The father of the family died in America 6 weeks later.
I think you did not mention the weird logic that allows you to tell where a car is from, given that they all have the "HB" registration. If "HB" is followed by two letters and three digits, the car is from the city of Bremen (not sure if this includes the port exclave, but it should). One letter followed by four digits means Bremerhaven. And then, strangely, there is Bremen-Nord with either a one-three combination or a two-two one.
@@Skoell1983 did my driver license there since my uncle was a driving instructor living there. So, I came from somewhere else, and this was a confusing time - since I also needed to learn how to drive a car. Now, the motorcycle part was easier - I had a 50ccm krad and an 80ccm license already - 1A as it was called back in the days was more a stress relief. The only complaint my uncle had is that when I do an emergency brake, I shouldn't try a stoppie on the front wheel only in front of the inspector. I didn't. And I passed my driving test for both.
I'm from Bremen, I adore your work, and having you create this documentary is an honour for the city. Thank you so much. Haake Beck is really horrible though :D
What lovely memories! Thank you for this short trip back to Bremen and Bremerhaven! I used to teach French and English in companies and at the Institut français in Bremen, and I taught French at the brand-new Uni, Jacobs University, in Bremerhaven. I miss my life there, every day, but alas, it was time to come home. Nostalgia, what can I say!
Don't forget that the Americans actually offered Bremen to expand all along the River Weser up to Bremerhaven, but our Mayor at the time declined the offer because the rural areas would be "too much of a hassle to govern". Oh how that one has bitten Bremen in the backside.
@@B.Ies_T.Nduhey DAs war ja auch nicht ernst gemeint xD Stell dir das mal vor.. Uthlede, Hagen, Loxstedt, Aschwarden alles bremisch? Nein was sollen wir denn damit ;) Obwohl ich ganz einverstanden wäre, wenn Bremen seinen Speckgürtel eingemeinden oder zumindest a den Steuereinnahmen beteiligt werden könnte..
Great video! It really is confusing living in Bremen sometimes. I live in the outskirts of Bremen (so Niedersachsen, it is locally also called "Umzu") but I was born in Bremen as there is the nearest hospital. I went to school in Niedersachsen and studied in Bremerhaven, now I work in Bremen. To make it even more confusing: Bremen Nord residents still often say they are going to Bremen if they talk about going to the city center. I never really thought much about that, but it is a relict of the times the cities Vegesack and Blumenthal were independent. And I think that changed quite recently, like 100 years ago I think. Another fun fact: the harbour in Vegesack is said to have been the oldest documented river harbour of germany.
I live in Bremerhaven and its one of the poorest citys with one of the highest rates of unemployment and poverty. This is due to the harbour belonging to Bremen so they get the taxes and profit from the harbour. Also Bremen decides over Bremerhaven so they only invest in Bremen and not in Bremerhaven which is another main reason why the city is so poor. None of my former classmates wanted to stay there, they all went to other places for a better live. I also did that. This is a mayor problem because thus the well educated people who can afford to move leave Bremerhaven and the people who cant afford it have to stay. Leading to a spiral of increasing poverty. Another fun fact is that during covid Bremen had an infection rate of over 500 while Bremerhaven had 50. So people in Bremen had stricter restrictions than these in Bremerhavene. But, due to the fact that the harbour belongs to Bremen the few 100 people who live in the harbour area had to stay at home because they fall under the 500 infection rate of Bremen.
I am sorry to report that the Beck's beer sold in the USA is now brewed in the USA. Munich's Loewenbraeu tried that in the 1970's and now I can't find it in either the German or terrible American version.
I like the juxtaposition of architecture in Bremen. The mixture of old, pastiche, reconstruction, and modern adds to the history of the city. Auswanderer is a wonderful name for emigrant.
Actually, it is a direct translation of the word. Latin e or ex = aus (out), Latin migrare = wandern (in the sense of "to migrate", a movement of people to a new settlement. Wandern can also mean "to hike, to roam, to ramble", but not in this context).
When you take the Amerikalinie from Bremerhaven to Berlin, you will pass Kirchlinteln (sadly the train doesn’t stop there). Near Kirchlinteln ist the village of Horst. According to the legend, this is where the journey of the Bremer Stadtmusikanten ended.
I love your video and must say that as a Bremen resident I also learned a couple of new things but I have one big contradiction and that is that the pancake ship is not a tourist attraction.
Haven is an old spelling of Hafen (same pronounciation), which means Harbour or Port. So Bremerhaven is literally Bremen's Harbour. Fun fact: Both Brermen and Bremerhaven use the same license plate regional code (HB), but to distinguish between the cities, Bremerhaven license plates used to have four digits at the end, while Bremen license plates only had three (in line with all German regional codes).
It´s the City Hall, built in the early 15th Century at the same time as the Roland Statue in front of it - and it IS the City Hall, not a Museum representing the former City Hall.
4:41 I do love the original "Horten" pattern on that building!! Andrew wouldn't understand, but I used to love that chain of departure stores growing up in the 70s/80s, and I hated when they became "Kaufhof".
"... before the railways meant travellers could easily plan to get to Bremerhaven on the day of departure" ... After our last couple of adventures with DB we finally got smart. Not having to deal with sudden "Personalmangel and Stellwerkschaden" is worth the cost of a night in a Frankfurt airport hotel.
I'd like to start off by saying that I liked the video very much. You were very fair in your assessment, thorough with the history and made a good case for the city's appeal. I will however say that you seemed to gloss over a fundamental aspect of Bremen's identity: Bremen is poor. In fact, it has the highest poverty rate in all of Germany. So when you criticize the lack of preservation it sounds a tad mean, although I know that it is unintended. I have talked to a few people in charge of historical sites in Bremen as part of my degree in history and they all said the same thing regarding the topic of preservation: They would love to preserve and properly present each and every historical bit Bremen has to offer, especially because they desperately need the tourism, but the state simply does not have the money. They depend on private Investors stepping in and taking on the costs, which rarely happens and when it does it usually means some part of its soul is lost to make the site more profitable. The city has to balance its appeal to tourists with appealing to corporate interests and it shows. Bremen's strange bouts of supposed modernization, its frankly horrible train station and thee overall somber feeling of the city are each a visible symptom of Bremen's tragic poverty.
6:54 In the windows you can see below the statues were once fish, with one of the windows having coffein in the water, to show how it makes the fish (and also potential customers) more awake. Due to obvious reasons this is no longer the case though. 8:56 the pancake boat surprisingly isn't a cheesy tourist trap, but just a cooler restaurant, especially for families with children ;)
Super! Bremen and Bremerhaven are dear to my heart having spent several yrs in "Fishtown" back in the 80's. Wonderful times bar maybe the insanely cold,wet/snowy winters!
Hey there :) The weather was quite different back then, though. Speaking as someone who grew up in Bremerhaven the 1990s. In the winters, on a regular basis the ponds in citizens' park used to freeze. You could ice skate on them! Nowadays, some winters barely have snow. I'm quite happy that Rewboss showed rainy days since I remember a ton of them.
The Senckenberg deep storage actually has two levels, and it's also not just for storage in case of disaster. It is a general storage, as the museum is not just a museum but also does research, and also has way more items than can be exhibited (they expanded recently, so a small amount more can be displayed now). One is dry storage, one is wet storage. You don't touch anything in dry storage if you can, as there's many old pelts and taxidermy that was preserved with...various poisons that are more or left undefined. You do not want to disturb the dust. The wet storage is mostly closed stuff, rocks and bones. Also, lots of creepy stuff in jars, like the head of a guy cut in half. Interesting anecdote: The entrance is behind the basalt pillars to the right of the entrance, when you face it. There's a stairway, and there's an elevator that is lowered into the ground. There's signs not to park anything there, but one time someone parked their motorbike there. Someone needed to access the elevator, and waited a bit, but no one came. So they lifted the elevator, complete with motorcycle, out of the hidden mode. After about 1 hour of work, the bike's owner came back. He was apparently a bit surprised, but took it in stride. He went to a cafe for about 30 minutes until the workers were finished.
I’ve visited Bremen. Nice city, and it’s a place I’d like to return to someday. But now I have interest in wanting to visit Bremerhaven. I have German ancestry and they immigrated to the US in the 19th century. Finding out that they most likely were in Bremerhaven before setting sail gives me the interest to visit.
I went to Bremerhaven on my challenge of getting from Germany's southern border to the sea in under 24 hours using the €9 ticket. Bremen and Bremerhaven are basically England and Wales.
I am a resident of Bremerhaven and i like how accurately you represent the history of Bremen and Bremerhaven. I also like the old maps. Just one thing to correct: HanNover with double "n". I
4:25 At least they didn't partially enclose the town hall in a giant glass box, which is supposed to be a new shopping centre. Our city had an idea like this with a model on display. I hope the idea was abandoned.
Of course, they are really close together with plenty of shared history, but it still surprises me how the city hall and market area of Bremen looks really a lot like Lübeck.
En route from Kyiv to Chicago in 1914, my great-grandparents, plus one great-aunt and great-uncle, boarded the _SS Emden_ from Bremerhaven. This is why my last name ends with a W. Thank you for showing me what it's like.
Everything he said is right, I lived in both cities. But he probably missed the U-boat in the habour of Bremerhaven, 600-700m from the Auswandererhaus.
Speaking of U-boats, he missed the U-Boot-Bunker Valentin, one of the largest remaining WWII buildings in Germany: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valentin_submarine_pens
@@max_the_german4989 Bremen Nord may be worth it's own video in my opinion. Sadly it is often overlooked, but that makes it a calmer place in a big city.
Regarding the translation of the German 'Hahn' into English, I'm please to say we have a 'Cock and Pye' pub here in Ipswich which dates from before 1689 (earliest known reference).
The existence of Wesermünde reminds me of Altona in Hamburg. Independent city has an important harbor. Lords of the neighboring principality agree that this is a great place for a port, and build their own right next to it.
Since we're doing verschachtelte sachen, the Gymnasium Wesermünde (known as the Kreisgy) is a lower-saxon school in Bremerhaven. Quite the bus ride to school for my brother back when he went there.
Ich als Bremerhavener find es mega wie viel Aufmerksamkeit Bremerhaven durch dieses Video bekommt. Dass es sogar das Kreisgy unters Video schafft, damit hätte ich echt nicht gerechnet... 😆
"There are worse places in Germany." (4:55) Could be on a postcard from Bremen ❤
Klingt auch sehr deutsch.
"Nicht so nett heir, aber irgendwoanders könnte schlechter sein"
@@myaseena Im Ruhrgebiet sagen wer: "Wo anners is au scheiße..."
Bremen: "At least we aren't Chemnitz"
I served in the Navy in Bremerhaven in the 70th. The saying then was: "The best thing of Bremen is the last train to Hamburg".
It's really cool to see an English speaker talking about Bremen to international crowd. As I live in Bremen I know most of the stories and the places but it's still fun to watch and I actually learned new things. Really good video!
Fun fact: the Bremerhaven part of the state also has its own exclave surrounded by Niedersachsen, which is separated from the rest of the city (and therefore the state) by a corridor that's 30-31 meters at its narrowest
I honestly wonder why. There's nothing there
@@JM-mg4el Compensation for some other land
And so does Vegesack as well :)
Vvvveeeery fractal, the whole thing...
And then there is the small other Bremen Exclave surrounded also by Niedersachsen in the north of the City Bremen :D
13:30 "… before the railways meant travellers could easily plan to get to bremerhaven on the day they were due to set sail."
Ah, those were the days, when you could plan to travel by train and yet arrive at your destination on time.
I knew someone would pick up on this, was also my thoughts :)
Deutsche Bahn please take note 😉
In fact in the 1980s You still could say "in time Like the train" (pünktlich wie die Eisenbahn)
Bremen - my hometown! I like your precise and clear style. Learned something new.
Remarks: Bremerhaven is an important fishing harbor. They call themselves „Fishtown“. Their ice hockey team are the „Fishtown penguins“. Roughly half way between Bremerhaven and Bremen lies Bremen-Vegesack which is a very interesting part of the state of Bremen with its own identity. They had a whaler’s and herring fisher‘s fleet.
The ice hockey team decided to go full denglish and are called "Fischtown Pinguins", using the german spellings of fish and penguin but english town and the plural s. Fittingly, their official logo is written in comic sans. Ouch.
Nicht zu vergessen: Vegesack ist innerhalb von Bremen-Nord eine Besonderheit. Anders als der Rest gehört Vegesack nicht erst seit 1938 zu Bremen (im Austausch zu dem Verlust von Bremerhaven wurde ja Bremen-Nord eingemeindet.).
@@irgendwonurwannI was gonna say, I wish they were called fishtown penguins instead of what they actually went for...
My friend is from Bremen. When we first met I tried to impress her by ordering a Becks. "I never drink the stuff" she said ☺️
@@rogink Citizen of Bremen here - Who would drink that pisswasser that is brewed by an american company (The one that also brews the pisswasser called budweiser and promotes their beverage via a trans-clown to kids)?
I “immigrated” to the US from Germany via Bremerhaven. I was born in Frankfurt am Main in 1958 (father was in the US Army). My family went back to the US in 1961 on a ship that departed Bremerhaven.
why the air quotes?
@@invalidavatar
Because although I was born in Germany, I was born to US Citizens in a US Army hospital and did not actually immigrate to the US. I was a US Citizen at birth. I used “immigrated” because I went to the US from Germany for the first time in 1961.
and?
@@AsterFoz hdf
Oldschool style
concerning the random tourist attraction: Bud Spencer and Terrence Hill are very highly regarded in Germany. Most people born last century grew up on those movies
Yep, I've still got a set of their Spaghetti Shoot-em-ups here somewhere. Good fun!
The Synchronisation is also part of it. They decided to deviate quite a bit from the source material resulting in lots and lots of absolutely famous jokes and qoutes. The german Synchro is very famous.
They have very Anglo names. Were the films in English?
@@rogink nah, Italian. Those are their stage names. Their actual names are Carlo Pedersoli and Mario Girotti
Just the other day I saw Bud Spencer sausages. So yes, their fame is still around.
"Hemelinger Spezial" is also a local favourite when it comes to beers. Great video!
Still quite popular in Bremen but it is not brewed it Bremen anymore (since 2012) but in Braunschweig (Brunswick).
@@peterhoelder2652 yeah I've always wondered if they drink it there, too
Haha, that was my standard during student times. 😀
Its the worst behind becks and haake
Better than some beers I had from Bavaria.
A little fun fact regarding the emigrating situation, the start of the video was filmed just a couple meters away from "The last pub before New York"
Worth mentioning that after WWII, Bremen and Bremerhaven were actually exclaves of the American occupation zone surrounded by the British occupation zone because the American occupation zone was inland, and so the Americans wanted a supply port for the US zones of occupation in west Berlin and southern Germany. Another city with interesting geography is New York City! Like if you draw a line from the southernmost point of NYC on Staten Island to the northernmost point in The Bronx, it's around 36 miles, but if you redraw this 36-mile line towards NJ, it goes past Trenton and into Pennsylvania! Or how almost every borough of NYC is on an island except for The Bronx which is on a peninsula! Or how there is a part of Manhattan surrounded by The Bronx called Marble Hill! This is because Marble Hill was once part of Manhattan Island, but it became its own island in 1895 as the result of the Harlem Ship Canal. Then in 1914, it became attached to the Bronx as the result of the Harlem River on the north side of Marble Hill being fully diverted to the canal. The name of Marble Hill was conceived when Darius C. Crosby came up with the name in 1891 from the deposits of dolomite marble underlying it known as Inwood marble. The marble was quarried for the federal buildings in Lower Manhattan when New York was the national capital in the 1780s.
But the most interesting fact about NYC geography is how the city has exclaves within New Jersey, on Ellis Island and Liberty Island! After the British took the region in 1664, NJ was founded as its own entity from the Province of NY. But this came with an unusual clause that stated it "was westward of Long Island, and Manhitas Island and bounded on the east part by the main sea, and part by Hudson's river". This clause didn't say the river's midpoint, so the border remained disputed. As early as 1804, attempts were made to resolve the status of the state line, and NYC claimed the right to regulate trade on all waters, effectively controlling NJ's ports. This was contested in the case Gibbons v. Ogden, where it was decided that the regulation of interstate commerce fell under the authority of the federal government, thus influencing competition in the newly developing steam ferry service in New York Harbor. In the 1830s, New Jersey planned to bring suit to clarify the border, but the matter was resolved with a compact between the states, ratified by Congress in 1834. This stated that the island was NY's, but the submerged land around it was NJ's. This set the boundary down the middle, but NY was still guaranteed jurisdiction of ALL waters of the Hudson, which enraged NJ. And it was between 1890 and 1934 that Ellis Island was expanded for immigration, so NJ kept on fighting until another Supreme Court case in 1998 which decided 6-3 in favor of NJ, stating that as the 1834 agreement was with the original outline of Ellis Island, the original outline of the island would be NY, while the rest of it was NJ's. Although NJ owns most of Ellis Island, the main museum and gift shop is still in NY!
I'm from the Netherlands, and we made a school trip to Bremerhaven and Bremen (two different trips). We visited the Klimahaus and the Zoo am Meer. I don't really remember much about our trip to Bremen, except that I stroke the Bremer Stadtmusikanten for good luck, threw some money in a fountain, and had ice cream in Lloyd's passage.
I mean i like my hometown Bremen, also was on School Trip in the Klimahaus & Auswandererhaus/Emigrant house (Museum about German Immigration to Usa+) but for a its quite a scam from the Netherlands to drive there.
But Schools have always so questionable destinations for Trips/School excursions like one Class goes to Berlin or Prag & the other to a little Village where is nothing, of course you still have fun there, but when others go to italy or bigger cities.😅
i was born in bremerhaven and lived here for the entirety of my life and its surreal that other people, especially from other countries, sometimes end up visiting our city.
@@alkan68same fr
you deserve so much more attention your work on reddit and youtube is an insparation i love your content!
Finally my birthplace, the city of Bremen! After an absence of just about 30 years, I just remigrated here last september. So maybe surprisingly, although I am quite interested in local history, there was still a lot I learned from this video. I really should take some local city tours... but that feels dirty and touristy
That's not necessarily a bad thing. I occasionally go on a tour through Brussels, the city I call home since 2007. Sometimes it's good to see the city through the eyes of a visitor.
About 40km to the north of Bremerhaven, in the middle of the Wadden Sea you can find 3 tiny islands that belong to Hamburg, which is a 100km away. The 2 uninhabited islands, Nigehörn and Scharnhörn and the inhabited island of Neuwerk.
When I took part in a working group within the trilateral cooperation about the (mostly ecological) status of the Wadden Sea, we also had a representative of Hamburg. He did the surveys on those islands. Nigehoern is a man-made island, by the way, constructed when it looked like Scharhoern was going to be lost to erosion.
Hamburg used to have its own Bremerhaven- Cuxhaven for one, which it held over 500 years till 1937
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gro%C3%9F-Hamburg-Gesetz#/media/Datei:Cuxhaven.png
Hooray, northern Germany content! I love these travel videos.
Bremen has a cool "easteregg". When standing on the old marketplace you can find a manhole cover. When throwing money inside it you can hear on of the four animals from the "bremer stadtmusikanten". The money will be collected and donated to charity after a while.
Also the "Böttcherstraße" that you showed while playing the bell tunes, a part of the wall moves which straight up looks like its from harry potter
Yes, I saw the moving images, but the building was being renovated and there was scaffolding in the way so I couldn't get a clear shot.
Enclaves/exclaves are quite interesting! The commune of Campione d'Italia stands out in that it's an Italian enclave and exclave surrounded by Switzerland! Why is it Italian? Well in the first century BC, the Romans founded the garrison town of Campilonum to protect their territories from Helvetii invasions. In 777, Toto of Campione, a local Lombard lord, left his inheritance to the archbishopric of Milan. Ownership was transferred to the abbey of Sant’Ambrogio. In 1512, the surrounding area of Ticino was transferred from the ownership of the bishop of Como to Switzerland by Pope Julius II, as thanks for the support in the War of the Holy League. However, the abbey maintained control over what is now Campione and some territory on the western bank of Lake Lugano. When Ticino chose to become part of the Swiss Confederation in 1798, the people of Campione chose to remain part of Lombardy. In 1800, Ticino proposed exchanging Indemini for Campione. In 1814 a referendum was held, and residents opposed it. In 1848, during the wars of Italian unification, Campione petitioned Switzerland for annexation, but this was rejected due to the Swiss desire for neutrality. After Italian unification in 1861, all land west of Lake Lugano and half of the lake were given to Switzerland so that Swiss trade and transport would not have to pass through Italy.
The d'Italia was added to the name of Campione in the 1930s by Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and an ornamental gate to the village was built, both to assert Italian character. During World War II, the US Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the CIA, maintained a unit in Campione for operations in Italy. At the time the Italian fascist regime did not have control over the enclave. The Swiss ignored the situation as long as the Americans kept a low profile. Campione's biggest employer is the Casinò di Campione which was originally founded in 1917 as a site to gather information from foreign diplomats during the First World War. It closed in 2019 after a bankruptcy in 2018 that led to financial distress of the municipality and dissolution of the city council that were only elected the year before, but the casino re-opened in 2022.
Kim-Jong-Un L South Korea W
Absolutely great summary of my hometown and its completely crazy history of two cities. Very great and enjoyable to listen to and you got to the heart of the matter.
Please keep up the good work!💚
I live in Grimsby which is twinned with Bremerhaven. I’ve been to Bremen, the main tea centre in Germany. Cleethorpes is twinned with Konigswinter. The Humber is the nearest point in the U.K. to the German Coast
And Neuwerk is part of Hamburg (so, what's the greatest distance of two locations in Hamburg? Almost 130 km!), and Helgoland lies in the district of Pinneberg near Hamburg.
As was Cuxhaven on the mouth of river Elbe until 1937
@@joeschneider3427 Großhamburggesetz?
Schnoor sounds similar to the dutch word "snoer", meaning "cable" or "cord".
Also sounds very similar to Polish "sznur" meaning "rope". Which is expected, most of maritime related vocabulary in Polish comse from German.
"Schnur" - it's also a word in modern German. Another synonym is "Faden". They mean "string". The long and narrow nature of the street makes the naming choice intuitive.
A piece of string in Swedish "snöre"
Šņore
ukr/rus same - шнур
Die Einheimischen trinken auch Hemelinger.
Nebenbei: Bremen-Nord auch zu behandeln, wäre vermutlich zuviel gewesen.
Aber auch da gibt es interessantes zu sehen.
Hemelinger wird übrigens seit 2012 in Braunschweig gebraut :(
@@irgendwonurwannPsst. Nicht verraten.
@@irgendwonurwann Dann gibt es ja praktisch kein Bier mehr aus Bremen was schmeckt.. Bremen union bier (craftbier) hatte ich noch nicht getrunken
@@Janoip Haake Beck Kräusen find ich kann man gut trinken, gibt's aber nur vom Fass :)
@@Janoip Ist ganz gutes Bier imho
Always interesting to see an outsiders perspective on your own hometown. I believe you captured Bremen very well - thank you✌️
My great-great-great-great-grandparents from Bavaria boarded their ship at Bremerhaven in 1847. Their vessel, the F.J. Wichelhausen, was named after the US Consul-General stationed at Bremen from 1796 to 1832. It was a triple-masted frigate, and their journey to Philadelphia took two months. Three grown children traveled with them, along with the oldest one's fiancee. The father of the family died in America 6 weeks later.
There is a museum called the "Auswanderer Haus" on the topic of all the people who left to the new world from Bremerhaven.
It's really interesting.
Spent several years in both of those cities. I was stationed in between them. Thanks for the vid! Nice to see the cities again.
Thanks, worthwhile watching. Blockland with its small, historic villages and farms might have been worth mentioning.
I'm counting weeks to make my way to Bremen and Bremerhaven, thank you for the great tips and informative content, Prost! 🍺
I think you did not mention the weird logic that allows you to tell where a car is from, given that they all have the "HB" registration. If "HB" is followed by two letters and three digits, the car is from the city of Bremen (not sure if this includes the port exclave, but it should). One letter followed by four digits means Bremerhaven. And then, strangely, there is Bremen-Nord with either a one-three combination or a two-two one.
Thanks for this. Germany is a wonderful, bonkers country...
Great video. One additional information: Bremen Vegesack Harbour was the first man made harbour in Europe.
Oh, go to Salzgitter! There is a sign leaving Salzgitter, right to Salzgitter, straight to Salzgitter and left to Salzgitter! 🙂
It's a trap. Don't go to Salzgitter.. ever!
@@Skoell1983 did my driver license there since my uncle was a driving instructor living there. So, I came from somewhere else, and this was a confusing time - since I also needed to learn how to drive a car. Now, the motorcycle part was easier - I had a 50ccm krad and an 80ccm license already - 1A as it was called back in the days was more a stress relief. The only complaint my uncle had is that when I do an emergency brake, I shouldn't try a stoppie on the front wheel only in front of the inspector. I didn't. And I passed my driving test for both.
I'm from Bremen, I adore your work, and having you create this documentary is an honour for the city. Thank you so much. Haake Beck is really horrible though :D
My friend is from the Neustadt. When we first met I tried to impress her by ordering a Becks. "I never drink the stuff" she said ☺️
What lovely memories! Thank you for this short trip back to Bremen and Bremerhaven! I used to teach French and English in companies and at the Institut français in Bremen, and I taught French at the brand-new Uni, Jacobs University, in Bremerhaven. I miss my life there, every day, but alas, it was time to come home. Nostalgia, what can I say!
But the Jacobs University (now Constructor University) is located in Bremen-Nord, not in Bremerhaven.
Don't forget that the Americans actually offered Bremen to expand all along the River Weser up to Bremerhaven, but our Mayor at the time declined the offer because the rural areas would be "too much of a hassle to govern". Oh how that one has bitten Bremen in the backside.
Whaaaat I didn’t know about that.. wir als Bremer sollten diesen Bürgermeister wohl kollektiv ächten für diese folgenreiche Entscheidung ;)
@@TheLikeys
KAISEN?! Spinnst du?!
@@B.Ies_T.Nduhey DAs war ja auch nicht ernst gemeint xD
Stell dir das mal vor.. Uthlede, Hagen, Loxstedt, Aschwarden alles bremisch? Nein was sollen wir denn damit ;)
Obwohl ich ganz einverstanden wäre, wenn Bremen seinen Speckgürtel eingemeinden oder zumindest a den Steuereinnahmen beteiligt werden könnte..
@@TheLikeys Och weißte...
Eigentlich würd ich diese Orte auch alle mitnehmen 😆
Great video as always. Greetings from Bremen 🫏🦮🐈🐀
Great video!
It really is confusing living in Bremen sometimes.
I live in the outskirts of Bremen (so Niedersachsen, it is locally also called "Umzu") but I was born in Bremen as there is the nearest hospital. I went to school in Niedersachsen and studied in Bremerhaven, now I work in Bremen.
To make it even more confusing: Bremen Nord residents still often say they are going to Bremen if they talk about going to the city center. I never really thought much about that, but it is a relict of the times the cities Vegesack and Blumenthal were independent. And I think that changed quite recently, like 100 years ago I think.
Another fun fact: the harbour in Vegesack is said to have been the oldest documented river harbour of germany.
I've learned so much from this video even as a native living near Bremen.
I live in Bremerhaven and its one of the poorest citys with one of the highest rates of unemployment and poverty. This is due to the harbour belonging to Bremen so they get the taxes and profit from the harbour. Also Bremen decides over Bremerhaven so they only invest in Bremen and not in Bremerhaven which is another main reason why the city is so poor. None of my former classmates wanted to stay there, they all went to other places for a better live. I also did that.
This is a mayor problem because thus the well educated people who can afford to move leave Bremerhaven and the people who cant afford it have to stay. Leading to a spiral of increasing poverty.
Another fun fact is that during covid Bremen had an infection rate of over 500 while Bremerhaven had 50. So people in Bremen had stricter restrictions than these in Bremerhavene. But, due to the fact that the harbour belongs to Bremen the few 100 people who live in the harbour area had to stay at home because they fall under the 500 infection rate of Bremen.
I am sorry to report that the Beck's beer sold in the USA is now brewed in the USA. Munich's Loewenbraeu tried that in the 1970's and now I can't find it in either the German or terrible American version.
It's kinda weird seeing the places I used to walk through to get to an old workplace of mine
The Pfannkuchenschiff is actually really good, coming from a Bremer
When I was in Bremen around 20 years ago there was a Pannekoekenboot (yes, somehow a Dutch word). Is it the same location, different name?
@@patrickoudejans Are you sure it wasn't Platt rather than Dutch?
@@niwa_s Low German and Dutch has indeed close relations to each other.
well it burned down...
@@elgrapa3540
häh was, davon hab ich aber nichts gehört???
I enjoyed the video a lot, Andrew. Sadly, on all my trips to Germany, I never visited Bremen/Bremerhaven. Cheers.
I like the juxtaposition of architecture in Bremen. The mixture of old, pastiche, reconstruction, and modern adds to the history of the city.
Auswanderer is a wonderful name for emigrant.
Actually, it is a direct translation of the word. Latin e or ex = aus (out), Latin migrare = wandern (in the sense of "to migrate", a movement of people to a new settlement. Wandern can also mean "to hike, to roam, to ramble", but not in this context).
@@tillneumann406 Yes. I was talking about how it sounds to English ears.
When you take the Amerikalinie from Bremerhaven to Berlin, you will pass Kirchlinteln (sadly the train doesn’t stop there). Near Kirchlinteln ist the village of Horst. According to the legend, this is where the journey of the Bremer Stadtmusikanten ended.
I'd love to see a video touring and showing the interesting parts of Schleswig
Best place in Schleswig is the Viking tower, so you don't have to look at the Viking tower.
I love your video and must say that as a Bremen resident I also learned a couple of new things but I have one big contradiction and that is that the pancake ship is not a tourist attraction.
No mention of Bremen-Nord, alas, this is the usual state of affairs. Great video still.
Haven is an old spelling of Hafen (same pronounciation), which means Harbour or Port. So Bremerhaven is literally Bremen's Harbour.
Fun fact: Both Brermen and Bremerhaven use the same license plate regional code (HB), but to distinguish between the cities, Bremerhaven license plates used to have four digits at the end, while Bremen license plates only had three (in line with all German regional codes).
Thanks, again, for great content!!!
Great video Andrew! I really enjoy your city trips.
Hamburg also has an exclave: the island of Neuwerk at the mouth of the Elbe, which belongs to the district of Hamburg Mitte.
that kind of honk sounded like they recognized you
3:35 this building is so wonderful holy shit
That’s why it is UNESCO World Heritage.
It´s the City Hall, built in the early 15th Century at the same time as the Roland Statue in front of it - and it IS the City Hall, not a Museum representing the former City Hall.
4:41 I do love the original "Horten" pattern on that building!! Andrew wouldn't understand, but I used to love that chain of departure stores growing up in the 70s/80s, and I hated when they became "Kaufhof".
I am born in Bremerhaven, interesting to watch someone with an outside perspec.tive talk about my home region. Always enjoy your travel videos.
In the late nineties Bremen was known for good British music at its jungle raves in Aladin/Tivoli.
I remember sleeping through Nirvana's support set for Sonic Youth there 😆
The "Angel of Bremen" story reminds me of the almoast identical story of "Goede Mie" here in Leiden, The Netherlands.
There is also small unrelated village called Bremen in Thuringia…
Was stuck in Binging TH-cam shorts until I found this! Great and interesting video
As a local I have to compliment your pronounciation. Also; thank you for educating me about my hometown.
A Bremer here, greetings. I learned a lot about my home 😅. Fun feeling to see your perspectve on so familiar places.
"... before the railways meant travellers could easily plan to get to Bremerhaven on the day of departure"
... After our last couple of adventures with DB we finally got smart. Not having to deal with sudden "Personalmangel and Stellwerkschaden" is worth the cost of a night in a Frankfurt airport hotel.
I'd like to start off by saying that I liked the video very much. You were very fair in your assessment, thorough with the history and made a good case for the city's appeal. I will however say that you seemed to gloss over a fundamental aspect of Bremen's identity: Bremen is poor. In fact, it has the highest poverty rate in all of Germany. So when you criticize the lack of preservation it sounds a tad mean, although I know that it is unintended.
I have talked to a few people in charge of historical sites in Bremen as part of my degree in history and they all said the same thing regarding the topic of preservation: They would love to preserve and properly present each and every historical bit Bremen has to offer, especially because they desperately need the tourism, but the state simply does not have the money. They depend on private Investors stepping in and taking on the costs, which rarely happens and when it does it usually means some part of its soul is lost to make the site more profitable. The city has to balance its appeal to tourists with appealing to corporate interests and it shows. Bremen's strange bouts of supposed modernization, its frankly horrible train station and thee overall somber feeling of the city are each a visible symptom of Bremen's tragic poverty.
Brother.... in just only the first eleven minutes i learnt sooooo damn much about the place i lived my whole life... thank you!
Thank you for explaining me the city I live in for my whole life👍🏻😂🫶🏼
Weird geography - that sounds like The Tim Traveller territory. Any chance of a collaboration at one point?
Good Idea!🙂👍
the intro timing was perfect xD
Nice one, thank you and greetings from Bremen.
This is an excellent video which explains the history really well, thank you :)
Mir hat das Video sehr gefallen! Ich hab so einige Sachen gelernt und auffrischen können 😊
We have the Romanian word expression ,,merge șnur/schnoor” meaning everything is going right (maybe related also to one-way street rule).
6:54 In the windows you can see below the statues were once fish, with one of the windows having coffein in the water, to show how it makes the fish (and also potential customers) more awake. Due to obvious reasons this is no longer the case though.
8:56 the pancake boat surprisingly isn't a cheesy tourist trap, but just a cooler restaurant, especially for families with children ;)
Talk about Hanseatic cities in general. Super interesting.
Super! Bremen and Bremerhaven are dear to my heart having spent several yrs in "Fishtown" back in the 80's.
Wonderful times bar maybe the insanely cold,wet/snowy winters!
Hey there :) The weather was quite different back then, though. Speaking as someone who grew up in Bremerhaven the 1990s. In the winters, on a regular basis the ponds in citizens' park used to freeze. You could ice skate on them! Nowadays, some winters barely have snow.
I'm quite happy that Rewboss showed rainy days since I remember a ton of them.
😳 Never had any of those!
Great video Andrew, thanks.
The Senckenberg deep storage actually has two levels, and it's also not just for storage in case of disaster. It is a general storage, as the museum is not just a museum but also does research, and also has way more items than can be exhibited (they expanded recently, so a small amount more can be displayed now). One is dry storage, one is wet storage. You don't touch anything in dry storage if you can, as there's many old pelts and taxidermy that was preserved with...various poisons that are more or left undefined. You do not want to disturb the dust.
The wet storage is mostly closed stuff, rocks and bones. Also, lots of creepy stuff in jars, like the head of a guy cut in half.
Interesting anecdote: The entrance is behind the basalt pillars to the right of the entrance, when you face it. There's a stairway, and there's an elevator that is lowered into the ground. There's signs not to park anything there, but one time someone parked their motorbike there. Someone needed to access the elevator, and waited a bit, but no one came. So they lifted the elevator, complete with motorcycle, out of the hidden mode. After about 1 hour of work, the bike's owner came back. He was apparently a bit surprised, but took it in stride. He went to a cafe for about 30 minutes until the workers were finished.
Also the "Klimahaus" in Bremerhaven is worth a visit :)
Me watching this as a Bremer, enjoying all the small bits of extra information
I’ve visited Bremen. Nice city, and it’s a place I’d like to return to someday. But now I have interest in wanting to visit Bremerhaven. I have German ancestry and they immigrated to the US in the 19th century. Finding out that they most likely were in Bremerhaven before setting sail gives me the interest to visit.
Take a look into the archives in the "Auswandererhaus", you may find them there. 👍
@@mueesli4745 I definitely want to take a look someway, somehow. Thank you for the suggestion
Well explained, love from Bremen
I went to Bremerhaven on my challenge of getting from Germany's southern border to the sea in under 24 hours using the €9 ticket.
Bremen and Bremerhaven are basically England and Wales.
Far too few sheep in Bremerhaven for that.
@@gerdforster883 Indeed.😅
@@gerdforster883 there are many on the dikes in between both cities 😅
I am a resident of Bremerhaven and i like how accurately you represent the history of Bremen and Bremerhaven. I also like the old maps. Just one thing to correct: HanNover with double "n". I
In English, it has a single "n".
Schön, dass du mal in Bremen warst 😊.
4:25 At least they didn't partially enclose the town hall in a giant glass box, which is supposed to be a new shopping centre. Our city had an idea like this with a model on display. I hope the idea was abandoned.
URGKS 🤢
Viele Grüße aus Bremerhaven!
Of course, they are really close together with plenty of shared history, but it still surprises me how the city hall and market area of Bremen looks really a lot like Lübeck.
En route from Kyiv to Chicago in 1914, my great-grandparents, plus one great-aunt and great-uncle, boarded the _SS Emden_ from Bremerhaven. This is why my last name ends with a W. Thank you for showing me what it's like.
Will you stay til next week then to enjoy the Breminale? And this weekend in the neustadt is the international street art competition @rewboss
I was not expecting this video to start in the city I was born in, well sort of. Surrounded by the city I was born in 😅
1:58 the animation looks nice
Everything he said is right, I lived in both cities.
But he probably missed the U-boat in the habour of Bremerhaven, 600-700m from the Auswandererhaus.
Speaking of U-boats, he missed the U-Boot-Bunker Valentin, one of the largest remaining WWII buildings in Germany:
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valentin_submarine_pens
Do you mean the one at 11:49?
@@max_the_german4989 Bremen Nord may be worth it's own video in my opinion. Sadly it is often overlooked, but that makes it a calmer place in a big city.
I life in Bremen and learned more from this video then I did in the last 10 years living here.
Regarding the translation of the German 'Hahn' into English, I'm please to say we have a 'Cock and Pye' pub here in Ipswich which dates from before 1689 (earliest known reference).
You missed the Bleikeller, a unique place where natural mummification occurs.
The existence of Wesermünde reminds me of Altona in Hamburg. Independent city has an important harbor. Lords of the neighboring principality agree that this is a great place for a port, and build their own right next to it.
I moved out of Bremen a half year ago and seeing now the whole down town here makes me feel nostalgic 😍
Wait till you get to Neuwerk, a district of Hamburg.
I'm a bit sad you didn't show the pigs
(Or did I not see them?)
Since we're doing verschachtelte sachen, the Gymnasium Wesermünde (known as the Kreisgy) is a lower-saxon school in Bremerhaven. Quite the bus ride to school for my brother back when he went there.
Ich als Bremerhavener find es mega wie viel Aufmerksamkeit Bremerhaven durch dieses Video bekommt. Dass es sogar das Kreisgy unters Video schafft, damit hätte ich echt nicht gerechnet...
😆
I wish Carlsburg (formerly planned ideal-city by the Swedish, based on present day Bremerhaven) was a thing.