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What to See in Triberg Im Schwarzwald - Top Sights and Attractions

Discover 5 hidden attractions, cool sights, and unusual things to do in Triberg Im Schwarzwald (Germany). Don't miss out on these must-see attractions: Triberg Waterfalls, Maria in der Tanne, and The House of 1000 Clocks. Also, be sure to include Hochseilgarten Triberg in your itinerary.

Below, you can find the list of the most amazing places you should visit in Triberg Im Schwarzwald (Baden-Württemberg).

Triberg Waterfalls

Waterfall in Germany
wikipedia / Meganp / CC BY-SA 4.0

Also known as: Triberger Wasserfälle

High waterfall reached by a hiking trail. The Triberg Waterfalls are waterfalls near Triberg in the Black Forest in Baden-Württemberg. With a descent of 163 m, it is one of the highest waterfalls in Germany and a landmark in the Black Forest region.

Above Triberg, in the midst of Black Forest, the Gutach river plunges over seven major steps from a gently undulated high plain into a rocky V-shaped valley.

In Triberg, at the bottom of the falls, the deep valley forms a basin just wide enough for a small town. The steep basin and the waterfalls were initially formed by two faults in the granite and then by glaciers during several glaciations of the Pleistocene.

Triberg with its waterfalls is a popular tourist spot, attracting a large number of both domestic and foreign tourists each year. The upper part of the falls is less spectacular. Here the water is used by a small and very old hydroelectric power plant.[1]

Address: Wallfahrtstraße 5A, 78098 Triberg

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Maria in der Tanne

Church in Triberg im Schwarzwald, Germany
wikipedia / joergens.mi / CC BY 3.0

Church in Triberg im Schwarzwald, Germany. Maria in der Tanne is a small baroque church near Triberg im Schwarzwald in the Black Forest of Germany. The legend behind this church dates from 1644, when a young girl was cured from an eye disease by the water of a nearby spring. Within the next year, a local tailor cured his leprosy by washing in the same spring. The thankful tailor placed a small statue of Mary in the cavity of a fir tree.

The statue was forgotten, then rediscovered years later by three Tyrolean soldiers around the year 1700. Shortly thereafter, a small wooden chapel, then a larger stone church, and finally the existing church were built by pilgrims.[2]

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The House of 1000 Clocks

The House of 1000 Clocks
facebook / cuckoo.clock.germany / CC BY-SA 3.0

Gift shop, Shopping

Address: Hauptstrasse 79-81, 78098 Triberg

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Hochseilgarten Triberg

Hochseilgarten Triberg
facebook / HochseilgartenTriberg / CC BY-SA 3.0
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Triberg Gallows

Historical place in Triberg im Schwarzwald, Germany
wikipedia / HostaMadosta / CC BY-SA 3.0

Also known as: Triberger Galgen

Historical place in Triberg im Schwarzwald, Germany. The Triberg Gallows is a double gallows on the heights known as Hochgericht on the K 5728 county road that runs from Schönwald to Villingen, and in the county of Schwarzwald-Baar-Kreis in the German state of Baden-Württemberg.

A map from Benedictine Abbey of St. George in the Black Forest indicates that, on the present site of the Blood Court, a gallows was erected in the late 16th century. A historical map known as the Pürschgerichtskarte, which charts the area around the free imperial town of Rottweil, shows two wooden gallows on this spot. The present stone gallows replaced its wooden predecessors in 1721. As a symbol of justice of the Anterior Austrian Obervogtei of Triberg, the execution site was visible for a long distance. By 1779, 15 executions are recorded, twelve of them for witchcraft.

The gallows consist of two sandstone pillars, reinforced with iron bands, and linked by a wooden crossbeam that was added later. The southeastern pillar bears the date 1721, the other one two initials, probably a mason's mark.

The Middle Way from Pforzheim to Waldshut runs by the gallows.[3]

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