Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Into Hamburg, Germany, Europe

Into Hamburg, Germany, Europe

On 20 12- 10, a 26-member China Petrochemical Maintenance Delegation flew from Beijing to Europe, mainly to inspect and study the operation and safety of advanced petrochemical plants in Europe, and successively visited Bayer, BASF, Shell and other well-known petrochemical enterprises. The first country is Germany, and the first city is

Hamburg, located on the Elbe River in the northeast of Bremen, is one of the three national cities in Germany, equivalent to one of Tianjin (Berlin, Hamburg and Bremen) in China, the second largest city (municipality directly under the central government) in Germany, the most important seaport, the largest foreign trade center and the second largest financial center in Germany. Northern Germany, an economic and cultural metropolis, has the reputation of "Bridge City of the World". It covers an area of 755 square kilometers and is divided into 7 districts with a population of 1.73 million, of which 1.4% are foreigners, and the main language is German. Famous scenic spots in Hamburg include St. Michael's Church, People's Park Stadium and Hamburg University.

In the 8th century, the first settlement area appeared on both sides of the Ulster River ("Han" in ancient Saxony) not far from the mouth of the Elbe River. In 830, the Holy Roman Empire built a town here called "Hammarborg". In 834, Hamburg was chosen as the seat of the cathedral by the apostle Bishop Ansgar in the north. 1 189, Hamburg won the concession of Emperor Barbarossa, imposed tariffs on the Elbe River, and later became an "imperial free city".

20 18 may, the 15th (20 18) ranking of Chinese and foreign summer tourist destinations was released, and Hamburg ranked 47th.

A few anecdotes: 1, Chinese food in Europe is extremely simple: because I usually go to work in the morning 10, breakfast and lunch are too close, so I usually eat standing up, a cup of coffee or a meat pie, and I finish it in a few minutes-

2. The nightclubs' stools may all be designed for Europeans, and everyone under 1.8 meters has to climb up, so cocktails are just as bad as them.

All over the world, people in China may sweep the fallen leaves after autumn, but in Europe, no one sweeps them. They are all piled under the tree trunks, covered with snow and turned into organic fertilizers in spring.

4. Buildings have a history of hundreds of years, so it can be seen that the European standard represented by Germany is: firm-firm-permanent.