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Opposite the city hall, and forming the east side of the Römerberg square, are more reconstructed buildings. |
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The view west down the Main from the Iron Bridge. |
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Frankfurt's Historisches Museum (Historical Museum). Once again, this has been completely restored. |
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At one corner of Saint Paul‘s Church stands this concentration camp memorial — a sober reminder of the Holocaust and the dark days of the early 1940s. |
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The Goethehaus at 23, Grosser Hirschgraben. Johann Wolfgang Goethe was born here on 28 August 1749. The house was destroyed by Allied bombing in 1944, but reconstructed as closely as possible to the original between 1947 and 1951. Inside you can see Goethe's study and the writing desk at which he wrote The Sorrows of Young Werther, a seminal book of the Romantic movement. |
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On the second floor of the Goethehaus stands this astronomical clock made in the eighteenth century by clockmaker Christian Kintzing of Neuwied. |