If you’ve never visited, the best possible way to describe the town, is that it looks as though it stepped right out of an ornamental placemat. Narrow alleyways meet cobble-stoned streets. Monuments from medieval times sit amid half-timbered villas. Looming large over the entire scape is the Romanesque Collegiate Church of St. Servatius. The richly-adorned facades of the houses that dot the town, demonstrate the use of timbering over a period of some eight centuries. That Quedlinburg is at the edge of the Harz Mountains, adds to the town’s appeal. You can take a narrow-gauge train from here right up to the Brocken. What’s especially nice, is that what seems like a tourist train and a museum piece, is in effect a regular-operation train for the townsfolk.
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