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Elbe

Kieler Straße 392, Stellingen, 22525 Hamburg, Germany


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Elbe




Situated in the Eimsbüttel district, this hotel is less than a 10-minute drive from O2 World Hamburg. It offers bright rooms with WiFi access and a 24-hour reception. Hotel Elbe provides compact rooms decorated in a classic-style. Each is complete with a flat-screen TV. Some rooms have shared bathroom facilities, which are located in the hallway. Breakfast can be booked for an extra fee at Hotel Elbe. Guests will find numerous restaurants serving international cuisine within 500 m of the hotel. Nearby attractions include Hagenbeck Wildlife Park (2 km) and the popular St. Pauli district (5 km). Parking is available for an additional charge at Hotel Elbe. A shuttle service to Hamburg Airport is available on request.


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What to see in Hamburg

Hamburg (in German, hamburg pronounced/ˈhambʊʁk/(listening); in a German bass, Hamborg, locally: [ˈhambɔːç]), officially free and haseatic city of Hamburg [n. (In German, Freie und Hensestadt Hamburg) is a German city-state [n. located in northern Germany. It has an extension of 755 km² and 1 857 727 inhabitants (November 2020). Hamburg heads a metropolitan area of ​​about 5.3 million people who also occupy parts of the neighboring states of Low Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein, being the second most populated city in Germany, after Berlin, the third in Europe Central and the seventh of the European Union. The port of Hamburg is the second largest in Europe, only after the port of Rotterdam, and one of the twenty largest in the world. Hamburg is located 290 kilometers northwest of Berlin.

The full name of Hamburg, Free and Hanseat Ciudad of Hamburg (Freie und Hensestadt Hamburg), is due to its history as a member of the medieval Hanseatic League and as an imperial city free of the Holy Roman Empire Germanic, while by the fact of be a city-state and one of the sixteen federated states of Germany.

The first historical name of the city was, according to reports by Claudio Ptolomeo (c. 100 - c. 170), Treva. The origins of Hamburg date back to 808 d. C., in which Carlomagno ordered the Hammaburg castle to defend a baptistery of the Slavic peoples, from which the area was monitored north of the Elba River, where Burgo means Castillo. The term Hamma remains uncertain, although it can mean "forest, as well as the location of this castle.

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