The German Cape is a land at the intersection of the Moselle and Rhine rivers in Koblenz, Germany, and houses a bronze horse riding sculpture of William I, the first emperor of the German Empire. On the top of the hill opposite the berth is the Ellenbrightstein Fortress. Around 1000 AD, a small castle was built here, and for centuries the Electors of Trier converted it into a fortress. Later, the French destroyed it, and the Prussian Kingdom sent men to repair the Ellenbrightstein Fortress. The fortress is one of the most powerful fortresses built in Europe after 1815 and remains intact.
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The German Cape is a land at the intersection of the Moselle and Rhine rivers in Koblenz, Germany, and houses a bronze horse riding sculpture of William I, the first emperor of the German Empire. On the top of the hill opposite the berth is the Ellenbrightstein Fortress. Around 1000 AD, a small castle was built here, and for centuries the Electors of Trier converted it into a fortress. Later, the French destroyed it, and the Prussian Kingdom sent men to repair the Ellenbrightstein Fortress. The fortress is one of the most powerful fortresses built in Europe after 1815 and remains intact.
The Horn of Germany has attracted a large number of tourists since the day it built the sculpture of William I on horseback. Since 2002 it has been included in the UNESCO World Heritage List as part of the upper middle Rhine valley.
Early in the morning we arrived at the Cape of Koblenz, under the blue sky and white clouds to admire the statue of William I on horseback. The statue stands 37 meters high and stands at the intersection of the Moselle and Rhine rivers.
Koblenz's "Horn of Germany" is a land at the confluence of the Mosel and Rhine rivers in Koblenz, Germany. It has a magnificent bronze horseback riding sculpture of William I, the first emperor of the German Empire.
The famous bronze statue of William I quietly looked at the earth under his feet.
Tour the Rhine, pass by, nothing, the emperor sculpture is good.