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A Wienerwald restaurant in Nuremberg, Germany. Wienerwald GmbH is a German chain of franchised fast food restaurants, specializing in chicken – especially hendl (a type of roast chicken), schnitzel, and other similar products. Its name means Vienna Woods. As of 2022 there are five Wienerwald restaurants in Germany and three in Egypt.
It is by far the busiest shopping street in Heidelberg and the 43rd busiest in Germany as of 2013, with an average of 5618 people visiting it per hour over the period 2004 to 2013. [6] In addition to the shops and restaurants, there are several significant institutions, like the Town Hall, the Kurpfälzisches Museum, and parts of the University.
In this rodízio restaurant in Germany, patrons turn over green/red cylinders to indicate to staff whether they require more food. In most areas of the world outside of Brazil, a rodízio restaurant refers to a Brazilian-style steakhouse restaurant, where customers pay a fixed price ( preço fixo ).
Heidelberg (German: [ˈhaɪdl̩bɛʁk] ⓘ; Palatine German: Heidlberg) is the fifth-largest city in the German state of Baden-Württemberg, and with a population of about 163,000, of which roughly a quarter consists of students, [3] it is Germany's 51st-largest city.
Commemorative plates for the Heidelberg Disputation and the 1933 book burnings are inlaid in the paving. In the north is the Old University building , which was built between 1712 and 1735. Opposite it on the south side of the square is the New University building [ de ] , which was erected in place of the "College house" in the 1930s.
Horten AG (Aktiengesellschaft) was a German department store chain founded by Helmut Horten in 1936 and headquartered in Düsseldorf, Germany. With up to 80 stores throughout Germany, Horten ranked fourth-largest among German department store chains, after Karstadt , Kaufhof and Hertie .
Bismarkplatz with flags for Heidelberg literature day 2019. The Bismarckplatz (pronunciation ⓘ) in Heidelberg is a square named for Otto von Bismarck, located at the western end of the Hauptstrasse, which forms the boundary between the old city and the suburb of Bergheim.
Early advertisement for the restaurant in German, as it appeared in a 1942 issue of the Neu England Rundschau (New England Review) On September 24, 1935, Paul Schoeder, a German immigrant from Spremberg active in Springfield's turnverein, [9] opened the Student Prince Cafe & Tap Room at 8 Fort Street in the storefront of a former shoe store. [10]