The Burgklause Boutique
Just 170 m from the banks of the Rhine River, this hotel in Linz am Rhein is housed in a historic half-timbered building. Hotel Burgklause offers a daily buffet breakfast, wine tastings and rooms with free WiFi. The warmly decorated rooms at Hotel Burgklause come complete with satellite TV, a desk and a private bathroom. International and regional cuisine is on offer in the restaurant. Meals can also be enjoyed outside on the hotel’s pretty terrace. Linz am Rhein Town Centre is 350 m away, while it is 12 km to Drachenfels Castle. You can also take a day trip to Sea Life Königswinter, just 13 km away. Linz am Rhein Train Station is 600 m away, and free on-site parking is available.
Book a room
See more photos
Booking.com
What to see in Rhein
The Rin River (in German: Rhein; in French: Rhin; in Dutch: Rijn; in Romanche: Rain) is an important river in Europe, the most used river route of the European Union (EU). ] With a length of 1230 km (14 ° Larmost in Europe), is navigable in a section of 883 km between Basel (Switzerland) and its delta in the North Sea. Its average flow It is 2100 m³/s, and forms a common delta with the Mosa River. Among the largest and most important cities of the RIN are Basel, Strasbourg, Colonia, Düsseldorf and Róterdam.
Together with the Danube, the RIN constituted most of the northern border (the Limes) of the Roman Empire. The Romans called it Rhēnus. Later, French and Germans fought in this river to affirm their power. The RIN also served as an important route for trade, generating wealth for several peoples, from frisons and Vikings to the merchants of the Hanseatic League and the Amsterdam Golden Age.
Initially, it was the textile industry that discovered the benefits of the RIN. Then came the chemical industry, and in recent decades some of the largest steel, automotive, textile and chemical plants in the world have been built on the banks of the river, with channels, with channels, with channels that connect the RIN with the Baltic Sea, the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. However, the free shipping of merchandise throughout the RIN has only been possible since 1868, when Mannheim's law was signed.