Transfer from Dresden - Airport
to Karlovy Vary

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Trip details

Departure from Dresden - Airport
Selected sights
Estimated arrival to Karlovy Vary
11:18h

Trip duration: 138min

Passengers & Extra luggage
1 x
0 x
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Trip details

Departure from Dresden - Airport
Passengers & Extra luggage
1 x
0 x

Places you can visit along the way

Quality photo of Weesenstein - Germany

Weesenstein
Germany

60 min

Weesenstein castle divinely combines different architectural styles that have emerged during many reconstructions since it was built 800 years ago. The styles are ranging from... Medieval to Renaissance and Baroque. Not only are the styles mixing, but the castle layout is quite unconventional with stables on the fifth floor, banquet halls in the attic and the residential quarters in the vault. This hidden gem is off the beaten path so there are no crowds. English audio guides are available. The castle features a cafe, a restaurant and a brewery (with beer brewed on site) where visitors can enjoy a Saxony style meal and nice views over the large gardens.

Quality photo of Loket Castle - Czech Republic

Loket Castle
Czech Republic

75 min

Most castles were built on hills, enabling the occupants to see invaders approaching and Loket Castle is no different. From the hilltop, it dominates the... town of Loket for more than 850 years and this abundant past can be observed in its museum, weaponry, armor and an eclectic collection of historic artifacts. If you have the courage for some rather ghastly equipment, explore the castle’s dungeons. If not, spend your visiting time in the impressive chapel and the castle’s ceremonial hall. All in all, this attraction has something to offer for everyone’s taste.

Quality photo of Jezeri Castle - Czech Republic

Jezeri Castle
Czech Republic

75 min

The Jezeri Castle was the cultural center of the whole region in the 18th and 19th centuries and its orchestra was world famous. Today, it... is hard to imagine the glorious days of this magnificent manor because it suffered severe damage caused by open-cast mining in the area. Nonetheless, certain parts of the castle have been restored and visitors can explore only some 15-20 rooms of this large building, witnessing its splendid past. Some of the prominent castle visitors in the past were Goethe, Beethoven, and composer Gluck who actually grew up in the castle’s hunting lodge.

Quality photo of Terezin - Czech Republic

Terezin
Czech Republic

90 min

Terezin fortress was built by the Emperor Joseph II at the end of the 18th century in honor of his mother Maria Theresa but during... the WWII it had been turned into a Jewish ghetto and a Gestapo prison by the Nazis. The fortress includes a whole complex of buildings surrounded by the walls and today it is a living monument that commemorates all victims of Jewish population that lost their lives here due to malnutrition, brutality and overcrowding. By visiting this highly moving complex visitors learn all about daily sufferings and inhumane conditions that Jews had to undergo during the Second World War. The complex is divided between the “Small Fortress” that was a prison for political prisoners and “Large Fortress” that became a ghetto for Jews.

Quality photo of Pillnitz Castle - Germany

Pillnitz Castle
Germany

75 min

A splendid palace that was once used as a summer residence by German royalty, today functions as museums. Pillnitz Castle is in fact divided in... 3 palaces - the Riverside Palace (Wasserpalais) and the Upper Palace (Bergpalais) are home to the Arts and Crafts Museum with furniture, ceramics and household objects from the 13th to the 20th century, and the New Palace (Neues Palais) that houses the Palace Museum, where visitors can learn about the history of the castle and its residents. This glorious Baroque and Neoclassical palace is placed amidst beautiful gardens along the Elbe River where guests can explore plants and trees from all over the world.

Quality photo of Konigstein Fortress - Germany

Konigstein Fortress
Germany

75 min

It’s grandiose; it’s immense; it’s unconquerable. One of Saxony’s most popular tourist attractions, Konigstein Fortress occupies the entire hilltop which is as big as 13... football fields. The original castle, first mentioned in 1233, was not this huge but was expanded in late 1500s and became a citadel of more than fifty buildings surrounded by solid walls. During centuries it was used for various purposes - a castle, a monastery, a military hospital, a country retreat and a state prison. Since 1955 the fortress complex has been opened to the public as a military and historical open air museum with many superb features like the giant wine barrel of Augustus the Strong and the second deepest water well in Europe.