Residenz Munich
The Residenz is Germany's largest urban palace, a sprawling 90,000 square meter complex where Bavaria's Wittelsbach rulers lived for 400 years.
About Residenz Munich
The Residenz is Germany's largest urban palace, a sprawling 90,000 square meter complex where Bavaria's Wittelsbach rulers lived for 400 years. You're paying for three separate attractions: the Residenz Museum with 130 opulent state rooms, the Schatzkammer Treasury holding Bavarian crown jewels, and the tiny Cuvilliés Theatre with its jaw-dropping rococo interior. The Antiquarium hall alone justifies the visit, a 66-meter Renaissance gallery that'll make your neck hurt from looking up at the intricate vaulting.
Walking through feels like infiltrating a royal soap opera set across ten courtyards and countless gilded rooms. The Treasury sparkles with the famous St. George statuette encrusted with 2,300 gemstones, while the Museum overwhelms with room after room of baroque excess. The Cuvilliés Theatre packs maximum wow factor into minimum space, its gold and red rococo curves photographed more than any interior in Munich. Each section has its own entrance and vibe, from ceremonial grandeur to intimate royal apartments.
Most guides won't tell you the combined ticket (EUR 17) isn't always worth it if you're palace-fatigued. Skip the theatre if you're rushed, prioritize the Antiquarium hall and Treasury instead. The Museum needs two full hours, the Treasury 90 minutes maximum. Avoid Sundays when German families pack the narrow rooms. The free Hofgarten courtyard outside makes a perfect breather between paid sections.
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