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Contribuisci feedbackI got the absolutely best pralins here! unfortunately not really cheap but every cent worth!
Service absolutely top. Very friendly service. Good hygiene concept is resolutely implemented. All right. Pralines dangerous as super delicious. Serve a star more.
Very central at the rathaus. there's a lot to see what we liked. who wants to have rest should go somewhere else to drink cafe. personal was nice and cafe good
The story of the coffee giant Secret legends tell that in Abessinien the habit of drinking coffee has been common since imaginable times. From there, coffee came to Arabia via Ethiopia, from where the drink was spread. Coffee houses became the centre of social life. At the beginning of the 16th They drank coffee in Cairo for a century, and from there he came to Syria. In 1511, the governor Khair staged the first persecution of coffee and banned the sale of the drink. But his successor already known himself to the new means of enjoyment and under the government of Solimans II. came to Constantinople in 1534. From the Arabic literature of that time, which contains as many spots as praise densities on coffee, it can be seen with which struggles its spread has been gained. In 1624 the Venetians brought larger quantities of coffee to Europe and in 1645 the drink in southern Italy was generally common. The coffee at the court of Ludwig XIV was known by a messenger of Mohammed IV. In 1671 there was the first coffee house in Marseilles and one year later in Paris. In 1652 coffee came to England, in 1670 to Germany. The first coffee houses in the German-speaking area were opened: in Vienna 1683, in Regensburg 1686, in Hamburg 1687, in Stuttgart 1712 and in Berlin only 1721. Introduced by the General Commissioner, Cardinal Guidobald von Thun, 1662, to prepare for the Reichstag Germany's first café house was opened in 1686 in the heart of the old free Reichsstadt Regensburg. French merchants brought the coffee to Regensburg. Here, where, for the everlasting Reichstag of the Holy Roman Empire of German Nations, Kurfürsten, Princes and Messengers of the Evening Land were gathered, one has always cultivated solicitude. Opposite the Old Town Hall, in a historical site, the Giebelen family, with the Princeess Konditorei Café, rebuilt in 1953 and 1985, continues the tradition of the old Regensburger Café Stuben.
The café was recommended to us and since it is one of the oldest ones, you must have been there a visit worth cakes and chocolates are not quite cheap but very tasty. Nice ambience.
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