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The Barbarossa Cycleway (German: Barbarossa-Radweg) is an 88 kilometre (55 mile) long cycle path in Germany, that links the North Palatine Uplands to the old imperial city of Worms on the River Rhine. It passes through the largely level, but varied landscape of the Palatinate region, before it reaches the vineyards of the Rhine Plain. It thus links the Glan-Blies Cycleway via the Barbarossa city of Kaiserslautern with the Rhine Cycleway. The whole route is uniformly signed with the cycleway logo which portrays a stylised Emperor Barbarossa. The figure of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa at the north portal of Worms Cathedral was used as the prototype.Several sections have been left natural, so the cycleway is not suitable for racing bicycles or inline skaters.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Barbarossa Cycleway (en)
  • Barbarossa-Radweg (de)
rdfs:comment
  • Der Barbarossa-Radweg ist ein 88 Kilometer langer Radweg, der das Nordpfälzer Bergland mit der alten Kaiserstadt Worms am Rhein verbindet. Dabei durchquert er, weitgehend steigungsarm, die abwechslungsreiche Landschaft der Pfalz (Region), bevor er die durch den Weinbau geprägte Rheinebene erreicht. Damit verbindet er den Glan-Blies-Radweg über die Barbarossa-Stadt Kaiserslautern mit dem Rhein-Radweg. Der gesamte Weg ist einheitlich mit dem Radweg-Logo beschildert. Das Radweg-Logo zeigt stilisiert Kaiser Barbarossa. Dabei diente die Figur am Nordportal des Wormser Doms als Vorlage.Einige Abschnitte sind naturbelassen, daher ist der Radweg für Rennräder oder Inline-Skater nicht geeignet. (de)
  • The Barbarossa Cycleway (German: Barbarossa-Radweg) is an 88 kilometre (55 mile) long cycle path in Germany, that links the North Palatine Uplands to the old imperial city of Worms on the River Rhine. It passes through the largely level, but varied landscape of the Palatinate region, before it reaches the vineyards of the Rhine Plain. It thus links the Glan-Blies Cycleway via the Barbarossa city of Kaiserslautern with the Rhine Cycleway. The whole route is uniformly signed with the cycleway logo which portrays a stylised Emperor Barbarossa. The figure of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa at the north portal of Worms Cathedral was used as the prototype.Several sections have been left natural, so the cycleway is not suitable for racing bicycles or inline skaters. (en)
foaf:homepage
name
  • (en)
  • Barbarossa Cycleway (en)
  • Barbarossa-Radweg (en)
dcterms:subject
Wikipage page ID
Wikipage revision ID
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
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trailheads
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caption
  • Logo (en)
length
location
  • North Palatine Uplands, Palatinate Forest and Weinstraße/ Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany (en)
region
  • DE-RP (en)
surface
  • Mainly tarmac, also coarse gravel. (en)
type
  • landmark (en)
Use
  • Predominantly forest and agricultural tracks (en)
website
EW
NS
has abstract
  • Der Barbarossa-Radweg ist ein 88 Kilometer langer Radweg, der das Nordpfälzer Bergland mit der alten Kaiserstadt Worms am Rhein verbindet. Dabei durchquert er, weitgehend steigungsarm, die abwechslungsreiche Landschaft der Pfalz (Region), bevor er die durch den Weinbau geprägte Rheinebene erreicht. Damit verbindet er den Glan-Blies-Radweg über die Barbarossa-Stadt Kaiserslautern mit dem Rhein-Radweg. Der gesamte Weg ist einheitlich mit dem Radweg-Logo beschildert. Das Radweg-Logo zeigt stilisiert Kaiser Barbarossa. Dabei diente die Figur am Nordportal des Wormser Doms als Vorlage.Einige Abschnitte sind naturbelassen, daher ist der Radweg für Rennräder oder Inline-Skater nicht geeignet. (de)
  • The Barbarossa Cycleway (German: Barbarossa-Radweg) is an 88 kilometre (55 mile) long cycle path in Germany, that links the North Palatine Uplands to the old imperial city of Worms on the River Rhine. It passes through the largely level, but varied landscape of the Palatinate region, before it reaches the vineyards of the Rhine Plain. It thus links the Glan-Blies Cycleway via the Barbarossa city of Kaiserslautern with the Rhine Cycleway. The whole route is uniformly signed with the cycleway logo which portrays a stylised Emperor Barbarossa. The figure of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa at the north portal of Worms Cathedral was used as the prototype.Several sections have been left natural, so the cycleway is not suitable for racing bicycles or inline skaters. (en)
certification
difficulty
  • Steep inclines at 5 km in the Palatine Forest (en)
dim
elev gain and loss
  • +800 Hm uphill / (en)
  • −920 Hm downhill (en)
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