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Regions in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern

The Welt am Sonntag newspaper once wrote: "America has Florida and Austria the Alps. Germany has Mecklenburg-Vorpommern". With its unique natural riches, its cultural diversity and its history, the state between the Baltic Sea and the lake district is perfectly suited for both living and holidaying.
A view of Schwerin Castle. (Image: TMV / Bernt Hoffmann)
The region of West Mecklenburg, which presents itself with corresponding diversity, stretches from the edge of the Baltic up to the Elbe valley meadows. The reason that the names of so many places end with "-ow" is because of the former settlers in this land, the Slavs. The best-known and largest archaeological excavation site in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, the partly re-erected Slavic village in Gross Raden near Sternberg, shows how they lived. The regional capital of Schwerin also lies in West Mecklenburg. Its unique landmark is the magical Schwerin Palace. Once the seat of the dukes of Mecklenburg, today it houses Mecklenburg-Vorpommern’s parliament and the impressive palace museum.
The Mecklenburg Lake District is Europe‘s largest cohesive lake district. The region invites you to cruise with a boat from one lake to the next and to be at one with Nature. With the Müritz National Park crane ticket it is possible to observe the “Birds of Happiness“ going to bed. Alongside this, the Mecklenburg Lake District Ice Age Route offers not only a unique experience of nature along a total distance of 666 kilometres and recuperation by bike or on foot. At the same time, you take a trip into the past long before our time.

How about a boat trip on the Mecklenburg Lake District? (Image: TMV/Markus Kirchgässner)

Mecklenburg Switzerland – that sounds like mountains, forests and breathtaking panoramic views. Except the highest mountain is just 123 metres high. For all that, this area offers architecture which is unequalled. Numerous castles and manor houses tell of the prosperity of former times. The most important architectural representative of German neo-classicism, Peter Joseph Lenné (1789-1866), created one of the most beautiful park ensembles of his life around Basedow Castle.
On the Baltic and Bodden coasts it not only smells of the big wide world after the G8 summit was held here in Heiligendamm in 2007. In cities such as Wismar, Rostock or Greifswald you can stumble over traces which the time-honoured Hanseatic League left behind at every step. The historic old centres of Wismar and Stralsund, with their splendid buildings, belong to the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage.
Vorpommern incomparably unites maritime flair and authenticity. Before reaching the backwater estuary mouth near Anklam, the river Peene, which is up to 80 metres wide in places, crosses Europe's largest continuous lowland moor area. The gradient of this "Amazon of the North" is so slight that it flows uphill during Baltic flooding or a sustained east wind.
The famous chalk cliffs on Rügen. (Image: Thomas Grundner)
25 Islands and peninsulas are spread out along the MV’s Baltic coast. The largest of them, Rügen, is famous for its chalk cliffs which fascinated the Romantic painter Caspar David Friedrich.
Sometimes it’s Rügen, sometimes it's Usedom – at any rate, the sun shines more frequently in the extreme north-east of MV than in any other region in Germany. The sea has shaped the Fischland-Darss-Zingst peninsula and thus created landscapes of unique beauty. On the island of Poel, before the gates of Wismar, the pace of life is rather contemplative. Broad meadows and fields are typical for this landscape and long beaches of fine sand tempt you to bathe.