Rostock was a Hanseatic League founding member, a Baltic shipping power, and home to the oldest university on the Baltic coast (1419). Three separate medieval towns — Altstadt, Mittelstadt, Neustadt — merged in 1265 to form one walled city. Allied bombing in April 1942 levelled much of it; East German planners rebuilt the historic core in the 1950s using surviving facade fragments. Walk it with 65 narrations across all three quarters.
Every stop traces back to primary archaeological and heritage records. Not AI-generated guesses. Here's how each narration gets built.
Each stop pulls from OpenStreetMap · 22 features in this old town (the open mapping database used by Apple Maps and Tesla), Wikidata · 63 cross-referenced entries (the peer-reviewed structured-data project), the heritage authority below, and primary historical texts where they exist.
Cross-referenced against Modern excavation publications · academic peer-review.
Every sentence is checked against the verified sources above. Anything that can't be supported gets cut.
Spot anything inaccurate? Email [email protected] — fixed in the next pass.
The original 1218 town around Petrikirche, the fisherman's church whose 117-metre spire was the first landmark Baltic sailors saw approaching Rostock. The oldest of the three merged towns.
The Marienkirche (Hanseatic Hochgotik), the Town Hall with its seven brick spires, the Neuer Markt, the university buildings. Where Rostock's wealth and power consolidated.
The newest of the three towns (1252), the surviving city gates, the Stadthafen, and the warehouses where Hanseatic cargoes were stored. Where the Warnow river meets the rebuilt 1950s-era port quarter.
One of the great Hanseatic churches of the Baltic. The astronomical clock (1472, modified 1641) is the only medieval clock in Europe still functioning with its original works — and the only one whose calendar disk runs through 2017 onward, meaning new wheels were cut at the millennium.
The oldest university in Northern Europe and the entire Baltic region, founded by Mecklenburg dukes and Hanseatic merchants. The main building's neo-Renaissance facade (1870) faces Universitätsplatz. Brunnen der Lebensfreude (Fountain of Joy) at the centre.
The medieval Town Hall facade is hidden behind a Baroque pink-plastered front added in 1727 — but the seven brick spires of the original Hanseatic merchant hall still rise above. The contrast is deliberate: the Hanseatic past visible only from a distance.
The fishermen's church in the Altstadt. The 117-metre spire was the tallest in the Hanseatic Baltic for centuries — the first sight of Rostock for ships entering from the sea. Destroyed in 1942, rebuilt to original height in 1994.
The largest surviving city gate, a 54-metre brick tower with seven floors. Now a museum of Rostock's medieval history. The Kröpeliner Strasse leading from it was the main shopping artery for 700 years — and was rebuilt as a pedestrian zone after the war.
The Hanseatic harbour where Rostock's wealth was made. The reconstructed warehouses date from after 1942 — built in original Hanseatic style by GDR planners using surviving facade fragments. The river still leads 12 km out to the Baltic.
Tap "Start Walking Tour" and allow location access. The map shows all 65 narration points.
Follow the suggested route or explore freely. GPS tracks your position. Reach a site and the narration plays automatically.
Each narration connects what you can see to the Hanseatic trading network that built Rostock. The brick gothic style is identical across the Baltic — Lübeck, Stralsund, Gdańsk — because the same merchants commissioned all of them.
Narrations play when you reach each site. No buttons, no track numbers. Walk naturally — the stories find you.
Premium narration that sounds like a documentary. Warm and knowledgeable, not a textbook reading.
Every narration is drafted, cross-checked against primary sources, then passed through a second editorial pass that strips unsupported claims. Dates, names, and citations verified.
See all narration points on the map. Tap any point to hear it early or replay it later.
Cruise-day appropriate. Three and a half hours, mostly flat through the merged three medieval quarters. Concise narrations that cover Hanseatic trade history, the 1942 bombing, and the GDR-era reconstruction with surprising fidelity.
Spend an hour or a full day. Skip sites, revisit favourites, take breaks. The tour adapts to you.
Three ways, all built in:
The map-tap option means you can stand anywhere — even at home before you travel — and play any narration. GPS just makes it hands-free while you’re actually walking the site.
No. Use the “Download for offline” button before you go, and the entire tour — audio, maps, narration text — works without any data connection. Tap-to-play and the map both work fully offline. GPS itself doesn’t need data; only the download does.
Two backstops. First, the map shows every site — just tap the marker for the place in front of you. Second, you can manually queue any narration even when GPS is off. The platform never assumes GPS works; it’s the convenience layer, not the gate.
The audio runs ~3.5 hours audio total, but you walk at your own pace. 65 narration points across the site. Most visitors take 2–4 hours; some spread it over multiple visits. Your access lasts 30 days from purchase, so revisit as often as you like.
One purchase covers one device session. Most couples share earbuds and use a single phone — the audio is paced for that. If you want everyone listening on their own device, each person needs their own purchase. We do not gate sharing aggressively; we trust visitors to do the right thing.
Full refund if you never trigger a single narration on-site. Partial refund based on how far you got. See the refund policy for specifics.
GPS-triggered audio tours for heritage sites worldwide.