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Germany
Rhineland-Palatinate
Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis
Simmern/Hunsrück

Schinderhannes Tower – St. Stephen's Church, Simmern loop from Simmern

Routes
Hiking trails & Routes
Germany
Rhineland-Palatinate
Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis
Simmern/Hunsrück

Schinderhannes Tower – St. Stephen's Church, Simmern loop from Simmern

Easy

5.0

(1)

5

hikers

Schinderhannes Tower – St. Stephen's Church, Simmern loop from Simmern

01:36

5.94km

80m

Hiking

Easy hike. Great for any fitness level. Easily-accessible paths. Suitable for all skill levels. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: May 21, 2026

Tips

Your route passes through a protected area

Please check local regulations for:

Naturpark Soonwald-Nahe

Waypoints

A

Start point

Bus stop

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1

1.59 km

Schinderhannes Bronze Sculpture Group

Highlight • Monument

With this work, a three-dimensional representation of the famous Hunsrück robber has now been produced for the first time. In the course of the research work for the bronze group, a portrait bust was made based on contemporary drawings by Karl Matthias Ernst, which can now be seen in bronze in the Hunsrück Museum. I have shown Schinderhannes at the moment of the pig theft, because in 1797 such an offense could be proven in Simmern and of course the assistant journeyman and the objects of desire could not be missing.
Source: juttareiss.de/gal/bronze_schinderhannes.php?slpos=0

Translated by Google •

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2

1.64 km

Schinderhannes Tower

Highlight • Historical Site

The end of the Schinderhannes cycle path forms the eponymous monument in Simmern.

Translated by Google •

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3

1.98 km

St. Stephen's Church, Simmern

Highlight • Religious Site

The Stephanskirche is an important late Gothic building. It was also the largest building erected in the course of the expansion of the city into a princely residence in the late 15th century.

The foundation stone was laid in 1486 during the reign of Duke Johann I (1480-1509). This is an extension of an older facility, the remains of which can still be found under the tower. The St. Anna chapel with the grave monuments of the Simmern dukes is located on the southern aisle.

Other funerary monuments are located in the chancel of the church. They are among the most famous examples of Renaissance culture between Mainz and Trier. The sculptors are attributed to Jacob Kerre (around 1520) from Koblenz, Johann von Trarbach (1530-1586) and a still unknown master from Simmern. Under the bell tower is another crypt with the coffins of the last Simmern princely couple (Duke Ludwig Heinrich 1673 and Maria von Oranien 1688).

The organ comes from the workshop of the organ builder family Stumm from Sulzbach.

Translated by Google •

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4

2.11 km

Greta (August 31, 1906 in Benzweiler; † January 24, 1994 at Schmiede) was the Simmern original.
On October 7, 1951 at around 6:00 p.m., the brakes of a truck loaded with cement failed and it sped unbraked into the Hotel Hirsch. Margarete Scherschlicht was buried under the cement load. She received a small accident pension and from that day on became more and more whimsical.
Therefore she was also called cement Gretchen or Gretchen.
On August 26, 1994, the Birk family had the bronze statue of the cement Gretchen erected in front of their optics shop in Simmern.
Source: de.pluspedia.org

Translated by Google •

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5

2.49 km

Simmern Castle

Highlight • Castle

The castle (1311) was then rebuilt into a castle.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

6

2.75 km

During his visit to Simmern in 1744, Elector Karl Theodor von der Pfalz approved the construction of the Catholic parish church. It was built in Klostergasse between 1749 and 1752 according to the plans of the Electoral Palatinate master builder and foreman Johann Jakob Rischer. The rectangular nave hall is adjoined by a semicircular choir, at the apex of which the bell tower with a hood rises. A two-storey vestibule with portal and flight of stairs connects the church with the former Carmelite monastery built in 1703/04.

The ceiling frescoes by the Mannheim court painter Francesco Bernhardini are of art historical interest: the Adoration of the Child. The original high altar is attributed to the Mannheim sculptor Paul Egell.

Translated by Google •

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B

5.94 km

End point

Bus stop

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

2.86 km

1.34 km

916 m

691 m

122 m

Surfaces

3.62 km

2.07 km

239 m

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Elevation

Elevation

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Highest point (400 m)

Lowest point (330 m)

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Weather

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Saturday 11 July

30°C

16°C

0 %

Additional weather tips

Max wind speed: 14.0 km/h

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