The castle in Prague is amazing, but the image he showed was of St Vitus Cathedral. The cathedral is at the castle, but it’s only one of many things to see there.
Prague is beautiful, but also full of tourists. The shops in the tourist areas attract a lot of visitors. I like to go to the outer districts of Prague and walk back towards the city center. - many people don't even know that there is a second castle - Vyšehrad.
@@bf2840 when we were at the cathedral and castle I saw them as being adjacent…as was the Golden Lane and St. George’s Basilica. I’d assumed the Basilica was the castle’s worship place and the cathedral was separate, but you’re probably right and the cathedral was part of the castle complex. There’s a lot of unconnected areas at the castle.
@@bf2840Czech person here, it is part of castle's complex. Castle grounds include lot of buildings, but Cathedral is kinda in front of it and I would definitely recommend to approach it as a separate monument. Czech kings and rulers from the past are burried there and it is far more impressive from architectural point of view.
Do a Euro Trip via trains. You see much more than flying and even driving, because the driver sees cars and is stressed out the entire time...and it should be nice for both of you. Also...don't pack too much into one trip. Rather do few cities/areas and do them longer...sometimes you need 2-4 days in a place and one just doesn't cut it. Big cities like London...a day is nothing. Berlin, Paris, well, any major city. Also...go for seeing small villages nobody would think of visiting, see the rural life... It is completely different compared to the city life, as you sure can imagine.
@@Kivas_Fajo Yes ... BUT you should also USE MAPS to navigate instead of Google / sat-nav ... because while reading the map and planning your route you might see something to the side of the route that strikes your fancy! The problem is that americans only get 2 weeks of vacation each year ...
The Amalfi coast is beautiful but very touristy and crowded in summer. Positano is not a city, so I am not sure why it’s on his list of top cities. Italy has dozens of amazing cities and towns.
Picking any "tiny" town will be much better than a larger one that is "on a list", because there wont be as much tourism around and thus it will be more authentic.
There are so many wonderful Cities in Europe. I don't always agree with these "lists" of places to go but this one is a very good start! xx (Portugal is staggeringly beautiful! As are all of the places on this list tbh...)
3:40 - That's the 25th of April Bridge, named after the date of the pacific revolution that overthrew the dictatorship in 1974 (it'll be the 50th anniversary this year) and the reason why it looks familiar to you it's because it was build by the same company that bulit the Golden Gate Bridge and the Bay Bridge. It shares the colour with one and the design with the other. 🙂
There are many beautiful cities in Europe. I will recomment a visit to York, England, Tallin, Estonia and Lübeck, Germany. Also the capitals of Denmark and Sweden are wort a visit, and not least Brussela, the European capital that I have visited the most.
10:14 The city of Prague has a big advantage over most European cities, especially the cities in Germany. Prague was never bombed during WWII, like the large cities in the German-speaking world. Prague therefore did not have to be rebuilt like almost all of Germany.
there are some cities left which were never bombed (and apart from that, some cities in Europe (and the US) were not destroyed by world wars but by later periods of re-newing things. apart from that you have to put your post into a context. you have to tell that most of Central Europe was influenced by the Holy Roman Empire and the surrounding culture mixtures. In the central-eastern part often Germans and Slavic influences. Prague was in one way or another associated with this - was even for a short time kind of the capital of the HRR etc.. many cities in the Eastern part of Central Europe have a lot of German influences ... only knowing that makes your comparison sound.
@@publicminx I live in Berlin ... and it gets destroyed every day by a) tearing down remaining buildings from the 17th century ... and b) filling open spaces with BLAND CUBES of 10*10*10m "houses". The "INVESTOR tradition" of a) buying old houses, b) letting them rot/fall into disrepair, c) tear them down to build "modern" garbage at the spot, d) profit seems to be alive and well ...
Without a doubt, for me Barcelona is the best city for its climate, architecture, food, nightlife, beaches and its people. The quality of life in this city is unmatched. I also love the multiculturalism of its inhabitants. The perfect city to be happy.
It is tempting to rush around and see as many places , as possible, but I would recommend choosing maybe two or three bases, and exploring the surrounding areas. For example, you could base yourself in Nice, and from there explore the Cote dAzure, Provence, and the Alps. And then go to the Alfalfi Coast in Italy. If you try to do too much , you'll probably just get a headache.
40 years ago we had a school trip to Crete, which has a lot of history, great (and simple) food ... and opportunities for swimming. The key point to making that possible was a greek teacher who could guide us to the good spots ... which is a valid point for any location. You NEED A LOCAL to show you the non-touristy stuff and give you the "secrets". Rushing around is a silly concept, because you only see things in passing and could just watch a video / read a book about it.
If you want to find out more about Positano, there is a UA-camr called Nikki Positano and she shares her life living in Positano. The scenery is stunning! She has recently moved to Tuscany but still maintains the house in `Positano,, so better to look at her videos from a year ago or so. Enjoy! Travelling and seeing the world is so exciting!
I have spent a few days in different foreign cities over the years - Brussels, Paris, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Dubrovnik. Athens, Vienna, Venice, Florence, Milan, Istanbul, Innsbruck, Salzburg. . My favourite holiday destination is Italy. I have had several holidays there and I especially loved the Italian Lakes (stunning scenery with backdrop of the mountains, trips on the lakes, and nearby towns to visit). Stayed in Sorrento twice. Naples is nearby, along with the Amalfi Coast and the isle of Capri. Whilst there seeing Pompell, Herculanium & Vesuvius was amazing. The Olympics are taking place in Paris this summer, with a lot.of events taking place at major sites, including Versailles, so you should try and see some footage from there.
I've crossed off all the cities off the list except Lisbon and Athens. The entire Amalfi coast is beautiful, I wouldn't call Positano a city. I would recommend Rome or even Paris over London and I'm from the UK.
Hi guys, I am English but have lived in the soulth of spain for most of my life now, I recoment a visit to Malaga and Granada but I also recoment Lisbon en portugal, I love the place been twice now and dont think i would ever ger tired of it... Love your channel. Michael
Prague is cheaper than England (but don't buy from stalls in the main square as they are a little dearer). It is also very walkable (with a good tram service when you get tired). There are some nice hotels on Wenceslas Square and the South end is 3min walk from the town square. (The North end is about10/15min walk). Charles Bridge is 5min walk from the Town Square and the castle's lower entrance is 6mins walk from the other side of Charle's Bridge. However it is best to get a tram to the top entrance of the castle and walk down as it is on a steep hill.
Prague is probably safer compared to London ... at least at in the current climate of violent carpet kneelers trying to convert the country by force (which wont be changing back soon).
I have been to every place he mentioned, either on holiday or with my work as an International sales person. Some places equally wonderful are, Bavaria ,Germany, Munich Nuremberg to name but two. Austria, Salzburg and Vienna. France but not Paris as it is dirty and very expensive, but Lyon , Marseilles which enables you to easily get to Monaco. Ireland, South and North, filled with so much history and beautiful places to visiit as well as the incredible people in both parts. Then more in the UK. Wales capital Cardiff, Bristol in SW England. I could go on nd on, there are so many more wonderful places throughout the UK and Europe, bearing in mind that many of our US cousins are from many of those places.
It seems strange to me that one of the many Italian cities such as: Venice, Rome, Florence etc. was not mentioned. But maybe it's better that this is the case because they are already too full of tourists. :-D
Second comment. Thinking of travel, I have done the journey from East to West across US and I did the trip from Las Vegas to San Francisco on one Greyhound. I just explained to my girlfriend how the Superbowl was like a home game for SF and so KC were getting booed. I also had to explain the Taylor Swift obsession on TV this year. Most of these places in this video are close enough to be in one US state, even though countries and cultures apart in Europe. Such a difference. I hope you enjoy cheering your team on again this year. It is bed time here now. My manager from US has booked the day off Monday.
Fun fact. USA and Dubrovnik has strong connection during history. Republic of Ragusa was citystate on what is now city of Dubrovnik. It was the first country in the world to recognize the newly founded USA.
Been to Lucerne, as I have a brother-in-law from Liechtenstein. Bern is also a lovely Swiss city and of course the capital. Lisbon, I visited as a kid in the 70s, so don't remember it. Did a boat trip along the Amalfi coast about 5 years ago. Truly beautiful. I may have been to London a few times in my life!! Went to Edinburgh as a kid (got Scottish DNA) and if I remember my Mum bought a kilt for me! I was going to Dubrovnik and then the war broke out, so cancelled. Never been to Prague, Barcelona or Monaco either. Went to Athens in the 70s, but did not rate it then, but the rest of Greece was very nice. Travel opens your mind and makes you an all round better person. Enjoy your next trip.
We stopped off for a couple of days in Luzern last August. Such a beautiful city and the lake is great for swimming in. Grab a towel, drinks and snacks and head to the Lido near the transport museum. No need to go to the paid part, go to the grassy bit next to it and relax. It has to be said though, Switzerland is eye wateringly expensive and cities like Luzern are even more so. A basic meal for 4 will knock you back about €200. I've been to Switzerland a few times (Lauterbrunnen valley), so I kind of knew what to expect, but I still found myself saying "Argh!" quite a lot when given the bill.
How exciting! Have fun planning. I’m visiting two bucket list places myself later this year, Athens and Santorini. My favourite places I go back to time and time again are anywhere in Italy really. Norway is spectacular too. I have been very lucky to have travelled through many beautiful parts of Spain, France, Germany and Italy. 😊
I must add that several European cities are starting to kick back against mass tourism. Local people are getting extremely angry at excessive tourism to their disadvantage. - Berlin, Dubrovnik, Barcelona, Vienna and Venice particularly have started to have large demonstrations. Tourists are starting to find they are no longer welcome as they used to be. Especially Americans.
Gonna give you the best travel tip ever. Just visit 1 country at a time and take your time to experience it. Do think you need to see as much as possible in the short amount of time you have. If you take your time for every country you'll see a lot more. 😊
*Born, raised and living in Bavaria's capital Munich, it's clear what is on the first rank. Beside my homebase-city I highly recommend in Bavaria : Würzburg and Rothenburg ob der Tauber....in AUSTRIA : Vienna, Salzburg, Kufstein, Innsbruck.....in ITALY : Merano, Pisa, Rome [ I also highly recommend to visit the Villa D' Este in Tivoli near Rome ]....in FRANCE I recommend the region Alsace incl. Strasbourg,...........* 🚆😎 🚌 🧭🏛🏨 🎸🎵😈
If you plan on visiting Europe. Do not do too much. Plan "free" time. And do not visit everything. You can't. Travel time will cut in your time you actually see things. It depends on how long you come, but say 2 weeks. The first few days you have jet lag, so plan half days. The other half can be easily done just walking around. Then take a train to some other place. 3 - 4 nights for large cities. 1-2 for smaller cities. And again: Try not to plan everything. Also I would look at what time the locals live. e.g eating in Spain is 21:00 or later.
I am norwegian and I must admit that Norway is NOT the country of interesting cities. We have nothing to compete with the architecture and city life feeling that most other European countries have. The most beautiful city in Scandinavia must be Stockholm in Sweden, and probably København in Denmark Second. Oslo, Bergen and Trondheim has their attraction, where Trondheim has a medieval cathedral, but even that won't hold a candle to what is in the mainland of Europe. Cities in Norway should in my opinion be experienced as a segment of a larger nature exploration trip, if you don't have any other spesific reasons to go to Norway. Just a general viewpoint from a Norwegian, because city life have never been a big thing in Norway, and we have always had policies to keep the population spread out through the whole country. So come for the nature and history, and take the cities as convenient resting places along the way. You could "fall in love" with a Norwegian town or city, of course, but these are not our main attractions, especially not if you are travelling far and expensive to experience cities spesificially.
Lucerne is on my bucket list (as soon as I rob a bank!); Lisbon...I'm so sorry Portuguese people but this is my least favourite. Maybe it was because I went there in winter? I have Portuguese friends and they all seem to have differing opinions on the place; Positano is also on my bucket list; London - I've visited London many times and really like. My best memory of London was sailing into it at night aboard the Paddle Steamer Waverley - we went under Tower Bridge at night!; Edinburgh is just wonderful. I visit it at least 3 or 4 times a year and always find something new. the crags are Salisbury Crags; Dubrovnik is another bucket list place. Never heard a bad word about it; I LOVE Prague. I would move there in a heartbeat. Beautiful city, fantastic people, I don't have a single bad word to say about it. It's also very affordable to visit! He wasn't showing the castle when he was mentioning it btw; I've been to Barcelona quite a few times and I do love it, but the last time I was there it just didn't feel the same. They definitely seem to be sick of tourists! I would still go back though, there's so much I've still to see there; Athens is on my bucket list too, but I've heard it's crazy busy; I've no plans to visit Monaco - I don't have the wardrobe, or the money!!; I tend to visit lots of places for a short spell (a day or two), then go back to the places that I liked the most! My favourite places not on this list are Hamburg, Bremen, Copenhagen, Paris, Girona and Salzburg. But Prague is my overall favourite.
The way of travel that you're talking about preferring is very typical for Amerians, it is all about bragging when you get home, and not about experiencing the places you visit. It is consumption of travel, not experience, to use a sociological term. I'd recommend not being in such a hurry, take a breath, allow yourself to experience what the place you're visiting is actually like. Smell the smells, taste the food, walk the smaller back roads, yes you an also see the sights, but let everything sink in. You will get a richer experience. Europe is so many different cultures, flavours and people, it is not experienced on conveyor belt tourism.
So basically most cities mentioned are just tourist attractions... imo that's boring... I'm not saying there's nothing to see in those places, but I find it a lot more exciting, when I see people explore less popular destinations... P.S. Also - the fact that there's nothing from Northern or Eastern Europe on this list is criminal imo... it's not like Southern/Western/Central Europe are the only places worth going to...just saying...
Also LOVE Switzerland , been 4 times . Saying that tho , i pray Scotland beat the Swiss when they play each other at the football European Championships this summer ⚽ 🙏 ⚽
I would have suggested Dubrovnik if it hadn’t come up in the video. Croatia is beautiful and cheaper than some other European countries. Greece is also beautiful but I would suggest the less touristy places.
13:30 That's the WRONG ATTITUDE there ... because RUSHING through "as many places as you can cram in your schedule" DOESNT LET YOU EXPERIENCE THEM PROPERLY, which takes time. "Just SEEING" can be done by WATCHING A VIDEO.
I advise against Athens .. greece is beautiful especially create but my friends recent visit to athens saw more drugs needles on the floor than beauty spots . 😢
My daughter wishes to visit Japan. Me, I'd love to visit Italy & USA. My 80y/o neighbour has just travelled to Rome. Love Angelas Chiefs sweater. GO CHIEFS! ❤💛🏈💛❤️
*Bradford* the... *6th biggest City in the UK by population* - *546,400* to be exact. *7th Biggest City in the UK by area* - *141.47 square miles* (366.41 square kilometres) to be exact. World's First *UNESCO City of Film.* UK's Fourth *City of Culture.* Seven time *Curry Capital of Britain* Winners. Birthplace and home of the *Bronte Sisters.* Former *Wool Capital of the World.* Unofficial *Tea Capital* - Birthplace of *Tetley Tea* founders, residence of *Betty's Tea* founder, location of 2nd ever *Betty's Tea Room,* and location of 2nd ever *Taylor's Tea Room.*
You said that:"Again, the U.S. is two weeks vacation." with a face that clearly states: I don't like it! Maybe you guys should move to greener pastures over the pond? I already told you that numerous times....come! 🙂
Quite disappointing that he's mostly mentioning capitol cities, that are already well known and the most touristy places in Europe. Not really adding something new to discover, bit cheap and easy, this video.
Are you taking your children with you this time ? If not I would seariously look at getting a Euro rail card , my daughter did one years ago . Basically you buy a ticket to travel the whole of Europe at your leisure getting on and off as you please , 2 decisions to make 1 how long have you got and 2 what do you want to see Personally I would do it buy car , but I am retired so time not an issue and cars give you more freedom to do and see what you want
I positivly hate the channel you're commenting on. The guy's commentaries are "my favorite this, the highest, deepest, oldest, ... that, ...", in my opinion, boring and not in the least interesting nor doing justice to the places he "visits"! I fully understand - and feel for - the Americans having so little vacation tiime, but I would not recommend, as you say, to pack as much as possible in one trip: Firstly, on the first 2-3 days, you'll be jetlagged; 2) no-one in a lifetime could possibly visit all the diversity Europe has to offer. If you don't want to be of these dumb tourists that just glance over things in a rush and in a crowd (and get in the way of the locals), and would be incapable to say, on their flight back home, what they've actually seen and experienced, my advice would be for you to pick one theme for each trip: if you're an Art lover, visit Greece and Itay, if you're a foodie, criss-cross France, if you're in search of your roots, visit the UK from South to North (or inversely), if you're a hiker, go to the Alps that straddle France, Switzerlland, Italy, Austria and Germany, if you're a beer lover, go on a pub crawl throughout Germany, Belgium or the Czech Republic, etc. And in each of these countries, you'll find amazing monuments, landmarks, museums, ... along the way. An excellent travel channel on YT is "Rick Steves Europe" that I'd recommnd you check on when preparing your next vacation on "the Old Continent". Happpy travels!
I know that the Americas are surrounded by _oceans_ but the constant references by Angela (mostly) to "every other large body of water" around the world as _oceans_ when they are (often) instead _SEAS_, is (for reasons I just *cannot explain*) _really_ annoying!! Sorry Angela.😢 (Also, Ryan Shirley* (*?!) ...his frequently mispronounced words are far _more_ annoying. (It's 'Westminster' - _not_ "Westmin_ister_"!) _and_ it's '_world_' _not_ "wreld" !?! (At the very least!!) However... Another interesting travel videographer - if you might describe him that way? - is '*Wolters World*' ... He's an American family nan who (seems to) travels a lot and gives useful 'hints and tips' on how to get the _best_ experiences when travelling in and around the UK, Ireland, and Europe, so... How to stay safe, behave, 'dress nicely' - whilst comfortably - not _too_ 'touristy (inviting pickpockets / scammers etc) What to expect regarding the differences in other cultures / foods / transport / service etc. 😊🇺🇸😊 😊🏴♥️🏴❤🏴❤🇮🇪❤🇬🇧♥️🇪🇺😊🖖
eh? The Guildhall, Tower of London, Roman remains, medieval churches, stunning modern architecture, historic pubs - and all that's just within the 'square mile'!
@@soozb15 The square mile is 1 of the 2 cities in Greater London, both of which are where all the attractions are, both are boring, and both are massively overrated.
@@soozb15 Coincidentally right now, I'm watching a UA-cam podcast where an actor who was raised a mile South of me in Bradford, is being interviewed by 2 other actors from Manchester and Grimsby, about things which are overrated... He said Manchester and London are massively overrated, and I agree. The 2 other Northern actors agreed about London, however the Manchester-born one obviously had to defend his own city slightly.
@@danielgardecki1046 all cities have crappy parts. As a Londoner, I know how to enjoy the city and all it can offer without having to endure crowds and getting ripped off. I pity the ordinary tourist having to navigate it, and in a ridiculously short space of time too. Also I love West Yorkshire! Lived in Leeds for two years. Great place, good memories.
The UK is in Europe. Do you mean the continent? On that, I’d agree. I love the Uk, but I don’t think we ‘do’ cities or towns very well. I think the villages, countryside and coast are the highlights of the UK and we just don’t have the same vibe you get in a lot continental towns and cities in ours. I sometimes like the idea of having a City break in a weekend, here, but it just doesn’t appeal here.
Lisbon is my absolute favorite city. I also love Prague, Athens, Tallinn, Helsinki, Copenhagen, Berlin, Amsterdam, Rome and Bologna and the island Ischia in the bay of Naples in Italy (similar to the Amalfi beach but way more affordable, for example Bella Vista ristorante (has b&b too). I do not recommend Monte Carlo at all.
Fantastic cities you can link up by train on a bucket list tour in either direction: Prague, Vienna, Ljubljana (dog leg but worth it), VENICE, Florence, Rome, Naples. You could optionally add Krakow before/after Prague if you want to see Poland too.
Good call. Touring Europe by car (or train) is fantastic. Every few hundred miles you can be in a new country with a new language, new culture, new architecture. Even within one country each region changes dramatically. I've done tens of thousands of miles through Europe. I'd recommend generally avoiding the flat bits - look on the maps contours for the interesting countryside. Up to and including the Alps, Dolomites, Apennines, Pyrenees. My fav country is Slovenia, but they're all nice.
A nice city to visit if you like medieval stuff would be Carcassonne. It's in the south of France, about 3 hours away from Barcelona (can also be accessed via train to avoid driving there), has a huge music festival every summer (month long, with many free shows in the town or the medieval city). Its most noteworthy thing is the medieval city: it is almost intact, fully surrounded by the city's walls, the castle was being restored last time I went (a few years ago) but could still be visited. It was founded some 2500 years ago, so lots of history there, but it is a rather small place so it can be done in a day or two (most likely 2 in summer, it is better towards the end of spring). There are also quite a few things to visit in the town that is barely a few minutes away on foot from the medieval city.
My favourite place in Switzerland is Interlaken. It is between two lakes and is surrounded by mountains (including the Eiger and the Jungfrau). At the far end of Lake Brienz there is a steam train that goes up the surrounding hills to a wonderful viewing area and not far from Brienz there are the Richenbaker Falls (where Sherlock Holmes and Moriarty fell to their deaths). There are lots of lovely villages to explore on both lakes and if you take a train out of Interlaken and down the Lauterbrunnen valley you can get up tp Piz Gloria (a revolving restaurant where they filmed the James Bond film "On Her Majesty's Secret Service"). You can make your base in Interlaken for a week and go off in different directions each day and explore different aspects of Switzerland. An expensive but worth it trip is up to the Jungfrau (the last bit being a train ride in a tunnel through the mountain) The station is underground, but when you come outside you are in and area of permanent snow that is just breathtaking.
As a swiss, I am always very amused by what foreigners seem to think is Switzerland. Most of my friends and family never went to places like Interlaken or St. Moritz. It is kind of derogatorily called "tourist places". But Switzerland is so much more than that. Most places we visit on our free times never make it to such compilations since they are hardly known outside of Switzerland. Lauener Lake in the Canton of Berne, the National Park in Canton Grison, the Juariassian Mountains in Canton Jura, Waegitaler Lake in Canto Schwyz.. just to name a few, are beautiful spots and there are many many more most tourists never see. As for Cities, try Thun, Lausanne, Bellinzona or Montreux. Even the Cities of Berne and Zurich have beautiful spots and old city centers.
Sadly, I haven't been to your country for far too many years now but when I did go (five times in total I think) I absolutely loved it. You are right, we did some really touristy things (including Interlaken, Thun, Davos - albeit in summer) but we also drove around a lot and visited small villages and towns too. The Bernese Oberland, the Jungfrau, Grindelwald, even little Gandria are probably tourist places too but they still blew me away. Berne itself was really great and I loved Lucerne and Lugano - they felt like living cities rather than just tourist places. Even if I haven't seen the best of your country, what I have seen of it was magical, so I clearly need to come back again and explore the parts I have missed! @@shanwyn
If you like Switzerland, go to Austria instead. Switzerland will absolutely kill you for money, no joke. $30 per person just for McDonalds. Plus personally I find Austria prettier, cleaner and much friendlier. I've been to both countries three times each. I'll die happy if I never go to Switzerland ever again. Austria on the other hand is well worth visiting and Vienna is 10x more impressive than any Swiss city.
I've been to Lucerne (in this video) because it looks very pretty in videos, and it is nice, but not that nice. It doesn't live up to the instagram shots. I've also been to Geneva and on yet another trip I've crossed the entire country by car from Basel to the Stelvio Pass. Honestly, go to Austria instead. Don't waste your money on Switzerland.
The list is not bad but the mentioned places are all on the continent. Europe has lots of islands, too, wether big (spanish, italian, french) or small (greek, croatian, german, danish, dutch).
I live in England I live on the coast not too far from France... My advice from someone who has travelled in Europe a lot is to avoid the cities and find some old towns and villages if you want to see real Europe and not the tourist traps. Enjoy.
In the Middle Ages, Europe was made up of small City States, each vying with each other, for prominence. There are multititudes of enchanting cities and towns all over Europe. The hilltop villages of Provence in France, and the coastal towns of Croatia, Italy, and Spain are often gorgeous. The Swiss and Austrain Alps are like picture postcards. You could go well off the beaten tourist track, and still be enchanted.
I’ve been to a lot of those places, but there are many more places that are really nice, with few tourists, and are much cheaper. And before anyone says anything, yes, I appreciate that these are nice cities. But as someone in Dubrovnik today me, most locals rent their houses to tourists, and go live somewhere else.
The castle in Prague is amazing, but the image he showed was of St Vitus Cathedral. The cathedral is at the castle, but it’s only one of many things to see there.
Prague is beautiful, but also full of tourists. The shops in the tourist areas attract a lot of visitors. I like to go to the outer districts of Prague and walk back towards the city center. - many people don't even know that there is a second castle - Vyšehrad.
According to wikipedia St Vitus Cathedral is a part of Prague Castle. The wikipedia pages use pictures to the castle and the cathedral are even same.
@@bf2840 when we were at the cathedral and castle I saw them as being adjacent…as was the Golden Lane and St. George’s Basilica. I’d assumed the Basilica was the castle’s worship place and the cathedral was separate, but you’re probably right and the cathedral was part of the castle complex. There’s a lot of unconnected areas at the castle.
"FULL OF TOURISTS" is a big big negative ... but "top lists" dont talk about it.
@@bf2840Czech person here, it is part of castle's complex. Castle grounds include lot of buildings, but Cathedral is kinda in front of it and I would definitely recommend to approach it as a separate monument. Czech kings and rulers from the past are burried there and it is far more impressive from architectural point of view.
I love the Amalfi coast too! I recommend taking a local bus that stops in the small towns that hug the coast - it's hair-raising!!
Especially when they reverse to get round a corner, and you’re sat in the back of the bus!
@@wanderingfool6312 Absolutely! A window seat is a must.
@@wanderingfool6312😮
Hire a car and drive the Amalfi coast, stop wherever you can.
One of the best drives I've had.
Do a Euro Trip via trains. You see much more than flying and even driving, because the driver sees cars and is stressed out the entire time...and it should be nice for both of you.
Also...don't pack too much into one trip.
Rather do few cities/areas and do them longer...sometimes you need 2-4 days in a place and one just doesn't cut it.
Big cities like London...a day is nothing. Berlin, Paris, well, any major city.
Also...go for seeing small villages nobody would think of visiting, see the rural life...
It is completely different compared to the city life, as you sure can imagine.
Interrail. A backpack and a lot of trains.... Youth was great!
I've done both. If driving, DONT TAKE MOTORWAYS EVER. Then there's nothing better. Try to avoid the flat plains of Europe too.
@@alan- Yes, when in Germany use the B's, not the BAB's ^^ Much more to see.
@@Kivas_Fajo Yes ... BUT you should also USE MAPS to navigate instead of Google / sat-nav ... because while reading the map and planning your route you might see something to the side of the route that strikes your fancy!
The problem is that americans only get 2 weeks of vacation each year ...
The Amalfi coast is beautiful but very touristy and crowded in summer. Positano is not a city, so I am not sure why it’s on his list of top cities. Italy has dozens of amazing cities and towns.
Picking any "tiny" town will be much better than a larger one that is "on a list", because there wont be as much tourism around and thus it will be more authentic.
@@Muck006 it’s a video about 10 European cities to visit, not 10 European tiny towns.
Budapest in Hungary is absolutely beautiful
There are so many wonderful Cities in Europe. I don't always agree with these "lists" of places to go but this one is a very good start! xx
(Portugal is staggeringly beautiful! As are all of the places on this list tbh...)
its obvious a rather personal list, not the best in general ...
Dubrovnik is kings landing, but also Girona in spain
3:40 - That's the 25th of April Bridge, named after the date of the pacific revolution that overthrew the dictatorship in 1974 (it'll be the 50th anniversary this year) and the reason why it looks familiar to you it's because it was build by the same company that bulit the Golden Gate Bridge and the Bay Bridge. It shares the colour with one and the design with the other. 🙂
There are many beautiful cities in Europe. I will recomment a visit to York, England, Tallin, Estonia and Lübeck, Germany. Also the capitals of Denmark and Sweden are wort a visit, and not least Brussela, the European capital that I have visited the most.
Yes, thumbs up on Tallinn I was there last year as my daughter lives in Estonia now.
You are correct with Salisbury Crags and Edinburgh certainly is beautiful.
10:14
The city of Prague has a big advantage over most European cities, especially the cities in Germany. Prague was never bombed during WWII, like the large cities in the German-speaking world.
Prague therefore did not have to be rebuilt like almost all of Germany.
there are some cities left which were never bombed (and apart from that, some cities in Europe (and the US) were not destroyed by world wars but by later periods of re-newing things. apart from that you have to put your post into a context. you have to tell that most of Central Europe was influenced by the Holy Roman Empire and the surrounding culture mixtures. In the central-eastern part often Germans and Slavic influences. Prague was in one way or another associated with this - was even for a short time kind of the capital of the HRR etc.. many cities in the Eastern part of Central Europe have a lot of German influences ... only knowing that makes your comparison sound.
@@publicminx I live in Berlin ... and it gets destroyed every day by a) tearing down remaining buildings from the 17th century ... and b) filling open spaces with BLAND CUBES of 10*10*10m "houses".
The "INVESTOR tradition" of a) buying old houses, b) letting them rot/fall into disrepair, c) tear them down to build "modern" garbage at the spot, d) profit seems to be alive and well ...
Prague was bombed, for example, on the 14th February 1945
Prague at Christmas is definitely worth a visit
Without a doubt, for me Barcelona is the best city for its climate, architecture, food, nightlife, beaches and its people. The quality of life in this city is unmatched. I also love the multiculturalism of its inhabitants. The perfect city to be happy.
It is tempting to rush around and see as many places , as possible, but I would recommend choosing maybe two or three bases, and exploring the surrounding areas.
For example, you could base yourself in Nice, and from there explore the Cote dAzure, Provence, and the Alps.
And then go to the Alfalfi Coast in Italy.
If you try to do too much , you'll probably just get a headache.
40 years ago we had a school trip to Crete, which has a lot of history, great (and simple) food ... and opportunities for swimming. The key point to making that possible was a greek teacher who could guide us to the good spots ... which is a valid point for any location. You NEED A LOCAL to show you the non-touristy stuff and give you the "secrets".
Rushing around is a silly concept, because you only see things in passing and could just watch a video / read a book about it.
If you want to find out more about Positano, there is a UA-camr called Nikki Positano and she shares her life living in Positano. The scenery is stunning! She has recently moved to Tuscany but still maintains the house in `Positano,, so better to look at her videos from a year ago or so. Enjoy! Travelling and seeing the world is so exciting!
I have spent a few days in different foreign cities over the years - Brussels, Paris, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Dubrovnik. Athens, Vienna, Venice, Florence, Milan, Istanbul, Innsbruck, Salzburg. . My favourite holiday destination is Italy. I have had several holidays there and I especially loved the Italian Lakes (stunning scenery with backdrop of the mountains, trips on the lakes, and nearby towns to visit). Stayed in Sorrento twice. Naples is nearby, along with the Amalfi Coast and the isle of Capri. Whilst there seeing Pompell, Herculanium & Vesuvius was amazing. The Olympics are taking place in Paris this summer, with a lot.of events taking place at major sites, including Versailles, so you should try and see some footage from there.
Paris and France in general are rubbish.
I've crossed off all the cities off the list except Lisbon and Athens. The entire Amalfi coast is beautiful, I wouldn't call Positano a city.
I would recommend Rome or even Paris over London and I'm from the UK.
Hi guys, I am English but have lived in the soulth of spain for most of my life now, I recoment a visit to Malaga and Granada but I also recoment Lisbon en portugal, I love the place been twice now and dont think i would ever ger tired of it... Love your channel. Michael
You're clearly not English, as you're the second "English" person I've seen here, who doesn't know how to spell "recommend."
I miss Bruges in this list or Ghent…. Absolute beauties of cities !
Prague is cheaper than England (but don't buy from stalls in the main square as they are a little dearer). It is also very walkable (with a good tram service when you get tired). There are some nice hotels on Wenceslas Square and the South end is 3min walk from the town square. (The North end is about10/15min walk). Charles Bridge is 5min walk from the Town Square and the castle's lower entrance is 6mins walk from the other side of Charle's Bridge. However it is best to get a tram to the top entrance of the castle and walk down as it is on a steep hill.
Prague is probably safer compared to London ... at least at in the current climate of violent carpet kneelers trying to convert the country by force (which wont be changing back soon).
I have been to every place he mentioned, either on holiday or with my work as an International sales person. Some places equally wonderful are, Bavaria ,Germany, Munich Nuremberg to name but two. Austria, Salzburg and Vienna. France but not Paris as it is dirty and very expensive, but Lyon , Marseilles which enables you to easily get to Monaco. Ireland, South and North, filled with so much history and beautiful places to visiit as well as the incredible people in both parts. Then more in the UK. Wales capital Cardiff, Bristol in SW England. I could go on nd on, there are so many more wonderful places throughout the UK and Europe, bearing in mind that many of our US cousins are from many of those places.
It seems strange to me that one of the many Italian cities such as: Venice, Rome, Florence etc. was not mentioned. But maybe it's better that this is the case because they are already too full of tourists. :-D
Second comment.
Thinking of travel, I have done the journey from East to West across US and I did the trip from Las Vegas to San Francisco on one Greyhound. I just explained to my girlfriend how the Superbowl was like a home game for SF and so KC were getting booed. I also had to explain the Taylor Swift obsession on TV this year.
Most of these places in this video are close enough to be in one US state, even though countries and cultures apart in Europe. Such a difference.
I hope you enjoy cheering your team on again this year. It is bed time here now. My manager from US has booked the day off Monday.
I reckon you will be happy again at the result.
Fun fact. USA and Dubrovnik has strong connection during history. Republic of Ragusa was citystate on what is now city of Dubrovnik. It was the first country in the world to recognize the newly founded USA.
No, that was Prussia.
Been to Lucerne, as I have a brother-in-law from Liechtenstein. Bern is also a lovely Swiss city and of course the capital.
Lisbon, I visited as a kid in the 70s, so don't remember it.
Did a boat trip along the Amalfi coast about 5 years ago. Truly beautiful.
I may have been to London a few times in my life!!
Went to Edinburgh as a kid (got Scottish DNA) and if I remember my Mum bought a kilt for me!
I was going to Dubrovnik and then the war broke out, so cancelled. Never been to Prague, Barcelona or Monaco either.
Went to Athens in the 70s, but did not rate it then, but the rest of Greece was very nice.
Travel opens your mind and makes you an all round better person. Enjoy your next trip.
When someone mentions Acropolis only thing that comes to my mind is Stephen Fry.
Italy is the only country in the world where you can find everything you desire.
9:30 you got that backwards. Kingslanding looks like Dubrovnik because the scenes were filmed there.
Edit: 10:10 exactly. 🙂
We stopped off for a couple of days in Luzern last August. Such a beautiful city and the lake is great for swimming in. Grab a towel, drinks and snacks and head to the Lido near the transport museum. No need to go to the paid part, go to the grassy bit next to it and relax. It has to be said though, Switzerland is eye wateringly expensive and cities like Luzern are even more so. A basic meal for 4 will knock you back about €200. I've been to Switzerland a few times (Lauterbrunnen valley), so I kind of knew what to expect, but I still found myself saying "Argh!" quite a lot when given the bill.
How exciting! Have fun planning. I’m visiting two bucket list places myself later this year, Athens and Santorini. My favourite places I go back to time and time again are anywhere in Italy really. Norway is spectacular too. I have been very lucky to have travelled through many beautiful parts of Spain, France, Germany and Italy. 😊
Belgrade (Serbian Capital) is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in Europe and the world.
it's about 7000 years old
Monte Carlo over Rome is crazy.
Strange the Netherlands isn't mentioned, Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Zaandam (last 2 because architecture,) and Utrecht.
I must add that several European cities are starting to kick back against mass tourism. Local people are getting extremely angry at excessive tourism to their disadvantage. - Berlin, Dubrovnik, Barcelona, Vienna and Venice particularly have started to have large demonstrations. Tourists are starting to find they are no longer welcome as they used to be. Especially Americans.
Europe has many beautiful cities. Even small unknown cities are beautiful. This is just the tip of the iceberg
Gonna give you the best travel tip ever.
Just visit 1 country at a time and take your time to experience it. Do think you need to see as much as possible in the short amount of time you have.
If you take your time for every country you'll see a lot more. 😊
Dubrovnik was a city state called the Republic of Ragusa, which was a client state of Venice.
*Born, raised and living in Bavaria's capital Munich, it's clear what is on the first rank. Beside my homebase-city I highly recommend in Bavaria : Würzburg and Rothenburg ob der Tauber....in AUSTRIA : Vienna, Salzburg, Kufstein, Innsbruck.....in ITALY : Merano, Pisa, Rome [ I also highly recommend to visit the Villa D' Este in Tivoli near Rome ]....in FRANCE I recommend the region Alsace incl. Strasbourg,...........* 🚆😎 🚌 🧭🏛🏨 🎸🎵😈
Positano is beautiful, only 20 mins by ferry from Amalfi and only 12 euro, Was there last summer and the Amalfi Coast is worth the visit
Lisbon was destroyed in the Earthquake of 1755. So, many of the mediaeval buildings didn't survive, and today Lisbon is a Baroque city.
If you want to rediscover your deepest roots, visit Europe, it will be an almost mystical journey.
If you plan on visiting Europe. Do not do too much. Plan "free" time. And do not visit everything. You can't. Travel time will cut in your time you actually see things. It depends on how long you come, but say 2 weeks. The first few days you have jet lag, so plan half days. The other half can be easily done just walking around. Then take a train to some other place. 3 - 4 nights for large cities. 1-2 for smaller cities. And again: Try not to plan everything. Also I would look at what time the locals live. e.g eating in Spain is 21:00 or later.
Hi from Edinburgh
Hello from Prague. Come to Czech republic, you are always welcome. :)
I believe that Croatia was where they filmed the King's Landing scenes- so you were right.
Salisbury Crags in Edinburgh
I am norwegian and I must admit that Norway is NOT the country of interesting cities. We have nothing to compete with the architecture and city life feeling that most other European countries have. The most beautiful city in Scandinavia must be Stockholm in Sweden, and probably København in Denmark Second. Oslo, Bergen and Trondheim has their attraction, where Trondheim has a medieval cathedral, but even that won't hold a candle to what is in the mainland of Europe. Cities in Norway should in my opinion be experienced as a segment of a larger nature exploration trip, if you don't have any other spesific reasons to go to Norway. Just a general viewpoint from a Norwegian, because city life have never been a big thing in Norway, and we have always had policies to keep the population spread out through the whole country. So come for the nature and history, and take the cities as convenient resting places along the way. You could "fall in love" with a Norwegian town or city, of course, but these are not our main attractions, especially not if you are travelling far and expensive to experience cities spesificially.
Portugal is Britain's oldest Ally.
Positano is like something from Avatar that you have to compare it to a Disney movie.
Switzerland is very beautiful but very expensive, keep that in mind !!! No joke
There's nothing wrong with the list. But for every prime tourist destination, there's somewhere less well known, yet just as good.
Prague is awesome ❤️
Lucerne is on my bucket list (as soon as I rob a bank!); Lisbon...I'm so sorry Portuguese people but this is my least favourite. Maybe it was because I went there in winter? I have Portuguese friends and they all seem to have differing opinions on the place; Positano is also on my bucket list; London - I've visited London many times and really like. My best memory of London was sailing into it at night aboard the Paddle Steamer Waverley - we went under Tower Bridge at night!; Edinburgh is just wonderful. I visit it at least 3 or 4 times a year and always find something new. the crags are Salisbury Crags; Dubrovnik is another bucket list place. Never heard a bad word about it; I LOVE Prague. I would move there in a heartbeat. Beautiful city, fantastic people, I don't have a single bad word to say about it. It's also very affordable to visit! He wasn't showing the castle when he was mentioning it btw; I've been to Barcelona quite a few times and I do love it, but the last time I was there it just didn't feel the same. They definitely seem to be sick of tourists! I would still go back though, there's so much I've still to see there; Athens is on my bucket list too, but I've heard it's crazy busy; I've no plans to visit Monaco - I don't have the wardrobe, or the money!!; I tend to visit lots of places for a short spell (a day or two), then go back to the places that I liked the most! My favourite places not on this list are Hamburg, Bremen, Copenhagen, Paris, Girona and Salzburg. But Prague is my overall favourite.
The way of travel that you're talking about preferring is very typical for Amerians, it is all about bragging when you get home, and not about experiencing the places you visit. It is consumption of travel, not experience, to use a sociological term. I'd recommend not being in such a hurry, take a breath, allow yourself to experience what the place you're visiting is actually like. Smell the smells, taste the food, walk the smaller back roads, yes you an also see the sights, but let everything sink in. You will get a richer experience. Europe is so many different cultures, flavours and people, it is not experienced on conveyor belt tourism.
So basically most cities mentioned are just tourist attractions... imo that's boring... I'm not saying there's nothing to see in those places, but I find it a lot more exciting, when I see people explore less popular destinations...
P.S. Also - the fact that there's nothing from Northern or Eastern Europe on this list is criminal imo... it's not like Southern/Western/Central Europe are the only places worth going to...just saying...
Also LOVE Switzerland , been 4 times . Saying that tho , i pray Scotland beat the Swiss when they play each other at the football European Championships this summer ⚽ 🙏 ⚽
Chester, Milan, or Stockholm.
I would have suggested Dubrovnik if it hadn’t come up in the video. Croatia is beautiful and cheaper than some other European countries. Greece is also beautiful but I would suggest the less touristy places.
My favourite cities in Europe (UK aside) are Paris, Helsinki, Cologne and best of all Copenhagen
I think you would particularly enjoy Carcassonne. Do a react to there!
You've clearly never been to Paris.
It's the worst place I've ever visited.
Athens is amazing, so is Rome and Valetta (Malta)
Athens, Geece, is where democracy was born.
Yesss Amalfi coast
11:45 Is Barcelona controlled by droids like Westworld?😂
13:30 That's the WRONG ATTITUDE there ... because RUSHING through "as many places as you can cram in your schedule" DOESNT LET YOU EXPERIENCE THEM PROPERLY, which takes time. "Just SEEING" can be done by WATCHING A VIDEO.
I advise against Athens .. greece is beautiful especially create but my friends recent visit to athens saw more drugs needles on the floor than beauty spots . 😢
That's sad to hear, thanks for sharing though, appreciate it.
My daughter wishes to visit Japan. Me, I'd love to visit Italy & USA. My 80y/o neighbour has just travelled to Rome. Love Angelas Chiefs sweater. GO CHIEFS! ❤💛🏈💛❤️
*Bradford* the...
*6th biggest City in the UK by population* - *546,400* to be exact.
*7th Biggest City in the UK by area* - *141.47 square miles* (366.41 square kilometres) to be exact.
World's First *UNESCO City of Film.*
UK's Fourth *City of Culture.*
Seven time *Curry Capital of Britain* Winners.
Birthplace and home of the *Bronte Sisters.*
Former *Wool Capital of the World.*
Unofficial *Tea Capital* - Birthplace of *Tetley Tea* founders, residence of *Betty's Tea* founder, location of 2nd ever *Betty's Tea Room,* and location of 2nd ever *Taylor's Tea Room.*
You said that:"Again, the U.S. is two weeks vacation." with a face that clearly states: I don't like it!
Maybe you guys should move to greener pastures over the pond?
I already told you that numerous times....come! 🙂
This guy makes a good video in pictures but he can’t speak !
Totally agree 💯 , i wouldn't be up for him whispering sweet nothings into my ear .
Europe has some beautiful places. I think you are going to Germany 😉
Fun fact: It’s WestMINSTER, not WestMINiSTER.
It's mediterranean sea , not an ocean lol , ffs
Hi Guys 🇬🇧🇬🇧
He said WestMinister.. it is Westminster
What an attractive and perceptive girl.Very refreshing>
Quite disappointing that he's mostly mentioning capitol cities, that are already well known and the most touristy places in Europe. Not really adding something new to discover, bit cheap and easy, this video.
Romamia
Are you taking your children with you this time ?
If not I would seariously look at getting a Euro rail card , my daughter did one years ago . Basically you buy a ticket to travel the whole of Europe at your leisure getting on and off as you please , 2 decisions to make
1 how long have you got and 2 what do you want to see
Personally I would do it buy car , but I am retired so time not an issue and cars give you more freedom to do and see what you want
Pff London, maybee top 1 000
France is the best ❤
I positivly hate the channel you're commenting on. The guy's commentaries are "my favorite this, the highest, deepest, oldest, ... that, ...", in my opinion, boring and not in the least interesting nor doing justice to the places he "visits"!
I fully understand - and feel for - the Americans having so little vacation tiime, but I would not recommend, as you say, to pack as much as possible in one trip: Firstly, on the first 2-3 days, you'll be jetlagged; 2) no-one in a lifetime could possibly visit all the diversity Europe has to offer.
If you don't want to be of these dumb tourists that just glance over things in a rush and in a crowd (and get in the way of the locals), and would be incapable to say, on their flight back home, what they've actually seen and experienced, my advice would be for you to pick one theme for each trip:
if you're an Art lover, visit Greece and Itay, if you're a foodie, criss-cross France, if you're in search of your roots, visit the UK from South to North (or inversely), if you're a hiker, go to the Alps that straddle France, Switzerlland, Italy, Austria and Germany, if you're a beer lover, go on a pub crawl throughout Germany, Belgium or the Czech Republic, etc. And in each of these countries, you'll find amazing monuments, landmarks, museums, ... along the way.
An excellent travel channel on YT is "Rick Steves Europe" that I'd recommnd you check on when preparing your next vacation on "the Old Continent".
Happpy travels!
Christ,,,,pause…pause,,,,,pause…
I know that the Americas are surrounded by _oceans_ but the constant references by Angela (mostly) to "every other large body of water" around the world as _oceans_ when they are (often) instead _SEAS_,
is (for reasons I just *cannot explain*) _really_ annoying!! Sorry Angela.😢
(Also, Ryan Shirley* (*?!) ...his frequently mispronounced words are far _more_ annoying. (It's 'Westminster' - _not_ "Westmin_ister_"!) _and_ it's '_world_' _not_ "wreld" !?! (At the very least!!) However... Another interesting travel videographer - if you might describe him that way? - is '*Wolters World*' ... He's an American family nan who (seems to) travels a lot and gives useful 'hints and tips' on how to get the _best_ experiences when travelling in and around the UK, Ireland, and Europe, so... How to stay safe, behave, 'dress nicely' - whilst comfortably - not _too_ 'touristy (inviting pickpockets / scammers etc) What to expect regarding the differences in other cultures / foods / transport / service etc. 😊🇺🇸😊
😊🏴♥️🏴❤🏴❤🇮🇪❤🇬🇧♥️🇪🇺😊🖖
They all talk nonsense. They all listen to the media, and go where the media tell them.
16:20 The ceremonial county of *Greater London* which is not a city, and *Paris,* are not worth visiting.
Both of them are a load of rubbish.
eh? The Guildhall, Tower of London, Roman remains, medieval churches, stunning modern architecture, historic pubs - and all that's just within the 'square mile'!
@@soozb15 The square mile is 1 of the 2 cities in Greater London, both of which are where all the attractions are, both are boring, and both are massively overrated.
@@danielgardecki1046 oh well, each to their own! I love the City and its history.
@@soozb15 Coincidentally right now, I'm watching a UA-cam podcast where an actor who was raised a mile South of me in Bradford, is being interviewed by 2 other actors from Manchester and Grimsby, about things which are overrated...
He said Manchester and London are massively overrated, and I agree.
The 2 other Northern actors agreed about London, however the Manchester-born one obviously had to defend his own city slightly.
@@danielgardecki1046 all cities have crappy parts. As a Londoner, I know how to enjoy the city and all it can offer without having to endure crowds and getting ripped off. I pity the ordinary tourist having to navigate it, and in a ridiculously short space of time too. Also I love West Yorkshire! Lived in Leeds for two years. Great place, good memories.
Best city is Manchester, England.
Top 10 cities and there isn't madrid, the most awesome city in the world, that's so ridiculous lol
Europe is, by far, more attractive, cleaner and more interesting than here in the UK.
Have a walk through the streets of Amsterdam after a Saturday night , that city for instance doesn't look SO good on a Sunday .
The UK is in Europe. Do you mean the continent? On that, I’d agree. I love the Uk, but I don’t think we ‘do’ cities or towns very well. I think the villages, countryside and coast are the highlights of the UK and we just don’t have the same vibe you get in a lot continental towns and cities in ours. I sometimes like the idea of having a City break in a weekend, here, but it just doesn’t appeal here.
Glad you looking to explore Europe further, I hope you get to do it sooner rather than later!
Lisbon is my absolute favorite city. I also love Prague, Athens, Tallinn, Helsinki, Copenhagen, Berlin, Amsterdam, Rome and Bologna and the island Ischia in the bay of Naples in Italy (similar to the Amalfi beach but way more affordable, for example Bella Vista ristorante (has b&b too).
I do not recommend Monte Carlo at all.
londoin?? in thsi list?? rerally??? london looks like crappy america'n city with no soul or beuty
Fantastic cities you can link up by train on a bucket list tour in either direction: Prague, Vienna, Ljubljana (dog leg but worth it), VENICE, Florence, Rome, Naples. You could optionally add Krakow before/after Prague if you want to see Poland too.
Good call. Touring Europe by car (or train) is fantastic. Every few hundred miles you can be in a new country with a new language, new culture, new architecture. Even within one country each region changes dramatically. I've done tens of thousands of miles through Europe. I'd recommend generally avoiding the flat bits - look on the maps contours for the interesting countryside. Up to and including the Alps, Dolomites, Apennines, Pyrenees. My fav country is Slovenia, but they're all nice.
A nice city to visit if you like medieval stuff would be Carcassonne. It's in the south of France, about 3 hours away from Barcelona (can also be accessed via train to avoid driving there), has a huge music festival every summer (month long, with many free shows in the town or the medieval city).
Its most noteworthy thing is the medieval city: it is almost intact, fully surrounded by the city's walls, the castle was being restored last time I went (a few years ago) but could still be visited. It was founded some 2500 years ago, so lots of history there, but it is a rather small place so it can be done in a day or two (most likely 2 in summer, it is better towards the end of spring). There are also quite a few things to visit in the town that is barely a few minutes away on foot from the medieval city.
My favourite place in Switzerland is Interlaken. It is between two lakes and is surrounded by mountains (including the Eiger and the Jungfrau). At the far end of Lake Brienz there is a steam train that goes up the surrounding hills to a wonderful viewing area and not far from Brienz there are the Richenbaker Falls (where Sherlock Holmes and Moriarty fell to their deaths). There are lots of lovely villages to explore on both lakes and if you take a train out of Interlaken and down the Lauterbrunnen valley you can get up tp Piz Gloria (a revolving restaurant where they filmed the James Bond film "On Her Majesty's Secret Service"). You can make your base in Interlaken for a week and go off in different directions each day and explore different aspects of Switzerland. An expensive but worth it trip is up to the Jungfrau (the last bit being a train ride in a tunnel through the mountain) The station is underground, but when you come outside you are in and area of permanent snow that is just breathtaking.
As a swiss, I am always very amused by what foreigners seem to think is Switzerland. Most of my friends and family never went to places like Interlaken or St. Moritz. It is kind of derogatorily called "tourist places". But Switzerland is so much more than that. Most places we visit on our free times never make it to such compilations since they are hardly known outside of Switzerland. Lauener Lake in the Canton of Berne, the National Park in Canton Grison, the Juariassian Mountains in Canton Jura, Waegitaler Lake in Canto Schwyz.. just to name a few, are beautiful spots and there are many many more most tourists never see. As for Cities, try Thun, Lausanne, Bellinzona or Montreux. Even the Cities of Berne and Zurich have beautiful spots and old city centers.
Sadly, I haven't been to your country for far too many years now but when I did go (five times in total I think) I absolutely loved it. You are right, we did some really touristy things (including Interlaken, Thun, Davos - albeit in summer) but we also drove around a lot and visited small villages and towns too. The Bernese Oberland, the Jungfrau, Grindelwald, even little Gandria are probably tourist places too but they still blew me away. Berne itself was really great and I loved Lucerne and Lugano - they felt like living cities rather than just tourist places. Even if I haven't seen the best of your country, what I have seen of it was magical, so I clearly need to come back again and explore the parts I have missed! @@shanwyn
If you like Switzerland, go to Austria instead. Switzerland will absolutely kill you for money, no joke. $30 per person just for McDonalds. Plus personally I find Austria prettier, cleaner and much friendlier. I've been to both countries three times each. I'll die happy if I never go to Switzerland ever again. Austria on the other hand is well worth visiting and Vienna is 10x more impressive than any Swiss city.
I've been to Lucerne (in this video) because it looks very pretty in videos, and it is nice, but not that nice. It doesn't live up to the instagram shots. I've also been to Geneva and on yet another trip I've crossed the entire country by car from Basel to the Stelvio Pass. Honestly, go to Austria instead. Don't waste your money on Switzerland.
Don't come back😂
@@adamgabriyel3414 As you can read, I'm not planning too.
@@adamgabriyel3414 And thanks for backing up my point that Austria is *much friendlier*
Who goes to Switzerland to eat at McDonalds?? I’ve been many times and never once felt the need for a Big Mac
The list is not bad but the mentioned places are all on the continent. Europe has lots of islands, too, wether big (spanish, italian, french) or small (greek, croatian, german, danish, dutch).
I live in England I live on the coast not too far from France... My advice from someone who has travelled in Europe a lot is to avoid the cities and find some old towns and villages if you want to see real Europe and not the tourist traps. Enjoy.
In the Middle Ages, Europe was made up of small City States, each vying with each other, for prominence.
There are multititudes of enchanting cities and towns all over Europe.
The hilltop villages of Provence in France, and the coastal towns of Croatia, Italy, and Spain are often gorgeous.
The Swiss and Austrain Alps are like picture postcards.
You could go well off the beaten tourist track, and still be enchanted.
I love Budapest, Hungary.
I’ve been to a lot of those places, but there are many more places that are really nice, with few tourists, and are much cheaper.
And before anyone says anything, yes, I appreciate that these are nice cities. But as someone in Dubrovnik today me, most locals rent their houses to tourists, and go live somewhere else.