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What can you do at the Berlin Cathedral?

The Berlin Cathedral Today It remains an active and operational cathedral, and visitors can sit in the pews while services take place. Look out for details such as the exquisitely-carved raised pulpit, the baptismal and matrimonial chapels, the imperial staircase, the gold altar and the organ with its over 7000 pipes.



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Clothing Our supervisory and security personnel are authorized to deny access to the Cathedral to guests wearing provocative garments— this in-cludes very short skirts or trousers, as well as off-the-shoulder or low-cut clothes.

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The magnificent dome of the Cathedral Church (Berliner Dom) is one of the main landmarks in Berlin's cityscape – and marks the spot of the impressive basilica housing the city's most important Protestant church. With its elaborate decorative and ornamental designs, the church interior is especially worth seeing.

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Among the most notable sarcophagi are those of Frederick I and Sophie Charlotte, the first King and Queen of Prussia and the grandparents of Frederick the Great. The cathedral's dome was bombed during World War II, and the resulting collapse and fire damaged and destroyed some of the crypt.

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Weddings are held exclusively on Fridays at 1.30 pm, Saturdays at 10.30 AM, 1.30 PM. Wedding ceremonies at Berlin Cathedral are not possible at other times. A wedding ceremony at Berlin Cathedral lasts a maximum of 40 minutes.

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As a World Heritage Site and host to the Shrine of the Three Kings, Cologne Cathedral is a major attraction for tourists and pilgrims, and is one of the oldest and most important pilgrimage sites of Northern Europe.

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As a World Heritage Site and host to the Shrine of the Three Kings, Cologne Cathedral is a major attraction for tourists and pilgrims, and is one of the oldest and most important pilgrimage sites of Northern Europe.

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