Europe
The Mozart Route (Historical and Legendary Figures of Europe)
Cultural Routes
- Architecture without Frontiers: Rural Habitat
- Parks and Gardens, landscape
- Saint Martin de Tours: a great European figure, a Symbol of sharing
- The Cluniac Sites in Europe (Monastic influence)
- The Hansa
- The Iron Route in The Pyrenees (Industrial Heritage in Europe)
- The Jewish Heritage Routes
- The Legacy of Al-Andalus
- The Mozart Route (Historical and Legendary Figures of Europe)
- The Route of the Castilian Language and its Expansion in the Mediterranean (The Sephardic Routes)
- The Routes of the Olive Tree
- The Santiago De Compostela Pilgrim Routes
- The Schickhardt Route (Historical and Legendary Figures of Europe)
- The Via Francigena (Pilgrim Routes)
- The Via Regia
- The Viking Routes (Vikings and Normans)
- The Wenzel and Vauban Routes (Military Architecture in Europe)
The theme was integrated into the Council of Europe programme in 1990, the network was approved in 2002 and the route was awarded certification as a “Cultural Route of the Council of Europe” on 16 June 2004.
The route shows how the renowned composer was inspired by his journeys, given that he spent over ten years of his thirty-five years life traveling throughout Europe.
At the instigation of Salzburg province, an extensive network has been set up along eighteen historic routes taken by Mozart, linking up some two hundreds towns visited by Mozart in ten European countries.
European Institute of Cultural Routes
Information source: The Council of Europe Cultural Routes brochure, 2004
Photo: The Mannheim Castle; © European Mozart Ways