6 hotels found, Showing 1 – 6:
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Edlmairstrasse 4, 94469 DeggendorfGBP 41 - 144

guest review score: N/A
Within a peaceful park yet minutes from the motorway, this hotel offers bright accommodation, a cosy restaurant and a spa. The Danube and central Degg… More
EUR 42 - 75

Zum Horizont

Tattenberg 15, 94469 DeggendorfGBP 34 - 60

guest review score: N/A
This hotel offers a spa and cottage-style rooms with views of the Bavarian Forest Nature Park. It is a 10-minute drive from the centre of Deggendorf … More
Luitpoldplatz 22, 94469 DeggendorfGBP 50 - 89

guest review score: N/A
This family-run, 4-star hotel offers rooms with free Wi-Fi, free rental bicycles, and a traditional Bavarian restaurant with beer garden. It lies in D… More
EUR 62 - 89

Hotel Donauhof

Hafenstr. 1, 94469 DeggendorfGBP 50 - 71

guest review score: N/A
This hotel offers free Wi-Fi and free parking. It is a 3-minute walk from the River Danube and less than 10 minutes from the centre of Deggendorf. Ho… More
EUR 59 - 105

Hotel Burgwirt

Deggendorfer str.7, 94469 DeggendorfGBP 47 - 84

guest review score: N/A
Situated close to the A3 motorway and on the edge of the Bavarian forest, you find this cosy hotel in the peaceful Natternberg district of Deggendorf.… More
EUR 40 - 75

Beim Krahwirt

Haslacher Str. 151, 94469 DeggendorfGBP 32 - 60

guest review score: N/A
This family-run guest house in the Simmling district of Deggendorf offers cosy accommodation, regional cuisine and an attractive beer garden. Guests e… More
 

Deggendorf: Guide



Deggendorf is a town in Bavaria, capital of the Deggendorf (district)|district Deggendorf.
The earliest traces of settlement in the area are found near the Danube, about 8,000 years ago. Both Bronze Age and Celt|Celtic era archeological finds indicate continuous habitation through the years. Henry II, Holy Roman Emperor established in 1002 his supremacy over the area.

DP camp

Deggendorf was the site of a DP Camp|displaced persons camp for Jewish refugees after World War II. It housed approximately 2,000 refugees, who created a cultural center that included two newspapers (the Deggendorf Center Review and Cum Ojfboj, theater group, synagogue, mikvah, kosher kitchen, and more. The camp even issued its own currency known as the Deggendorf Dollar. Many of the camp's residents were survivors of the concentration camp at Theresienstadt.

The camp closed on June 15, 1949.

External links




This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Deggendorf". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.