Nurnberg, Germany’s Christkindlesmarkt, offers old-world Christmas charm

  • Friday, December 23, 2011 2:04pm
  • Life

Cradling a cup of hot-spiced wine as a hand warmer, I stroll through Nurnberg’s main square. All around me are bundled-up shoppers and kids sampling fresh gingerbread, riding the carousel, listening to roving brass quintets and marveling at the newest toys.

I’m standing in Germany’s largest Christmas market, 200 wooden stalls crammed with local artisans dealing in all things Christmas. With all these goodies, it’s no wonder that Nurnberg’s Christkindlesmarkt (www.christkindlesmarkt.de) attracts more than 2 million people annually.

A traditional center for toy-making in Germany, Nurnberg has long prided itself on the quality of its market. With no canned music, fake greenery, plastic kitsch or war toys, it feels classier than your average crafts fair.

As far back as 1610, a proclamation warned that “indecent joke articles would be confiscated.” The merchants’ stalls are old-style wooden huts with traditional ambience, and each year the most beautiful stall is awarded the prestigious “Prune Man” trophy, a homemade figurine made of fruit.

Germany’s holiday markets are a Christmas fantasy of tiny figurines, and this market offers some of the best. Nutcrackers, strong-jawed to crack even the toughest nuts, are usually authority figures like soldiers, police officers and constables.

“Smokers,” which are small carvings of woodworkers, loggers, postal carriers and other common folk, send out fragrant incense from their tiny smoke-ring-blowing mouths.

Many of these classic wooden figurines originated in the highly forested region of Saxony in eastern Germany. When the iron ore and silver mines went out of business back in the 15th century, Saxon miners became woodworkers.

A popular Nurnberg decoration is the candle chime. A multitiered wooden stand holds candles, which heat a pinwheel on top, causing it to spin. Each level of the stand features a different carved scene: a Nativity, forest critters, nutcrackers or miners at work.

It’s said these chimes were especially popular in mining communities because of the miners’ hunger for, and appreciation of, light.

The golden Rausch Angel hovering above the market is an icon of Christmas in Nurnberg. The name is a bit of German onomatopoeia. “Rausch” is the sound of wind blowing through the angel’s gold foil wings. For locals, there’s no better way to cap their home’s Christmas tree than with a miniature version of this angel.

After the sun sets, Nurnberg’s Christkindlesmarkt delights, as shoppers enjoy some old-time fast food. Spicy smoke billows from stalls selling the famous Nurnberg bratwurst, skinny as your little finger. Stick three of them on a crunchy fresh roll and then add a generous squirt of spicy mustard.

At the next stall, wrap your mittens around a mug of hot-spiced wine. A disposable paper or plastic cup would ruin the experience, so you must pay a deposit for a nicely decorated ceramic one. Either return the mug or keep it as a collectible, since each year there’s a different model.

Bakeries crank out traditional gingerbread, the Lebkuchen Nurnberg, using the same recipe they did in the 17th century. Back then, Nurnberg was the gingerbread capital of the world, and a stroll through the market makes it clear that the city’s love affair with the cake continues.

For four centuries, the families of Nurnberg have bought their gingerbread at this thriving Christkindlesmarkt. The gingerbread was not baked in the home, but was made exclusively by a guild of master bakers, the Lebkuchler.

The cake itself became a work of art. Well-known sculptors, painters and goldsmiths added ornament and detail. Carvers whittled intricate wooden molds of hearts, angels and wreaths. Painters frosted the cookies or added a flourish of gold paint.

Germany’s gingerbread tradition, whether as a spiced cake, cookie or even a small loaf, has spread throughout Europe, and they’re sold at fairs, carnivals and markets.

Another German tradition that has spread all over Europe and the New World is the candy cane. The first candy canes were simple, straight white sticks of sugar candy. In 1670, a choirmaster at the Cologne Cathedral, fed up with noisy kids ruining the ambience, passed them out during a Nativity service to keep the restless children quiet.

He’d had the ends bent to depict a shepherd’s crook. German immigrants to America popularized the practice of using them to decorate Christmas trees (and an American company added the signature red stripes in the 1920s).

Germany has long celebrated Christmas well, with markets that seem more like a public service than a seasonal business. From sweets to savory treats, candles to carousels, Nurnberg’s Christkindlesmarkt warms up cold days and lights up dark nights. Its festive swirl of heartwarming sights, sounds, and scents is sure to get you in the holiday spirit.

Rick Steves (www.ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.

&Copy;2011 Rick Steves, distributed by Tribune Media Services, Inc.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Life

The back patio area and deck on Oct. 23, 2025 in Mukilteo, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
$6 million buys ‘Wow’ and a gleaming glass mansion in Mukilteo

Or for $650,000, score a 1960s tri-level home on Easy Street in Everett. Dishwasher included.

Connie Lodge
Warren G, right, will join Too Short, Xzibit and Yung Joc on Saturday at Angel of the Winds Arena in Everett.
Warren G, Forest Songs, #IMOMSOHARD and more

Music, arts and more coming to Snohomish County

Typically served over rice, gumbo is made with chicken, sausage and the Creole “holy trinity” of onions, bell peppers and celery. (Gretchen McKay/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/TNS)
Easy, roux-less gumbo features Creole spices, chicken and sausage

Many family dinners are planned ahead of time after pulling a delicious-sounding… Continue reading

Join Snohomish PUD in preparing for storm season

October is here and the weather has already displayed its ability to… Continue reading

Silas Machin, 13, uses a hand saw to make a space for a fret to be placed during class on Oct. 7, 2025 in Lake Stevens, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Kids at play: Lake Stevens middle-schoolers craft electric guitars

Since 2012 students in Alex Moll’s afterschool club have built 100s of custom and classic guitars.

Absolute Zero Earthstar Bromeliad was discovered in a crypt! Its foliage is black with ghostly white striping with sharp edges – be careful! (Provided photo)
The Halloweeniest plants around

This magical month of October is coming to a close, accompanied everywhere… Continue reading

The 2025 Volkswagen ID. Buzz in two-tone Energetic Orange and Candy White paint.
2025 Volkswagen ID. Buzz is an irresistible throwback

The new Microbus maintains charm while piling on modern technology and special features.

These crispy, cheesy chorizo and potato tacos are baked in the oven to achieve an extra crunch. (Post-Gazette)
Crispy oven chorizo and potato tacos are social media darlings

I’m not alone when I say I could eat tacos every day… Continue reading

Marysville Pilchuck High School mural artists Monie Ordonia, left, and Doug Salinas, right, in front of their mural on the high school campus on Oct. 14, 2025 in Marysville, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Tulalip artists unveil mural at Marysville Pilchuck High School

Monie Ordonia hopes her depictions of Mount Pilchuck and Pilchuck Julia bring blessings and community.

Grandpa Buzz smiles while he crosses the street and greets people along the way as he walks to Cascade View Elementary on Sept. 30, 2025 in Snohomish, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
‘Everybody wants a Grandpa Buzz’

Buzz Upton, 88, drives 40 minutes from Stanwood to spread joy and walk kids to school in Snohomish.

Escalade IQ photo provided by Cadillac Newsroom USA
2026 Cadillac Escalade IQ Premium Sport

Unsurpassed Luxury All-Electric Full-Sized SUV

Snohomish Conservation District will host the eighth annual Orca Recovery Day

Help out planting native species in Ovenell Park in Stanwood on Saturday.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.