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Wittelsbach Photos – License unique travel photos ❘ lookphotos
71415951 - Wittelsbach Fountain, Munich, Bavaria, Germany
70338996 - Pedestrians feeding gulls at river Isar near Wittelsbach bridge, Munich, Bavaria, Germany
70454497 - Woman playing with a dog at river Isar, Wittelsbach bridge, Munich, Bavaria, Germany
70454498 - Woman playing with a dog at river Isar, Wittelsbach bridge, Munich, Bavaria, Germany
70454496 - Woman playing with a dog at river Isar, Wittelsbach bridge, Munich, Bavaria, Germany
70061760 - Residenz, Munich, Bavaria, Germany, Castle, Old Town, room decoration museum, architecture, Wittelsbach
70454520 - Angler and jogger at river Isar, Wittelsbach bridge in background, Munich, Bavaria, Germany
71160832 - Cafe Wittelsbach in the Spa of Bad Woerishofen, Lower Allgaeu, Allgaeu, Swabia, Bavaria, Germany
70124832 - Germany, Kallmuenz, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Naab promenade, town view, Wittelsbach Castle on the hill, stone bridge
71343607 - The Nymphenburg Palace (German: Schloss Nymphenburg), i. e., "Castle of the Nymph (or Nymphs)", is a Baroque palace in Munich, Bavaria, southern Germany. The palace is the main summer residence of the former rulers of Bavaria of the House of Wittelsbach. The palace was commissioned by the prince-electoral couple Ferdinand Maria and Henriette Adelaide of Savoy to the designs of the Italian architect Agostino Barelli in 1664 after the birth of their son Maximilian II Emanuel. The central pavilion was completed in 1675. As a building material served limestone from Kelheim. The castle was graduall
70454519 - Angler in river Isar, Wittelsbach bridge in background, Munich, Bavaria, Germany
71343608 - The Nymphenburg Palace (German: Schloss Nymphenburg), i. e., "Castle of the Nymph (or Nymphs)", is a Baroque palace in Munich, Bavaria, southern Germany. The palace is the main summer residence of the former rulers of Bavaria of the House of Wittelsbach. The palace was commissioned by the prince-electoral couple Ferdinand Maria and Henriette Adelaide of Savoy to the designs of the Italian architect Agostino Barelli in 1664 after the birth of their son Maximilian II Emanuel. The central pavilion was completed in 1675. As a building material served limestone from Kelheim. The castle was graduall