The capital, dramatically-sited Luxembourg City , is almost impossible to avoid if you're not travelling by car. Home to something like a fifth of the population, it is the country's only genuinely urban environment, and well worth one or two nights' stay. The central part of Luxembourg is, however, even more spectacular, rucking up into rich green hills and valleys that reach their climax in the narrowing north of the country around Echternach , a tiny town dominated by its ancient abbey, and Vianden , with its magnificent castle.
Once part of the Spanish and later Austrian Netherlands, Luxembourg today is an independent constitutional monarchy. Although everyone speaks the indigenous language, Letzebuergesch - a dialect of German that sounds a bit like Dutch - most also speak French and German and many speak English too. Indeed, multilingualism is one of Luxembourg's most admirable features and different languages are favoured for different purposes - French is the official language of the government and judiciary, the one you'll see on street signs and suchlike, whilst German is the language most used by the press -- location id = 34235 -->
Copyright Rough Guides Ltd as trustee for its authors. Published by Rough Guides. All rights reserved. The Rough Guides name is a trademark of Rough Guides Ltd.
Copyright © 2006TravelPages
Information and maps