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WhereToStayEurope

Best European Cities for Cathedral Architecture

By FredolinePublished 2026-05-04Reviewed 2026-05-0412 min read

Style by century

Romanesque (1000–1200), Gothic (1200–1500), Renaissance (1400–1600), Baroque (1600–1750), Modernisme (1880–1930). Each has flagship cathedrals — visiting all together demands cross-Europe travel.

Cologne — Gothic

Cologne Cathedral (Kölner Dom) — 632 years to build, twin spires 157m tall (briefly tallest building in world 1880-1884). Free entry to nave; €8 climb tower. UNESCO. Altstadt walking distance.

Strasbourg — Gothic

Strasbourg Cathédrale Notre-Dame — pink sandstone, single spire 142m (tallest building in world 1647-1874). Astronomical clock daily 12:30pm. Free.

Florence — Renaissance

Florence Duomo (Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore) — Brunelleschi's dome (1436) the engineering miracle. Climb 463 steps for cupola view. Reservations mandatory; €25–60.

Sevilla — Gothic + Renaissance hybrid

Sevilla Cathedral — largest Gothic cathedral in the world by volume. Built on former mosque foundations. Giralda bell tower originally a minaret. €13.

Saint Peter's Rome — Renaissance/Baroque

Rome Saint Peter's Basilica (1626) — Bramante, Michelangelo, Bernini collaborated across decades. Dome 136m. Free entry but security queue 30–60 min. Plus Pieta sculpture.

Barcelona — Modernisme

Barcelona Sagrada Família — Gaudí's still-unfinished masterpiece (begun 1882, completion 2026 target). Reservations mandatory; €33–48. UNESCO. Combined with Park Güell + Casa Batlló for full Gaudí day.

Milan — Gothic spires

Milan Duomo (1386–1965 — completed in 6 centuries). 135 spires, 3,400+ statues. Rooftop walk among spires €20. Italy's largest church.

Chartres — Gothic stained glass

Chartres Cathedral (covered in our stained-glass guide). Day-trip from Paris.

Salamanca — old + new cathedral combo

Salamanca has Old Cathedral (Romanesque-Gothic) and New Cathedral (Gothic-Baroque) connected — view 800 years of architecture in one walk.

Strategy

Visit early morning (8–9am) for empty interiors. Most cathedrals close midday for services. Photography permitted (no flash) most cathedrals. Combined city + cathedral itineraries. Stained glass companion.

Best European Cities for Cathedral Architecture · WhereToStayEurope