Weimar, Einsenach and Leipzig
From 23 September to 27 September 2026
Type of stay

Small group journeys

Availability

Inscriptions ouvertes

Price

From €5,900 per person

THE ARCHITECTS OF THE SOUL:
BACH, GOETHE, LUTHER, MENDELSSOHN

 

Between Frankfurt and Leipzig, Germany unfolds as a landscape where each city bears the name of a composer, poet, or reformer like a heraldic emblem. This journey traces the roads crossing Thuringia, a land of deep forests, hilltop castles, and foundational figures of German culture – where Bach was born and where Luther translated the Scriptures in the secrecy of a fortress. It then continues into Saxony and Leipzig, a mercantile city turned musical capital, where Bach spent twenty-seven years directing the choirs of St. Thomas Church, where Mendelssohn revived his work a century later, and where the Gewandhaus Orchestra, founded in 1743 by music-loving merchants, remains the oldest civic orchestra still in existence.

 

Between these two poles, Weimar preserves in its quiet streets the memory of Goethe and Schiller, while the silhouette of the Wartburg still rises over the hills as it did in the age of the Minnesingers and their poetic contests.

 

Our journey follows this thread with precision, through a succession of halls and acoustics that each reflect a different era: a historical-instrument concert in the intimate setting of the Bach House, an evening with the Gewandhaus Orchestra beneath the gilded grandeur of the Großer Saal, cantatas heard in the very church where Bach first had them performed by his choristers, and chamber music in the intimate salon of the Mendelssohn House.

 

Everywhere, places and music echo one another, most often performed on the very instruments for which it was originally conceived, as though neither could have been created without the other.

The program
WEDNESDAY 23 SEPTEMBER 2026 | PARIS – FRANKFURT

Direct train from Paris to Frankfurt, the gateway to a Germany where commerce, faith, and artistic creation have been intertwined since the splendors of the Roman Empire.

 

On arrival, the Städel Museum opens a journey through 7 centuries of Western painting: from early Rhenish primitives to Flemish masters, from the Renaissance to the avant-gardes of the 20th century. This major cultural institution unfolds across a labyrinth of galleries where natural light accompanies the works throughout the day. Founded through the 1815 will of banker Johann Friedrich Städel, an avid art collector devoted to sharing his treasures with his city, it remains the oldest museum foundation in Germany.

 

A walk along the Main River follows, crossing bridges that link the commercial bank to Frankfurt’s old town, carefully rebuilt over time, until reaching the Imperial Cathedral of St. Bartholomew, whose red sandstone tower has watched over the city’s rooftops for centuries. Designated the electoral site of the kings of the Roman Empire in 1356, and the coronation church of ten emperors between 1562 and 1792, it preserves in the stone of its choir the silent memory of five centuries of German imperial power.

 

In the late afternoon, continue to Kronberg im Taunus and check-in at the Schlosshotel Kronberg, a castle built between 1889 and 1894 for the Dowager Empress Victoria, eldest daughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, in memory of her husband Emperor Frederick III, who reigned for just ninety-nine days. Architect Ernst von Ihne combined English Gothic, German Renaissance, and Hessian half-timbering to create a residence both princely and intimate, set within a park where evening silence falls early over the trees. The salons still preserve the furniture and art collections assembled by the Empress over thirty years of marriage.

 

Dinner and overnight at Schlosshotel Kronberg (1/1).

THURSDAY 24 SEPTEMBER 2026 | EISENACH

Breakfast at the hotel.

 

Private transfer to Thuringia, a land of deep forests, castles, and foundational figures of German culture, where the road winds between wooded hills and villages with steeply pitched roofs.

 

In Eisenach, the town where Johann Sebastian Bach was born in 1685 and spent his first ten years, the Bach House Museum displays nearly nine hundred historical instruments in a 15th century half-timbered house, one of the finest museums dedicated to the composer. A concert on historical instruments brings this musical memory to life, revealing the timbres Bach himself might have known (harpsichord, Silbermann spinet, clavichord, and baroque organs) in rare proximity to the original sound world.

 

Lunch and time to explore the town, before ascending to the Wartburg Castle, the fortress that has dominated Eisenach since the 12th century, watching over the city like a stone sentinel visible from afar through the treetops. It is here, according to a legend already recorded in the 13th century, that Landgrave Hermann of Thuringia, a generous patron of the arts, is said to have gathered the Minnesingers, including Wolfram von Eschenbach and Walther von der Vogelweide, for a singing contest remembered as the Sängerkrieg. Richard Wagner later used this legend as the basis for his opera Tannhäuser. More importantly, it was here that Martin Luther, sheltered after the Diet of Worms, translated the New Testament into German in just a few months, in an upstairs room where the silence must have weighed as heavily as the stakes were high – thereby laying the foundations of a shared literary language and profoundly reshaping Europe’s religious balance.

 

Return to Hotel Hohenhaus, an elegant country residence set within a vast estate.

 

Dinner and overnight at Hotel Hohenhaus (1/1).

FRIDAY 25 SEPTEMBER 2026 | WEIMAR – LEIPZIG

Breakfast at the hotel.

 

Departure for Weimar, a small city in Thuringia with pastel façades, where what is known as Weimar Classicism took shape at the end of the eighteenth century – a fertile dialogue between Goethe and Schiller around ideals of beauty, humanism, and balance.

 

The morning is devoted to a visit of Goethe’s House, where the writer lived for more than twenty years until his death in 1832. Room by room, the residence reveals a man of wide-ranging curiosity: a vast library, a natural science cabinet, and collections assembled over a lifetime bear witness to a mind equally devoted to science and poetry.

 

The Duchess Anna Amalia Library completes this immersion in Weimar’s golden age. Its Rococo oval hall houses one of Germany’s most precious collections, partly saved in 2004 from a devastating fire by a human chain spontaneously formed by the city’s inhabitants.

 

A stroll follows through the city’s colorful streets, where memories of Franz Liszt, court music director from 1842 to 1858 and tireless advocate of new music, intersect with those of Friedrich Nietzsche, who spent his final years here, and the Bauhaus, founded by Walter Gropius in 1919 amid the post-war upheaval.

 

Lunch at the Restaurant Anna, located within the legendary Hotel Elephant, an address that has hosted royalty and leading figures of 20th century German power.

 

In the late afternoon, return to Leipzig, a charming city shaped by centuries of trade fairs, publishing, and music, and closely associated with the work and legacy of Johann Sebastian Bach, Felix Mendelssohn, Robert Schumann, Richard Wagner, Gustav Mahler, and Edvard Grieg.

 

Check-in at the Steigenberger Grandhotel Handelshof.

 

In the evening, the Gewandhaus Orchestra welcomes Semyon Bychkov for a concert in the Großer Saal, a hall whose legendary acoustics have attracted the world’s greatest conductors for generations.

 

At 7:30 p.m., at the Gewandhaus:

GEWANDHAUSORCHESTER & SEMYON BYCHKOV

Gewandhausorchester
Semyon Bychkov

 

Conductor

 

MidoriViolin
Renaud Capuçon

 

Violin

 

Program:

– B. Smetana: The Moldau, the second symphonic poem from the cycle My Homeland;

– D. Glanert: Concerto for two violins and orchestra (world premiere; commissioned by the Gewandhaus Orchestra and the Bruckner Orchestra Linz);

– M. Moussorgski: Pictures at an Exhibition, in Maurice Ravel’s orchestral arrangement.

 

Founded in 1743 by a group of merchants determined to provide their city with a musical life worthy of its commercial prominence, the Gewandhaus Orchestra remains one of the oldest civic orchestras in Europe still in continuous operation. Felix Mendelssohn served as its Kapellmeister for more than a decade, shaping an artistic legacy that continues to define the orchestra’s identity today. Semyon Bychkov, who is due to become Music Director of the Paris Opera in 2028, counts the Gewandhaus Orchestra among the ensembles he conducts most frequently as a guest conductor.

 

Overnight at the Steigenberger Grandhotel Handelshof.

 

 

SATURDAY 26 SEPTEMBER 2026 | LEIPZIG

A guided walking tour opens this day devoted to Bach with an exploration of the city’s historic center. The visit continues at the Bach Museum, located opposite St. Thomas Church, where the twenty-seven years during which Johann Sebastian Bach served as Cantor of the St. Thomas School are brought vividly to life. It was here that, week after week, he composed the greater part of his cantatas and many of his greatest sacred works. The museum offers insight not only into the composer’s life but also into the musical, religious, and intellectual world of eighteenth-century Leipzig, a city where Lutheran faith, commerce, and scholarship were closely intertwined.

 

Lunch is served at the Thüringer Hof, one of Leipzig’s historic restaurants, long cherished by both locals and visitors alike.

 

The afternoon naturally leads to St. Thomas Church, the light-brick sanctuary where Bach trained the choir, educated generations of musicians, and directed the performance of his cantatas week after week. Today, his tomb rests before the altar, making the church not only a place of worship but also one of the most significant sites in the history of Western music.

 

At 3:00 p.m., at St. Thomas Church:

MOTETTTE | 25 JAHRE CHORHERRENSTIFTUNG

Gewandhausorchester

St. Thomas Choir of Leipzig

Janning HoenenPastor
Christian WolffPastor Emeritus
Andreas Reize

 

Choir Director

 

Pia DavilaSoprano
Jonathan MichieBass
Johannes Lang

 

Organist of St. Thomas Church

 

Program:

– J.-S. Bach: cantate “Whoever exalts himself shall be humbled” BWV 47.

 

At St. Thomas Church, the music of Johann Sebastian Bach returns to the place for which it was conceived. Appointed Thomaskantor in 1723, Bach directed the renowned St. Thomas Choir for twenty-seven years, shaping a musical tradition that has continued uninterrupted to the present day. Attending a motet in this church is therefore far more than hearing a sacred work in concert: it is taking part in a living liturgy in which music continues to fulfil its original purpose. To mark the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Chorstiftung, the Thomanerchor is joined by the Gewandhausorchester for a performance of Bach’s Cantata BWV 47, Wer sich selbst erhöhet, der soll erniedriget werden, inspired by the Gospel according to St. Luke. Composed in 1726, the work reflects on the virtue of humility through a contrapuntal architecture of remarkable richness, in which the rigour of Bach’s writing constantly serves its profound spiritual expression. Performed beneath the very vaults for which it was written, this music reveals the full depth of Bach’s genius and the extraordinary continuity of a musical tradition that has endured for nearly three centuries.

 

Late afternoon at leisure. We recommend visiting St. Nicholas Church (Nikolaikirche), where the Monday Prayers that began in 1982 became the focal point of the peaceful demonstrations of autumn 1989, or exploring the Museum of Fine Arts, whose outstanding collections span from the Old Masters to contemporary art.

 

Farewell dinner at the Michelin-starred Stadtpfeiffer, one of Leipzig’s finest dining destinations.

 

Overnight at the Steigenberger Grandhotel Handelshof.

SUNDAY 27 SEPTEMBER 2026 | LEIPZIG

After checking out of the hotel, the morning begins with a visit to the Mendelssohn House, the final residence of Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy and the only surviving home of the composer anywhere in the world.

 

A conductor, pianist, and educator, Mendelssohn was also the figure who restored Johann Sebastian Bach to the forefront of musical history. In 1829, in Berlin, he conducted the first performance of the St Matthew Passion since Bach’s death, a landmark event that returned the composer to the central place he continues to hold today. In Leipzig, where Mendelssohn served as Kapellmeister and helped shape the city’s musical institutions, his private world is revealed through elegant reception rooms, manuscripts, and personal correspondence, offering an intimacy that no biography alone could convey.

 

In the warmly paneled Musiksalon, the Saxonia Piano Trio presents a private concert featuring works by Haydn and Schumann, recreating the spirit of the intimate musical evenings that Mendelssohn himself hosted here for friends and fellow musicians.

 

Following lunch, the journey continues to Berlin international airport for the return flight to Paris.

Your Accommodations
In Frankfurt | Schlosshotel Kronberg *****

Overlooking the wooded hills of the Taunus, just a few kilometres from Frankfurt, Schlosshotel Kronberg offers the rare opportunity to stay in a genuine imperial residence. Built between 1889 and 1893 for Empress Victoria Friedrich, the eldest daughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, the castle has become one of Germany’s most prestigious hotels while preserving the original furnishings, artworks, and atmosphere of the historic residence.

 

Each room and suite are individually designed, extending this immersion into history. Antique furniture, richly woven tapestries, paintings from the House of Hesse collection, and views over the landscaped park create elegant spaces where historic refinement is complemented by contemporary comfort. No two accommodations are alike, each possessing its own distinctive character.

 

Gastronomy is an integral part of the experience. The Victoria Restaurant celebrates seasonal ingredients in an elegant setting, while the castle’s historic lounges, terrace, and bar provide the perfect backdrop for enjoying the refined lifestyle of a grand aristocratic estate. The property is surrounded by extensive landscape gardens and an adjacent golf course, offering a peaceful environment ideal for leisurely walks and relaxation.

In Herleshausen | Hohenhaus Hotel *****

Set away from the main roads in the heart of a vast wooded estate spanning several hundred hectares, Hohenhaus Hotel embodies the understated elegance of Germany’s grand country houses. Housed in a historic manor surrounded by meadows, forests, and ponds, this Relais & Châteaux property offers an atmosphere where time seems to stand still. It captivates guests with both its natural setting and the warmth of its hospitality, combining heritage, nature, and a refined art of living.

 

Each room and suite is individually designed, blending the charm of a historic residence with contemporary comfort. Elegant furnishings, fine materials, and views over the parkland or the rolling Hessian countryside create a peaceful retreat, ideal for relaxing after a day of cultural exploration.

 

The Hohenhaus restaurant is one of the estate’s defining highlights. Its cuisine showcases produce sourced from the estate itself and from local farmers, following a seasonal approach that celebrates the flavors of Germany with elegance and creativity. The inviting lounges, library, gardens, and the many walking trails that wind through the estate provide the perfect setting to extend this timeless escape.

In Leipzig | Steigenberger Grandhotel Handelshof *****

Located in the former Handelshof, a prestigious trade fair palace inaugurated in the early 20th century, the Steigenberger Grandhotel Handelshof enjoys a landmark address in the heart of Leipzig’s historic center. Behind its meticulously restored monumental façade lies a hotel where architectural heritage blends seamlessly with contemporary luxury, just steps from the Market Square, St. Thomas Church, the Gewandhaus, and the Leipzig Opera.

 

Each room and suite is unique, reflecting the building’s historic architecture, and combines generous proportions, elegant design, and modern amenities. Fine materials, a soothing color palette, and excellent soundproofing create a refined atmosphere, ideal for unwinding after a day exploring the city’s rich cultural heritage.

 

Brasserie Le Grand showcases cuisine inspired by Europe’s great culinary traditions in an elegant setting, while the bar provides the perfect place to extend the evening over a drink. The hotel also features an extensive wellness area with a sauna, steam bath, and fitness center, offering guests a relaxing retreat.

Price per Person
Package price for a double room

€5,900 per person

 

The price of this trip includes: accommodation in a double room with breakfast and tourist tax for 4 nights from 23 to 27 September 2026 • tickets for all concerts • the tours listed in the programme with our tour guide throughout the stay • the lunches and dinners listed in the programme (drinks included) • transfers by private minibus • the services of a member of La Fugue on site • repatriation assistance.

The price of this trip does not include: extras • international transport • airport and railway station transfers for participants not booking the train and flight recommended in the programme • cancellation insurance.

 

Small group journey.

Transport arrangements and airport transfers available upon request.

 

Booking guaranteed until 18 July 2026 (subject to availability).

Tour limited to a maximum of 8 participants.

Package price for a double room for single occupancy

€6,860 per person

 

The price of this trip includes: accommodation in a double room with breakfast and tourist tax for 4 nights from 23 to 27 September 2026 • tickets for all concerts • the tours listed in the programme with our tour guide throughout the stay • the lunches and dinners listed in the programme (drinks included) • transfers by private minibus • the services of a member of La Fugue on site • repatriation assistance.

The price of this trip does not include: extras • international transport • airport and railway station transfers for participants not booking the train and flight recommended in the programme • cancellation insurance.

 

Small group journey.

Transport arrangements and airport transfers available upon request.

 

Booking guaranteed until 18 July 2026 (subject to availability).

Tour limited to a maximum of 8 participants.

Information about this trip
In charge of the destination
Pauline Heckly
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