Grand European Tour – Budapest to Amsterdam
- 25 Sep ‘27
- 14 nights
- Departing from
- Viking Rota
-
Inside price fromCall for price
-
Outside price fromCall for price
-
Balcony price fromCall for price
-
Suite price fromCall for price
YOUR ITINERARY
Budapest - Budapest - Vienna - Vienna - Melk - Passau - Regensburg - Nuremberg - Bamberg - Wurzburg - Wertheim - Koblenz - Cologne - Kinderdijk - Amsterdam























Budapest, Hungary’s capital, is bisected by the R...
Budapest, Hungary’s capital, is bisected by the River...
Vienna, Austria’s capital, lies in the country...
Vienna, Austria’s capital, lies in the country̵...
Melk is an Austrian town on the River Danube, west of...
Passau, a German city on the Austrian border, lies...
Regensburg, a Bavarian city on the Danube River in southeas...
Nuremberg is the second-largest city of the German state ...
Bamberg is a town in northern Bavaria, Germany, laid out o...
The Würzburg Residence is a palace in Würzburg, Germ...
Wertheim is a town in southwestern Germany, in the state o...
Koblenz, spelled Coblenz before 1926, is a German city ...
Cologne, a 2,000-year-old city spanning the Rhine River in we...
Kinderdijk is a village in the the NetherlandsR...
Amsterdam is the Netherlands’ capital, known for its a...
YOUR SHIP - The Viking Rota
Róta was a rebellious Valkyrie, one of the fierce warrior women known as the “choosers of the slain” who served Odin. During Ragnarök, the Valkyries chose who would die and escorted souls to Valhalla, a realm of the dead in Norse mythology. Associated with chaos, Róta was often linked to Gunnr, another warrior maiden, and Skuld, the youngest of the Norns—the Norse goddesses of fate.
Description
Róta was a rebellious Valkyrie, one of the fierce warrior women known as the “choosers of the slain” who served Odin. During Ragnarök, the Valkyries chose who would die and escorted souls to Valhalla, a realm of the dead in Norse mythology. Associated with chaos, Róta was often linked to Gunnr, another warrior maiden, and Skuld, the youngest of the Norns—the Norse goddesses of fate.