Jena, Germany

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Jena (population ~110,000) is Thuringia's science city — birthplace of the Carl Zeiss optical enterprise (1846), home to the world's oldest operating planetarium (1926), and seat of the Friedrich-Schiller-Universität (founded 1558), where Schiller taught from 1789 to 1799. The city occupies a narrow Saale river valley ringed by pale limestone cliffs, 30 minutes from Erfurt by ICE/regional train. The Battle of Jena (1806), where Napoleon destroyed the Prussian army, was fought on the surrounding Plateau.

Carl Zeiss & Optical Heritage

Carl Zeiss workshop (1846), Ernst Abbe's lens formula (1869), Schott glass (1884) — the trio that created precision optics. Deutsches Optisches Museum with the world's largest optical instrument collection. Carl Zeiss Foundation ownership model still intact.

Zeiss Planetarium — World's Oldest Operating

Opened 1926 on the Botanical Garden grounds — the world's oldest operating planetarium, still projecting shows daily under a 19-metre dome. Gift of the Carl Zeiss Foundation to the city. Combined visit with the Botanical Garden (2nd oldest in Germany).

Friedrich-Schiller-Universität & German Idealism

Founded 1558 — Schiller taught here 1789–99; Fichte, Hegel, Schelling, and the Jena Romantics defined German Idealism in the 1790s. Hegel wrote the Phenomenology of Spirit in Jena. Schillers Gartenhaus is a museum on the Saale bank.

Battle of Jena 1806 — Napoleon's Decisive Win

Napoleon defeated the Prussian army on the Landgrafen plateau on 14 October 1806 — the same day as Auerstedt. Napoleonstein marks his field headquarters. One of the most significant Napoleonic victories on German soil, with a marked battlefield accessible by trail.

Botanical Garden — 2nd Oldest in Germany

Founded 1586 — 12,000 plant species, Victorian palm house, alpine and Mediterranean sections, and the Zeiss Planetarium on the same grounds. Free entry to the garden. April–May and late summer are the best visiting periods.

JenTower & City Panorama

128-metre cylindrical skyscraper (the tallest in the former East German states) on the central Eichplatz — observation deck open to visitors with panoramic views over the Saale valley and the surrounding limestone plateau.

Practical Info

Safety: Jena is a safe university city. The Saale valley floor and university quarter are well-frequented. Normal urban precautions near the Hauptbahnhof in the evening. Language: German throughout. English spoken at the Zeiss Planetarium, the Deutsches Optisches Museum, and the main university information points. Limited English in local restaurants and shops outside the student quarter — some German basics are helpful. Currency: Euro (EUR). ATMs on the Markt and near the main university buildings. Planetarium and Deutsches Optisches Museum require tickets purchased at the venue.
Travel Overview

Jena is a compact university city with a specific and unusual identity: the birthplace of precision optics (Carl Zeiss and Ernst Abbe founded the optical empire that made 'Jena glass' a universal term) and one of the oldest universities in the German-speaking world. The city's topography is striking — the Saale river cuts a narrow valley between steep limestone and chalk cliffs (the Jenzig, the Hausberg, and the Leutra valley), and the mediaeval city grew along the western bank with a market square and collegiate buildings within a few hundred metres of the river. The JenTower (128 m, the only cylindrical skyscraper in the former East German states) rises above the compact centre as the city's unconventional landmark. The Zeiss heritage defines Jena's scientific identity. Carl Zeiss opened his workshop in 1846, physicist Ernst Abbe developed the mathematical formula for lens design in 1869 that made precision microscope manufacture possible, and Otto Schott founded the Schott glass works in 1884 — the three together created a vertically integrated optical industry that produced microscopes, telescopes, camera lenses, and binoculars. The legacy survives in the Deutsches Optisches Museum (the world's largest collection of optical instruments, on Jena's Johannisplatz) and the Zeiss Planetarium (opened 1926 on the Botanical Garden grounds, the world's oldest operational planetarium, still using updated projection technology). The Friedrich-Schiller-Universität (FSU), with approximately 18,000 students, is the other pillar of the city's identity — Schiller taught here as a professor of history from 1789 to 1799, Fichte, Hegel, and Schelling also lectured here, and the Romantic philosophers made Jena a centre of German Idealism in the 1790s–1800s. For visitors, Jena is a manageable half-day to full-day stop on a Thuringia itinerary — or a standalone base for those interested in the history of science and optics. The city is 30 minutes from Erfurt by ICE or regional train and 15 minutes from Weimar by regional service.

Discover Jena

The story of Jena's optical empire begins with three names that changed modern science and industry. Carl Zeiss (1816–1888) opened his optical workshop in Jena in 1846, initially making simple magnifying lenses and microscopes by craftsman intuition. Ernst Abbe (1840–1905), a physicist at the Friedrich-Schiller-Universität, joined Zeiss in 1866 and over the next three years derived the mathematical sine condition (Abbe's law) that made precision optical design possible for the first time — replacing workshop intuition with calculable lens formulas. Otto Schott (1851–1935), a glassmaker from Witten, brought Abbe a new borosilicate glass formula in 1879 that transformed what lenses could achieve; the three co-founded the Schott Glassworks in Jena in 1884. After Zeiss's death, Abbe restructured the company as the Carl Zeiss Foundation (1889), a profit-sharing enterprise without private shareholders — still the ownership model today. The Zeiss Foundation funded the construction of the Zeiss Planetarium (1926) and much of Jena's university and civic infrastructure. The Deutsches Optisches Museum (DOM) at Johannisplatz 26 holds the world's largest collection of optical instruments — microscopes from Leeuwenhoek to present day, eyeglasses through history, Zeiss telescopes, spy binoculars, and the original workshop instruments. The Carl Zeiss Jena GmbH continues manufacturing precision optics on the original site; factory tours are available by appointment.