Christian Tiedt
· 03.06.2026
Estonia is a small country, but it has the fourth largest island in the Baltic Sea: Saaremaa. It separates the Gulf of Riga from the rest of the Baltic Sea and is flat, just like the sea around it. To the south lies Kuressaare, its capital, which has had many masters and whose traces can still be found today. Today, despite so much chequered history, it is hard to imagine a more relaxed place.
Arensburg - the old German name for Kuressaare is used for marketing purposes. It can also be found in the pretty historic town centre with the Kurhaus, Waage and Laurentius Church. The imposing bishop's castle itself is also in impeccable condition and impresses with its sheer size alone. The walls and ramparts look freshly restored, almost new - like the deliberately modern main gate. Rowboats are out and about in the moat.
The Museum inside leafs through the various chapters of Saaremaa's past, painful ones such as the Second World War, and leaden ones such as the decades of Soviet rule afterwards, when Kuressaare became Kingisepa, named after a model Estonian communist. But also the proud chapter of the "singing revolution", which restored Estonia's freedom and independence in the course of perestroika in 1991. A lot of history for a single island!
Guest sailors can look forward to one of the most beautiful harbours in the Baltic: the Kuressaare city harbour (Kuressaare Jahisadam) is home to the local yacht club and offers a restaurant, bar and sauna as well as the usual service in beautiful surroundings.
The city centre, beach and castle can be reached in ten minutes. Three nearby wellness hotels offer additional options for well-being. A canal-like channel leads to the harbour, the shallow embankments on either side are populated by seagulls. The upper sign of the leading light line stands on the roof of one of the hotels.

Editor Travel