Bundesstraße 14

Baden-Württemberg Konstanz district (KN number plates) Tuttlingen district (TUT number plates) Rottweil district (RW number plates) diversion around Rottweil together with the B 27 diversion around Rottweil together with the B 27 under A 81 / E41 Freudenstadt district (FDS number plates) continues as B 28a replaced by B 28a replaced by A 81 / E41 replaced by B 28 Böblingen district (BB number plates) replaced by A 81 / A 831 / E41 Stuttgart (S number plates) continuation of A 831 together with the B 10 through Stuttgart together with the B 10 through Stuttgart Rems-Murr-Kreis (WN number plates) Schwäbisch Hall district (SHA number plates) together with the B 19 in the direction of Untermünkheim together with the B 19 in the direction of Schwäbisch Hall-Heimbach replaced by A 6 E50 Bavaria Ansbach district (AN number plates) Fürth district (FÜ number plates) Nürnberg (N number plates) replaced by B 4 R connecting to B 2 / B 4 / B 8 Nürnberger Land district (LAU number plates) replaced by A 9 / E51 Amberg-Sulzbach district (AS number plates) Schwandorf district (SAD number plates) Neustadt an der Waldnaab district (NEW number plates) replaced by A 6 / E50 continues as 605 to Rozvadov and Přimda Bundesstraße 14 (abbr.

It connects Stockach in Baden-Württemberg with Rozvadov in the Czech Republic.

The biggest towns along this road are Stuttgart and Nuremberg.

Wide parts of today's Bundesstraße 14 date back to medieval or even older trade routes.

[1] The stretch from Nuremberg to Prague was once known als Goldene Straße (″Golden Road″)[2]

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