• Kiek in de Kök (Low German: Peek into the Kitchen) is an artillery tower in Tallinn, Estonia, built in 1475. It gained the name Kiek in de Kök from the ability of tower...
  • Tallinn City Museum encompasses multiple museums in Tallinn’s medieval Old Town and districts of Kadriorg and Kalamaja.
  • Tallinn, Estonia’s Kiek in de Kök (translated as “Peep into the Kitchen” since the high tower windows could see into the kitchens of the houses around it) is a...
  • The tower Kiek in de Kök together with the passages of the Ingrian and Swedish bastions is an exciting part of Tallinn historical...
  • Kiek in de Kök Fortification Museum forms a complex over 500 m long that includes four medieval towers: the first artillery tower Kiek in de Kök, Maiden Tower...
  • Kiek in de Kök Fortification Museum forms a museum complex over 500 metres long that includes four towers: Kiek in de Kök, Maiden's Tower, Tallitorn Tower...
  • The story of defending Tallinn. The Kiek in de Kök Museum and Bastion Tunnels, located in Tallinn Old Town, form a museum complex over 500 meters long and...
  • Kiek in de Kök, built in 1475, is one of the 20 of the original 46 defensive towers that still remain.
  • Tickets to Kiek in de Kök include admission to the adjacent Maiden, Stable and Gate towers.
  • A striking example of the evolution of medieval Tallinn towers into gun towers is the Kiek in de Kök tower, erected in 1475-1483 on the slope of Toompea hill.
  • Tallinn, Estonia’s capital on the Baltic Sea, retains its walled and cobblestoned Old Town, which is home to cafes and shops as well as Kiek in de Kök...
  • Compared to the other Tallinn towers Kiek in de Kök was predominant in its fire power, due to its 27 embrasures for cannons and 30 for handguns.