Stralsund is awesome. I visited the old town, and there were a lot of beautiful Brick Gothic and Northern Renaissance buildings throughout its charming streets. I saw the Baltic Sea for the first time in my life there as well! Once I'm back home I'll post pictures, aside from (especially one of) the three churches and the town hall there were many a pleasurable stone- and brick-crafted sight.
Speaking of the town hall though, in its front there were engraved a handful of coats of arms. While most were obviousl, like the one of Stralsund itself or the Pomeranian gryphon, there one one that still bothers me. It presented a sable, double-headed eagle on Or (or I think it was Or, the colours had wilthered after the hundreds of years; might have been argent), which would have meant that it was the coat of arms of a Holy Roman Emperor. Yet on its chest it had an escutcheon, vertically split in either azure, gules or even vert (again, hard to tell as the colour had come off a bit; being colourblind doesn't help, although my father couldn't tell either) and below it, Or. BUT I DON'T KNOW ANY HOLY ROMAN EMPEROR WHO HAD ANY SUCH A COAT OF ARMS AND IT BOTHERS ME
Pics once I get home, although I doubt anyone here would know.
EDIT: GAAH UPON CLOSER INSPECTION OF THE PHOTO I TOOK I NOTICED THE TOP HALF OF THE INNER COAT OF ARMS HAS A PATTERN BUT I CAN'T SEE WHAT SORT OF FUR, if it's one, IT IS AND LESS SO THE COLOURS IT'S MADE OF
Afterwards my father wanted to take a small trip to the island of Rügen, to which a large (modern) bridge led. We failed to see the open sea though (as in the harbour of Stralsund it was a rather enclosed area between Rügen and the continent, only partially leading into the open), but we somehow landed in what I assume to be the tiniest place ever (5-7 hourses, 2-3 of which were decaying) in the middle of fields (which caused me to develop hay fever reactions again) and only reachable through a very badly maintained path. On the map it looked like it'd have a connection to the see and also be bigger, but that was an illusion! :(
Still it was sort of hilarious as I'm sure it was a place no man had ever set foot on before. Or at least no West German.