Der Vierte König occupies a residential stretch of southern Cologne at Gottesweg 165, placing it in a quieter register than the city's more central dining addresses. The name, 'The Fourth King', carries a local mythological resonance that sets an immediate tone. For Cologne's serious dining circuit, the address alone signals a certain kind of deliberate remove from the mainstream.
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- Address
- Gottesweg 165, 50939 Köln, Germany
- Phone
- +4922148481288
- Website
- derviertekoenig.com

Southern Cologne's Quieter Register
Der Vierte König is a French-Indian Fusion restaurant at Gottesweg 165, 50939 Köln, Germany, with a Google rating of 4.7 and an average price of about $40 per person. Cologne's dining geography has a clear centre of gravity: the inner city, the Belgian Quarter, and the ring of addresses that cluster around recognisable postcodes. Gottesweg, in the southern residential district of Klettenberg, operates on different terms. The street is long, lined with solid pre-war apartment buildings, and the approach to Der Vierte König on foot carries the kind of ambient quiet that signals a neighbourhood restaurant in the original sense, a place that exists for the people who live nearby, not primarily for visitors working through a shortlist. That geographic positioning shapes the entire experience before a single dish arrives.
The name itself deserves a moment. Cologne's civic mythology includes the legend of the Three Wise Men, whose relics are held in the Cathedral and whose presence defines the city's identity as a pilgrimage destination. Der Vierte König, the Fourth King, invokes a figure who, in local tradition, arrived too late or was overlooked. The name carries a quietly ironic charge: a place that positions itself as the one that got missed.
The Lunch and Dinner Divide in Cologne's Independent Dining Scene
Across Germany's mid-tier restaurant market, the gap between lunch and dinner service has become one of the more revealing indicators of a kitchen's priorities. Restaurants that invest in a proper midday offer, rather than a stripped-back prix-fixe designed to turn tables, are signalling something about their approach to hospitality. In Cologne, this divide is visible across the independent dining tier: venues like maiBeck and Le Moissonnier Bistro have developed distinct lunchtime identities that differ meaningfully from their evening formats, in both menu depth and room atmosphere.
For a southern neighbourhood address like Der Vierte König, this dynamic takes on particular weight. A residential location at Gottesweg 165 means the lunchtime clientele skews local, nearby professionals, the occasional household name from the district, people who have time for a proper meal in the middle of the day. Evening service, by contrast, tends to draw a broader radius. The room's character shifts accordingly: the same physical space reads differently at noon, when natural light through street-level windows creates an informal tone, than it does after dark, when the same room contracts into something more considered. This is not a distinction unique to this address; it describes a structural reality across Cologne's neighbourhood dining tier.
What distinguishes the lunch-versus-dinner question in this part of the city is the absence of tourist pressure. Areas like the Altstadt or the streets around the Cathedral carry a lunchtime crowd that moves quickly and expects predictable formats. Klettenberg does not. That freedom allows a kitchen to work more deliberately during the day, running a shorter menu at a pace that suits the neighbourhood rather than the tour itinerary. Comparable dynamics play out at higher price points when you look at what La Cuisine Rademacher or La Société do with their midday formats relative to their evening ambitions.
Where Der Vierte König Sits in Cologne's Dining Hierarchy
Cologne's upper tier is anchored by a small number of addresses with significant recognition: Ox & Klee holds two Michelin stars and occupies a different competitive register entirely. Just outside the city, Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach has long been one of the most decorated tables in the broader Rhine region. Der Vierte König operates below that recognition tier, in the bracket that Cologne's neighbourhood dining scene depends on most: independent, address-specific, without the weight of major awards but also without the pricing and formality those awards bring.
That positioning matters for the reader making a practical decision. Germany's fine-dining circuit, from Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn to Aqua in Wolfsburg, tends to cluster its highest ambitions in destination or resort contexts. Cologne's serious urban dining tier, represented by venues like JAN in Munich as a comparable model in another German city, punches at a different weight class. Der Vierte König belongs to the neighbourhood layer of that ecosystem: the restaurants that serious diners in a city know and return to, that do not appear prominently in tourist resources, and that function as reliable addresses for people who live within twenty minutes of the door.
For context on what the upper end of the market offers elsewhere, Victor's Fine Dining by Christian Bau in Perl and ES:SENZ in Grassau represent the German destination-dining tier. CODA Dessert Dining in Berlin demonstrates how a highly specialised format can earn significant recognition in an urban German context. Der Vierte König sits outside all of those reference points, its comparable set is Cologne-specific and neighbourhood-scale.
Planning a Visit: What to Know Before You Go
Gottesweg 165 is in Klettenberg, reachable from central Cologne by tram through the southern corridor toward Sülz and Klettenberg, a journey of roughly fifteen to twenty minutes from the main station. The area is walkable from the tram stop, and the residential character of the street means parking is available for those arriving by car, which is more common at this distance from the centre than it would be for inner-city addresses.
Comparison points for readers building a Cologne itinerary: if you are also considering Schanz in Piesport or Waldhotel Sonnora in Dreis as day-trip destinations from the city, the profile of those meals is significantly different in format, price, and occasion register. Der Vierte König belongs to a more routine, repeatable dining category. International reference points like Le Bernardin in New York City or Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg illustrate what the top end of the formal tasting-menu format looks like globally and nationally; Der Vierte König is not competing in that space.
In Context: Similar Options
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Der Vierte KönigThis venue — the venue you are viewing | French-Indian Fusion | $$$ | , | |
| Wein Bisto L'escalier | French Bistro with Local Seasonal Cuisine | $$ | , | Neustadt/Süd |
| Christoph Pauls Restaurant | Modern French Gourmet | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Neustadt/Süd |
| L'Imprimerie | French Bistro | $$$ | , | Bayenthal |
| Reef and Beef | Steakhouse & Seafood | $$$ | , | Bayenthal |
| Hanse Stube | Innovative French Haute Cuisine with Rhineland Influences | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Altstadt/Nord |
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