• www.berlin-videoguide.de • Travel Guide, Destination Germany: Berlin – Gendarmenmarkt. • Die besten, schönsten, interessantesten und beliebtesten Reiseziele, Urlaubsziele, Sehenswürdigkeiten in Deutschland: Berlin – Gendarmenmarkt. — The Gendarmenmarkt is a square in Berlin, and the site of the Konzerthaus and the French and German Cathedrals. The centre of the Gendarmenmarkt is crowned by a statue of Germany’s poet Friedrich Schiller. The square was created by Johann Arnold Nering at the end of the seventeenth century as the Linden-Markt and reconstructed by Georg Christian Ungerin 1773. The Gendarmenmarkt is named after the cuirassier regiment Gens d’Armes, which was deployed at this square until 1773. The French Cathedral (in German: Französischer Dom) the older of the two cathedrals was built by the Huguenot community between 1701 and 1705. The cathedral was modeled after the destroyed Huguenot church in Charenton-Saint-Maurice, France. The tower and porticos, designed by Carl von Gontard, were added to the building in 1785. The French cathedral has a viewing platform, a restaurant and a Huguenot museum. The German Cathedral (in German: Deutscher Dom) is located in the south of the Gendarmenmarkt. It has a pentagonal structure which was designed by Martin Grünberg and built in 1708 by Giovanni Simonetti. In 1785 it was modified by Carl von Gontard, who build the domed tower. The German cathedral was completely destroyed during World War II through fire in 1945 …
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Gendarmenmarkt – Berlin, Germany
Donnerstag, 27. Januar 2011Berlin East German Checkpoint Bravo Tour
Mittwoch, 28. Juli 2010After World War 2, the Allies divided Berlin half. The Americans, British, and French all took the West side of the city. The Soviets took the East. In the middle of the cold war, August 13, 1961, the Berlin Wall was built by the soviets effectively cutting the city in half. Residents both sides of the city were forced to have to go through checkpoints to be able to enter and leave these portions of the city — if they could at all. Most people are familiar with Checkpoint Charlie, now a museum in downtown Berlin. However, there were other checkpoints throughout the area. This is Checkpoint Bravo, in the Southwest of Berlin. The West (American) guard checkpoint area has been saved. Unlike its counterpart, however, only the East German (Soviet) command tower at checkpoint Bravo still stands, and is badly in need of restoration. When this command post was originally built, it sat looking out over a huge concrete area that was the checkpoint for those wishing to leave East Berlin (soviet side) and head into West Berlin. Cars would pull in here from one direction or the other and guards would search vehicles and belongings and check the papers before allowing entry and/or exit. Vehicles going to West Berlin then drove about 500 meters (about 1.5 miles) were stopped and went through it all again before being able to enter the west (American) side of the city. Vehicles entering East Berlin (soviet side) had already gone through the other checkpoint before exiting. The concrete …