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BERLIN TRAVEL GUIDE

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Berlin Travel Guide<br />

1<br />

1685: Edict of<br />

Potsdam<br />

Berlin’s history as a cultural<br />

capital began in 1685, when<br />

the far-sighted Great Elector<br />

announced in the Edict of<br />

Potsdam that around 20,000<br />

Huguenots would be taken<br />

in by Berlin. Many were<br />

excellent craftsmen and<br />

scientists, who, having fled<br />

Catholic France because of<br />

their Protestant beliefs,<br />

brought a new age of cultural<br />

ascendancy to the provincial town.<br />

2<br />

1744: Frederick the Great<br />

Although “Old Fritz”, as Frederick the Great was<br />

nicknamed, preferred the isolation of Sanssouci to the<br />

bustle of Berlin, in 1740 he began to transform the city<br />

into a new metropolis. In particular, the “Forum<br />

Fridericianum” in Unter den Linden brought new<br />

splendours to the town, and masterpieces such as the<br />

national opera house helped transform Berlin into one<br />

of the most important European cities.<br />

3<br />

1928: Golden Twenties<br />

Between 1919 and 1933, Berlin flourished culturally<br />

and became an important metropolis. Film, theatre,<br />

cabaret shows and thousands of restaurants and bars<br />

transformed the town into an international centre of<br />

entertainment. In the realms of fine art and architecture,<br />

too, Berlin set new standards.<br />

4<br />

1945: Surrender<br />

Signed in Berlin-Karlshorst on 8 May 1945,<br />

Germany’s unconditional surrender marked more than<br />

the end of World War II. The previous Jewish population<br />

of 161,000 had virtually disappeared and Berliners called<br />

their city “the empire’s fields of rubble”.<br />

1953: Workers’<br />

Uprising in East<br />

Germany<br />

On 17 June 1953,<br />

construction workers in<br />

Frankfurter Allee<br />

demonstrated against an<br />

increase in the average rate of production. Soviet tanks<br />

suppressed the rebellion while, in West Berlin, the<br />

uprising was interpreted as a demonstration for German<br />

unification.<br />

6<br />

1961: Building of the Wall<br />

The building of the Berlin Wall, which commenced<br />

during the night of 12 August 1961, was, after the<br />

surrender of 1945, the second most traumatic event for<br />

many Berliners. Many families were torn apart by the<br />

concrete wall and more than 100 people were to be killed<br />

over the following 30 years at the border dividing East<br />

and West.<br />

7<br />

1963: “I am a Berliner”<br />

No other politician was as enthusiastically received<br />

in Berlin as the US President John F. Kennedy. On 17<br />

July 1963, in front of Rathaus Schöneberg, he declared<br />

to the cheering crowd: “I am a Berliner”. Berliners had<br />

forgiven the US for staying silent when the Wall was<br />

traveldk.com<br />

5<br />

built. Kennedy confirmed once more that the Western<br />

Allies would stand by Berlin and support the town, just<br />

as they had done during the blockade of 1948–9, when<br />

the US and Britain air-lifted food to the “island” of West<br />

Berlin.<br />

8<br />

1968: The late Sixties<br />

During the late 1960s, West Berlin students<br />

transformed Germany. Rudi Dutschke and others<br />

propounded political change, free love and a reappraisal<br />

of Germany’s Nazi past. The movement came to an<br />

untimely end when Dutschke was assassinated in April<br />

1968.<br />

1989: Fall of the Wall<br />

The fall of the Berlin<br />

Wall in November 1989<br />

heralded a new dawn. For<br />

the first time in 30 years,<br />

Berliners from both halves of<br />

the divided city were able to<br />

visit each other. The town<br />

celebrated all along Ku’damm and in front of the<br />

Brandenburg Gate. When the Wall was built, Willy<br />

Brandt, then governing mayor of West Berlin, had<br />

promised: “Berlin will survive!” He was right.<br />

9<br />

10<br />

1991: Berlin becomes<br />

the capital of<br />

Germany<br />

In 1991, Berlin was officially<br />

declared the capital of the<br />

reunified Federal Republic of<br />

Germany. Allied Forces left<br />

the city during 1994, but it<br />

was only when the<br />

Bundestag, the German parliament, moved here from<br />

Bonn on 19 April 1999 that Berlin became the “real”<br />

capital. Today, all the main ministries, the Bundesrat<br />

(upper house), and the Chancellor’s and the President’s<br />

offices are based in Berlin.<br />

Hidden Treasures<br />

Neuer See<br />

Shimmering in a<br />

mysterious emerald green,<br />

the largest lake in Tiergarten<br />

is perfect for rowing.<br />

Afterwards you can recover<br />

in the Café am Neuen See.<br />

1<br />

➤ S-Bahn station Tiergarten • Map M5<br />

2 Löwenbrücke<br />

The Lion Bridge, which<br />

leads across a small stream<br />

near Neuer See, is<br />

“suspended” from the<br />

sculptures of four lions. This<br />

idyllic spot is a favourite<br />

meeting point for gays in<br />

Berlin.<br />

➤ Großer Weg • Map M5<br />

49<br />

Top Ten

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