Welcome to my pages.

Potsdam

Germany




Germany, facts and history in brief


Potsdam
Excerpted from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Potsdam (population 131,900) is a city in eastern Germany, and the capital of the state of Brandenburg.
It is situated near Berlin, on the Havel river. Potsdam was probably founded in the 10th century.
It was first mentioned in 993.
The village remained small and insignificant, until it was chosen for the residence of Frederick William I, The city was later also adapted as a residence of the Prussian royal family.
The majestic buildings were mainly built during the regency of Frederick the Great.
The Sanssouci palace is one of these buildings.
While Berlin was the official capital of Prussia and later of the German Empire, the court remained in Potsdam.
The city lost this status as a second capital in 1918, when the World War I was over and the emperor The city of Potsdam was severely damaged in bombing raids during World War II.
The Cecilienhof palace was the scene of the Potsdam Conference in August 1945.
The government of the GDR endeavoured to erase the symbols of Prussian militarism.
Many historic buildings were torn down.
Potsdam bordered on West Berlin and was, after the construction of the Berlin Wall, cut off from the neighbouring metropolis.
After the German reunification Potsdam became the capital of the newly established state of Brandenburg.

Sights in Potsdam:
Sanssouci Palace, former palace of the Prussian royal and German imperial families.
Orangery Palace, former palace for foreign royal guests.
Neues Palais ("New Palace"), an additional palace in Sanssouci Park, built in 1769.
Charlottenhof, another palace in Sanssouci Park, by Karl Friedrich Schinkel (1826).
New Garden with two smaller palaces, one of them Cecilienhof, where the Potsdam Conference was held.
Old Town with the Brandenburg Gate (1770, not to be confused with the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin).
St. Nikolai church (1850) and the
Town Hall (1753).
Babelsberg, a quarter east of the centre, housing the UFA film studios.



For a more information about Potsdam see Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This page was retrieved and condensed from (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potsdam) see Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, September 2003.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License (see Copyrights for details).

About Wikipedia
Disclaimers

This information was correct in September 2003. E. & O.E.



Hui Chin and I have visited Potsdam and many previously East German cities, because they were 'in our way', but mainly because I couldn't or didn't visit them before.

We found a noticeable difference between them, including Potsdam, a lack of vibrancy in comparison with the western cities, like Hamburg or Bremen or Munich, only to mention a few.

Apart from that, they were very nice, very interesting and very hospitable to us.





You can click on these photos for an enlargement.

2003

Potsdam Potsdam Potsdam
Potsdam Potsdam Potsdam





Site Index            Back to Top            Photos Index

Thanks for coming, I hope you have enjoyed it, will recommend it to your friends, and will come back later to see my site developing and expanding.

I'm trying to make my pages enjoyable and trouble free for everyone, please let me know of any mistakes or trouble with links, so I can fix any problem as soon as possible.

These pages are best viewed with monitor resolution set at 640x480 and kept simple on purpose so everyone can enjoy them across all media and platforms.

Thank you.


You can e-mail me at Webmaster


free webpage hit counter