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Essential
Architecture- Berlin
Siegessaeule Victory Column
Goldelse |
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architect
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Heinrich Strack |
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location
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in the Tiergarten on axis with the
Brandenburg Gate on the Unter den Linden |
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date
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1864 |
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style
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NeoClassical |
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construction
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Anchored on a solid fundament of polished red granite, the
column sits on a hall of pillars with a glass mosaic designed by Anton von
Werner. The column itself consists of three solid blocks of sandstone, which
are decorated by cannon pipes captured from the enemies of the
aforementioned three wars. |
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type
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Monument |
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The Statue of Victoria |
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Placed on the new East-West Axis of
Germania. |
Berlin Victory Column
The Victory Column (German: Siegessäule) is one of the more
famous sights of Berlin. Designed by Heinrich Strack after 1864 to
commemorate the Prussian victory in the Danish-Prussian war, by the time
it was inaugurated on 2 September 1873 Prussia had also defeated Austria
in the Austro-Prussian War and France in the Franco-Prussian War
(1870/1871), giving the statue a new purpose. Different from the
original plans, these later victories inspired the addition of the
bronze sculpture of Victoria, 8.3 meters high and weighing 35 tonnes,
designed by Friedrich Drake. Berliners, with their fondness for
disrespectful names of famous buildings, call the statue Goldelse,
meaning something like "golden Lizzy".
Anchored on a solid fundament of polished red granite, the column
sits on a hall of pillars with a glass mosaic designed by Anton von
Werner. The column itself consists of three solid blocks of sandstone,
which are decorated by cannon pipes captured from the enemies of the
aforementioned three wars. A relief decoration on the foundation, which
had to be removed on request of the victorious allied forces in 1945,
was restored in the 1980s.
Surrounded by a street circle with heavy car traffic, pedestrians
can reach the column through four tunnels, built in 1941 to plans by
Johannes Huntenmueller. Via a steep spiral staircase of 285 steps, the
physically fit may climb up almost to the top of the pillar, to right
underneath the statue, for a small fee and a spectacular view over the
Tiergarten.
Even many Berliners do not know that originally the column was
erected with a height of merely 50.66 meters opposite the Reichstag
building. In preparation of executing the monumental plans to redesign
Berlin into Welthauptstadt Germania, in 1939, the Nazis relocated the
pillar to its present location at the Großer Stern (Great Star), a large
intersection on the visual city axis that leads from the former Berliner
Stadtschloss (Berlin City Palace) through the Brandenburg Gate to the
western parts of Berlin. At the same time, the pillar was augmented by
another 7.5 meters, giving it its present height of 66.89 meters. The
monument survived World War II without much damage. The relocation of
the monument probably saved it from destruction, as its old site in
front of the Reichstag was completely destroyed in the war.
The column is featured in Wim Wenders' film Wings of Desire as
being a place where angels congregate. The golden statue atop the column
was featured in the music video to U2's "Stay (Faraway, So Close!)" and
inspired Paul van Dyk's 1998 trance music hit, "For an Angel". "El Ángel"
in Mexico City bears a more than passing resemblance to the Berlin
victory column, while both echo the earlier examples of the victory
column crowned by an angel, notably the Alexander Column in Saint
Petersburg.
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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