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Essential
Architecture- Frankfort on the Main
(Frankfurt am Main)
St. Paul's Church (Paulskirche) |
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architect
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location
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Frankfurt am Main, Hessen, Germany |
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date
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1789-1833 |
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style
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Georgian |
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construction
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Stone |
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type
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Church |
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The Paulskirche is a church in Frankfurt am Main with important
political symbolism in Germany. It was opened as a Protestant church in
1789, coincidentally the same year as the French Revolution, and in
1848-1849 it became the seat of the Frankfurt Parliament, the first
publicly and freely elected body of Germany.
The church started with the building of the oval-shaped central
church building in 1789. It was completed from 1829 to 1833, whereupon
the organ loft was disconnected in 1833.
Because of its centralized form and dome, it was desired as the
meeting place for the Frankfurt Parliament in the course of the German
revolutions of 1848.
From March 31 until April 3, 1848 it was the meeting place for
the Vorparlament, which prepared the election for the National Assembly.
On May 18, 1848 the National Assembly met for the first time in the
church, and was, therefore, named the Paulskirchenparlament. Until 1849,
the National Assembly worked in the church to develop a constitution for
a united Germany. The resistance of Prussia and Austria and a number of
smaller German states ultimately destroyed the effort. In May 1849,
there were a number of uprisings to force the implementation of the
constitution, but these were destroyed with the help of Prussia. On May
30, 1849, the Parliament in the Paulskirche was dissolved.
After 1852, the Paulskirche was again used for religious
services.
In World War II, the church was nearly completely destroyed along
with much of the Frankfurt Innenstadt. As a tribute to its symbolism of
freedom and as the cradle of Germany it was the first building to be
rebuilt in Frankfurt after the war, reopened on the 100th anniversary of
the Frankfurt Parliament. Due to cost restraints, the original inner
form was dramatically altered. An inserted floor now divides the
basement, which currently serves as a display room, from the actual hall
in the main floor.
After the war it was no longer used as a church, and instead
became a center used for various displays and events. The most
well-known is the annual awarding of the Peace Prize of the German Book
Trade during the Frankfurt Book Fair. For the 150th birthday of the
German democratic experience in 1998, the Paulskirche once again
attracted the public interest.
In 1963, US President John F. Kennedy gave a major speech in the
Paulskirche during a visit to Germany.
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links
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With thanks to
http://altfrankfurt.com , a website devoted to pre-war Frankfurt images. |
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www.essential-architecture.com
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