Luisenstadt cemetery
The old Luisenstadt cemetery is located on Südstern in the Berlin district of Kreuzberg . It was laid out in 1831 on a former unprofitable vineyard . At 90,998 m², it is the largest of the four cemeteries on Bergmannstrasse , although its main entrance, unlike the three neighboring cemeteries, is not directly on Bergmannstrasse. In the middle is the two meter high statue of a resurrection angel, created by Otto Geyer . The cemetery partly contains lavish hereditary burial sites of important Berlin personalities, but also some graves of forgotten personalities with grave decorations that are important for art history.
The Luisenstadt cemetery is the second cemetery of the Luisenstadt community , whose history ended in 1964 with the demolition of the church, a war ruin. The first cemetery was also known as the "plague cemetery" and was finally abandoned in the 1930s. It was located in today 's Waldeck Park on Oranienstrasse , where a large tomb of a cavalry master was left as a souvenir.
In the rear of the churchyard there is a closed system with war graves for 314 war dead, including the grave of an unknown soldier . 63 soldiers from the First World War and 250 mostly civilian war dead from the Second World War rest in this area .
Particular importance during the Nazi era
During the Nazi era, the cemetery gained special importance as the so-called “main cemetery of the movement”. Between September 1931 and April 1935, a total of 22 National Socialists were buried there, not including prominent party leaders. Many of them had died in violent clashes with party opponents, but also party supporters who were shot at their own people or who committed suicide were buried there in a memorial service heavily infused with National Socialist elements.
The responsible pastor Johannes Wenzel, the pastor of the New Garrison Church, to which the cemetery belonged, was an open sympathizer of the National Socialist movement and played an important role in the staging and interlinking of parts of the Protestant church with the Nazi dictatorship.
Today none of these tombs can be found, under what circumstances they disappeared is unclear.
Graves of famous people
Preserved graves
- ( ± = honor grave of the state of Berlin)
- Erwin Beck (1911–1988), SPD politician and resistance fighter , later youth councilor in Kreuzberg ( ± )
- Hans Brendicke (1850–1925), publicist, local researcher ( ± )
- Hans Chemin-Petit the Elder (1864–1917), composer, conductor, music teacher
- Hans Chemin-Petit (1902–1981), composer, conductor
- Emil Döblin (1853–1918), typesetter, union official
- Ernst Fidicin (1802–1883), lawyer, historian, city archivist (from 1952 to 2014 "Honorary Grave of the State of Berlin")
- Otto Fischbeck (1865–1939), politician, Minister of State for Trade and Industry, city councilor and city elder
- Eduard Fürstenau (1862–1938), architect
- Kurt Haase-Jastrow (1885–1958), painter
- Eugen Hahn (1841–1902), doctor, director at Friedrichshain Hospital (portrait medallion by Gerhard Janensch )
- Ernst Harrich (1886–1941), garden architect, garden director in Treptow
- Carl Justus Heckmann (1786–1878), coppersmith, industrialist
- Heinrich Philipp Hedemann (1800–1872), lawyer, Mayor of Berlin (from 1964 to 2017 "Honorary Grave of the State of Berlin")
- Max Heinhold (1881–1946), mining engineer, manager of the Mansfeld Group
- Reimar Hobbing (1874–1919), publisher, Muschelkalk stele (The night takes the book out of the hands of those who have fallen asleep) by Hermann Hosaeus
- Carl Hochhaus (1852–1935), painter
- Leo Impekoven (1873–1943), painter, set designer
- Lorenz Impekoven (1909–1969), actor, singer, dancer, cabaret artist and director
- Johanna Juncker-Schatz (1848–1922), actress
- August Kahlbaum (1794–1872), brandy distiller, founder of the C. A. F. Kahlbaum "Spritreinigungsanstalt und Liqueur Factory"
- August Wilhelm Kahlbaum (1822–1884), German chemist, councilor, art collector; Second generation factory owner (C. A. F. Kahlbaum)
- Albert Klatt (1892–1970), painter ( ± )
- Gustav Adolf von Klöden (1814–1885), geographer
- Heinrich Kochhann (1805–1890), local politician, city councilor, honorary citizen of Berlin ( ± )
- Ernst Koerner (1846–1927), landscape and marine painter
- Friedrich Wilhelm Langerhans (1780–1851), architect, town planning officer, local politician, city elder
- Paul Langerhans (1820–1909), physician, city councilor, honorary citizen of Berlin, son of Friedrich Wilhelm Langerhans ( ± )
- Gottfried Wilhelm Lehmann (1799–1882), engraver and lithographer, founder of the first Berlin Baptist congregation ( ± )
- Hans Luckhardt (1890–1954) and Wassili Luckhardt (1889–1972), architects, together in an acquired grave from 1905 ( Schischin grave )
- Christfried Reinhard-Moritz Maassen (1859–1907), businessman, textile entrepreneur ( RM Maassen women's coat factory )
- Dieter Masuhr (1938–2015), painter, writer
- Andreas Matthae (1968–2004), politician
- Hans Mühlhofer (1878–1932), court actor
- Martha Mühlhofer (1874–1940), theater pedagogue
- Erwin Reibedanz (1878–1919), owner of the steam laundry built by Bruno Taut and a listed building on Teilestrasse (limestone stele on the grave of Bruno's brother Max Taut )
- Hermann Roeder (1856–1941), manor owner, community leader in Lichtenberg
- Heinrich Runge (1817–1886), heraldist, curator, city treasurer (from 1952 to 2017 "Honorary Grave of the State of Berlin")
- Bodo Saggel (1939–2003), left-wing radical activist and author, " Haschrebell "
- August Scherl (1849–1921), publisher, buried in the grave of his wife, the actress Flora Rosner (1855–1885)
- Franz Scholz (1873–1958), lawyer, administrative judge, specialist book author
- Friedrich Scholz (1926–2008), composer
- Otto Sohre (1853–1926), architect, builder
- Franz Späth (1839–1913), founder of the gardening dynasty, at times the "largest tree nursery in the world" ( Berlin-Baumschulenweg ) (family grave with bronze bust of Albert Manthe )
- Robert Stock (1858–1912), industrialist, pioneer of telecommunications (hereditary funeral with a bronze statue of a resting blacksmith by Gerhard Janensch )
- Gustav Stresemann (1878–1929), Reich Chancellor, Foreign Minister, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate ; monumental grave, designed by Hugo Lederer ( ± )
- Johannes Stumm (1897–1978), lawyer, local politician, West Berlin police chief
Not preserved graves
- Ernst Behrend (1851–1912), civil servant in the Royal Directorate General of Customs, writer
- Hans Bischoff (1852–1889), pianist, piano teacher, editor of the works of Bach and Schumann
- Rudolf Dammeier (1851–1936), painter
- Tobias Feilner (1773–1839), potter, inventor of the Berlin tiled stove and an employee of Karl Friedrich Schinkel
- Ludwig Hess (1877–1944), tenor singer and composer
- Marie Kahle-Keßler (1844–1896), actress
- Richard Kahle (1842–1916), actor, husband of Marie Kahle-Keßler
- Albert Keßler (1819–1890), actor, father of Marie Kahle-Keßler
- August von Kloeber (1793–1864), painter
- Karl Friedrich von Klöden (1786–1856), geographer, historian, father of Adolf von Klöden
- Julius Krause (1812–1881), court opera singer
- Ludwig Löffler (1819–1876), lithographer
- Friedrich Albert Immanuel Mellin (1796–1859), architect, general building director, successor to Karl Friedrich Schinkel
- Karl Friedrich Müchler (1763–1857), war councilor, writer
- Reinhold Muchow (1905–1933), Nazi functionary, organizer of the German Labor Front
- Wilhelm Münch (1843–1912), councilor, honorary professor of education, writer
- Eugen Richter (1838–1906), leader of the Liberals in the Reichstag (grave with portrait bust of Ernst Wenck ; grave was "Honorary Grave of the State of Berlin" from 1952 to 1983; Richter was reburied in 1983 in Hagen, tombstone and bust moved there)
- Hubert Ries (1802–1886), violinist, composer, music teacher
- Hermann Scherenberg (1826–1897), painter and draftsman, illustrator of the Ulk
- Leopold Schmidt (1860–1927), music historian and critic
- Heinrich Smidt (1798–1867), writer
- Clara Wenck (1852–1905), actress, "comical old woman of the Berlin theater"
- Edgar von Westphalen (1819–1890), communist politician, friend and brother-in-law of Karl Marx
- Ludwig Wilhelm Wichmann (1788-1859), sculptor
See also
Web links
- Bergmannstrasse cemeteries
- Who was the Luisenstadt congregation? A complicated story
- Lost Churches: Luisenstadt Church
- Entry in the Berlin State Monument List
Individual evidence
Coordinates: 52 ° 29 ′ 11 ″ N , 13 ° 24 ′ 14 ″ E