Maximilian-II-Kaserne

The Maximilian-II-Kaserne respectively Max-II-Kaserne was a military facility in Munich, Germany, which was completed in 1865. The kaserne was named after Maximilian II of Bavaria.

Max-II-Kaserne, 1890

The barracks were the largest ones that have ever been built in Munich.[1] They were primarily used by some field artillery regiments and the 1st Train Detachment of the Bavarian army. Between the World Wars the barracks were used by the Bavarian State Police,[2] and in Nazi Germany by the Kraftfahr-Ersatz-Abteilung 7 (Motor Reserve Detachment 7) and by the Kraftfahr-Ausbildungs-Abteilung 7 (Motor Training Detachment 7).[3] The symmetrical main building with its 600 meters width was planned by the architect M. Berger,[4] and some facades were designed by Eduard Riedel. The facility was destroyed in the Second World War.

Location

Map of 1922

Currently only the courses of the streets remember of the former barracks. The area is now covered with residential and commercial buildings.[5] A monument at Hiblestraße remembers of the then stationed artillery units.

Originally the Max-II-Kaserne was built in the rural North of the old town near the artillery training area Oberwiesenfeld[6] in the South of today's Leonrodplatz.[1] In the South of the Max-II-Kaserne bordered the barracks of the telegraph troops.

gollark: Interesting fact; seawater contains 3µg/L of uranium. If mages can function as sieves and process large quantities of seawater, [REDACTED].
gollark: Pulling gold from a few km underground is about as energy-intensive as firing bullets or dropping 100kg weights on people's heads from 50m up, which somehow people don't do?
gollark: There isn't just gold *everywhere* underground.
gollark: Was it just a really gold-rich area for some reason?
gollark: How do you even *get* pure gold from arbitrary ground locations, in significant quantities?

See also

References

  1. Leonrodstraße (German), City of Munich.
  2. 83. Schwerterträger Hermann Fegelein (German)
  3. Kraftfahr-Ersatz-Abteilung 7 ... (German), Lexikon der Wehrmacht.
  4. Gerhard J. Bellinger; Brigitte Regler-Bellinger: Schwabings Ainmillerstraße und ihre bedeutendsten Anwohner (German), 2003, p. 81.
  5. Max II Archived 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine (German), GEWOFAG.
  6. Militär (German), City of Munich.

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