Tempelhof

Tempelhof  is a locality of Berlin within the borough of Tempelhof-Schöneberg. It is the location of the former Tempelhof Airport, one of the earliest commercial airports in the world. It is now deserted and shows as a blank spot on maps of Berlin. Attempts are being made to save the still-existing buildings.

360° aerial photograph of the old part of Tempelhof
(view as a 360° interactive panorama)
Tempelhof
Quarter of Berlin
Coat of arms
Location of Tempelhof in Tempelhof-Schöneberg and Berlin
Tempelhof
Tempelhof
Coordinates: 52°28′00″N 13°23′00″E
CountryGermany
StateBerlin
CityBerlin
BoroughTempelhof-Schöneberg
Founded1210
Area
  Total12.2 km2 (4.7 sq mi)
Elevation
50 m (160 ft)
Population
 (2008-06-30)
  Total54,382
  Density4,500/km2 (12,000/sq mi)
Time zoneCET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes
(nr. 0703) 12101, 12103, 12105, 12109, 12099, 12279
Vehicle registrationB

The Tempelhof locality is located in the south-central part of the city. Before Berlin's 2001 administrative reform, the area of Tempelhof, together with the localities of Mariendorf, Marienfelde, and Lichtenrade, constituted a borough of its own, also called Tempelhof. These localities grew from historic villages on the Teltow plateau founded in the early 13th century in the course of the German Ostsiedlung.

History

Tempelhove was first mentioned in a 1247 deed issued at the Walkenried Abbey as a Komturhof (commander's court, the smallest holding entity of a military order) of the Knights Templar whose leadership and many fellow knights had been expelled from the Kingdom of Jerusalem on its downfall in 1291. The centre of the settlement, consisting of the church and the original estate, was fortified and originally completely surrounded by water. The Templars were joined by fifteen families of landless farmers' sons from the Rhine, who could not inherit any estate from their parents because of over-fragmentation of those estates. Legates of the Templars offered them fertile soil and the protection of Tempelhove's stronghold.

After Pope Clement V officially abolished the Order of the Temple in 1312, the knights of Saint John (the Johanniter), backed by Margrave Waldemar of Brandenburg, took over the villages of Tempelhof, Mariendorf, and Marienfelde. In 1435, they sold their estates to the city of Berlin.

In the early nineteenth century, Tempelhof was still a village outside Berlin proper and was the site of country excursions for the citizens of Berlin.[1] The northern parts of Tempelhof were incorporated as Berlin's Tempelhofer Vorstadt in 1861 and in 1920 became part of the Kreuzberg borough.

Today, the former commandry (German: Komturei) is a chain of parks, called Bosepark, Kleiner Park, Alter Park, and Franckepark. Some of them still have ponds that were part of the artificial moat surrounding the village's center. One, the Krummer Pfuhl, located in the Franckepark, after being turned into public swimming baths in the nineteenth century, has completely dried out and is now an enclosed deer park.

The original church, built from glacial boulders, was destroyed in the Second World War and was replaced with one built of ashlar or dressed stone with a timber-frame tower.

The Tempelhof Studios were established in 1912 and functioned as film and later television studios.

Sister cities

Sons and daughters Tempelhof

  • Manny Marc (born 1980), DJ and rapper
  • Klaus Wowereit (born 1953 in Altbezirk Tempelhof), SPD-politician, 1984-1995 Council Chairman of Tempelhof, 2001-2014 Governing Mayor of Berlin [2]
  • Michael Müller (born 1964 in Altbezirk Tempelhof), SPD politician, from 1989 to 1996 member of the Borough Council (BVV) Tempelhof, since 2014 mayor, succeeding Klaus Wowereit
  • Marta Hillers (1911-2001), German journalist, lived until after the war in an apartment in the Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße 13 (then number 31). She has recorded her experiences during the capture of the city and the subsequent occupation of the Red Army in diaries, that were published in Germany in 1959 under the German title: Eine Frau in Berlin. In 2008 a film was made with Nina Hoss as leading lady under the German title: Anonyma eine Frau in Berlin [3]
gollark: Each layer will have the same flaws.
gollark: Nesting the same sandbox is totally unhelpful.
gollark: <@151391317740486657> Not really.
gollark: The protections are just to buy some time and prevent accidentally running it.
gollark: NOTHING would be properly secure against dangerous unfriendly AI or something.

See also

References

  1. See Theodor Fontane's Schach von Wuthenow.
  2. Klaus Wowereit / wegewerk GmbH (Agentur). "Klaus Wowereit – Biografie". klaus-wowereit.de (in German). Zitat daraus: „Am 01.10.1953 bin ich im Bezirk Tempelhof geboren.“
  3. schnabeline (2014-11-07). "The life and times of Marta Dietschy-Hillers – Part 4: The characters and places in „A Woman in Berlin"" (in German). Clarissa Schnabel. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
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