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Germany, Berlin
End and beginning of a century:road traffic in Berlin
United Kingdom
End and beginning of a century: sweeper womans
Germany, Berlin
End and beginning of a century: electricity, Horse-drawn carriages, automotive
Germany, Berlin
End and beginning of a century: locomotives, train passengers
United Kingdom
1930 - Year to remember: Speedboat vs.Flying Scotsman - racing
Germany
Adolf Hitler: Down with Hitler - written near railway
Spain, Madrid
Alfonso XIII of Spain: Emigrate to Italy
Poland, Auschwitz
The day, January 27th, was declared as the International Holocaust Remembrance Day by the UN General Assembly in 2005. In 1945, this was the day when the largest and most notorious Nazi death camp, Auschwitz-Birkenau, was liberated. During the second World War 1.3 million people lost their lives here. On the 27th of January, the world remembers the 6 million Jewish victims and the millions of other victims of the Nazi genocide.
Germany, Munich
Germany: Munich Railway Station ruined
Germany, Berlin
Berlin Blockade: End of the soviet blockade, public transport starts again, departure of the first train, celebrating crowd, bus
Germany
Berlin Blockade: Charlottenburg station, empty station, soviet soldiers on train controlling the traffic
Germany, Berlin
Berlin Blockade: Charlottenburg station, end of the blockade, the first train enters Berlin from the west, passangers and soldiers on the station
Germany, Berlin
Berlin Blockade: End of the blockade, train arrives to the station, passangers waiting on the peron, train station, railway, travel by train
Germany, Berlin
Berlin citylife: Public transport in the city, tram, bus, traffic, train station
Germany, Berlin
Berlin traffic: Tram, train, cart, pedestrian in a junction
Germany, Berlin
Berlin-Grunewald station: Main location of deportation of the Berlin Jews Between autumn 1941 and most probably spring 1942, deportation trains carrying Berlin Jews to ghettos and extermination camps in the east departed from this train station. The trains left mainly for the ghettos of Litzmannstadt and Warsaw, from 1942 directly for the Auschwitz and Theresienstadt concentration camps.
Germany, Berlin
Berlin, 1920's: traffic - cityscape In January 1919 the leftist Spartacus-rebellion is put down bloodily. Free corps troops abduct Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg on January 15th and kill them at the “Tiergarten”. On March 13, 1920 parts of the “Reichswehr” (empire’s army) overthrow their break-up as ordered by the “Versailler Vertrag” (Versaille agreement) and proclaim the rightist conservative Wolfgang Kapp imperial chancellor. A general strike organized by SPD and KPD leads to the collapse of the Kapp-Putsch. In October of 1920 7 cities, 59 country communities and 27 property districts are being suburbanized to Berlin by law and the city is divided into 20 districts. The population is now 3.8 million, the size 878 square kilometers. Berlin becomes Europe’s largest industrial city and turns out to be a cultural metropolis in the Twenties. Artists such as Otto Dix, Lionel Feininger, Bertolt Brecht and Arnold Zweig and Nobel Prize laureate Albert Einstein live and work in Berlin. In 1923 inflation is at its peak level. In 1924 the „1. Große Deutsche Funkausstellung“ (first big German radio exhibition) inaugurates on the fairgrounds. In 1926 the first “Grüne Woche”(agricultural exhibition) takes place. In August of 1928 the debut performance of “The Threepenny Opera” by B. Brecht occurs in the theater at the “Schiffbauerdamm”. About 150 daily and weekly papers are released in the city. The global economic crisis seizes Berlin in 1929. There are 450.000 people jobless in February.
Germany, Berlin
Berlin, 1920's: animal transport by train In January 1919 the leftist Spartacus-rebellion is put down bloodily. Free corps troops abduct Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg on January 15th and kill them at the “Tiergarten”. On March 13, 1920 parts of the “Reichswehr” (empire’s army) overthrow their break-up as ordered by the “Versailler Vertrag” (Versaille agreement) and proclaim the rightist conservative Wolfgang Kapp imperial chancellor. A general strike organized by SPD and KPD leads to the collapse of the Kapp-Putsch. In October of 1920 7 cities, 59 country communities and 27 property districts are being suburbanized to Berlin by law and the city is divided into 20 districts. The population is now 3.8 million, the size 878 square kilometers. Berlin becomes Europe’s largest industrial city and turns out to be a cultural metropolis in the Twenties. Artists such as Otto Dix, Lionel Feininger, Bertolt Brecht and Arnold Zweig and Nobel Prize laureate Albert Einstein live and work in Berlin. In 1923 inflation is at its peak level. In 1924 the „1. Große Deutsche Funkausstellung“ (first big German radio exhibition) inaugurates on the fairgrounds. In 1926 the first “Grüne Woche”(agricultural exhibition) takes place. In August of 1928 the debut performance of “The Threepenny Opera” by B. Brecht occurs in the theater at the “Schiffbauerdamm”. About 150 daily and weekly papers are released in the city. The global economic crisis seizes Berlin in 1929. There are 450.000 people jobless in February.
Germany, Berlin
Berlin, 1920's: mass on the train station - landscape from train In January 1919 the leftist Spartacus-rebellion is put down bloodily. Free corps troops abduct Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg on January 15th and kill them at the “Tiergarten”. On March 13, 1920 parts of the “Reichswehr” (empire’s army) overthrow their break-up as ordered by the “Versailler Vertrag” (Versaille agreement) and proclaim the rightist conservative Wolfgang Kapp imperial chancellor. A general strike organized by SPD and KPD leads to the collapse of the Kapp-Putsch. In October of 1920 7 cities, 59 country communities and 27 property districts are being suburbanized to Berlin by law and the city is divided into 20 districts. The population is now 3.8 million, the size 878 square kilometers. Berlin becomes Europe’s largest industrial city and turns out to be a cultural metropolis in the Twenties. Artists such as Otto Dix, Lionel Feininger, Bertolt Brecht and Arnold Zweig and Nobel Prize laureate Albert Einstein live and work in Berlin. In 1923 inflation is at its peak level. In 1924 the „1. Große Deutsche Funkausstellung“ (first big German radio exhibition) inaugurates on the fairgrounds. In 1926 the first “Grüne Woche”(agricultural exhibition) takes place. In August of 1928 the debut performance of “The Threepenny Opera” by B. Brecht occurs in the theater at the “Schiffbauerdamm”. About 150 daily and weekly papers are released in the city. The global economic crisis seizes Berlin in 1929. There are 450.000 people jobless in February.
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