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  • Last week we talked about the long-vanished cemetery railway line which connected Berlin-Wannsee with Germany's second largest burial site, Berlin's Südwestfriedhof Stahnsdorf. This episode remains in the realm of both the dead and the railways but with a serious shift towards Berlin's centre.

    This time we are travelling to the first half of the eighteenth century and will take it from there until we have reached (and left) one of Berlin's best-known railway termini, Potsdamer Bahnhof.

    To see images of the old Dreifaltigkeitsfriedhof visit:

    File:M Dreifaltigkeitskirche Berlin 1910.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

    View of the church seen from Mohrenstraße looking west over Zietenplatz (Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-1982-1213-508 / CC-BY-SA 3.0) - Wikipedia

    To see photos of the first and the second Potsdamer Bahnhof look here:

    First Potsdamer Bahnhof on a 1843 steel engraving by C Schulin after a drawing by E. Henning and in 1850 by an unknown author (both images in PD)

    1890 Potsdamer Bahnhof with the cemetery before it (image in PD, here via Bildindex and Wikipedia)

    You can see the exact position of the cemetery on the historic 1846 Berlin map here:
    Kreuzberged - Berlin Companion

    Sounds:
    Main theme: “Assembly Line Frustration" © Ionics Music | TerraSound.de

    Via Freesound:
    "Bells and religious hymn on the top of "Dell'Avocata" mountain" by Felix Blume
    "Train Stopping" by Vlatko Blazek via Freesound
    "Gates of Heaven" by Theo Ther via Freesound
    "Wales Steam-train" by Jrosin via Freesound
    bbc_animals--f_07028130 via BBC Sound Effects
    "Wind howling" via BBC Sound Effects
    07037493 pigeons cooing via BBC Sound Effects
    Water Trickling by Yoyodaman234 via Freesound
    20070808.horse.wav by Dobroid via Freesound
    U1 nearing Hallesches Tor by Katja Schäfer via Soundcloud





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  • What do large cities do when they run out of space to bury their dead? They go beyond their limits. Traditionally all large European cities like Paris, Vienna or London eventually established new burial sites further and further from their centre. Vienna even considered using the pneumatic tube system to transport their deceased to the Zentralfriedhof (Central Cemetery).

    By the end of the nineteenth century Berlin faced a similar problem and dealt with it the same way: by opening new cemeteries on its outskirts. In two cases it went even further: it set up new burial grounds in Brandenburg. Here's a short story of one of them and the railway line (not a pneumatic one) built to serve its guests - a line which opened for regular service on June 3, 1913.

    To visit Stahnsdorf Cemetery with a guide, please visit the cemetery's web page at
    Veranstaltungen - Südwestkirchhof Stahnsdorf (suedwestkirchhof.de)

    To find out more about the famous Berliners buried in Stahnsdorf visit:
    Wikipedia page of the cemetery

    To see maps of the railway line known as "Leichenbahn" visit (highly recommended) page of
    Stadtschnellbahn-Berlin

    To watch a short film presenting the state of the line's remains today go to
    The Vanished Railway Line to Stahnsdorf by AirBerl

    To support the show and its running, please visit my Buy Me A Coffee page here.


    Sounds:
    Main theme: “Assembly Line Frustration" © Ionics Music | TerraSound.de

    Via Freesound:
    "Bells and religious hymn on the top of "Dell'Avocata" mountain" by Felix Blume
    "Magnificat" by Tarikki
    "Spooky Dark Pad" by John Wally
    "Secundo tempore2" by John Wally
    "Train Stopping" by Vlatko Blazek
    "Gates of Heaven" by Theo Ther
    "Wales Steam-train" by Jrosin






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  • Many old Berlin flats in the typical 19th century apartment buildings are equipped with a curious feature: a small storage space under the ceiling, usually installed in the bathroom, the kitchen or the corridor. What makes these so curious is not their function today - a storeroom for suitcases, skis and snorkels or that gear you wore for your first Love Parade in the mid-1990s - but the original purpose for which they were built. In this episode you will find out why they were in fact an indispensable addition to many middle-class lodgings.

    You can follow Berlin Companion on:

    Twitter at @kreuzberged and @BerlinCompanion
    Wordpress blog at kreuzberged.com
    Voicemap audio-tours at Audio tours by Beata Gontarczyk-Krampe » Storytellers » VoiceMap

    To support the podcast via Buy Me A Coffee click here. Thank you!

    Sound effects:

    BBC Sound Effects Archive
    sound of wardrobe door and drawers

    Freesound
    " Silent Movie - Sam Fox - Hurry Music" by FreqMan
    "Berlin city courtyard in the evening" by SwampCommand

    Storyblocks
    Magic Chimes on Wind by None

    Main theme: “Assembly Line Frustration" © Ionics Music | TerraSound.de

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  • The 1920s in Berlin were an incredible time, full both of misery and wonder. It was the time which brought both the worst and the best in people who lived there. And sometimes it helped pave way for genius. Or future classics.

    Episode 5 of Berlin Companion Podcast tells the story of one such classic made in Berlin.

    Sound effects:

    BBC Sound Effects Archive
    bbc_animals---_07037493 piegeons cooing
    bbc_animals fighting for food

    Freesound
    "Suspense Comedy" by Tyops
    " Ambient Traut" by Vann Westfold
    " Silent Movie - Sam Fox - Hurry Music" by FreqMan

    Storyblocks

    Main theme: “Assembly Line Frustration" © Ionics Music | TerraSound.de

    You can follow Berlin Companion on:

    Twitter at @kreuzberged and @BerlinCompanion
    Wordpress blog at kreuzberged.com
    and via all most popular podcast streaming services out there.

    To support the podcast via Buy Me A Coffee click the link below. Many thanks, time-travellers!

    Support the show
  • We all know how annoying air traffic can be these days for those who experience it from the ground - not only is it a time-bomb just waiting to make our environment go belly-up but it can also bring any conversation to a halt, if said conversation takes place under what is known as a flight corridor. But whenever if you think this is bad, here is a little story from the days where Berlin's first inner-city airport - the original Flughafen Tempelhof - became, at least for some, an ugly stain on the city's face.

    Join me on an aerial time-travel escapade to Berlin in the late 1920s and beyond!

    You can follow Berlin Companion on:

    Twitter at @kreuzberged and @BerlinCompanion
    Wordpress blog at kreuzberged.com
    and via all most popular podcast streaming services out there.

    To support the podcast via Buy Me A Coffee click the link below. Many thanks, time-travellers!

    Support the show
  • In April 1945, as the Red Army was closing its grip on Berlin, coming closer and closer to Hitler's last refuge under the Chancellery gardens, one of his favourite pilots managed to fly a small aeroplane into the burning capital and land it near Brandenburg Gate. On board she carried a wounded future head of the Nazi Luftwaffe.

    Aircraft Capitan Hanna Reitsch. Here is the story of her remarkable Berlin coup. And of her post-war denial.



    Music theme: “Assembly Line Frustration" © Ionics Music | TerraSound.de

    Sound effects:
    BBC Sounds (artillery barrage, Junkers Ju-88, Stukas, Messerschmitt, air-raid sirens, park ambience)
    Search Results | BBC Sound Effects (bbcrewind.co.uk)

    Freesounds.org (Junker Ju-52 by Reinsamba, Creative Commons Licence 4.0
    https://freesound.org/s/128542/

    Frog in the throat: private







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  • In the 1920s elegant Berliners fell in love with a scent called "Treffpunkt 8 Uhr" (Rendezvous at 8PM). Made by a legendary local manufacture Schwarzlose - which still exists today - it stood for the Exciting and the Romantic but also for what Berlin seemed never to have enough of: time.

    From 1787 when the first public clock appeared in Unter den Linden, clocks dictated the pace of the city. Many appointments were scheduled under the chronometer. Later, the areas around public city clocks, the Normaluhren, became traditional meeting points for Berliners. So when in 1969 a new public clock was unveiled on the main East Berlin plaza, on Alexanderplatz, it became clear that the Weltzeituhr (World Clock) would be a witness to many a rendezvous in the years to come. As it has been until today.

    Here's the story of two famous Berlin chronometers.

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  • When in April 1893 German Empire introduced new time measuring system based the Greenwich meridian, Berlin lost something big for good. It lost its own time. Here is the story behind it.


    Main theme for the podcast: “Assembly Line Frustration" © Ionics Music | TerraSound.de

    Sound effects: ChaliceWell, Bidone, JRosin and LG (CC Licence https://freesound.org/s/56874/) via freesounds.



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  • For anyone interested in history, Berlin is your playground. From old Slavic and Germanic tribes through Crusaders, alchemists and feuding houses to Prussian expansion, Emperors and world wars, including the Cold one.

    But next to big events, which often changed the world - and not always for the better - myriads of smaller things happened here daily, turning the city into what it is today: a melting pot of cultures, languages and stories. And a treasure trove of trivia.

    This podcast aims to tell some of the most interesting lesser-known stories about Berlin from day one all the way until now. In no particular order, it will give you small insights into what's often forgotten or overlooked. Or is too small to make it into big history books.

    So join me as we explore the nooks and crannies of Berlin. Welcome to Berlin Companion Podcast!


    Main theme for the podcast: “Assembly Line Frustration" © Ionics Music | TerraSound.de

    Support the show