Historical inscriptions on the walls of the Reichstag. Reichstag from the inside

However, it is inside the Reichstag that some inscriptions of Soviet soldiers still remain. Today, May 9, I propose to honor the memory of the dead and see how the main government building of modern Germany has become

In 2008, when I first came to Berlin for half a day, I met a kilometer-long queue at the Reichstag, and even in the rain, we left with nothing. When I returned there in 2011, it turned out that you can get inside the building only by prior appointment via the Internet. In 2012, I seemed to have signed up, but it turned out that the registration was only for a tour of the dome of the building. It turns out that you can visit the corridors of the Reichstag only by signing up for a tour, which is conducted only in German.
Late in the evening, March 4, we arrived on an excursion as part of a small group of Germans, we waited a very long time for the guide, who turned out to be terribly boring and even spoke rather incomprehensible (as for me) German.
The tour itself lasts one hour, and about half of this time you will stay in the meeting room, where they will talk for a long time about the procedure of these very meetings, the composition of parties, the activities of the government ... A lonely grandfather from the tour will be politically active and ask the guide a lot of questions

And the guide devoted only 5 minutes to the inscriptions of Soviet soldiers. During the total reconstruction of the building, it was planned to completely remove all the inscriptions, since the building was completely in them. But the Russian embassy demanded to leave the memory at least partially. As a result, the inscriptions fit quite harmoniously into the renovated interior of the Reichstag.

If someone says that the Germans are great and honor the memory so much, then I would not say that this is actually the case. The guide (by the way, a real employee of the Bundestag) expressed the general opinion that they should have been removed from the walls long ago, that no one needs them, and in general, Russian obscenities are written there. The people generally approve. I corrected him, kindly translating some of the inscriptions, which made Monsieur a little embarrassed, obviously not expecting to see a descendant of a Soviet soldier among the excursion group. My great-grandfather participated in the storming of Berlin as part of the 216th Infantry Regiment of the 47th Army. And although he did not accept in the battles for the Reichstag buildings, he left his autograph there after, to know where ...

Apparently, sometimes Russians also get on the tour, since some "fighter" tried not so long ago to leave his autograph there with a felt-tip pen, now there are surveillance cameras

In fact, there are not many inscriptions left.

By the way, I found some inscriptions from the Anglo-American soldiers, apparently they managed to sign until they divided Berlin into sectors

In some places there were traces of bullets, bloody battles were going on inside the building

Unfortunately, not everywhere you can walk freely, the tour route is directed in a slightly different vector

We pass through the underground bridge to the new building of the Bundestag

This part reminds me of the Senate from Star Wars. In fact, these are separate halls where party members hold their closed meetings.

By the way, these green men (not to be confused with the Crimean ones) on the stairs symbolize the laundering of these same inscriptions as a symbol of the rebirth of the new Germany. Well we were told

We are walking past the dome, a good night shot without a tripod

Conference room. I'm giving an interview

Reports on the Reichstag. PartIII

Parliament belongs to the people. "Dem deutschen Volke" - "To the German people" - is written above the entrance to the Reichstag in Berlin. The architect Paul Wallot wanted to place this kind of dedicatory inscription as early as 1894, for the opening of the imperial parliament building on its facade, but faced resistance from the German Kaiser Wilhelm II (Wilhelm II.). He did not like the mention of "the people" in this context.

The place provided for the dedication remained empty for more than ten years. Only at the height of the First World War, when in 1916 the deputies from the Social Democratic Party agreed to vote for war loans, and Germany was already pretty tired of the war, did the Kaiser decide to respond with a grand gesture. The letters were cast in a fashionable calligraphic font in those days from the bronze of two French cannons taken during the liberation wars of 1813-1815.

From 1894 to 1918, the imperial parliament of Kaiser Germany worked in the Reichstag building in Berlin, and then, until the fire of 1933, the parliament of the Weimar Republic, from the window of which it was once proclaimed. The building was destined to become the seat of parliament again only in 1999.

On the facade of the Reichstag there are still original letters - silent witnesses of the arson of 1933, the coming to power of the National Socialists, the holding of anti-Semitic and anti-communist exhibitions in the damaged building such as "The Eternal Jew" ("Der ewige Jude") or "Bolshevism without a mask" ( "Bolschewismus ohne Maske"). Later, models of "Germany" ("Welthauptstadt Germania"), the new "capital of the world", which Adolf Hitler's court architect Albert Speer was going to build on the site of Berlin, were later shown here.

The arson of the Reichstag served as a formal pretext for the crackdown on the opposition and the seizure of power by the National Socialists, and its circumstances have not yet been fully investigated. Hitler blamed the communists for the arson, and the communists blamed Hitler. During the fire, the meeting room of the Reichstag was almost completely burned out. The next one-party "parliament" (here it is already necessary to put quotation marks), which included only deputies from the NSDAP, held its meetings at the Krolloper near the Brandenburg Gate. Berliners sarcastically called this operetta "parliament" "the highest paid male choir in the world" ("höchstbezahlter Männergesangsverein").

Interesting fact. During the search for a site for the construction of the Reichstag, which took more than ten years after the decision was made in 1871 (we talked about this in the previous part of the report), the deputies were offered to purchase the Kroll Opera and build a building in its place. They put the issue to the vote several times, but invariably rejected this option. The deputies did not want the building of the Kaiser's parliament to stand on the site of the former entertainment establishment ...

From 1933 to 1942, the Nazi Reichstag met for its propaganda and demonstration meetings only 19 times - including on September 15, 1935, for a visiting session in the "city of NSDAP party congresses" Nuremberg, to vote for the "racial laws" that marked the beginning of mass destruction European Jews.

Video: Inscriptions of Soviet soldiers

During the Second World War, the windows of the Reichstag, which did not play any role in the system of architectural and ideological symbols of the National Socialist dictatorship, were walled up. In some of its premises, AEG established the production of radio tubes, in others they placed a military infirmary and an obstetric department of the Berlin clinic "Charite" (Charité).

During the first post-war decade, the building, which ended up in the western part of Berlin, was in a dilapidated form. In 1954, due to the threat of collapse, the remains of the dome were blown up, although, according to some architects, without much need. Soon they decided to carry out repairs, however, in the conditions of a divided Germany, it was not clear for what purposes the Reichstag building should be used.

Repair work dragged on until 1973. The West German architect Paul Baumgarten, who won the competition, refused to restore the dome, and, in keeping with the pragmatic spirit of the 60s, removed many neo-Renaissance and neo-Baroque carvings and stucco decorations, referring to the fact that they already were badly damaged during the war and gradually destroyed after it.

Inscriptions in Russian

The walls inside were lined with white panels, under which they hid the traces of battles, as well as the autographs of Soviet soldiers, thus - voluntarily or involuntarily - preserving them for the future. The former meeting room, which burned down in 1933, was restored, moreover, with the expectation of German reunification, so that there would be enough space for all deputies. In some rooms there was a historical exposition telling about the history of the building.

In 1971, the victorious powers adopted a new Quadripartite Agreement for West Berlin (Viermächteabkommen über Berlin) on the status of this part of the divided city. During the period of detente, the Soviet Union, the United States, Great Britain and France agreed that West Berlin was not an integral part of the FRG, but the Federal Republic of Germany received the right to represent its interests in the international arena, if they did not affect strategic and security issues.

This treaty prevented plans to hold some plenary sessions of the Bundestag in West Berlin. True, meetings of factions and hearings of commissions were sometimes held in the renovated Reichstag building, to which deputies flew in from Bonn. But these events were rather symbolic: they demonstrated the desire of the FRG to unite the country.

German unification

One of the most significant events in modern German history took place near the Reichstag building on October 3, 1990. At midnight, the black-red-gold flag of united Germany was hoisted on the flagpole in front of the western portal. It was on this day, less than a year after the fall of the Berlin Wall, that the formal legal reunification of the country took place. Newsreels show the steps of the Reichstag illuminated by searchlights. Chancellor Helmut Kohl and his wife surrounded by German politicians. Thousands of people in the dark sing the national anthem about unity, justice and freedom: "Einigkeit und Recht und Freiheit ..."

During the renovation of the building in 1995-1999, before the German capital moved from Bonn to Berlin, almost all of the changes made by Baumgarten were corrected, focusing on Wallo's original plans. But the reconstruction, of course, did not pursue the goal of restoring the Reichstag in its former form. The preservation of traces of history was one of the conditions for an open international competition, which was won by British architect Norman Foster.

Visitors and deputies are reminded of the capture of the Reichstag in 1945 by inscriptions made by soldiers of the Red Army. Now, thanks to a special restoration technology, they look like they appeared only yesterday. All the soldiers' autographs found on the walls after the removal of the "Baumgarten" cladding were first photographed and then translated into German.

Some of the inscriptions were left for viewing, some had to be removed under plaster, but in such a way as to preserve them, that is, to conserve them. The inscriptions containing obscene words and obscenities were removed, having previously coordinated this with Russian diplomats.

During tours of the building, guides like to repeat the story about the first deputies who got into the Reichstag after the parliament moved from Bonn to Berlin. One of them, seeing the autographs of Soviet soldiers, thought that these were fresh traces left by some hooligans in the newly renovated premises. The deputy called the parliamentary administration to tell about this blatant disgrace, but they explained to him the origin and meaning of these inscriptions. It should be noted that not all deputies liked the idea of ​​preserving historical reminders then, but they did not receive support.

See also:
History of the Brandenburg Gate

    Symbol of unity

    Until the middle of the 19th century, Berlin was surrounded by a city customs wall. It was possible to enter its territory through eighteen gates, which were later dismantled - with the exception of one and only. Today they are the most popular attraction of the German capital and the architectural symbol of the united Germany.

    "Athens on the Spree"

    This is how the place looked in 1764. About a quarter of a century later, the Prussian king Friedrich Wilhelm II ordered the construction of a new gate here. The architect Karl Gotthard Langhans prepared a project in the classicist style, taking as a model for imitation the antique gate that decorated the entrance to the Acropolis. Berlin at that time was the center of the cultural life of Europe and was even called "Athens on the Spree".

    Gate of the world

    The gate was completed in August 1791. In 1793, a quadriga was installed on them, which is now controlled by the goddess of victory, Victoria. But originally this place on the Gates of the World (Friedenstor), as they were then called, was occupied by Eirene - the daughter of Zeus, the goddess of the world in ancient Greek mythology. The project of a triumphal chariot drawn by four horses was developed by the sculptor Johann Gottfried Schadow.

    image" src="https://dw.com/image/19408937_303.jpg" title="(!LANG:1814" alt="1814">!}

    triumphant return

    In 1814, after the defeat of Napoleon's troops by a coalition led by Russia and Prussia, the quadriga was solemnly returned from Paris to Berlin. The gates have been given a new look. They became the Prussian triumphal arch. The author of the project was the architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel. The quadriga was now ruled not by the goddess of peace, but by the goddess of victory, Victoria, who received an iron cross and a wreath of oak leaves as a reward.

    Nazi propaganda

    During the Third Reich, the National Socialists used the Brandenburg Gate for their propaganda. Immediately after the seizure of power by Hitler in January 1933, they staged a torchlight procession here. Berlin was to become the "Capital of the World". Plans for the creation of "Germany" included the construction of a new giant triumphal arch, the demolition of entire neighborhoods, but not the Brandenburg Gate.

    After the war

    During the bombing of World War II and the capture of Berlin, the Brandenburg Gate was seriously damaged. In a divided city, they ended up in the Soviet occupation zone. Until 1957, the flag of the USSR flew over them, and then the GDR. The quadriga was completely destroyed. Only the head of one of the horses survived from it. Now she is in the museum.

    Reconstruction

    The sculpture had to be restored. On this issue, East and West Berlin, despite the political confrontation, agreed to cooperate. To do this, they used casts made during the war shortly before the start of the massive bombing of Berlin. An exact copy of the quadriga was installed in 1957. However, the GDR authorities soon made adjustments: they removed the cross and the Prussian eagle.

    no man's land

    On August 13, 1961, the construction of the wall began. As a result, the Brandenburg Gate was on the forbidden strip between East and West Berlin. The wall passed right in front of them. Only East German border guards now had access here, and this historic gate itself became a symbol of the division of Germany.

    "Tear down this Wall!"

    The speech delivered here on June 12, 1987 by US President Ronald Reagan went down in history. "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this Wall!" he urged the Soviet leader. "Open these gates!" Reagan's words, amplified by powerful speakers, were heard throughout East Berlin. At that time, no one knew what would happen in just two years.

    The fall of the Belinsky wall

    Immediately after the fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989, thousands of people went to the Brandenburg Gate to celebrate the event. The symbol of the division of Germany has become a symbol of the reunification of the country.

    Meeting point

    Today, the Brandenburg Gate is not only a popular attraction, but also a place for concerts, celebrations, and demonstrations. In 2006, during the world football championship held in Germany, for the first time they staged the so-called mile for fans - a multi-day fan celebration with live broadcasts of matches on giant screens.

    Solidarity

    Every autumn, the Festival of Lights takes place in Berlin, the program of which includes the Brandenburg Gate. They also become a place of expression of solidarity after terrorist attacks and other emergencies. This photo was taken in June 2016 after an attack on a gay club in the US city of Orlando.

    Hanukkah

    A 10-meter Hanukkah was installed in front of the Brandenburg Gate in December 2015. According to the traditions of Judaism, the candles of this lamp are lit during the eight days of Hanukkah. The commissioner of the German government for culture and media, Monika Grütters, took part in the ceremony. At the moment, about 12 thousand Jews live in the German capital.

    Symbol

    The Brandenburg Gate is a monument of European and German history, witnesses of numerous wars and a symbol of hope. "Frieden" - "Peace". This light installation could be seen at the Brandenburg Gate in 2014 on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.


The Berlin building, where after the unification of Germany (since 1999) the German parliament - the Bundestag sits, has a very interesting fate. The past is tragic, the present is "reconstructive", and the future, as it should be, is unknown.

The Reichstag was not lucky throughout its rather short history.

The headquarters of the German parliamentarians, finally united in 1871, the German Empire ordered to create another Kaiser Wilhelm I . The construction of the building, made in the style of the High Renaissance, with a luxurious glass dome, was completed already under the next Kaiser - Wilhelm II in 1894. It lasted almost 12 years: the competition was announced back in 1882, out of 183 projects they chose the one presented by the Frankfurt architect Paul Wallot .

View of the Reichstag in the photo of the late XIX century:

Interestingly, the inscription on the pediment of the building "Dem Deutschen Volke" ("To the German people"), conceived by the architect, the Kaiser forbade. It appeared above the central portal of the Reichstag only in 1916.


The further fate of the Reichstag was rather sad. Less than 40 years after its opening, having somehow survived the First World War and the revolution, it literally burned to the ground. 1933 fire , which completely destroyed the meeting room, is a textbook example of provocation: apparently, it was organized by the Nazis, but all the blame was immediately shifted to the Communists.

After the fire, the Reichstag lay in ruins for a long time, and Hitler’s decorative parliament met nearby, in the so-called Opera Kroll (this building did not survive, it was destroyed by Allied aircraft in November 1943, and its ruins were finally demolished in 1951).

Meeting of the Reichstag at the Opera Croll October 6, 1939,
in which Hitler announces the end of the campaign against Poland:

In 1942, the meetings of the Hitlerite Parliament ceased altogether, and the restored Reichstag building was used by the Nazis for all sorts of propaganda meetings.

During the storming of Berlin by Soviet troops in late April - early May 1945, the Reichstag was significantly damaged during artillery shelling.

For Soviet soldiers, the Reichstag was one of the symbols of Nazi Germany,
although in fact parliament played almost no role in the Third Reich.
But how could the Soviet soldiers know this, motivated by a thirst for revenge for all that
what did the Nazis do in the occupied territories of the USSR?

The first attempts to reconstruct the Reichstag were made only in 1954. Moreover, they are somewhat peculiar: because of the threat of collapse, they blew up the frame of the dome - the "brand name" of the Reichstag.

After the construction of the infamous Berlin Wall in 1961, the Reichstag ended up on the territory of West Berlin. And in the same year, the architect took over the reconstruction of the building Paul Baumgarten , through his efforts, the German parliament was expanded and substantially rebuilt by 1969, however, finishing work continued until 1973. The deviation from the original Renaissance plan consisted in the fact that the building finally lost its dome, and the corner towers were shortened by several meters. As a result, the Reichstag began to resemble a fortified castle.

Reichstag without dome:

Tellingly, before the unification of Germany, it was not possible to use the Reichstag for its intended purpose: the special status of West Berlin did not allow the transfer of the Bundestag there. Such an opportunity appeared only in 1990, and in 1992 the Reichstag underwent another restructuring.

The competition for the reconstruction of the Reichstag was attended by 80 applicants, but in 1995 it was won by the famous English architect Norman Foster .

Modern building of the Reichstag:

In 1999, the Reichstag again acquired a glass dome inside which there were observation galleries. Now anyone (by appointment, of course) can watch the work of the German parliamentarians, if he is interested.

The new dome of the Reichstag is a typical example of Norman Foster's work:

Inside the dome of the Reichstag:

The most heated debate during the reconstruction of the 1990s erupted over the inscriptions on the walls of the Reichstag, left by Soviet soldiers in May 1945, and the name of the new seat of the German parliament.

As a result, the inscriptions were preserved, conserved using a special technology, - "for posterity as an example" .

Inscriptions of Soviet soldiers on (and in) the Reichstag:

And the name of the Reichstag was left the same.
Although there were many options - from the Bundeshaus to the Plenary Building.
But the German authorities decided that the word "Reichstag" does not carry any negative connotation.
Perhaps they were right, because one should not forget one's history, although I would argue about the "negative coloring".

Thank you for attention.
Sergei Vorobyov.

From April 28 to May 2, 1945 by forces The 150th and 171st Rifle Divisions of the 79th Rifle Corps of the 3rd Shock Army of the 1st Belorussian Front carried out an operation to capture the Reichstag. To this event, my friends, I dedicate this photo collection.
_______________________

1. View of the Reichstag after the end of hostilities.

2. Fireworks in honor of the Victory on the roof of the Reichstag. Soldiers of the battalion under the command of the Hero of the Soviet Union S. Neustroev.

3. Soviet trucks and cars on a ruined street in Berlin. Behind the ruins you can see the Reichstag building.

4. Rear Admiral Fotiy Ivanovich Krylov (1896-1948), head of the River Emergency Rescue Directorate of the USSR Navy, awards a diver with an order for clearing mines on the Spree River in Berlin. In the background is the Reichstag building.

6. View of the Reichstag after the end of hostilities.

7. A group of Soviet officers inside the Reichstag.

8. Soviet soldiers with a banner on the roof of the Reichstag.

9. The Soviet assault group with the banner moves to the Reichstag.

10. The Soviet assault group with the banner is moving towards the Reichstag.

11. Commander of the 23rd Guards Rifle Division, Major General P.M. Shafarenko in the Reichstag with colleagues.

12. Heavy tank IS-2 against the backdrop of the Reichstag

13. Soldiers of the 150th Rifle Idritsko-Berlin, Order of Kutuzov, 2nd degree, division on the steps of the Reichstag (among the depicted scouts are M. Kantaria, M. Egorov and the Komsomol organizer of the division, Captain M. Zholudev). In the foreground is the 14-year-old son of the regiment, Zhora Artemenkov.

14. The Reichstag building in July 1945.

15. The interior of the Reichstag building after the defeat of Germany in the war. On the walls and columns there are inscriptions of Soviet soldiers left as a keepsake.

16. The interior of the Reichstag building after the defeat of Germany in the war. On the walls and columns there are inscriptions of Soviet soldiers left as a keepsake. Pictured is the south entrance of the building.

17. Soviet photojournalists and cameramen at the Reichstag building.

18. The wreckage of an inverted German Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fighter against the backdrop of the Reichstag.

19. Autograph of Soviet soldiers on the column of the Reichstag: “We are in Berlin! Nikolay, Peter, Nina and Sasha. May 11, 1945.

20. A group of political workers of the 385th Infantry Division, headed by the head of the political department, Colonel Mikhailov, near the Reichstag.

21. German anti-aircraft guns and a dead German soldier at the Reichstag.

23. Soviet soldiers on the square near the Reichstag.

24. Red Army signalman Mikhail Usachev leaves his autograph on the wall of the Reichstag.

25. A British soldier leaves his autograph among the autographs of Soviet soldiers inside the Reichstag.

26. Mikhail Yegorov and Meliton Kantaria go out with a banner to the roof of the Reichstag.

27. Soviet soldiers hoist a banner over the Reichstag on May 2, 1945. This is one of the banners installed on the Reystag in addition to the official hoisting of the banner by Yegorov and Kantaria.

28. The famous Soviet singer Lidia Ruslanova performs "Katyusha" against the backdrop of the destroyed Reichstag.

29. The son of the regiment Volodya Tarnovsky puts his autograph on the column of the Reichstag.

30. Heavy tank IS-2 against the backdrop of the Reichstag.

31. A captured German soldier at the Reichstag. The famous photograph, often published in books and on posters in the USSR under the name "Ende" (German: "The End").

32. Fellow soldiers of the 88th Separate Guards Heavy Tank Regiment near the wall of the Reichstag, in the assault of which the regiment took part.

33. Banner of Victory over the Reichstag.

34. Two Soviet officers on the steps of the Reichstag.

35. Two Soviet officers on the square in front of the Reichstag building.

36. Soviet mortar soldier Sergei Ivanovich Platov leaves his autograph on the column of the Reichstag.

37. Banner of Victory over the Reichstag. A photograph of a Soviet soldier hoisting the Red Banner over the Reichstag, which later became known as the Banner of Victory - one of the main symbols of the Great Patriotic War.


  1. The Reichstag building or Reichstag (Reichstagsgebäude (inf.) - “state assembly building”) is a famous historical building in Berlin, where in 1894-1933 the eponymous state body of Germany, the Reichstag of the German Empire and the Reichstag of the Weimar Republic, met, and since 1999 the Bundestag has been located .

    Story

    The building was designed by the Frankfurt architect Paul Wallot in the style of the Italian High Renaissance.
    The foundation stone of the German parliament building was laid on June 9, 1884 by Kaiser Wilhelm I.
    Construction lasted ten years and was completed under Kaiser Wilhelm II.

  2. The inscriptions on the walls of the Reichstag. May, 1945

    "Still in the heat of battle, the heart was beating,
    And silence has already entered the world,
    It's like time has stopped here
    Not believing suddenly who ended the war.
    Under the arches of the charred vault,
    In some pristine silence
    Soldiers of the Greatest Campaign
    Painted right on the wall.
    The Reichstag ruin was breathing
    All the fume of the world battle,
    And it is louder than any chorale
    Sang a chorus of names rising like the surf.
    He sang, flying over fire and blood,
    Before the war, a defeated face,
    As if overshadowing the head
    The last dying fighters.
    Everyone wrote their name openly,
    For people of the future to know
    So that this feat accomplished by all of them,
    Done in the name of humanity!"

    Nikolay Tikhonov.

  3. Reichstagsgebaude

    The Reichstag building in Berlin is an interesting monument in every sense.
    Its walls remember as much as other houses and buildings do not "make money" for centuries.
    But he's only half a century old!

    Construction history

    The “Iron Chancellor” of Prussia and then Germany, Otto Bismarck, united the disparate German duchies and principalities into one, and, naturally, the question arose of where the government of the newly born state would sit. It was decided to build a building reflecting the greatness and power of the new country.

    The place was chosen quickly: on Republic Square (then Kaiser Square), not far from the river, almost on its bank.
    But suddenly, the Prussian diplomat and collector of Polish origin, Count Rachinsky, who owned the land, sharply opposed the construction.
    The German government announced a project competition in the hope that the uncompromising count would change his will: the Kaiser really did not want to take the land by force.
    But even this measure had no effect, the construction was delayed for several more years, until the son of the already deceased Rachinsky sold the building site.

    The first stone was laid in 1884 by Wilhelm I, the first meeting of Parliament took place 10 years later, when Wilhelm II ruled.

    Architectural appearance

    The main idea of ​​the architectural project developed by Paul Wallot was simple: the new Germany, reflected in stone, was supposed to give the impression of strength, sovereign power and statehood.
    This style of architecture is called imperial. The architect deliberately "weighted" the building, made it massive, large, solid.

    The Reichstag is made in the form of a square, in the corners of which there are four towers topped with the national flags of Germany. They symbolize 4 German lands, which became the basis for the unification of the country. In the center of the building there is a glass dome (it became such as a result of reconstruction after the Second World War, since the former one was destroyed). Initially, Emperor Wilhelm did not like the dome, because it was higher than all the other domes in the city, and the Kaiser perceived this fact as an attempt on the symbols of his power, but still yielded to the author of the project. Today, the height of the dome is 75 meters, at the top there is an observation deck, which offers a magnificent view of the surroundings.

    The central entrance is decorated in the form of a solemn ancient Roman portal with 6 pairs of columns, above which there is a portico with a bas-relief depicting the triumph of united Germany. On both sides of the portico there is a turret of a carillon - a mechanical musical instrument, but today there are no bells on it, the instrument does not work.

    There are allegory statues on the towers, symbolizing all aspects of life in the state: industry, agriculture, the army, art, and so on. There are 16 of them in total. It is curious that among the statues there is an allegory of the brewing industry as the basis of the well-being of Germany and its people.

    On the portico, in addition to the bas-relief, there is an inscription "Dem deutsche Volke" ("To the German people"). The letters are cast from the guns of the Napoleonic wars. She appeared on the pediment in 1916.

    The interiors, also designed by Vallot, provided for meeting rooms made of wood (mainly to increase acoustic effects), a lot of stucco, designed to copy the style of decoration of city administrative buildings of the 16th-17th centuries: garlands, rosettes, bas-reliefs.

    The most unusual thing about the Reichstag building today is the dome. During the Second World War, it was completely destroyed, and the building itself was badly damaged. After the war, it ended up on the territory of West Berlin (the parliament met in Bonn). The restoration of the historical monument began in the 60s, and the dome was worked on in the 90s. The construction of the dome, designed by the architect Foster, provided for its installation on the roof of the building, which was made of glass and concrete. It was a grandiose idea for implementation: weighing 1200 tons, 23.5 m high and 38 m in diameter, the dome was not only a decoration, an observation deck, but also a ventilation device, as well as a dimmer switch.

    Two paths stretch along the dome: one for ascent to the observation deck, the second for descent. In the center is a computer-controlled mirror structure. It is a giant funnel that ventilates the plenary hall and regulates the amount of daylight depending on its brightness: the mirrors turn at a certain angle and thus increase or decrease the illumination.

    The practical Germans provided for an environmentally friendly energy supply for the building. Part of it is supplied with thermal springs, part - with solar panels. So the current owners of the building combined history and modern technology.

    History of the Reichstag

    At the beginning of its existence, it was the building of the parliament, then the Weimar Republic. The Nazis (they came to power legally through elections) did not begin to transfer the work of parliament to another place.

    On the night of February 28, 1933, the Reichstag was destroyed by fire. The symbol of the state was on fire. The arson was blamed on the communists, and this was the pretext for a large-scale wave of repression and terror unleashed by the Nazis. Dark times began in Germany.

    They ended in 1945, when Soviet troops took Berlin.

    One of the main characters of the film “Only Old Men Go to Battle” dreamed of leaving his painting on the Reichstag. The whole world went around pictures of a dilapidated building with inscriptions on the walls left by such ordinary soldiers. It was like a victory over Nazi Germany: we signed on the main building of the country, we won, fascism was destroyed.

    And the red banner of the Great Victory was also hoisted on the Reichstag, on the right turret of the carillon.
    What happened to these inscriptions after the war? It would seem that it would be natural for the defeated side to destroy even a hint of the violated statehood.
    But no. Honor and praise to the Germans: they do not want to forget what their compatriots have done, they do not want the world to forget about the danger posed by fascism.
    And they left inscriptions. They are in the large conference room, in some rooms, on the roof.
    From the steps of the destroyed Reichstag, the Berliners turned to humanity: “Peoples of the world! Look at this city... And do not repeat our mistakes - so much we want to continue this emotional appeal.
    Today you can come to the Reichstag with a guided tour, having previously signed up on the website. This tour will remain in your memory for a long time, because the Reichstag is not just a building, it is a living history.

    In the first weeks after the capture of the Reichstag, thousands of Soviet soldiers signed there.

    Story

    On the Reichstag the word "Vasya"
    (Right above the swastika-cross)
    All shining with soldier's happiness,
    Knocked out the soldiers with a bayonet.
    Well, you are smart, soldier,
    Winner and hero!
    On the Reichstag taken by storm,
    All the same contained his autograph!
    On, look, read, Europe,
    And America - dare
    Whose infantry took the Reichstag!?
    Who smashed the "spider paradise"!?
    Went in battles here from the Volga,
    Died and again...
    She continued on her way, long,
    To take the damned Reichstag!
    On, read, Berlin, and remember
    Remember with your heart - forever!
    At the conquered Reichstag
    Russian bayonet painting!
    The name Vasya is for all Vasya,
    What lies in the damp earth,
    On the wall of the Reichstag imperiously,
    Painted a soldier with a bayonet!

    (Masasin Mikhail Vasilyevich)

    He signed on the wall

    He signed on the wall
    I, Ivanov N.N. from Penza
    And above, lines, in depth...
    Victory! Alive! And here is my monogram...

    Sat by the wall, took out a pouch
    Smell of smoke over the soldier
    Hands were trembling ... for so many years
    He went to Berlin, for this date

    And how many were, them, roads
    And pain, and blood, and fear, and trouble
    Oh, how hard is the threshold of war
    How high is the price of Victory...

    All the snows of Moscow remember you
    The walls of Stalingrad remember you
    Where the ridge is, you broke
    Enemy, in the crucible of a terrible hell

    Odessa remembers you, and Kerch
    And Brest, and Kursk, and Rzhev and Prague
    War bloody spooky tornado
    Brought you to the lair of the Reichstag

    And the Volga cries, the Don cries
    Both the Dnieper and the Vistula echo
    And the bell is ringing
    And life is noisy with merry laughter ..

    On the walls of the Reichstag, Soviet soldiers left many inscriptions, some of which (including in the meeting room) were preserved and left during the restoration of the building.

    In 1947, by order of the Soviet commandant's office, the inscriptions were "censored", that is, obscene inscriptions were removed and several "ideologically consistent" inscriptions were added.

    The issue of preserving the inscriptions on the Reichstag was raised in the 1990s during its reconstruction (in this case, the initial stages of the repair revealed many inscriptions hidden by the previous restoration in the 1960s). By agreement of the President of the Bundestag, R. Süsmuth (English) Russian. and the Ambassador of the Russian Federation to Germany in 1996, statements of obscene and racist content were removed and only 159 graffiti were left. In 2002, the issue of removing the inscriptions was raised in the Bundestag, but the proposal was rejected by a majority of votes. Most of the surviving inscriptions of Soviet soldiers are located in the interior of the Reichstag, now accessible only with a guide by appointment. Above, on the right pediment from the inside, the inscription: "Astrakhan Makarov" is preserved.

    There are also traces of bullets on the inside of the left pediment.


    One of the walls with inscriptions, left during the restoration of the Reichstag

    On September 9, 1948, during the blockade of Berlin, a rally was held in front of the Reichstag building, which brought together over 350 thousand Berliners. Against the backdrop of the destroyed Reichstag with the famous appeal to the world community "Peoples of the world ... Look at this city!" Mayor Ernst Reuter asked.

    The Berlin Wall, erected on August 13, 1961, passed in close proximity to the Reichstag building. It ended up in West Berlin. Subsequently, the building was restored and since 1973 it has been used as a historical exhibition and as a meeting room for bodies and factions of the Bundestag.

    After the reunification of Germany on October 4, 1990, the day after the actual date of German reunification, the first meeting of the first all-German Bundestag took place in the Reichstag. On June 20, 1991, the Bundestag in Bonn decides by 338 votes to 320 to move to Berlin in the Reichstag building. After the competition, the reconstruction of the Reichstag was entrusted to the English architect Lord Norman Foster. In May 1995, the Council of Elders of the Bundestag, after a long debate, decides to build a modern glass dome, inside which people can walk.

    Norman Foster managed to preserve the historical appearance of the Reichstag building and at the same time create premises for a modern parliament, open to the outside world. The building is divided into levels according to the principle of transparency and expediency. The structures of the parliamentary secretariat, as well as technical devices and life support systems are located in the basement and on the first floor. Above is the plenary level with a large meeting room, above which is the level for visitors. Even higher is the level of the presidium, above it is the fractional level and, finally, the roof-terrace and the impressive dome of the building. The transparency of the building is ensured by modern building materials: light steel structures and large glazed areas, decorative concrete, matte white or beige natural stone give the massive building a silver hue. The color concept of the Danish artist Per Arnoldi is used for orientation: the doors of each level are painted in a certain color.

    Today the Reichstag building is one of Berlin's tourist attractions. Until November 2010, free access was open to the dome of the building and to the observation deck on the roof of the Bundestag, but tourists must first register on the Bundestag website. The German Bundestag is the most visited parliament in the world. After the Bundestag moved to Berlin in 1999, more than 13 million people from all over the world visited the Reichstag building. For comparison: during the stay of the German Bundestag in Bonn in 1949-1997, about 11.5 million people visited it. After Interior Minister Thomas de Mezieres announced an increased terrorist threat on November 17 in connection with the possibility of Islamists preparing terrorist attacks on Christmas infiltration into Germany, the building was surrounded by temporary metal barriers, and the dome was closed to tourists. At present
    time the dome is open to tourists by appointment on the website of the Bundestag.