In the largest such evacuation since the end of World War II, 54,000 people in Augsburg are to move out of their homes on Christmas morning. Police do not know how long it will take to make the bomb safe.
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Authorities have ordered residents in the southern German city within a 1.8 kilometer (1.1 mile) radius to evacuate their homes on Christmas morning. A bomb-disposal team will disarm the massive 1.8-ton aerial bomb which was launched on the city during the Second World War.
The impacted area covers much of Augsburg's central historic district, including the city hall and cathedral. On Saturday, patients at a hospital clinic were transferred to another hospital or allowed to temporarily go home.
Around 4,000 police, firefighters and emergency service personnel will be on hand to support the operation, which will impact 32,000 households. Peole without another place to go will be offered shelter in schools.
Seven decades on since the end of World War II, finding unexploded bombs dropped by Allied forces on Nazi Germany is not uncommon.
Sunday's evacuation will be the largest since 45,000 people were obliged to leave their homes when a bomb was removed from Koblenz in 2011.
Large parts of Augsburg were destroyed in February 1944, when the city was attacked by hundreds of British and US bombers. A major raid was organized against the city in April 1942.
cw/jm (AP, dpa)
German ruins of World War II
They are spread out throughout Germany. Mindful restorations of the remaining ruins of the Second World War have turned the rubble into memorials calling to peace.
Image: Hulton Archive/AFP/Getty Images
Like a hollow tooth
It's hard to imagine that in 1945 many German cities were completely destroyed by bombs, as is the case in Iraq or Syria nowadays. Though practically everything has been rebuilt since, the remaining ruins in Germany now serve as reminders of the horrors of war. Many of them are religious buildings: Berlin's Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church is one of these stone witnesses.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Hiekel
Beauty with five towers
Designed in Neo-Romanesque style and consecrated in 1895, Berlin's Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church burned down following an air raid by the Allies on November 23, 1943. Only the 71-meter high main tower could be preserved. The four-part ensemble of buildings surrounding it with the new Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church was inaugurated in late 1961. Both old and new parts are protected monuments.
Image: picture alliance/akg-images
Making use of a ruin
The history of the Franciscan monastery church in Berlin's district of Mitte goes back to 1250. The monastery was dissolved during the Reformation in 1539. It was bombed on April 3, 1945. The ruined church needed to stabilized and it became the only building to survive the era. After its restoration, the ruin has been used for exhibitions, theater performances and concerts since 2004.
Image: gemeinfrei/imago/F. Berger
Memorial without a roof
The church of St. Alban in the heart of Cologne was heavily destroyed, never to be rebuilt. Here is a view of the remains of the choir. The open former church serves as a memorial to the dead of the war. Inside, "The Mourning Parents," a sculpture by Ernst Barlach based on a drawing by Käthe Kollwitz, call to peace.
Image: CC BY-SA 3.0/Raimond Spekking
Valuable remains
Not far from St. Alban was the Church of St. Kolumba, one of the oldest parish churches of Cologne. The foundation stone was laid in 980. After the almost total destruction of the church in 1943, only a few parts of the late medieval outer wall and statue of Mary were left in the rubble.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/F. Gambarini
Integrated into a new museum
For this statue of the Virgin Mary, the octagonal chapel of St. Mary was built from 1947 to 1950 on the location of the ruins. The Cologners therefore refer to it as the "Madonna in the Ruins". In 1956-57, an additional square chapel was built as an extension to the first one. St. Kolumba was fully integrated into the newly created archiepiscopal museum of Cologne in 2007.
Image: CC BY-SA 3.0/Elke Wetzig
Ancient baroque glory
The Zerbst Castle in Saxony-Anhalt once was the residence of the princes of Anhalt-Zerbst. In the 17th century, a new building was planned as a three-winged facility. It was one of the most important baroque buildings in central Germany. The future Russian Empress Catherine II, born Princess Sophie Friederike Auguste von Anhalt-Zerbst, visited her relatives there quite often as a child.
Image: picture-alliance/AKG
Still a ray of hope
In April 1945, the Zerbst Castle was hit by bombs and burned out completely. The sumptuous interior was lost. It would have been possible to reconstruct it, but the proposal was turned down for political reasons. Only the ruins of the east wing escaped demolition. It remains a goal to reconstruct their outer part in their original form.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/J. Wolf
A church for eternity
It's not a ruin, but nevertheless a memorial: In Düsseldorf, a huge bunker was designed as a church for reasons of camouflage in the early 1940s. It finally became a church in 1949. The unique building is a protected monument, and is said to be the world's most stable place of worship. Today, the bunker is not only a church, but also a memorial and an art center.
Image: CC BY-SA 3.0/Ilion
Energetic memorial
Also unique in the world is this huge bunker in Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg. After the war, many of these constructions fell into decline. This former bunker was renovated a few years ago to be transformed into an "energy bunker." Equipped with a solar envelope and a regenerative power plant with large heat storage, the huge building now supplies the population with heat and electricity.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/B. Marks
The obvious target
The origins of the St. Nicholas Church in Hamburg reach back to the year 1195. Following a fire in 1842, a completely new church in neo-Gothic style was built and completed in 1874. The 147-meter (482 ft) high tower was temporarily the tallest architectural structure in the world. Then came July 28, 1943: The spire served as a target marker during Allied air raids. St. Nikolai burned down.
Image: gemeinfrei
Hamburg and Gomorrha
Only the tower and the vault survived, remaining open wounds to this day. After the war, the Hamburg Senate decided not to rebuild the church. The ruins of St. Nicholas were dedicated to "the victims of war and tyranny between 1933 and 1945." In the basement, a documentation center was created with a permanent exhibition showing "Gomorrha1943 - The destruction of Hamburg in aerial warfare."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Some ends are a beginning
The Frauenkirche, the pearl of the Baroque city of Dresden and a splendid example of Protestant religious architecture, was left in ruins in 1945. It had been spared during the devastating bombing in February 1945. But the stone dome collapsed the next day. The rubble long served as a memorial of war and destruction. The East German government could not afford to reconstruct the majestic church.
Image: Hulton Archive/AFP/Getty Images
Symbol of hope
After German reunification, reconstruction of the Frauenkirche began in 1996. It took nine years to be completed. Stones of the original building were incorporated into the new masonry. Involved in the financing of the 180-million-euro mammoth project were 16 German and foreign support associations, as well as donors from around the world - a strong symbol of hope and international understanding.
Image: DW/Holm Weber
Rubble for a new beginning
The restoration of the Auferstehungskirche, or Church of Resurrection, in Pforzheim, was completed in 1947. It was the first church rebuilt in Germany after the war, using the ruins of surrounding houses: 30,000 bricks were laboriously unearthed and cleaned. The church became a symbol of a new beginning and served as a model for 46 of the temporary churches set up in war-ravaged German cities.