The Day of the Open Monument offers a chance for a guided tour of unusual, often off-bounds architectural monuments. But are you aware of these 10 German public monuments, all of them top tourist attractions?
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10 famous German monuments and statues
Erected to commemorate events and people, monuments and statues are reminders of the past, cast in stone and bronze. These 10 structures are among Germany's most distinctive sites of remembrance.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe
Also known as the Holocaust Memorial, the vast monument is situated near the Brandenburg Gate in the heart of Berlin. The site is a sloping field covered with 2,711 concrete slabs, or "stelae." Built in 2005, the memorial commemorates the six million Jews killed by the Nazis. It includes an underground information center that documents the fates of individuals and families.
Image: picture-alliance/Schoening
Luther Monument
A bronze statue of Martin Luther stands among other key figures of the Reformation in the city of Worms, where Luther in 1521 refused to recant his writings. Unveiled in 1868, it is the world's largest memorial to the Reformation. The reformer's famous words "Here I stand, I can do no other" are engraved in the pedestal.
Image: Uwe Feuerbach
Goethe-Schiller Monument
The bronze double statues of two of Germany's most revered literary figures, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Friedrich von Schiller, stand in front of the Deutsches Nationaltheater in the eastern city of Weimar. Larger than life, they have symbolized the men's friendship and the spirit of Weimar since 1857. The ensemble of "Classic Weimar" was named a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1998.
Image: picture-alliance/DUMONT Bildarchiv
Buchenwald Memorial
Not far from Weimar, the Nazis ran the Buchenwald concentration camp from 1937 to 1945. More than 250,000 people from all over Europe were imprisoned there, and about 56,000 were killed. In 1958, the East German government erected a memorial to commemorate Communist resistance in the camp.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Karl Marx Monument
In 1953, East Germany renamed Chemnitz as Karl-Marx-Stadt (Karl Marx City). In 1971, 250,000 people watched as a more than seven-meter-tall stylized bronze Marx bust was erected in the center of the city. The inscription in the wall behind the bust reads, Workers of the World, Unite — in four languages. After reunification, the city's name reverted to Chemnitz, but the monument remained.
Image: imago/ecomedia/robert fishman
Beethoven Monument
Bonn is Ludwig van Beethoven's (1770-1827) hometown, so it comes as no surprise that the city dedicated a bronze statue to its most famous son in 1845. Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm IV and Queen Victoria were present for the inauguration of the imposing composer's likeness.
Image: DW/A. Magazova
Hermann Monument
At 54 meters, the Hermann Monument near Detmold is Germany's highest statue. It was built between 1838 and 1875 and commemorates Arminius (Hermann), a Germanic war chief, and his victory over Roman troops in 9 A.D. In the 19th century, it stood for the German search for a national identity and unity.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Monument to the Battle of the Nations
This 91-meter-tall monument, one of Europe's largest, is dedicated to Napoleon's defeat to Russian, Austrian, Prussian and Swedish troops in the 1813 Battle of Leipzig. It was unveiled in 1913, a century after the battle. The structure towers over the "Sea of Tears" reflecting pool, a symbol of mourning for the 120,000 soldiers who died in the battle.
Image: Sandor Jackal - Fotolia.com
Niederwald Monument
This monumental structure near Rüdesheim on the River Rhine commemorates the end of the Franco-Prussian war and founding of the German Empire in 1871. The monument stands 38 meters tall and features a huge statue of Germania standing in front of a throne, holding aloft the imperial crown.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Walhalla Hall of Fame
The massive Walhalla Hall of Fame towers over the landscape in Donaustauf like a Greek temple. Inaugurated in 1842 and named after the resting place of fallen soldiers in Norse mythology, it honors distinguished celebrities in German history with marble busts and plaques — rulers, artists, writers, scientists, composers and freedom fighters, all in all 196 of which 13 are women.
Image: Fotolia/Frank Merfort
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The Europe-wide event Heritage Day, which takes places every year on the second Sunday in September, is also known as Day of the Open Monument in Germany. The German Foundation for Monument Protection has been coordinating the event for the past 25 years.
This year, about 7,800 historical buildings at more than 2,500 locations in Germany will open their doors on Sunday. Some of these monuments may not even be perceived as such in everyday life. Visitors have the chance to get to know locations usually never or rarely accessible to the public: disused railway stations, former places of work, churches, historical and technical installations as well as old fortifications.
A memory jolt
Heritage Day does not focus on the huge historical monuments that tower over the landscape throughout Germany, commemorating various events or great minds.
The 19th century US journalist Ambrose Bierce defined a monument as "a structure intended to commemorate something which either needs no commemoration or cannot be commemorated" — and he is only partially right as quite a few historical events need more remembrance these days.
One of the founders of French literary romanticism, Francois-Rene Vicomte de Chateaubriand (1768-1848), also described great monuments as an "essential part of the glory of every human society."
Click on the above gallery for 10 of Germany's most important monuments, memorials and statues. They come in various shapes, sizes and ages but they all have one thing in common — they commemorate either horrific or grand human enterprises.