manuel cohen

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  • German Cathedral or Neue Kirche or Deutsche Dom at night, originally built 1701-1708 by Giovanni Simonetti but largely replaced in 1881 by Hermann von der Hude and Julius Hennicke with a Neobaroque design on a pentagonal plan, on Gendarmenmarkt, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0509.jpg
  • German Cathedral or Neue Kirche or Deutsche Dom, originally built 1701-1708 by Giovanni Simonetti but largely replaced in 1881 by Hermann von der Hude and Julius Hennicke with a Neobaroque design on a pentagonal plan, on Gendarmenmarkt, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0429.jpg
  • Courtyard of the German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, a federal agency serving the executive office of the Chancellor, the head of the German federal government, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes in post-modernist style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0241.jpg
  • German military parade on the Place du Marechal Petain, (now the Place de la Mairie), during the German occupation of France in Second World War, photograph, in Sable-sur-Sarthe, Pays de la Loire, France. Collection G Cherrier. Picture by Manuel Cohen / Further clearances required
    LC_HISTORY_MC_0375.jpg
  • Steel sculpture, 2000, entitled 'Berlin' by Eduardo Chillida, 1924-2002, at the entrance to the German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, a federal agency serving the executive office of the Chancellor, the head of the German federal government, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes in post-modernist style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0238.jpg
  • Steel sculpture, 2000, entitled 'Berlin' by Eduardo Chillida, 1924-2002, at the entrance to the German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, a federal agency serving the executive office of the Chancellor, the head of the German federal government, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes in post-modernist style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0110.jpg
  • Painted statue of San German, patron saint of Cadiz, holding a cross and a palm frond, 1687, by Luisa Roldan la Roldana, with clothes of a Roman legionary made by Luis Antonio de los Arcos, husband of the sculptor, in the Catedral de Santa Cruz de Cadiz (Cadiz Cathedral), designed by Vicente Acero in Baroque and Neoclassical style and built 1722-1838, Cadiz, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Cadiz is one of the oldest cities in Europe, founded by the Phoenicians in 1100 BC, and later became a Carthaginian then a Roman city, and Spain's constitution was signed here in 1812. It is situated on a peninsula on the Costa de la Luz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_SPAIN_MC311.jpg
  • German Historical Museum or Deutsches Historisches Museum, in the Zeughaus or former Armoury building on Unter den Linden, with a new glass extension 1998-2003 by I M Pei, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0450.jpg
  • German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, a federal agency serving the executive office of the Chancellor, the head of the German federal government, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes in post-modernist style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0239.jpg
  • Entrance to the German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, a federal agency serving the executive office of the Chancellor, the head of the German federal government, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes in post-modernist style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0109.jpg
  • The Zeughaus or Arsenal, built 1695-1730 by the Brandenburg Elector Frederick III, on the banks of the River Spree, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The Zeughaus now houses the Deutsches Historisches Museum or German Historical Museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0451.jpg
  • German Historical Museum or Deutsches Historisches Museum, in the Zeughaus or former Armoury building on Unter den Linden, with a new glass extension 1998-2003 by I M Pei, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0510.jpg
  • The German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, post-modernist style building by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes, the personal offices of the Chancellor and the Chancellery staff, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0258.jpg
  • Inside the German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, post-modernist style building by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes, the personal offices of the Chancellor and the Chancellery staff, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0107.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus reflecting the German flag, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0114.jpg
  • Inside the German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, post-modernist style building by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes, the personal offices of the Chancellor and the Chancellery staff, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0106.jpg
  • The German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, post-modernist style building by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes, the personal offices of the Chancellor and the Chancellery staff, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0108.jpg
  • File made by the German Secret Service on the 'Reseau Interallie', the Second World War spy network infiltrated by the French double agent Mathilde Carre, 1908-2007, known as La Chatte or Pussy, code name Victoire, dated 18th November 1941, from the collection of the Service Historique de La Defense, at the Chateau de Vincennes, Vincennes, Paris, France. The collection includes documents of the Vichy government detailing spying activities of the French Secret Services on the German Nazi regime. The Centre Historique des Archives at Vincennes forms part of the SHD, which stores the archives of the Ministry of Defence and its armed forces. It was set up by decree in 2005. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_HISTORY_MC_0257.jpg
  • The Karl Marx Buchhandlung, a bookshop opened in 1970 on the ground floor of Paulick Block C, a residential building on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0963.jpg
  • Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0962.jpg
  • Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0960.jpg
  • Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. A modern sculpture sits on the grass in front of the building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0957.jpg
  • Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0959.jpg
  • The Karl Marx Buchhandlung, a bookshop opened in 1970 on the ground floor of Paulick Block C, a residential building on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0964.jpg
  • Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. A modern sculpture sits on the grass in front of the building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0966.jpg
  • Plaque showing construction workers laying a brick wall celebrating the GDR's 5 year plan development program in the 1950s on the facade of Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC1006.jpg
  • Plaque showing a stone mason carving a capital, celebrating the GDR's 5 year plan development program in the 1950s on the facade of Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC1007.jpg
  • Plaque celebrating the GDR's 5 year plan development program, 1952, on the facade of Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC1004.jpg
  • Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0961.jpg
  • Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0956.jpg
  • A modern sculpture in front of Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0958.jpg
  • The Karl Marx Buchhandlung, a bookshop opened in 1970 on the ground floor of Paulick Block C, a residential building on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0965.jpg
  • Plaque showing construction workers carrying a steel beam celebrating the GDR's 5 year plan development program in the 1950s on the facade of Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC1005.jpg
  • Plaques showing construction workers celebrating the GDR's 5 year plan development program in the 1950s on the facade of Paulick Block C, a residential building with shops and restaurants on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Richard Paulick, a leading figure in the redevelopment of East German cities. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC1003.jpg
  • Bronze bust of Karl Marx, 1818-83, German philosopher and socialist, by Will Lammert, 1892-1957, German sculptor, on Strausbergerplatz on Karl Marx Allee in the former East Berlin in the GDR, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0494.jpg
  • Bronze bust of Karl Marx, 1818-83, German philosopher and socialist, by Will Lammert, 1892-1957, German sculptor, on Strausbergerplatz on Karl Marx Allee in the former East Berlin in the GDR, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0493.jpg
  • Page from the file on the German armoured divisions from 1940-43, listing their movements and equipment, dated 1st February 1940 and stamped Secret, from the collection of the Service Historique de La Defense, at the Chateau de Vincennes, Vincennes, Paris, France. The collection includes documents of the Vichy government detailing spying activities of the French Secret Services on the German Nazi regime. The Centre Historique des Archives at Vincennes forms part of the SHD, which stores the archives of the Ministry of Defence and its armed forces. It was set up by decree in 2005. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_HISTORY_MC_0275.jpg
  • The German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt in the evening, a federal agency serving the executive office of the Chancellor, the head of the German federal government, opened 2001, with a steel sculpture, 2000, entitled 'Berlin' by Eduardo Chillida, 1924-2002, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes in post-modernist style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0427.JPG
  • Late Gothic Hall, housing German, Spanish and Italian paintings and sculpture of the late 15th and early 16th centuries, in The Cloisters, a museum specialising in European medieval architecture, sculpture and decorative arts, part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, at Fort Tryon Park, Manhattan, New York, USA. In the foreground is a German Palmesel, 15th century, a wooden wheeled statue of Jesus on a donkey used in Palm Sunday processions. Behind is the Retable with Scenes from the Life of St Andrew, Spanish, c. 1420–30, attributed to the Master of Roussillon. The Cloisters collection includes Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance works from 12th to 15th centuries. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_NYC_USA_MC107.jpg
  • Late Gothic Hall, housing German, Spanish and Italian paintings and sculpture of the late 15th and early 16th centuries, in The Cloisters, a museum specialising in European medieval architecture, sculpture and decorative arts, part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, at Fort Tryon Park, Manhattan, New York, USA. In the foreground is a German Palmesel, 15th century, a wooden wheeled statue of Jesus on a donkey used in Palm Sunday processions. Behind is the Retable with Scenes from the Life of St Andrew, Spanish, c. 1420–30, attributed to the Master of Roussillon. The Cloisters collection includes Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance works from 12th to 15th centuries. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_NYC_USA_MC106.jpg
  • Late Gothic Hall, housing German, Spanish and Italian paintings and sculpture of the late 15th and early 16th centuries, in The Cloisters, a museum specialising in European medieval architecture, sculpture and decorative arts, part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, at Fort Tryon Park, Manhattan, New York, USA. In the centre is a German Palmesel, 15th century, a wooden wheeled statue of Jesus on a donkey used in Palm Sunday processions. The Cloisters collection includes Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance works from 12th to 15th centuries. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_NYC_USA_MC105.JPG
  • Underside of painted lid of a Coffret or Minnekastchen, 1325-50, German, depicting Frau Minneolas, German goddess of love, and a young man, in The Cloisters, a museum specialising in European medieval architecture, sculpture and decorative arts, part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, at Fort Tryon Park, Manhattan, New York, USA. The wooden box is made from oak, with inlay detail and a tempera painted lid. The Cloisters collection includes Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance works from 12th to 15th centuries. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_NYC_USA_MC083.jpg
  • Late Gothic Hall, housing German, Spanish and Italian paintings and sculpture of the late 15th and early 16th centuries, in The Cloisters, a museum specialising in European medieval architecture, sculpture and decorative arts, part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, at Fort Tryon Park, Manhattan, New York, USA. In the foreground is a German Palmesel, 15th century, a wooden wheeled statue of Jesus on a donkey used in Palm Sunday processions. Behind is the Retable with Scenes from the Life of St Andrew, Spanish, c. 1420–30, attributed to the Master of Roussillon. The Cloisters collection includes Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance works from 12th to 15th centuries. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_NYC_USA_MC108.jpg
  • File on the German armoured divisions from 1940-43, from the collection of the Service Historique de La Defense, at the Chateau de Vincennes, Vincennes, Paris, France. The collection includes documents of the Vichy government detailing spying activities of the French Secret Services on the German Nazi regime. The Centre Historique des Archives at Vincennes forms part of the SHD, which stores the archives of the Ministry of Defence and its armed forces. It was set up by decree in 2005. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_HISTORY_MC_0274.jpg
  • Carved verse by German poet Holderlin, 1770-1843, carved in the 1960s in the Langemarck-Halle, a memorial hall for German soldiers who died in the First World War, at the Olympiastadion, built by Werner March for the 1936 Summer Olympics, Olympiapark Berlin, Berlin, Germany. The stadium itself was rebuilt and reinaugurated in 2004. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0744.jpg
  • Reichstag building, opened 1894, seat of the German parliament and meeting place of the Bundestag, refurbished by Norman Foster 1990-99, including the large glass windows behind the columns, Berlin, Germany. A frieze below the pediment reads 'Dem Deutschen Volke' or To The German People. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0508.jpg
  • The German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, a federal agency serving the executive office of the Chancellor, the head of the German federal government, opened 2001, with a steel sculpture, 2000, entitled 'Berlin' by Eduardo Chillida, 1924-2002, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes in post-modernist style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0426.jpg
  • Tourist boat passing the Marie-Elisabeth Luders building, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0240.jpg
  • Reichstag building, opened 1894, seat of the German parliament and meeting place of the Bundestag, refurbished by Norman Foster 1990-99, including the addition of the huge glass dome, Berlin, Germany. Below the pediment reads the slogan 'Dem Deutsche Volk' or To The German People. The building sits on the river Spree. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0205.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0204.jpg
  • Reichstag building, opened 1894, seat of the German parliament and meeting place of the Bundestag, refurbished by Norman Foster 1990-99, including the addition of the huge glass dome, Berlin, Germany. A frieze below the pediment reads 'Dem Deutschen Volke' or To The German People. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0105.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0118.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0119.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0123.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0125.jpg
  • Late Gothic Hall, housing German, Spanish and Italian paintings and sculpture of the late 15th and early 16th centuries, in The Cloisters, a museum specialising in European medieval architecture, sculpture and decorative arts, part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, at Fort Tryon Park, Manhattan, New York, USA. In the foreground is a German Palmesel, 15th century, a wooden wheeled statue of Jesus on a donkey used in Palm Sunday processions. The Cloisters collection includes Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance works from 12th to 15th centuries. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_NYC_USA_MC104.jpg
  • French, German and European flags on the grassed roof of the Fort de Douaumont, built 1885-1913, the largest of the 19 defensive forts around Verdun, Meuse, Lorraine, France. In 1916, during the Battle of Verdun in World War One, the German army occupied the fort, which was only recaptured after 9 months of intense fighting and the loss of tens of thousands of men, ending in the First Offensive Battle of Verdun on 24 October 1916. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_VERDUN_MC044.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0124.jpg
  • Buildings along Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0356.jpg
  • Section of the Berlin Wall depicting a yellow East German Trabant car, detail of a painting entitled Mauern International by Alexej Taranin, damaged by graffiti, part of the East Side Gallery, a 1.3km long section of the Wall on Muhlenstrasse painted in 1990 on its Eastern side by 105 artists from around the world, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0191.JPG
  • Students studying in the library, which stocks 20,000 books, 90% of which are German language publications, in the Maison de L'Allemagne or Germany House, or Maison Heinrich Heine, designed by Johannes Krahn, 1908-1974, and opened in 1956, in the Cite Internationale Universitaire de Paris, in the 14th arrondissement of Paris, France. The CIUP or Cite U was founded in 1925 after the First World War by Andre Honnorat and Emile Deutsch de la Meurthe to create a place of cooperation and peace amongst students and researchers from around the world. It consists of 5,800 rooms in 40 residences, accepting another 12,000 student residents each year. Picture by Manuel Cohen. Further clearances may be requested.
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_0575.jpg
  • Students studying in the library, which stocks 20,000 books, 90% of which are German language publications, in the Maison de L'Allemagne or Germany House, or Maison Heinrich Heine, designed by Johannes Krahn, 1908-1974, and opened in 1956, in the Cite Internationale Universitaire de Paris, in the 14th arrondissement of Paris, France. The CIUP or Cite U was founded in 1925 after the First World War by Andre Honnorat and Emile Deutsch de la Meurthe to create a place of cooperation and peace amongst students and researchers from around the world. It consists of 5,800 rooms in 40 residences, accepting another 12,000 student residents each year. Picture by Manuel Cohen. Further clearances may be requested.
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_0573.jpg
  • Library, with 20,000 books, 90% of which are German language publications, in the Maison de L'Allemagne or Germany House, or Maison Heinrich Heine, designed by Johannes Krahn, 1908-1974, and opened in 1956, in the Cite Internationale Universitaire de Paris, in the 14th arrondissement of Paris, France. The CIUP or Cite U was founded in 1925 after the First World War by Andre Honnorat and Emile Deutsch de la Meurthe to create a place of cooperation and peace amongst students and researchers from around the world. It consists of 5,800 rooms in 40 residences, accepting another 12,000 student residents each year. Picture by Manuel Cohen. Further clearances may be requested.
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_0574.jpg
  • Library, with 20,000 books, 90% of which are German language publications, in the Maison de L'Allemagne or Germany House, or Maison Heinrich Heine, designed by Johannes Krahn, 1908-1974, and opened in 1956, in the Cite Internationale Universitaire de Paris, in the 14th arrondissement of Paris, France. The CIUP or Cite U was founded in 1925 after the First World War by Andre Honnorat and Emile Deutsch de la Meurthe to create a place of cooperation and peace amongst students and researchers from around the world. It consists of 5,800 rooms in 40 residences, accepting another 12,000 student residents each year. Picture by Manuel Cohen. Further clearances may be requested.
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_0571.jpg
  • Library, with 20,000 books, 90% of which are German language publications, in the Maison de L'Allemagne or Germany House, or Maison Heinrich Heine, designed by Johannes Krahn, 1908-1974, and opened in 1956, in the Cite Internationale Universitaire de Paris, in the 14th arrondissement of Paris, France. The CIUP or Cite U was founded in 1925 after the First World War by Andre Honnorat and Emile Deutsch de la Meurthe to create a place of cooperation and peace amongst students and researchers from around the world. It consists of 5,800 rooms in 40 residences, accepting another 12,000 student residents each year. Picture by Manuel Cohen. Further clearances may be requested.
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_0572.jpg
  • German Historical Museum or Deutsches Historisches Museum, in the Zeughaus or former Armoury building on Unter den Linden, with a new glass extension 1998-2003 by I M Pei, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0880.jpg
  • German Historical Museum or Deutsches Historisches Museum, in the Zeughaus or former Armoury building on Unter den Linden, with a new glass extension 1998-2003 by I M Pei, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0879.jpg
  • Portrait bust of Friedrich I of Prussia with imperial eagles on the main portal of the Zeughaus or Arsenal, built 1695-1730 in Baroque style under Frederick III and designed by the architects Martin Grunberg, Andreas Schluter and Jean de Bodt, Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The building was converted into a military museum in 1875 and now houses the Deutsches Historisches Museum or German Historical Museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0992.jpg
  • Portrait bust of Friedrich I of Prussia with eagles and angels on the main portal of the Zeughaus or Arsenal, built 1695-1730 in Baroque style under Frederick III and designed by the architects Martin Grunberg, Andreas Schluter and Jean de Bodt, Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The building was converted into a military museum in 1875 and now houses the Deutsches Historisches Museum or German Historical Museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0993.jpg
  • Head of Medusa by Andreas Schluter, 1659-1714, on the North facade of the Zeughaus or Arsenal, built 1695-1730 in Baroque style under Frederick III and designed by the architects Martin Grunberg, Andreas Schluter and Jean de Bodt, Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The building was converted into a military museum in 1875 and now houses the Deutsches Historisches Museum or German Historical Museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0991.jpg
  • Head of Medusa by Andreas Schluter, 1659-1714, on the North facade of the Zeughaus or Arsenal, built 1695-1730 in Baroque style under Frederick III and designed by the architects Martin Grunberg, Andreas Schluter and Jean de Bodt, Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The building was converted into a military museum in 1875 and now houses the Deutsches Historisches Museum or German Historical Museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0990.jpg
  • Main portal of the Zeughaus or Arsenal, built 1695-1730 in Baroque style under Frederick III and designed by the architects Martin Grunberg, Andreas Schluter and Jean de Bodt, Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The building was converted into a military museum in 1875 and now houses the Deutsches Historisches Museum or German Historical Museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0977.jpg
  • Facade of the Zeughaus or Arsenal, built 1695-1730 in Baroque style under Frederick III and designed by the architects  Martin Grunberg, Andreas Schluter and Jean de Bodt, Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The building was converted into a military museum in 1875 and now houses the Deutsches Historisches Museum or German Historical Museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0995.jpg
  • Portrait bust of Friedrich I of Prussia with eagles and angels on the main portal of the Zeughaus or Arsenal, built 1695-1730 in Baroque style under Frederick III and designed by the architects Martin Grunberg, Andreas Schluter and Jean de Bodt, Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The building was converted into a military museum in 1875 and now houses the Deutsches Historisches Museum or German Historical Museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC1064.jpg
  • Head of Medusa by Andreas Schluter, 1659-1714, on the North facade of the Zeughaus or Arsenal, built 1695-1730 in Baroque style under Frederick III and designed by the architects Martin Grunberg, Andreas Schluter and Jean de Bodt, Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The building was converted into a military museum in 1875 and now houses the Deutsches Historisches Museum or German Historical Museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC1063.jpg
  • Building with a shop on the ground floor, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0330.jpg
  • Buildings along Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, with the Fernsehturm or Television Tower in the distance, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0329.jpg
  • Buildings with shops and cafes on the ground floor on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, with the Fernsehturm or Television Tower in the distance, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0328.jpg
  • Detail of a building with relief of workers building a wall, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0355.jpg
  • Buildings and lampposts on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0353.jpg
  • Buildings and lampposts on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0352.jpg
  • A lamppost on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0351.jpg
  • Detail of windows with old woman looking out, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0350.jpg
  • Detail of a bronze Art Deco style frieze on a building on the junction of Karl Marx Allee and Otto-Brown Strasse, with shop below, Berlin, Germany. Karl Marx Allee is a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0363.jpg
  • Looking down Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, with the Fernsehturm or Television Tower in the distance, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0398.jpg
  • Double spires of the Nikolaikirche or St Nicholas Church, built 1220-30, the oldest church in Berlin, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The church was restored in the 1980s by the former East Germany, the German Democratic Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0514.jpg
  • Cyclists on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, with Schwebender Platz in the distance, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0502.jpg
  • Cafe Moskau, built by Josef Kaiser in the 1960s, with a mosaic mural entitled From the lives of the people of the Soviet Union by the painter Bert Heller, and a sputnik model on the roof given by the Soviet ambassador, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0501.jpg
  • Woman fruit seller with child eating an apple, from a mosaic mural entitled From the lives of the people of the Soviet Union by the painter Bert Heller, at Cafe Moskau, built by Josef Kaiser in the 1960s, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0500.jpg
  • Kino International, built 1961-63 by Josef Kaiser and Heinz Aust, the main cinema for premieres during the time of the GDR, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0498.jpg
  • Entrance to Cafe Moskau, built by Josef Kaiser in the 1960s, with a mosaic mural entitled From the lives of the people of the Soviet Union by the painter Bert Heller, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0499.jpg
  • Window reflecting the Kino International, built 1961-63 by Josef Kaiser and Heinz Aust, the main cinema for premieres during the time of the GDR, on Karl Marx Allee, a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0497.jpg
  • Schwebender Ring or Floating Ring Fountain, inspired by the artist Fritz Kuhn, on Strausberger Platz, Karl Marx Allee, Friedrichshain, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. In the background is the Haus Berlin, a shopping and apartment building designed by Herman Henselmann.  Karl Marx Allee is a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0496.jpg
  • Schwebender Ring or Floating Ring Fountain, inspired by the artist Fritz Kuhn, on Strausberger Platz, Karl Marx Allee, Friedrichshain, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. In the background is the Haus Berlin, a shopping and apartment building designed by Herman Henselmann. Karl Marx Allee is a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0495.jpg
  • Karl Marx Allee Park, between Karl Marx Allee and Weidenweg, Berlin, Germany. Karl Marx Allee is a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0491.jpg
  • Karl Marx Buchhandlung or bookshop on Karl Marx Allee, Berlin, Germany. Karl Marx Allee is a monumental socialist boulevard built 1952-65 by the former East German state. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0492.jpg
  • Offices of the DZ Bank at night, Berlin, Germany. The DZ Bank or Deutsche Zentral Genossenschaftbank (German Central Cooperative Bank) is the fourth largest bank in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0266.jpg
  • Logo and offices of the DZ Bank at night, Berlin, Germany. The DZ Bank or Deutsche Zentral Genossenschaftbank (German Central Cooperative Bank) is the fourth largest bank in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0267.jpg
  • Barcelona Pavilion, a Modernist building inaugurated 1929 and designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, 1886-1969, and Lilly Reich, 1885-1947, as the German Pavilion for the 1929 International Exposition in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Although destroyed in 1930 after the exhibition, the pavilion was rebuilt 1983-86. The sculpture is Alba or Dawn by Georg Kolbe, the walls are lined with red onyx and green travertine and the furniture, including the Barcelona chair, was designed for the building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_1127.jpg
  • The Nikolaikirche or St Nicholas Church, built 1220-30, the oldest church in Berlin, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The church was restored in the 1980s by the former East Germany, the German Democratic Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0505.jpg
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