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  1. Schloss Bellevue has been the Federal President’s principal official residence since 1994. Situated at the edge of the Tiergarten, not far from the German Bundestag and the Federal Chancellery, the palace is surrounded by a spacious park bordering the River Spree. The palace owes its name "Bellevue" to its beautifully landscaped surroundings ...

    • History of Bellevue Palace
    • After WWI
    • After WWII
    • The Official Residence of The President
    • Presidential Standard Flag

    The palace was constructed between 1785 and 1787 as a private residence for the youngest brother of Frederick the Great, known as prince August Ferdinand of Prussia. Michael Philipp Baumann was the architect who built the palace, and he blended the neoclassical and baroque elements. Some of the guests of Prince Ferdinand included Napoleon, Friedric...

    The palace remained a private property after the First World War, but in 1928 the state of Prussia acquired the palace from the family of Hohenzollern, and the main part of the building was used for an art exhibition of Grand Berlin. As from 1935, the palace was a museum of the German folk history, and in 1938 the palace was converted into a Reich ...

    The palace was almost destroyed in 1941 when it was heavily bombed. After the war, the park surrounding the palace was divided and converted into vegetable gardens, and as of 1959, the palace had been modified extensively to serve as the residence of the federal president. Several changes were made so that the Palace could accommodate large functio...

    The palace was converted as the official residence of the federal president in 1994 moving it from Bonn to Berlin, and the number of functions in the palace increased significantly. As a result, major renovations were carried out in the palace. More recently in 2004 and 2005 renovations were also made in the palace.

    The presidential standard is always flown at the palace even on days when the president is not within Berlin. The flag is only lowered when the president’s official residence is elsewhere, for instance in the case of a state visit when the standard flag is raised over his temporary overseas residence or on occasions when he uses the 2nd residence i...

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  3. Bellevue Palace is the Residence of the German president. The neoclassic building has been almost competely destroyed during World War II. After the unification it is the main residence of the German president. It is possible to visit the palace via a guided tour (in German) together with the Office of the Federal President.

    • (74)
    • Attraction
    • Spreeweg 1, Berlin
  4. The palace was located at Wilhelmstrasse No. 73 in Berlin and housed the Office of the Reich President [ de], which regulated all matters related to the function of the Reich President as a state institution.

  5. Berlin, Germany, Europe. Berlin. While in office, the German president makes his or her temporary home in this snowy white neoclassical palace on the edge of the Tiergarten. Built in 1785 by Philipp Daniel Boumann for the youngest brother of Frederick the Great, it became a school under Kaiser Wilhelm II and a museum of ethnology under the Nazis.

  6. Bellevue Palace (Schloss Bellevue) Bellevue Palace is the official residence of the President of Germany. This palace dates back to the 18th century, when it was first commissioned by Prince August Ferdinand of Prussia. It has become the President’s principal official residence since 1994.

  7. Germany surrendered to the Allies in May 1945. Paris had been liberated on August 25, 1944. Four years after occupying the hotel, the Abwehr, still under the leadership of Oskar Reile, exited just ...

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