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Text in German. There is a copious and wide-ranging body of
literature on Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Germany's most important
19th-century architect. But there is not a single work that records
and assembles material on buildings by Schinkel that are still
standing today, one hundred and sixty years after his death, after
two world wars and major political upheavals. This volume is
intended to fill the gap by providing the fullest possible
compilation. It is surprising how many buildings by Schinkel still
exist. There are over 170 of them in 112 different places, 62 in
Germany and 49 in Poland and Russia, with Berlin and Potsdam each
counting as a single location. The picture is very varied as far as
the individual buildings are concerned. The churches make up the
greatest number: about 86 of them are still standing. Then come 34
museums, theatres, guardhouses, schools and similar buildings, 18
palaces, castles and manor houses, 12 memorials, 12 tombs, 6
interiors and 4 fonts. A glance at a map of the former state of
Prussia shows clearly that the buildings are not distributed
evenly. In the west, the Rhineland and Westphalia, there were and
are relatively few buildings by Schinkel. There is a decided
cluster, the first regional concentration, in the present
Saxony-Anhalt, between Magdeburg and Weimar. Further to the east
come major accumulations in Berlin and Potsdam, and then the
Oderbruch in the east of Brandenburg as another cluster. There are
also concentrations of buildings by Schinkel in the Posen area as
well as in West and East Prussia. Pomerania and Silesia have far
fewer. Heinz Schonemann provides an introductory essay about
Schinkel in his day, Helmut Borsch-Supan has contributed accounts
of the way in which Schinkel's legacy is being handled today. The
catalogue texts are by Martina Abri, Elke Blauert, Eva
Borsch-Supan, Bernd Evers, Hillert Ibbeken and Heinz Schonemann.
This comprehensively illustrated book records and assembles
material on over 150 buildings by Karl Schinkel, Germany's most
important 19th century architect.
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