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Englischer Garten

The Englischer Garten (German: [ˈʔɛŋlɪʃɐ ˈɡaʁtn̩], English Garden) is a large public park in the centre of Munich, Bavaria, stretching from the city centre to the northeastern city limits. It was created in 1789 by Sir Benjamin Thompson (1753–1814), later Count Rumford (Reichsgraf von Rumford), for Prince Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria. Thompson's successors, Reinhard von Werneck (1757–1842) and Friedrich Ludwig von Sckell (1750–1823), advisers on the project from its beginning, both extended and improved the park.

Englischer Garten
Aerial view of the Englischer Garten
TypeUrban park
LocationMunich, Bavaria, Germany
Area3.7 km2 (1.4 sq mi)
Created1789 (1789)
Operated byBayerische Verwaltung der staatlichen Schlösser, Gärten und Seen
StatusOpen year round
Englischer Garten with Munich skyline

With an area of 3.7 km2 (1.4 sq mi) (370 ha or 910 acres), the Englischer Garten is one of the world's largest urban public parks. The name refers to its English garden form of informal landscape, a style popular in England from the mid-18th century to the early 19th century and particularly associated with Capability Brown.

History edit

Creation edit

 
Autumn foliage in English Garden

When the Elector of Bavaria Maximilian III Joseph, the last ruler from the Bavarian branch of the Wittelsbach dynasty, died childless in 1777, his throne passed to Charles Theodore, count and elector of the Palatinate. The new ruler preferred his existing home in Mannheim on the Rhine to living in Bavaria and tried unsuccessfully to trade his unloved inheritance for the Austrian Netherlands. Understandably, the people of Munich returned his disdain.[1] To offset this unhappy atmosphere, Charles Theodore devoted much attention to improvements in the city. Among others, he created an art gallery in the northern arcades of the Residence's Hofgarten ("Court Garden") and made both the garden and the new gallery open to the public (the former in 1780, the latter in 1781).[2]

 
The Rumford Monument in the park honours Sir Benjamin Thompson's contribution

While the Hofgarten was then the only public park in Munich, that was not the primary motivation for the creation of the English Garden. Rather, it was part of a series of military reforms being pursued under the guidance of Sir Benjamin Thompson, the new Elector's chief military aide, later created Count Rumford and appointed as Bavarian war minister. Born in Massachusetts, Thompson had served on the Loyalist side in the American Revolutionary War, and after the British defeat had returned to England before moving to continental Europe and entering Charles Theodore's service in 1784.[3] In 1788 Thompson proposed that in peacetime the majority of the soldiers of the Elector's army should be given leave to do civilian work, such as farming and gardening.[4] In February 1789, Charles Theodore decreed that military gardens should be laid out in each garrison city, to provide soldiers with good agricultural knowledge and also to serve as recreation areas, accessible also to the public.[5]

The planned location of the Munich gardens was the area north of the Schwabinger city gate, a hunting ground of the Wittelsbach rulers since the Middle Ages. Known as the Hirschanger (or "deer park"), the higher part of the hunting ground closer to the city was included in the scheme, while the Hirschau (also meaning "deer park"), lower and further north, and a more densely wooded part to the south known as the Hirschangerwald ("Deer Park Wood") were originally not included.[6] The whole area had been subject to flooding from the Isar, the river on which Munich stands, a little to the east. This problem was soon removed by the construction of a river wall in 1790, which became known as the "Riedl-Damm" after the engineer Anton von Riedl, who had supervised its construction.[7]

The laying out of the military garden was begun in July 1789, and an area of 800 by slightly less than 200 metres was quickly made ready for cultivation,[8] but soon the idea was extended to the creation of a public park, of which the military garden should be only a small part. On August 13, 1789, Charles Theodore published a decree, devoting the Hirschanger to the amusement of the people of Munich. To advise on the project, the Royal Gardener Friedrich Ludwig Sckell (ennobled in 1808) who had studied landscape gardening in England and had previously worked for Charles Theodore at Schwetzingen, had been summoned to Munich earlier in August.[9] Various associated projects were made part of the park development, among them the Elevengarten ("Pupils' Garden", a garden for the students at the recently formed military academy), a "Schweizerey" (cattle farm), "Schäfery" (sheep farm) and "Ackerbauschule" (arable farming school) to improve farming techniques, and a "Vihearzneyschule" (veterinary school) for the treatment of cattle diseases.[10] Most of these projects did not long survive the creation of the park, but the veterinary school went on to become what is now the Tierärztliche Fakultät (Veterinary Faculty) of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. The gateway from 1790 can be seen at the Veterinärstraße entrance to the garden.[11] The park was initially named "Theodors Park", but it very quickly became known by the descriptive name of "the English Garden".[12] By May, 1790 sufficient progress had been made to allow Charles Theodore to make an inspection tour; but it was first in the spring of 1792 that the park was officially opened to the approximately 40,000 citizens of Munich.[13]

Further development edit

 
The waterfall created in 1815

Thompson left Munich in 1798. His successor, Baron von Werneck, attempted to make the garden itself through its agricultural use. To that end he expanded the park in December 1799 to encompass the Hirschau, which was improved to provide pasture. The fields of the military gardens were added to the Englischer Garten in January 1800. Werneck's improvements had been costly, and in 1804 he was replaced by Sckell, who was given the post of Bayerischer Hofgärtenintendant ("Bavarian Court Garden Supervisor").[14] Although Sckell had had a guiding role from the beginning, many aspects of the execution differed from his ideas, which he set out in a memorandum of 1807.[15] His long supervision of the garden (1804–1823) was marked by a movement away from agricultural uses and by concentration on the landscape garden. For instance, two mills at the point where the Schwabingerbach (Schwabing stream) leaves the Eisbach (Ice stream) were removed and an artificial waterfall was created in 1814–1815.[16]

Under Sckell, the park took on its present form. The only significant addition since his time is the creation of the hill for the Monopteros by his nephew Carl August Sckell, who succeeded him as director of the park.[17] In the 20th century, there were some minor additions to the park, most notably the addition in 1952 of some thirty hectares of land where the locomotive factory of Joseph Anton von Maffei had stood, and in 1958-62 of a further 67 hectares from the Hirschauer Forst (Hirschau Wood).[18] The century almost brought less welcome changes to the park. In the Second World War, Allied bombing damaged the Monopteros and destroyed the Chinese Tower, and 93,000 cubic metres of rubble were dumped in the Hirschanger. The area was only cleared in 1953, when a sports ground for schools was created there.[19] (The park briefly had another sports ground, with the archery range that hosted the archery competitions for the 1972 Summer Olympics on the Werneckwiese by the Kleinhesseloher See.)[20] Transport too has harmed the character of the garden, most notably with the construction in 1963 of the Isarring, part of Munich's central ring road, which divides the park just north of the Kleinhesseloher See.[21] Towards the end of the 20th century the city of Munich wished to construct a tram route through the garden north of the Chinese Tower, currently a road used only by buses;[22] but it was opposed by the Bavarian government, which owns the land, and the Bayerische Verwaltungsgerichtshof rejected the plan.[23] There were also natural disasters: many trees were destroyed by severe storms in 1964, 1988, and 1990 (the "Wiebke" storm); and Dutch elm disease has almost destroyed the elm trees of the park. Both kinds of loss were compensated by a "tree donation" campaign organised by Munich's Abendzeitung ("Evening Paper") in 1989 to 1990 on the occasion of the park's 200th anniversary; among the 1500 new trees that were planted were a thousand elms, using only varieties resistant to Dutch elm disease.[24]

Sights and attractions edit

Japanese teahouse edit

 
The Japanese teahouse in winter

In April 1972, to celebrate the Summer Olympics of that year, held in Munich, a Japanese teahouse and a Japanese garden were created on a small island at the south end of the Englischer Garten, behind the Haus der Kunst. The island lies in a lake which had been created only a few years earlier, in 1969. The teahouse was a gift to Bavaria from Soshitsu Sen, head of the Urasenke tea school in Kyoto, and it was designed by Soshitsu Sen and Mitsuo Nomura. A traditional Japanese tea ceremony takes place here regularly.[25]

Schönfeldwiese and surroundings edit

 
Northern Schönfeldwiese, looking towards the Ludwigskirche

Between the Monopteros and the Japanisches Teehaus lies the Schönfeldwiese ("Beautiful field meadow"). In this part of the Gardens nude sunbathing has been permitted since the 1960s, something which many Germans practise.[citation needed] It caused quite a sensation at the time and also made the English Gardens well-known, even outside Munich.[citation needed] The Schönfeldwiese proper lies to the south of the Schwabingerbach, which crosses the English Garden at this point before flowing northwards along its west side; but the name is sometimes used of the whole larger open space. The expanse to the north of the Schwabingerbach, the Carl Theodorswiese ("Carl Theodors meadow") has the oldest construction in the park: the "Burgfriedsäule", a boundary marker from 1724, topped with the Münchner Kindl stands in a grove of trees below the Monopteros.[26]

Surfing edit

 
A surfer riding a wave in a stream in the Garden

In one of the artificial streams flowing through the Englischer Garten, there is a standing wave (a stationary hydraulic jump) in which there is a transition from laminar to turbulent flow. Surfers line up along the bank taking turns entering the water with their boards. After a minute or so, successful surfers will voluntarily drop out returning to the end of the line allowing the next person in line an opportunity. The signage states that surfing should only be done by expert or skilled surfers.

Monopteros edit

 
The Monopteros

When the nearby wooden Apollo temple had fallen into disrepair, an early idea of Sckell's for a hilltop temple was taken up[27] and a new stone building of similar design was commissioned (an early plan even calls the Monopteros "Apollo Tempel", a name it never actually bore). This small (16 m high), round, Greek-style temple was designed by Leo von Klenze. It was built on a 15 m high foundation, around which a small hill was created in 1832, using leftover building material from recent work on the Munich Residenz (Royal Residence). Hill and temple were completed in 1836. Ten Ionic columns support a shallow copper-covered dome; palmettes adorn the sima. A particular feature of the Monopteros is the use of polychrome stone painting, an interest of Klenze at the time, who intended the building to serve as a model for its use.[28]

Steinerne Bank edit

 
Klenze's Steinerne Bank

Before the Monopteros was built, a small circular temple had stood by the Eisbach a little to the south of the Chinesischer Turm. Designed by Johann Baptist Lechner (1758–1809) and erected in 1789, it became known as the Apollo temple after an Apollo statue by Josef Nepomuk Muxel was added to it in 1791. While the basis of the temple was tuff, the temple itself was wooden; and by the early nineteenth century, this had fallen into disrepair. In 1838, Leo von Klenze built an exedra or stone bench (Steinerne Bank) in place of the temple, with the inscription "Hier wo Ihr wallet, da war sonst Wald nur und Sumpf" ("Here where you meander was once only wood and marsh"). The temple's circular basis served as the basis for the curved bench.[29]

Chinese Tower edit

Tower edit

 
The Chinese Tower in winter

The Chinesischer Turm ("Chinese Tower") is a 25-metre-high wooden structure, first constructed in 1789 to 1790, from a design by the Mannheimer military architect Joseph Frey (1758–1819).[30] It was modelled on the "Great Pagoda" in the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew. The Pagoda, twice as high as the tower, was supposed to resemble a porcelain pagoda in the gardens of a Chinese emperor. The Munich tower has five storeys: the ground storey roof has a diameter of 19 m, the topmost storey of 6 m.[31]

On July 13, 1944, the original tower burned down after heavy bombing; but a society aiming to rebuild it was formed in 1951 and the new tower, copied accurately from the original by consulting photographs and old drawings, was completed in September 1952.[32]

Surroundings edit

A wooden Chinesische Wirtschaft (restaurant in Chinese style), designed by Lechner, was added in 1790. In 1912, this was replaced by the present-day stone building, which reflected the original design.[33] With 7,000 seats, the beer garden at the Chinesischer Turm is the second largest in Munich.

 
"Kocherlball" (cooks' ball) at the Chinese Tower, 2001

In the late 19th century up to 5000 servants, manual workers, soldiers, and students would come to the tower early on a Sunday morning to dance to the music of a brass band. The dance began around five in the morning and ended around eight o'clock, so that servants could return to serve their employers' breakfast or go to church. As a dance for servants it was known as the "Kocherlball" (cooks' ball). In 1904 the custom was forbidden by the police on moral grounds. But in 1989, to celebrate the two hundredth anniversary of the park, a revival was made, with around 4000 attending, and the dance has since been celebrated each year in July.[34]

A children's carousel was put up near the tower in 1823, similar in design to the current one. By 1912 a replacement was needed, which is still in use. It was designed by the Schwabinger sculptor Joseph Erlacher and the decoration painter August Julier. Alongside the usual horses, the carousel has less expected creatures to ride, such as an ibex, stork and flamingo.[35] Its wooden roof and pillars were restored from 1979 to 1980.[36]

South of the tower are the Ökonomiegebäude ("Economy buildings"), which were designed by Lechner towards the end of the 18th century as a model farm. Today, the Ökonomiegebäude are occupied by the management of the Englischer Garten.[37]

Rumford-Saal edit

 
Rumford-Saal

A little to the north of the Chinesischer Turm, the Rumford-Saal (Rumford Hall) or Rumfordhaus (Rumford House) is a small building in Palladian style. During its construction it was known as the "großer Saal" (great hall) or "Militairsaal" (military hall); but it was later renamed to honour the garden's founder, Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford.[38] It was built in 1791 by Lechner as an officers' mess (Offiziers-kasino) and was used first by the army, later by the court. The building, 30 m long and 10 m wide, has one and a half storeys; front and back have a portico with six wooden Ionic pillars. Its dining hall, adorned with many mirrors which give it its name, the "Spiegelsaal" (mirror room), has room for 150 people. The building is currently used by the city of Munich as a children's centre ("Kinderfreizeitstätte").[39]

Kleinhesseloher See edit

Kleinhesseloher See
 
 
 
Kleinhesseloher See
LocationEnglischer Garten, Munich
Coordinates48°9′38″N 11°35′47″E / 48.16056°N 11.59639°E / 48.16056; 11.59639 (Kleinhesseloher See)
Typeartificial lake
Basin countriesGermany
Surface area8.64 ha (21.3 acres)
Islands3 (Königsinsel, Kurfürsteninsel, Regenteninsel)

The Kleinhesseloher See ("Kleinhesseloher Lake") was created under Werneck's direction around 1800 between the districts of Schwabing, at that time a village north of Munich, and Kleinhesselohe. Kleinhesselohe had been the original northern limit of the park, with a watchhouse and a gate to the northern Hirschau. The park warden there had set up an improvised beer shop for workers in the park. This soon expanded to offer milk and cold meals and came to be a favoured stop for walkers in the park, especially after a wooden dance place had been added.[40] Werneck's successor Sckell increased the size of the lake by one and a half times in 1807 to 1812, giving it its present form. It is constantly fed by water from the Eisbach. Three islands can be found within the lake's 86,410 square meters: Königsinsel ("King's Island", 2,720 m2), Kurfürsteninsel ("Elector's Island", 1,260 m2) and Regenteninsel ("Regent's Island", 640 m2).[41]

 
Sckell monument on the banks of the Kleinhesseloher See

Sckell's enlargement of the lake brought it close to Kleinhesselohe; and the little beer garden there was to be a forerunner of the modern Seehaus ("lake house"), with 2,500 seats. In 1882 to 1883 Gabriel von Seidel built a boathouse with food service. This was replaced with a new building by Rudolf Esterer in 1935; with a terrace overlooking the lake, this was very popular until 1970, when it was demolished. A competition for a new design was won by Alexander von Branca, with a design modelled on a Japanese village; but the work was found too costly and never executed. For fifteen years service was from temporary buildings, until in 1985 the current Seehaus was built to a design by Ernst Hürlimann and Ludwig Wiedemann.[42] Today, the lake and the Seehaus are well-loved leisure destinations; pedal boats are also leased here to those who want to splash around.

Two monuments near the lake honour its creators. The Werneck-Denkmal, a monument to Werneck, stands on a rise near the east side. It was erected in 1838 on Ludwig I's suggestion to a design by von Klenze.[43] A little south of it, on the bank of the lake, the Sckell-Säule ("Sckell pillar") honours Ludwig von Sckell. This, also designed by von Klenze, was erected in 1824, a year after Sckell's death; the design was executed by Ernst von Bandel, who would later be known as the creator of the Hermannsdenkmal.[44]

Hirschau edit

 
A flock of sheep in the Hirschau

The English Garden is divided into two portions by the busy Isarring road. The southern part is around 2 km long, while the northern part, called the Hirschau, is around 3 km long. In contrast to the southern part, which on sunny days contains as many people as one would find in a medium-sized town, the Hirschau has a peaceful character. In the southern part the grass in the open expanses (heavily used for sport and sunbathing) must be kept short; but in the Hirschau some meadows are allowed to grow and are mown for hay in June and August, while others are used as pasture for sheep.[45] Two beer gardens, the "Aumeister", built in 1810–11 by the court mason (Hofmaurermeister) Joseph Deiglmayr (1760–1814)[46] and the "Hirschau", built in 1840,[47] are located at the north and south end of the Hirschau respectively.

 
Open air theatre

The northern part of the garden also contains a small amphitheatre, built in 1985 and called the new amphitheatre. (An amphitheatre built in 1793 to a similar plan, but in a different position, a little north of the Rumford-Saal, has not survived; this had been used primarily for fireworks exhibitions). The new amphitheatre is used for open-air performances in summer.[48] To the east the Hirschau's border is formed by the Isar, which can be crossed at the Oberföhring dam (Stauwehr Oberföhring), built between 1920 and 1924, and at the Emmeram Bridge, a wooden pedestrian bridge first built in 1978. The bridge was destroyed by arson in 2002, and replaced by a new design in 2004.[49]

Statistics edit

  • Area: 3.73 km2[50]
  • Total length of paths and walkways: roughly 75 km (26 km roads, 36 km footpaths, 13 km bridlepaths)[51]
  • Length of streams: 15 km
  • Bridges: over 100[52]
  • Number of bird species that breed in the Garden: 50–60[53]

Literature edit

  • C. Bauer, Der Englische Garten in München. Munich: Harbeke, 1964
  • J. H. Biller and H.-P. Rasp, München, Kunst und Kultur. Munich: Südwest, ed. 18, 2006. ISBN 978-3-517-06977-7
  • T. Dombart, Der Englische Garten zu München. Munich: Hornung, 1972. ISBN 3-87364-023-6
  • P. Freiherr von Freyberg (ed.), Der Englische Garten in München. Munich: Knürr, 2000. ISBN 3-928432-29-X
  • E. D. Schmid (ed.), Englischer Garten München. Munich: Bayerische Verwaltung der staatlichen Schlösser, Gärten und Seen, ed. 2, 1989

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ G. Greindl in Freyberg (2000), 14-6.
  2. ^ E. D. Schmid in Freyberg (2000), 46.
  3. ^ Dombart (1972), 25-6; S. Miedaner in Freyberg (2000), 19.
  4. ^ S. Miedaner in Freyberg (2000), 19-20.
  5. ^ Dombart (1972), 27-8.
  6. ^ Dombart (1972), 15.
  7. ^ Dombart (1972), 41-2.
  8. ^ Dombart (1972), 30-2.
  9. ^ Dombart (1972), 33-4.
  10. ^ Dombart (1972), 40-1.
  11. ^ C. Karnehm in Freyberg (2000), 130; Geschichte der Tierärztlichen Fakultät München, faculty history page. (German)
  12. ^ A guidebook of 1793 is titled Skizze des neu angelegten englischen Gartens oder Theodors Park zu München ("Sketch of the newly created English Garden or Theodor's Park in Munich"): see Dombart (1972), 92-4.
  13. ^ E. Schmid in Freyberg (2000), 51; Freyberg, ibid., 80-8
  14. ^ S. Heym in Freyberg (2000), 26-8; D. Lehner in Freyberg (2000), 40.
  15. ^ Reprinted in Freyberg (2000), 90-109.
  16. ^ E.D. Schmid in Freyberg (2000), 56; C. Karnehm in Freyberg (2000), 131.
  17. ^ Biller and Rasp (2006), 119; S. Rhotert in Freyberg (2000), 60.
  18. ^ S. Rhotert in Freyberg (2000), 66; W. Palten in Freyberg (2000), 287.
  19. ^ W. Palten in Freyberg (2000), 287.
  20. ^ Volume 2. Part 2. pp. 142-5; W. Palten in Freyberg (2000), 289.
  21. ^ S. Rhotert in Freyberg (2000), 65.
  22. ^ E. Müller-Jentsch, "Stadt will Trambahn durch den Englischen Garten 2005-05-26 at the Wayback Machine", SZ 14.04.1994.
  23. ^ F. Müller, "Keine Trambahn im Englischen Garten 2004-12-13 at the Wayback Machine", SZ 21.05.2001; A. Dürr, Tram durch den Englischen Garten gestoppt 2008-10-16 at the Wayback Machine", SZ 30.03.2006.
  24. ^ W. Palten in Freyberg (2000), 231-2; 291.
  25. ^ Schmid (1989), 33; G. Staufenbiel in Freyberg (2000), 134; Teehaus KanShoAn 2008-07-06 at the Wayback Machine, webpage of Urasenke München - Gesellschaft der Freunde des Teewegs e.V.; W. Palten in Freyberg (2000), 289.
  26. ^ C. Karnehm in v. Freyberg (2000), 112-3.
  27. ^ Biller and Rasp (2006), 120.
  28. ^ Dombart (1972), 167-70; Schmid (1989), 62-3; C. Karnehm in v. Freyberg (2000), 119-20; Biller and Rasp (2006), 120.
  29. ^ Schmid (1989), 42; C. Karnehm in von Freyberg (2000), 129.
  30. ^ The designer was unknown in the early nineteenth century and occasionally Lechner is named. An 1887 attribution to Frey seems to be based on knowledge of the original plans (now lost). As Frey was still in Mannheim, Lechner may have been involved in the actual construction. See Dombart (1972), 247-8. The dates for Frey are those in Dombart and in Schmid (1989), 43; C. Karnehm in v. Freyberg (2000), 114 gives 1757-1812.
  31. ^ Schmid (1989), 43-4.
  32. ^ Dombart (1972), 207-8; W. Palten in von Freyberg (2000), 287.
  33. ^ Biller and Rasp (2006), 120.
  34. ^ W. Palten and K.-F. Beuckelmann in Freyberg (2000), 274; "Kocherlball: Tanz im Morgengrauen" 2008-09-29 at the Wayback Machine article in Bayerischer Rundfunk, accessed August 10, 2008.
  35. ^ C. Karnehm in Freyberg (2000), 118.
  36. ^ W. Palten in Freyberg (2000), 290.
  37. ^ C. Karnehm in Freyberg (2000), 120.
  38. ^ Dombart (1972), 109.
  39. ^ Bauer (1964), 28; Dombart (1972), 110; C. Karnehm in v. Freyberg (2000), 123.
  40. ^ Dombart (1972), 103-6.
  41. ^ Schmid (1989), 52, where the name of the large island is given as Königinsel; but Schmid's map labels the island Königsinsel.
  42. ^ C. Karnehm in v. Freyberg (2000), 126; W. Palten in v. Freyberg (2000), 289.
  43. ^ C. Karnehm in v. Freyberg (2000), 133.
  44. ^ C. Karnehm in v. Freyberg (2000), 124-5.
  45. ^ D. Holder in v. Freyberg (2000), 211-3.
  46. ^ C. Karnehm in von Freyberg (2000), 110.
  47. ^ C. Karnehm in von Freyberg (2000), 116. The Hirschau was first opened under the name "Zum Hasenstall" by Joseph Anton von Maffei to provide meals for the workers in his factory, the "Maffei'sche Maschinenbauanstalt".
  48. ^ Dombart (1972), 119-21 (on the original amphitheatre); C. Karnehm in v. Freyberg (2000), 110 (on the new amphitheatre).
  49. ^ C. Karnehm in von Freyberg (2000), 117-8; 128; Biller and Rasp (2006), 170.
  50. ^ Biller and Rasp (2006), 118. The area of 4.17 km2 given by the Bavarian Palace Department's page, "Dimensions", includes various parks that do not belong to the English Garden proper.
  51. ^ W. Palten in v. Freyberg (2000), 235-6.
  52. ^ "Dimensions", information page of the Bavarian Palace Department
  53. ^ S. Zedler in v. Freyberg (2000), 214.

External links edit

  • Die Bayerische Verwaltung der staatlichen Schlösser, Gärten und Seen on the English Garten
  • (German)
  • Englischer Garten - video
  • Englischer Garten at Google Maps
  • 360° View of Chinese Tower

48°09′10″N 11°35′31″E / 48.15278°N 11.59194°E / 48.15278; 11.59194

englischer, garten, german, ˈʔɛŋlɪʃɐ, ˈɡaʁtn, english, garden, large, public, park, centre, munich, bavaria, stretching, from, city, centre, northeastern, city, limits, created, 1789, benjamin, thompson, 1753, 1814, later, count, rumford, reichsgraf, rumford, . The Englischer Garten German ˈʔɛŋlɪʃɐ ˈɡaʁtn English Garden is a large public park in the centre of Munich Bavaria stretching from the city centre to the northeastern city limits It was created in 1789 by Sir Benjamin Thompson 1753 1814 later Count Rumford Reichsgraf von Rumford for Prince Charles Theodore Elector of Bavaria Thompson s successors Reinhard von Werneck 1757 1842 and Friedrich Ludwig von Sckell 1750 1823 advisers on the project from its beginning both extended and improved the park Englischer GartenAerial view of the Englischer GartenTypeUrban parkLocationMunich Bavaria GermanyArea3 7 km2 1 4 sq mi Created1789 1789 Operated byBayerische Verwaltung der staatlichen Schlosser Garten und SeenStatusOpen year roundEnglischer Garten with Munich skylineWith an area of 3 7 km2 1 4 sq mi 370 ha or 910 acres the Englischer Garten is one of the world s largest urban public parks The name refers to its English garden form of informal landscape a style popular in England from the mid 18th century to the early 19th century and particularly associated with Capability Brown Contents 1 History 1 1 Creation 1 2 Further development 2 Sights and attractions 2 1 Japanese teahouse 2 2 Schonfeldwiese and surroundings 2 3 Surfing 2 4 Monopteros 2 5 Steinerne Bank 2 6 Chinese Tower 2 6 1 Tower 2 6 2 Surroundings 2 7 Rumford Saal 2 8 Kleinhesseloher See 2 9 Hirschau 3 Statistics 4 Literature 5 Footnotes 6 External linksHistory editCreation edit nbsp Autumn foliage in English GardenWhen the Elector of Bavaria Maximilian III Joseph the last ruler from the Bavarian branch of the Wittelsbach dynasty died childless in 1777 his throne passed to Charles Theodore count and elector of the Palatinate The new ruler preferred his existing home in Mannheim on the Rhine to living in Bavaria and tried unsuccessfully to trade his unloved inheritance for the Austrian Netherlands Understandably the people of Munich returned his disdain 1 To offset this unhappy atmosphere Charles Theodore devoted much attention to improvements in the city Among others he created an art gallery in the northern arcades of the Residence s Hofgarten Court Garden and made both the garden and the new gallery open to the public the former in 1780 the latter in 1781 2 nbsp The Rumford Monument in the park honours Sir Benjamin Thompson s contributionWhile the Hofgarten was then the only public park in Munich that was not the primary motivation for the creation of the English Garden Rather it was part of a series of military reforms being pursued under the guidance of Sir Benjamin Thompson the new Elector s chief military aide later created Count Rumford and appointed as Bavarian war minister Born in Massachusetts Thompson had served on the Loyalist side in the American Revolutionary War and after the British defeat had returned to England before moving to continental Europe and entering Charles Theodore s service in 1784 3 In 1788 Thompson proposed that in peacetime the majority of the soldiers of the Elector s army should be given leave to do civilian work such as farming and gardening 4 In February 1789 Charles Theodore decreed that military gardens should be laid out in each garrison city to provide soldiers with good agricultural knowledge and also to serve as recreation areas accessible also to the public 5 The planned location of the Munich gardens was the area north of the Schwabinger city gate a hunting ground of the Wittelsbach rulers since the Middle Ages Known as the Hirschanger or deer park the higher part of the hunting ground closer to the city was included in the scheme while the Hirschau also meaning deer park lower and further north and a more densely wooded part to the south known as the Hirschangerwald Deer Park Wood were originally not included 6 The whole area had been subject to flooding from the Isar the river on which Munich stands a little to the east This problem was soon removed by the construction of a river wall in 1790 which became known as the Riedl Damm after the engineer Anton von Riedl who had supervised its construction 7 The laying out of the military garden was begun in July 1789 and an area of 800 by slightly less than 200 metres was quickly made ready for cultivation 8 but soon the idea was extended to the creation of a public park of which the military garden should be only a small part On August 13 1789 Charles Theodore published a decree devoting the Hirschanger to the amusement of the people of Munich To advise on the project the Royal Gardener Friedrich Ludwig Sckell ennobled in 1808 who had studied landscape gardening in England and had previously worked for Charles Theodore at Schwetzingen had been summoned to Munich earlier in August 9 Various associated projects were made part of the park development among them the Elevengarten Pupils Garden a garden for the students at the recently formed military academy a Schweizerey cattle farm Schafery sheep farm and Ackerbauschule arable farming school to improve farming techniques and a Vihearzneyschule veterinary school for the treatment of cattle diseases 10 Most of these projects did not long survive the creation of the park but the veterinary school went on to become what is now the Tierarztliche Fakultat Veterinary Faculty of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich The gateway from 1790 can be seen at the Veterinarstrasse entrance to the garden 11 The park was initially named Theodors Park but it very quickly became known by the descriptive name of the English Garden 12 By May 1790 sufficient progress had been made to allow Charles Theodore to make an inspection tour but it was first in the spring of 1792 that the park was officially opened to the approximately 40 000 citizens of Munich 13 Further development edit nbsp The waterfall created in 1815Thompson left Munich in 1798 His successor Baron von Werneck attempted to make the garden itself through its agricultural use To that end he expanded the park in December 1799 to encompass the Hirschau which was improved to provide pasture The fields of the military gardens were added to the Englischer Garten in January 1800 Werneck s improvements had been costly and in 1804 he was replaced by Sckell who was given the post of Bayerischer Hofgartenintendant Bavarian Court Garden Supervisor 14 Although Sckell had had a guiding role from the beginning many aspects of the execution differed from his ideas which he set out in a memorandum of 1807 15 His long supervision of the garden 1804 1823 was marked by a movement away from agricultural uses and by concentration on the landscape garden For instance two mills at the point where the Schwabingerbach Schwabing stream leaves the Eisbach Ice stream were removed and an artificial waterfall was created in 1814 1815 16 Under Sckell the park took on its present form The only significant addition since his time is the creation of the hill for the Monopteros by his nephew Carl August Sckell who succeeded him as director of the park 17 In the 20th century there were some minor additions to the park most notably the addition in 1952 of some thirty hectares of land where the locomotive factory of Joseph Anton von Maffei had stood and in 1958 62 of a further 67 hectares from the Hirschauer Forst Hirschau Wood 18 The century almost brought less welcome changes to the park In the Second World War Allied bombing damaged the Monopteros and destroyed the Chinese Tower and 93 000 cubic metres of rubble were dumped in the Hirschanger The area was only cleared in 1953 when a sports ground for schools was created there 19 The park briefly had another sports ground with the archery range that hosted the archery competitions for the 1972 Summer Olympics on the Werneckwiese by the Kleinhesseloher See 20 Transport too has harmed the character of the garden most notably with the construction in 1963 of the Isarring part of Munich s central ring road which divides the park just north of the Kleinhesseloher See 21 Towards the end of the 20th century the city of Munich wished to construct a tram route through the garden north of the Chinese Tower currently a road used only by buses 22 but it was opposed by the Bavarian government which owns the land and the Bayerische Verwaltungsgerichtshof rejected the plan 23 There were also natural disasters many trees were destroyed by severe storms in 1964 1988 and 1990 the Wiebke storm and Dutch elm disease has almost destroyed the elm trees of the park Both kinds of loss were compensated by a tree donation campaign organised by Munich s Abendzeitung Evening Paper in 1989 to 1990 on the occasion of the park s 200th anniversary among the 1500 new trees that were planted were a thousand elms using only varieties resistant to Dutch elm disease 24 Sights and attractions editJapanese teahouse edit nbsp The Japanese teahouse in winterIn April 1972 to celebrate the Summer Olympics of that year held in Munich a Japanese teahouse and a Japanese garden were created on a small island at the south end of the Englischer Garten behind the Haus der Kunst The island lies in a lake which had been created only a few years earlier in 1969 The teahouse was a gift to Bavaria from Soshitsu Sen head of the Urasenke tea school in Kyoto and it was designed by Soshitsu Sen and Mitsuo Nomura A traditional Japanese tea ceremony takes place here regularly 25 Schonfeldwiese and surroundings edit nbsp Northern Schonfeldwiese looking towards the LudwigskircheBetween the Monopteros and the Japanisches Teehaus lies the Schonfeldwiese Beautiful field meadow In this part of the Gardens nude sunbathing has been permitted since the 1960s something which many Germans practise citation needed It caused quite a sensation at the time and also made the English Gardens well known even outside Munich citation needed The Schonfeldwiese proper lies to the south of the Schwabingerbach which crosses the English Garden at this point before flowing northwards along its west side but the name is sometimes used of the whole larger open space The expanse to the north of the Schwabingerbach the Carl Theodorswiese Carl Theodors meadow has the oldest construction in the park the Burgfriedsaule a boundary marker from 1724 topped with the Munchner Kindl stands in a grove of trees below the Monopteros 26 Surfing edit Main article Eisbach Isar nbsp A surfer riding a wave in a stream in the GardenIn one of the artificial streams flowing through the Englischer Garten there is a standing wave a stationary hydraulic jump in which there is a transition from laminar to turbulent flow Surfers line up along the bank taking turns entering the water with their boards After a minute or so successful surfers will voluntarily drop out returning to the end of the line allowing the next person in line an opportunity The signage states that surfing should only be done by expert or skilled surfers Monopteros edit nbsp The MonopterosWhen the nearby wooden Apollo temple had fallen into disrepair an early idea of Sckell s for a hilltop temple was taken up 27 and a new stone building of similar design was commissioned an early plan even calls the Monopteros Apollo Tempel a name it never actually bore This small 16 m high round Greek style temple was designed by Leo von Klenze It was built on a 15 m high foundation around which a small hill was created in 1832 using leftover building material from recent work on the Munich Residenz Royal Residence Hill and temple were completed in 1836 Ten Ionic columns support a shallow copper covered dome palmettes adorn the sima A particular feature of the Monopteros is the use of polychrome stone painting an interest of Klenze at the time who intended the building to serve as a model for its use 28 Steinerne Bank edit nbsp Klenze s Steinerne BankBefore the Monopteros was built a small circular temple had stood by the Eisbach a little to the south of the Chinesischer Turm Designed by Johann Baptist Lechner 1758 1809 and erected in 1789 it became known as the Apollo temple after an Apollo statue by Josef Nepomuk Muxel was added to it in 1791 While the basis of the temple was tuff the temple itself was wooden and by the early nineteenth century this had fallen into disrepair In 1838 Leo von Klenze built an exedra or stone bench Steinerne Bank in place of the temple with the inscription Hier wo Ihr wallet da war sonst Wald nur und Sumpf Here where you meander was once only wood and marsh The temple s circular basis served as the basis for the curved bench 29 Chinese Tower edit Main article Chinese Tower Tower edit nbsp The Chinese Tower in winterThe Chinesischer Turm Chinese Tower is a 25 metre high wooden structure first constructed in 1789 to 1790 from a design by the Mannheimer military architect Joseph Frey 1758 1819 30 It was modelled on the Great Pagoda in the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew The Pagoda twice as high as the tower was supposed to resemble a porcelain pagoda in the gardens of a Chinese emperor The Munich tower has five storeys the ground storey roof has a diameter of 19 m the topmost storey of 6 m 31 On July 13 1944 the original tower burned down after heavy bombing but a society aiming to rebuild it was formed in 1951 and the new tower copied accurately from the original by consulting photographs and old drawings was completed in September 1952 32 Surroundings edit A wooden Chinesische Wirtschaft restaurant in Chinese style designed by Lechner was added in 1790 In 1912 this was replaced by the present day stone building which reflected the original design 33 With 7 000 seats the beer garden at the Chinesischer Turm is the second largest in Munich nbsp Kocherlball cooks ball at the Chinese Tower 2001In the late 19th century up to 5000 servants manual workers soldiers and students would come to the tower early on a Sunday morning to dance to the music of a brass band The dance began around five in the morning and ended around eight o clock so that servants could return to serve their employers breakfast or go to church As a dance for servants it was known as the Kocherlball cooks ball In 1904 the custom was forbidden by the police on moral grounds But in 1989 to celebrate the two hundredth anniversary of the park a revival was made with around 4000 attending and the dance has since been celebrated each year in July 34 A children s carousel was put up near the tower in 1823 similar in design to the current one By 1912 a replacement was needed which is still in use It was designed by the Schwabinger sculptor Joseph Erlacher and the decoration painter August Julier Alongside the usual horses the carousel has less expected creatures to ride such as an ibex stork and flamingo 35 Its wooden roof and pillars were restored from 1979 to 1980 36 South of the tower are the Okonomiegebaude Economy buildings which were designed by Lechner towards the end of the 18th century as a model farm Today the Okonomiegebaude are occupied by the management of the Englischer Garten 37 Rumford Saal edit nbsp Rumford SaalA little to the north of the Chinesischer Turm the Rumford Saal Rumford Hall or Rumfordhaus Rumford House is a small building in Palladian style During its construction it was known as the grosser Saal great hall or Militairsaal military hall but it was later renamed to honour the garden s founder Benjamin Thompson Count Rumford 38 It was built in 1791 by Lechner as an officers mess Offiziers kasino and was used first by the army later by the court The building 30 m long and 10 m wide has one and a half storeys front and back have a portico with six wooden Ionic pillars Its dining hall adorned with many mirrors which give it its name the Spiegelsaal mirror room has room for 150 people The building is currently used by the city of Munich as a children s centre Kinderfreizeitstatte 39 Kleinhesseloher See edit Kleinhesseloher See nbsp nbsp nbsp Kleinhesseloher SeeLocationEnglischer Garten MunichCoordinates48 9 38 N 11 35 47 E 48 16056 N 11 59639 E 48 16056 11 59639 Kleinhesseloher See Typeartificial lakeBasin countriesGermanySurface area8 64 ha 21 3 acres Islands3 Konigsinsel Kurfursteninsel Regenteninsel The Kleinhesseloher See Kleinhesseloher Lake was created under Werneck s direction around 1800 between the districts of Schwabing at that time a village north of Munich and Kleinhesselohe Kleinhesselohe had been the original northern limit of the park with a watchhouse and a gate to the northern Hirschau The park warden there had set up an improvised beer shop for workers in the park This soon expanded to offer milk and cold meals and came to be a favoured stop for walkers in the park especially after a wooden dance place had been added 40 Werneck s successor Sckell increased the size of the lake by one and a half times in 1807 to 1812 giving it its present form It is constantly fed by water from the Eisbach Three islands can be found within the lake s 86 410 square meters Konigsinsel King s Island 2 720 m2 Kurfursteninsel Elector s Island 1 260 m2 and Regenteninsel Regent s Island 640 m2 41 nbsp Sckell monument on the banks of the Kleinhesseloher SeeSckell s enlargement of the lake brought it close to Kleinhesselohe and the little beer garden there was to be a forerunner of the modern Seehaus lake house with 2 500 seats In 1882 to 1883 Gabriel von Seidel built a boathouse with food service This was replaced with a new building by Rudolf Esterer in 1935 with a terrace overlooking the lake this was very popular until 1970 when it was demolished A competition for a new design was won by Alexander von Branca with a design modelled on a Japanese village but the work was found too costly and never executed For fifteen years service was from temporary buildings until in 1985 the current Seehaus was built to a design by Ernst Hurlimann and Ludwig Wiedemann 42 Today the lake and the Seehaus are well loved leisure destinations pedal boats are also leased here to those who want to splash around Two monuments near the lake honour its creators The Werneck Denkmal a monument to Werneck stands on a rise near the east side It was erected in 1838 on Ludwig I s suggestion to a design by von Klenze 43 A little south of it on the bank of the lake the Sckell Saule Sckell pillar honours Ludwig von Sckell This also designed by von Klenze was erected in 1824 a year after Sckell s death the design was executed by Ernst von Bandel who would later be known as the creator of the Hermannsdenkmal 44 Hirschau edit nbsp A flock of sheep in the HirschauThe English Garden is divided into two portions by the busy Isarring road The southern part is around 2 km long while the northern part called the Hirschau is around 3 km long In contrast to the southern part which on sunny days contains as many people as one would find in a medium sized town the Hirschau has a peaceful character In the southern part the grass in the open expanses heavily used for sport and sunbathing must be kept short but in the Hirschau some meadows are allowed to grow and are mown for hay in June and August while others are used as pasture for sheep 45 Two beer gardens the Aumeister built in 1810 11 by the court mason Hofmaurermeister Joseph Deiglmayr 1760 1814 46 and the Hirschau built in 1840 47 are located at the north and south end of the Hirschau respectively nbsp Open air theatreThe northern part of the garden also contains a small amphitheatre built in 1985 and called the new amphitheatre An amphitheatre built in 1793 to a similar plan but in a different position a little north of the Rumford Saal has not survived this had been used primarily for fireworks exhibitions The new amphitheatre is used for open air performances in summer 48 To the east the Hirschau s border is formed by the Isar which can be crossed at the Oberfohring dam Stauwehr Oberfohring built between 1920 and 1924 and at the Emmeram Bridge a wooden pedestrian bridge first built in 1978 The bridge was destroyed by arson in 2002 and replaced by a new design in 2004 49 Statistics editArea 3 73 km2 50 Total length of paths and walkways roughly 75 km 26 km roads 36 km footpaths 13 km bridlepaths 51 Length of streams 15 km Bridges over 100 52 Number of bird species that breed in the Garden 50 60 53 Literature editC Bauer Der Englische Garten in Munchen Munich Harbeke 1964 J H Biller and H P Rasp Munchen Kunst und Kultur Munich Sudwest ed 18 2006 ISBN 978 3 517 06977 7 T Dombart Der Englische Garten zu Munchen Munich Hornung 1972 ISBN 3 87364 023 6 P Freiherr von Freyberg ed Der Englische Garten in Munchen Munich Knurr 2000 ISBN 3 928432 29 X E D Schmid ed Englischer Garten Munchen Munich Bayerische Verwaltung der staatlichen Schlosser Garten und Seen ed 2 1989Footnotes edit G Greindl in Freyberg 2000 14 6 E D Schmid in Freyberg 2000 46 Dombart 1972 25 6 S Miedaner in Freyberg 2000 19 S Miedaner in Freyberg 2000 19 20 Dombart 1972 27 8 Dombart 1972 15 Dombart 1972 41 2 Dombart 1972 30 2 Dombart 1972 33 4 Dombart 1972 40 1 C Karnehm in Freyberg 2000 130 Geschichte der Tierarztlichen Fakultat Munchen faculty history page German A guidebook of 1793 is titled Skizze des neu angelegten englischen Gartens oder Theodors Park zu Munchen Sketch of the newly created English Garden or Theodor s Park in Munich see Dombart 1972 92 4 E Schmid in Freyberg 2000 51 Freyberg ibid 80 8 S Heym in Freyberg 2000 26 8 D Lehner in Freyberg 2000 40 Reprinted in Freyberg 2000 90 109 E D Schmid in Freyberg 2000 56 C Karnehm in Freyberg 2000 131 Biller and Rasp 2006 119 S Rhotert in Freyberg 2000 60 S Rhotert in Freyberg 2000 66 W Palten in Freyberg 2000 287 W Palten in Freyberg 2000 287 1972 Summer Olympics official report Volume 2 Part 2 pp 142 5 W Palten in Freyberg 2000 289 S Rhotert in Freyberg 2000 65 E Muller Jentsch Stadt will Trambahn durch den Englischen Garten Archived 2005 05 26 at the Wayback Machine SZ 14 04 1994 F Muller Keine Trambahn im Englischen Garten Archived 2004 12 13 at the Wayback Machine SZ 21 05 2001 A Durr Tram durch den Englischen Garten gestoppt Archived 2008 10 16 at the Wayback Machine SZ 30 03 2006 W Palten in Freyberg 2000 231 2 291 Schmid 1989 33 G Staufenbiel in Freyberg 2000 134 Teehaus KanShoAn Archived 2008 07 06 at the Wayback Machine webpage of Urasenke Munchen Gesellschaft der Freunde des Teewegs e V W Palten in Freyberg 2000 289 C Karnehm in v Freyberg 2000 112 3 Biller and Rasp 2006 120 Dombart 1972 167 70 Schmid 1989 62 3 C Karnehm in v Freyberg 2000 119 20 Biller and Rasp 2006 120 Schmid 1989 42 C Karnehm in von Freyberg 2000 129 The designer was unknown in the early nineteenth century and occasionally Lechner is named An 1887 attribution to Frey seems to be based on knowledge of the original plans now lost As Frey was still in Mannheim Lechner may have been involved in the actual construction See Dombart 1972 247 8 The dates for Frey are those in Dombart and in Schmid 1989 43 C Karnehm in v Freyberg 2000 114 gives 1757 1812 Schmid 1989 43 4 Dombart 1972 207 8 W Palten in von Freyberg 2000 287 Biller and Rasp 2006 120 W Palten and K F Beuckelmann in Freyberg 2000 274 Kocherlball Tanz im Morgengrauen Archived 2008 09 29 at the Wayback Machine article in Bayerischer Rundfunk accessed August 10 2008 C Karnehm in Freyberg 2000 118 W Palten in Freyberg 2000 290 C Karnehm in Freyberg 2000 120 Dombart 1972 109 Bauer 1964 28 Dombart 1972 110 C Karnehm in v Freyberg 2000 123 Dombart 1972 103 6 Schmid 1989 52 where the name of the large island is given as Koniginsel but Schmid s map labels the island Konigsinsel C Karnehm in v Freyberg 2000 126 W Palten in v Freyberg 2000 289 C Karnehm in v Freyberg 2000 133 C Karnehm in v Freyberg 2000 124 5 D Holder in v Freyberg 2000 211 3 C Karnehm in von Freyberg 2000 110 C Karnehm in von Freyberg 2000 116 The Hirschau was first opened under the name Zum Hasenstall by Joseph Anton von Maffei to provide meals for the workers in his factory the Maffei sche Maschinenbauanstalt Dombart 1972 119 21 on the original amphitheatre C Karnehm in v Freyberg 2000 110 on the new amphitheatre C Karnehm in von Freyberg 2000 117 8 128 Biller and Rasp 2006 170 Biller and Rasp 2006 118 The area of 4 17 km2 given by the Bavarian Palace Department s page Dimensions includes various parks that do not belong to the English Garden proper W Palten in v Freyberg 2000 235 6 Dimensions information page of the Bavarian Palace Department S Zedler in v Freyberg 2000 214 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Englischer Garten Munich Die Bayerische Verwaltung der staatlichen Schlosser Garten und Seen on the English Garten W Haller Der Englische Garten German Englischer Garten video Photos of the English Garden Monopteros Chinesischer Turm Seehaus Beergarden River Surfers in the Eisbach Englischer Garten at Google Maps Englischer Garten Munich a Gardens Guide review 360 View of Chinese Tower 48 09 10 N 11 35 31 E 48 15278 N 11 59194 E 48 15278 11 59194 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Englischer Garten amp oldid 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