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Potsdam

Potsdam (German pronunciation: [ˈpɔtsdam] (listen)) is the capital and, with around 183,000 inhabitants, largest city of the German state of Brandenburg. It is part of the Berlin/Brandenburg Metropolitan Region. Potsdam sits on the River Havel, a tributary of the Elbe, downstream of Berlin, and lies embedded in a hilly morainic landscape dotted with many lakes, around 20 of which are located within Potsdam's city limits. It lies some 25 kilometres (16 miles) southwest of Berlin's city centre. The name of the city and of many of its boroughs are of Slavic origin.

Potsdam
From top and left to right:
Potsdam City Palace with St Nicholas' Church,
old city hall, Brandenburg Gate,
New Palace, Palace of Sanssouci,
Potsdam skyline
Location of Potsdam
Potsdam
Potsdam
Coordinates: 52°24′N 13°4′E / 52.400°N 13.067°E / 52.400; 13.067Coordinates: 52°24′N 13°4′E / 52.400°N 13.067°E / 52.400; 13.067
CountryGermany
StateBrandenburg
DistrictUrban district
Founded1776
Government
 • Lord mayor (2018–26) Mike Schubert[1] (SPD)
Area
 • Total187.28 km2 (72.31 sq mi)
Elevation
32 m (105 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total183,154
 • Density980/km2 (2,500/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
14467–14482
Dialling codes0331
Vehicle registrationP
Websitewww.potsdam.de

Potsdam was a residence of the Prussian kings and the German Kaiser until 1918. Its planning embodied ideas of the Age of Enlightenment: through a careful balance of architecture and landscape, Potsdam was intended as "a picturesque, pastoral dream" which would remind its residents of their relationship with nature and reason.[3]

The city, which is over 1000 years old, is widely known for its palaces, its lakes, and its overall historical and cultural significance. Landmarks include the parks and palaces of Sanssouci, Germany's largest World Heritage Site, as well as other palaces such as the Orangery Palace, the New Palace, Cecilienhof Palace, and Charlottenhof Palace. Potsdam was also the location of the significant Potsdam Conference in 1945, the conference where the three heads of government of the USSR, the US, and the UK decided on the division of Germany following its surrender, a conference which defined Germany's history for the following 45 years.

Babelsberg, in the south-eastern part of Potsdam, was already by the 1930s the home of a major film production studio and it has enjoyed success as an important center of European film production since the fall of the Berlin Wall. The Filmstudio Babelsberg, founded in 1912, is the oldest large-scale film studio in the world.[4]

Potsdam developed into a centre of science in Germany in the 19th century. Today, there are three public colleges, the University of Potsdam, and more than 30 research institutes in the city.

Geography

 
The Templiner See south of Potsdam

The area was formed from a series of large moraines left after the last glacial period. Today, only one quarter of the city is built up, the rest remaining as green space.

There are about 20 lakes and rivers in and around Potsdam, such as the Havel, the Griebnitzsee, Templiner See, Tiefer See, Jungfernsee, Teltowkanal, Heiliger See, and Sacrower See. The highest point is the 114-metre (374 ft) high Kleiner Ravensberg.

Subdivisions

Potsdam is divided into seven historic city Stadtteile (quarters) and nine new Ortsteile (suburbs/wards, former separate villages), which joined the city in 2003. The appearance of the city boroughs is quite different. Those in the north and in the centre consist mainly of historical buildings, the south of the city is dominated by larger areas of newer buildings.

The city of Potsdam is divided into 32 Stadtteile (boroughs, both quarters and suburbs/wards together),[5] which are divided further into 84 statistical Bezirke (districts).

Today, one distinguishes between the older parts of the city (areas of the historic city and places suburbanized at the latest in 1939) – these are the city center, the western and northern suburbs, Bornim, Bornstedt, Nedlitz, Potsdam South, Babelsberg, Drewitz, Stern and Kirchsteigfeld – and those communities incorporated after 1990 which have since 2003 become Otsteile – these are Eiche, Fahrland, Golm, Groß Glienicke, Grube, Marquardt, Neu Fahrland, Satzkorn and Uetz-Paaren.[6] The new Ortsteile are located mainly in the north of the city. For the history of all incorporations, see the relevant section on incorporation and spin-offs.

Structure with statistical numbering:[7][8]

 
Stadtteile (boroughs) of Potsdam
  • 1 Potsdam Nord
  • 2 Nördliche Vorstädte
    • 21 Nauener Vorstadt
    • 22 Jägervorstadt
    • 23 Berliner Vorstadt
  • 3 Westliche Vorstädte
    • 31 Brandenburger Vorstadt
    • 32 Potsdam West
  • 4 Innenstadt
    • 41 Historische Innenstadt
    • 43 Zentrum Ost und Nuthepark
    • 44 Hauptbahnhof und Brauhausberg Nord
  • 5 Babelsberg
  • 6 Potsdam Süd
    • 61 Templiner Vorstadt
    • 62 Teltower Vorstadt
    • 63 Schlaatz
    • 64 Waldstadt I und Industriegelände
    • 65 Waldstadt II
  • 7 Potsdam Südost
    • 71 Stern
    • 72 Drewitz
    • 73 Kirchsteigfeld
  • 8 Nördliche Ortsteile

At the end of 2019, a change was made to the administrative structure:[7]

  • Borough 41 has been renamed: previously Nördliche Innenstadt, now Historische Innenstadt.
  • Borough 42 (Südliche Innenstadt) has been divided into two boroughs, 43 (Zentrum Ost und Nuthepark) and 44 (Hauptbahnhof und Brauhausberg Nord). The number 42 was thus repealed.
  • Some very sparsely populated urban boroughs have been disbanded:
    • Borough 33 (Wildpark) was incorporated into borough 32 (Potsdam-West).
    • Borough 66 (Industriegelände) was incorporated into borough 64 (formerly Waldstadt I). The borough was then renamed Waldstadt I und Industriegelände.
    • Borough 67 (Forst Potsdam Süd) was incorporated into borough 61 (Templiner Vorstadt).

Climate

Officially the climate is oceanic - more degraded by being far from the coast and to the east (Köppen: Cfb),[9] but using the 1961-1990 normal and the 0 °C isotherm the city has a humid continental climate (Dfb), which also shows a slight influence of the continent different from the climates predominantly influenced by the Atlantic Ocean. Low averages below freezing for almost all winter causing snows that are frequent and winters are cold, but not as stringent as inland locations or with greater influence from the same. Summer is also relatively warm with temperatures between 23 and 24 °C, the heat waves being influenced by the UHI of Potsdam.[10]

The average winter high temperature is 3.5 °C (38.3 °F), with a low of −1.7 °C (28.9 °F). Snow is common in the winter. Spring and autumn are short. Summers are mild, with a high of 23.6 °C (74.5 °F) and a low of 12.7 °C (54.9 °F).[citation needed]

Climate data for Potsdam (Teltower Vorstadt), elevation: 100 m, 1961-1990 normals and extremes
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 13.6
(56.5)
18.6
(65.5)
25.7
(78.3)
31.8
(89.2)
32.5
(90.5)
34.2
(93.6)
36.3
(97.3)
36.5
(97.7)
32.9
(91.2)
27.8
(82.0)
21.2
(70.2)
15.5
(59.9)
36.5
(97.7)
Average high °C (°F) 1.7
(35.1)
3.5
(38.3)
8.1
(46.6)
13.5
(56.3)
19.1
(66.4)
22.4
(72.3)
23.6
(74.5)
23.4
(74.1)
19.2
(66.6)
13.7
(56.7)
7.1
(44.8)
3.0
(37.4)
13.2
(55.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) −0.9
(30.4)
0.2
(32.4)
3.7
(38.7)
8.0
(46.4)
13.2
(55.8)
16.6
(61.9)
17.9
(64.2)
17.5
(63.5)
13.9
(57.0)
9.4
(48.9)
4.2
(39.6)
0.7
(33.3)
8.7
(47.7)
Average low °C (°F) −3.4
(25.9)
−2.7
(27.1)
0.0
(32.0)
3.4
(38.1)
8.0
(46.4)
11.5
(52.7)
13.0
(55.4)
12.7
(54.9)
9.8
(49.6)
6.0
(42.8)
1.7
(35.1)
−1.7
(28.9)
4.9
(40.8)
Record low °C (°F) −20.9
(−5.6)
−19.9
(−3.8)
−14.0
(6.8)
−5.8
(21.6)
−2.6
(27.3)
2.2
(36.0)
6.2
(43.2)
5.4
(41.7)
0.1
(32.2)
−3.5
(25.7)
−16.6
(2.1)
−24.5
(−12.1)
−24.5
(−12.1)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 44
(1.7)
38
(1.5)
38
(1.5)
44
(1.7)
56
(2.2)
69
(2.7)
52
(2.0)
60
(2.4)
46
(1.8)
36
(1.4)
47
(1.9)
55
(2.2)
585
(23.0)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 11 8 9 9 10 10 9 9 8 7 10 12 112
Mean monthly sunshine hours 47.1 73.7 124.2 168.3 226.9 231.1 231.9 220.1 161.3 114.4 54.0 39.3 1,692.2
Source: NOAA[10]

Etymology

The name "Potsdam" originally seems to have been Poztupimi. A common theory is that it derives from an old West Slavonic term meaning "beneath the oaks",[11] i.e., the corrupted pod dubmi/dubimi (pod "beneath", dub "oak"). However, some question this explanation.[12]

History

Pre- and early history

 
Document from the Holy Roman Empire in 993 mentioning Poztupimi
 
New Palace today
 
Stadtschloss Potsdam in 1773

The area around Potsdam shows signs of occupancy since the Bronze Age and was part of Magna Germania as described by Tacitus. After the great migrations of the Germanic peoples, Slavs moved in and Potsdam was probably founded after the 7th century as a settlement of the Hevelli tribe centred on a castle. It was first mentioned in a document in 993 as Poztupimi, when Emperor Otto III gifted the territory to the Quedlinburg Abbey, then led by his aunt Matilda.[12] By 1317, it was mentioned as a small town. It gained its town charter in 1345. In 1573, it was still a small market town of 2,000 inhabitants.

Early modern era

Potsdam lost nearly half of its population due to the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648).

A continuous Hohenzollern possession since 1415, Potsdam became prominent, when it was chosen in 1660 as the hunting residence of Frederick William I, Elector of Brandenburg, the core of the powerful state that later became the Kingdom of Prussia. It also housed Prussian barracks.

 
Voltaire at the residence of Frederick II in Potsdam. Partial view of an engraving by Pierre Charles Baquoy, after N. A. Monsiau

After the Edict of Potsdam in 1685, Potsdam became a centre of European immigration. Its religious freedom attracted people from France (Huguenots), Russia, the Netherlands and Bohemia. The edict accelerated population growth and economic recovery.

Later, the city became a full residence of the Prussian royal family. The buildings of the royal residences were built mainly during the reign of Frederick the Great. One of these is the Sanssouci Palace (French: "without cares", by Georg Wenzeslaus von Knobelsdorff, 1744), famed for its formal gardens and Rococo interiors. Other royal residences include the New Palace and the Orangery.

In 1815, at the formation of the Province of Brandenburg, Potsdam became the provincial capital until 1918, except for a period between 1827 and 1843 when Berlin was the provincial capital (as it became once again after 1918). The province comprised two governorates named after their capitals Potsdam and Frankfurt (Oder).

Governorate of Potsdam

 
Bond of Potsdam, issued 22 May 1852

Between 1815 and 1945, the city of Potsdam served as capital of the Regierungsbezirk of Potsdam [de] (German: Regierungsbezirk Potsdam). The Regierungsbezirk encompassed the former districts of Uckermark, the Mark of Priegnitz, and the greater part of the Middle March. It was situated between Mecklenburg and the Province of Pomerania on the north, and the Province of Saxony on the south and west (Berlin, with a small surrounding district, was an urban governorate and enclave within the governorate of Potsdam between 1815 and 1822, then it merged as urban district into the governorate only to be disentangled again from Potsdam governorate in 1875, becoming a distinct province-like entity on 1 April 1881). Towards the north west the governorate was bounded by the rivers Elbe and the Havel, and on the north east by the Oder. The south eastern boundary was to the neighbouring governorate of Frankfurt (Oder). About 500,000 inhabitants lived in the Potsdam governorate, which covered an area of about 20,700 square kilometres (7,992 sq mi), divided into thirteen rural districts, partially named after their capitals:[13]

Angermünde Beeskow-Storkow (as of 1836) East Havelland East Prignitz
Jüterbog-Luckenwalde Lower Barnim Prenzlau Ruppin
Teltow (as of 1836) Teltow-Storkow (until 1835) Templin Upper Barnim
West Havelland West Prignitz Zauch-Belzig

The traditional towns in the governorate were small, however, in the course of the industrial labour migration some reached the rank of urban districts. The principal towns were Brandenburg upon Havel, Köpenick, Potsdam, Prenzlau, Spandau and Ruppin.[13] Until 1875 Berlin also was a town within the governorate. After its disentanglement a number of its suburbs outside Berlin's municipal borders grew to towns, many forming urban Bezirke within the governorate of Potsdam such as Charlottenburg, Lichtenberg, Rixdorf (after 1912 Neukölln), and Schöneberg (all of which, as well as Köpenick and Spandau, incorporated into Greater Berlin in 1920). The urban Bezirke were (years indicating the elevation to rank of urban Bezirkor affiliation with Potsdam governorate, respectively):

Berlin (1822–1875) Brandenburg/Havel (as of 1881) Charlottenburg (1877–1920) Eberswalde (as of 1911)
Lichtenberg (1908–1920) Schöneberg (1899–1920) Deutsch-Wilmersdorf (1907–1920) Rixdorf (Neukölln) (1899–1920)
Potsdam Rathenow (as of 1925) Spandau (1886–1920) Wittenberge (as of 1922)

20th century

Berlin was the capital of Prussia and later of the German Empire, but the court remained in Potsdam, where many government officials settled. In 1914, Emperor Wilhelm II signed the Declaration of War in the Neues Palais (New Palace). The city lost its status as a "second capital" in 1918, when Wilhelm II abdicated and Germany became a Republic at the end of World War I.

After the Nazis seized power in 1933, there was a ceremonial handshake between President Paul von Hindenburg and the new Chancellor Adolf Hitler on 21 March 1933 in Potsdam's Garrison Church in what became known as the "Day of Potsdam". This symbolised a coalition of the military (Reichswehr) and Nazism. Potsdam was severely damaged by Allied bombing raids during World War II.

The Cecilienhof Palace was the scene of the Potsdam Conference from 17 July to 2 August 1945, at which the victorious Allied leaders Harry S. Truman, Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin met to decide the future of Germany and postwar Europe in general. The conference ended with the Potsdam Agreement and the Potsdam Declaration.

 
The Glienicke Bridge, used for exchanging spies during the Cold War

The government of East Germany (formally known as the German Democratic Republic (German: Deutsche Demokratische Republik, DDR)) tried to remove symbols of "Prussian militarism". Many historic buildings, some of them badly damaged in the war, were demolished.

When in 1946 the remainder of the Province of Brandenburg west of the Oder-Neiße line was constituted as the state of Brandenburg, Potsdam became its capital. In 1952 the GDR disestablished its states and replaced them by smaller new East German administrative districts known as Bezirke. Potsdam became the capital of the new Bezirk Potsdam until 1990.

Potsdam, south-west of Berlin, lay just outside West Berlin after the construction of the Berlin Wall. The walling off of West Berlin not only isolated Potsdam from West Berlin, but also doubled commuting times to East Berlin. The Glienicke Bridge across the Havel connected the city to West Berlin and was the scene of some Cold War exchanges of spies.

After German reunification, Potsdam became the capital of the newly re-established state of Brandenburg. Since then there have been many ideas and efforts to reconstruct the original appearance of the city, including the Potsdam City Palace and the Garrison Church.

Demography

Since 2000 Potsdam has been one of the fastest-growing cities in Germany.[14]

Potsdam: Population development
within the current boundaries (2020)[15]
YearPop.±% p.a.
1875 61,719—    
1890 77,301+1.51%
1910 101,950+1.39%
1925 107,734+0.37%
1939 125,664+1.11%
1950 114,663−0.83%
1964 117,711+0.19%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1971 118,923+0.15%
1981 139,746+1.63%
1985 146,746+1.23%
1990 147,252+0.07%
1995 144,118−0.43%
2000 140,668−0.48%
2005 147,583+0.96%
YearPop.±% p.a.
2010 156,906+1.23%
2015 167,745+1.34%
2016 171,810+2.42%
2017 175,710+2.27%
2018 178,089+1.35%
2019 180,334+1.26%
2020 182,112+0.99%

International residents

 
People at the Fanfarenzug

Largest groups of foreign residents:

Rank Nationality Population (31.12.2019)
1   Syria 2,415
2   Russia 1,425
3   Poland 1,115
4   Ukraine 920
5   Romania 795

Governance

 
Potsdamer Stadthaus, the city hall

City government

Potsdam has had a mayor (Bürgermeister) and city council since the 15th century. From 1809 the city council was elected, with a mayor (Oberbürgermeister) at its head. During Nazi Germany, the mayor was selected by the NSDAP and the city council was dissolved; it was reconstituted in token form after 1945, but free elections did not take place until after reunification.

Today, the city council is the city's central administrative authority. Local elections took place on 26 October 2003 and again in 2008. Between 1990 and 1999, the Chairman of the City Council was known as the "Town President" but today the post is the "Chairman of the City Council". The mayor is elected directly by the population.

 
Results of the second round of the 2018 mayoral election.

The current mayor is Mike Schubert of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) since 2018. The most recent mayoral election was held on 23 September 2018, with a runoff held on 14 October, and the results were as follows:

Candidate Party First round Second round
Votes % Votes %
Mike Schubert Social Democratic Party 23,872 32.2 28,803 55.3
Martina Trauth The Left 14,161 19.1 23,283 44.7
Götz Friederich Christian Democratic Union 12,892 17.4
Lutz Boede The Others 8,449 11.4
Dennis Hohloch Alternative for Germany 8,215 11.1
Janny Armbruster Alliance 90/The Greens 6,586 8.9
Valid votes 74,175 99.3 52,086 97.7
Invalid votes 549 0.7 1,251 2.3
Total 74,724 100.0 53,337 100.0
Electorate/voter turnout 140,963 53.0 141,109 37.8
Source: City of Potsdam (1st round 2022-08-15 at the Wayback Machine, 2nd round 2022-08-15 at the Wayback Machine)
 
Winning party by district in the 2019 city council election.

The city council governs the city alongside the mayor. The most recent city council election was held on 26 May 2019, and the results were as follows:

Party Votes % +/- Seats +/-
Social Democratic Party (SPD) 49,898 19.3   4.0 11   2
Alliance 90/The Greens (Grüne) 48,739 18.8   6.9 10   3
The Left (Die Linke) 46,761 18.1   7.2 10   4
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) 32,078 12.4   3.1 7   2
The Others (aNDERE) 26,754 10.3   2.6 6   2
Alternative for Germany (AfD) 24,508 9.5   5.0 5   2
Free Democratic Party (FDP) 12,620 4.9   2.4 3   2
CitizensAlliance (BB) 10,124 3.9   2.2 2   1
Die PARTEI 3,955 1.5 New 0 New
Brandenburg United Civic Movements/Free Voters (BVB/FW) 2,985 1.2   0.3 1 ±0
Independent Charnow 214 0.1 New 0 New
Total 258,636 100.0
Total votes 88,055 100.0 56 ±0
Electorate/voter turnout 141,443 62.3   13.5
Source: City of Potsdam 2022-07-12 at the Wayback Machine

Brandenburg state government

The Landtag Brandenburg, the parliament of the state of Brandenburg is in Potsdam. It has been housed in the Potsdam City Palace since 2014.[16]

Twin towns – sister cities

Potsdam is twinned with:[17]

Infrastructure

Transport

 
The Kaiserbahnof building

Rail transport

Potsdam, included in the fare zone "C" (Tarifbereich C)[18] of Berlin's public transport area and fare zones A and B of its own public transport area, is served by the S7 S-Bahn line. The stations served are Griebnitzsee, Babelsberg and the Central Station (Hauptbahnhof), the main and long-distance station of the city. Other DB stations in Potsdam are Charlottenhof, Park Sanssouci (including the monumental Kaiserbahnhof), Medienstadt Babelsberg, Rehbrücke, Pirschheide and Marquardt. The city also possesses a 27 km-long tramway network.

Road transport

Potsdam is served by several motorways: the A 10, a beltway better known as Berliner Ring, the A 115 (using part of the AVUS) and is closely linked to the A 2 and A 9. The B 1 and B 2 federal roads cross the city. Potsdam features a network of urban and suburban buses.

Education and research

Potsdam is a university town. The University of Potsdam was founded in 1991 as a university of the State of Brandenburg. Its predecessor was the Akademie für Staats- und Rechtswissenschaften der DDR "Walter Ulbricht", a college of education founded in 1948 which was one of the GDR's most important colleges. There are about 20,000 students enrolled at the university.

 
The Einstein Tower was built in 1921 to house research on the theory of relativity.

In 1991 the Fachhochschule Potsdam was founded as the second college. It had 3,518 students as of 2017.[19]

Konrad Wolf Film University of Babelsberg (HFF), founded in 1954 in Babelsberg, is the foremost[citation needed] centre of the German film industry since its birth, with over 600 students.

There are also several research foundations, including Fraunhofer Institutes for Applied Polymer Research and Biomedical Engineering, Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute), Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, and Max Planck Institute for Molecular Plant Physiology, the GFZ – German Research Centre for Geosciences, the Potsdam Astrophysical Institute, the Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies, The Leibniz Institute for Agricultural Engineering and Bioeconomy and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, which employs 340 people in researching climate change.[20]

As well as universities, Potsdam is home to reputable secondary schools. Montessori Gesamtschule Potsdam, in western Potsdam, attracts 400 students from the Brandenburg and Berlin region.

Culture

 
The historical centre of Potsdam

Potsdam was historically a centre of European immigration. Its religious tolerance attracted people from France, Russia, the Netherlands and Bohemia. This is still visible in the culture and architecture of the city.

The most popular attraction in Potsdam is Sanssouci Park, 2 km (1 mi) west of the city centre. In 1744 King Frederick the Great ordered the construction of a residence here, where he could live sans souci ("without worries", in the French spoken at the court). The park hosts a botanical garden (Botanical Garden, Potsdam) and many buildings:

  • The Sanssouci Palace (Schloss Sanssouci), a relatively modest palace of the Prussian royal (and later German imperial) family
  • The Orangery Palace (Orangerieschloss), former palace for foreign royal guests
  • The New Palace (Neues Palais), built between 1763 and 1769 to celebrate the end of the Seven Years' War, in which Prussia held off the combined attacks of Austria and Russia. It is a much larger and grander palace than Sanssouci, having over 200 rooms and 400 statues as decoration. It served as a guest house for numerous royal visitors. Today, it houses parts of University of Potsdam.
  • The Charlottenhof Palace (Schloss Charlottenhof), a Neoclassical palace by Karl Friedrich Schinkel built in 1826
  • The Roman Baths (Römische Bäder), built by Karl Friedrich Schinkel and Friedrich Ludwig Persius in 1829–1840. It is a complex of buildings including a tea pavilion, a Renaissance-style villa, and a Roman bathhouse (from which the whole complex takes its name).
  • The Chinese Tea House (Chinesisches Teehaus), an 18th-century pavilion built in a Chinese style, the fashion of the time.

Three gates from the original city wall remain today. The oldest is the Hunters' Gate (Jägertor), built in 1733. The Nauener Tor was built in 1755 and close to the historic Dutch Quarter. The ornate Brandenburg Gate (built in 1770, not to be confused with the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin) is situated on the Luisenplatz at the western entrance to the old town.

 
St. Nicholas' Church on the Alter Markt

The Old Market Square (Alter Markt) is Potsdam's historical city centre. For three centuries this was the site of the City Palace (Stadtschloß), a royal palace built in 1662. Under Frederick the Great, the palace became the winter residence of the Prussian kings. The palace was severely damaged by Allied bombing in 1945 and demolished in 1961 by the Communist authorities. In 2002 the Fortuna Gate (Fortunaportal) was rebuilt in its original historic position which was followed by a complete reconstruction of the palace as the Brandenburg Landtag building inaugurated in 2014. Nearby the square in the Humboldtstraße block, which also was demolished after getting damaged in 1945, reconstructions of several representative residential palaces including Palazzo Pompei and Palazzo Barberini housing an arts museum were completed in 2016–2017 alongside buildings with modernized facades to restore the historical proportions of the block.

 
The old town (main shopping street, Brandenburger Straße)

The Old Market Square is dominated today by the dome of St. Nicholas' Church, built in 1837 in the Neoclassical style. It was the last work of Karl Friedrich Schinkel, who designed the building but did not live to see its completion. It was finished by his disciples Friedrich August Stüler and Ludwig Persius. The eastern side of the Market Square is dominated by the Old City Hall, built in 1755 by the Dutch architect Jan Bouman (1706–1776). It has a characteristic circular tower, crowned with a gilded Atlas bearing the world on his shoulders.

 

North of the Old Market Square is the oval French Church (Französische Kirche), erected in the 1750s by Boumann for the Huguenot community. To the south lies the Museum Barberini, a copy of the previous building, the Barberini Palace. The museum was funded by the German billionaire Hasso Plattner. The former Baroque building was built by Carl von Gontard in 1771–1772, inspired by the Renaissance palace Palazzo Barberini in Rome. The newly built museum was scheduled to open in spring 2017.

Another landmark of Potsdam is the two-street Dutch Quarter (Holländisches Viertel), an ensemble of buildings that is unique in Europe, with about 150 houses built of red bricks in the Dutch style. It was built between 1734 and 1742 under the direction of Jan Bouman to be used by Dutch artisans and craftsmen who had been invited to settle here by King Frederick Wilhelm I. Today, this area is one of Potsdam's most visited quarters.

North of the city centre is the Russian colony of Alexandrowka, a small enclave of Russian architecture (including an Orthodox chapel) built in 1825 for a group of Russian immigrants. Since 1999, the colony has been part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site Palaces and Parks of Potsdam and Berlin.

East of the Alexandrowka colony is a large park, the New Garden (Neuer Garten), which was laid out from 1786 in the English style. The site contains two palaces; one of them, the Cecilienhof, was where the Potsdam Conference was held in July and August 1945. The Marmorpalais (Marble Palace) was built in 1789 in Neoclassical style. Nearby is the Biosphäre Potsdam, a tropical botanical garden.

Babelsberg, a quarter south-east of the centre, houses the UFA film studios (Babelsberg Studios), and an extensive park with some historical buildings, including the Babelsberg Palace (Schloß Babelsberg, a Gothic revival palace designed by Schinkel).

The Einstein Tower is located within the Albert Einstein Science Park, which is on the top of the Telegraphenberg within an astronomy compound.

Potsdam also features a memorial centre in the former KGB prison in Leistikowstraße. In the Volkspark to the north, there is one of the last monuments dedicated to Lenin in Germany.

Potsdam joined UNESCO's Network of Creative Cities as a Design City on October 31, 2019 on the occasion of World Cities’ Day.[21]

Parks

There are many parks in Potsdam, most of them UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Among their attractions are:

Sports

Notable people

18th century
 
Graf Henckel von Donnersmarck
 
Wilhelm von Humboldt
19th century
 
Frederick III
20th century
20th century

Honorary citizens

See also

References

  1. ^ Ergebnis der Bürgermeisterwahl in Potsdam, accessed 30 June 2021.
  2. ^ "Bevölkerungsentwicklung und Flächen der kreisfreien Städte, Landkreise und Gemeinden im Land Brandenburg 2021" (PDF). Amt für Statistik Berlin-Brandenburg (in German). June 2022.
  3. ^ The Potsdam project, 1996, HRH The Prince of Wales, Charles; Hanson, Brian; Steil, Lucien; Prince of Wales's Urban Design Task Force; Prince of Wales's Institute of Architecture, Prince of Wales's Institute of Architecture, 1998, Introduction.
  4. ^ "About us".
  5. ^ "Stadtteilkatalog der Landeshauptstadt Potsdam" (in German). Retrieved 2016-12-28.
  6. ^ "Stadtteile" (in German). Landeshauptstadt Potsdam. Retrieved 2016-12-31.
  7. ^ a b "Landeshauptstadt Potsdam, Stadtteile im Blick 2019" (PDF, 12.3 MB) (in German). 2020-10-15. p. 4. (PDF) from the original on 2021-05-14. Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  8. ^ "Landeshauptstadt Potsdam, Stadtteile im Blick 2010" (PDF, 5.4 MB) (in German). 2011-06-30. p. 5. (PDF) from the original on 2016-12-28. Retrieved 2016-12-28. Note: Reports from later years omit mention of borough designations with single-digit numbers.
  9. ^ "Potsdam climate: Average Temperature, weather by month, Potsdam weather averages - Climate-Data.org". en.climate-data.org. Retrieved 2019-01-30.
  10. ^ a b "Potsdam Climate Normals 1961–1990". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved December 8, 2015.
  11. ^ "993 – From Poztupimi to the Royal Seat". potsdam.de. 1 December 2004.
  12. ^ a b August Kopish, "Die Königlichen Schlösser u. Gärten zu Potsdam", Berlin, 1854, p. 18 (Google Books)
  13. ^ a b Thomas Curtis (1839). The London encyclopaedia, or, Universal dictionary of science, art, literature, and practical mechanics, by the orig. ed. of the Encyclopaedia metropolitana Volume XVIII, p. 11
  14. ^ Zuwachs in Potsdam und kein Ende in Sicht[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ Detailed data sources are to be found in the Wikimedia Commons.Population Projection Brandenburg at Wikimedia Commons
  16. ^ Jennerjahn, Yvonne (13 November 2013). . Archived from the original on 17 March 2016. Retrieved 4 January 2014 – via Potsdamer Neueste Nachrichten.
  17. ^ "Die Partnerstädte der Landeshauptstadt Potsdam". potsdam.de (in German). Potsdam. 17 November 2004. Retrieved 2021-03-11.
  18. ^ (in German) BVG: Berliner public transport pdf maps showing fare zones 2011-05-29 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ . www.fh-potsdam.de (in German). Archived from the original on 2019-04-27. Retrieved 2019-04-27.
  20. ^ http://www.pioneers-in-polymers.com/index.html, http://www.ibmt.fhg.de/fhg/ibmt_en/profile/locations/_index_potsdam_golm.jsp, http://www.mpikg.mpg.de/en/, http://www.mpimp-golm.mpg.de/, , http://www.aip.de/, http://www.iass-potsdam.de/, http://www.pik-potsdam.de/
  21. ^ "UNESCO celebrates World Cities Day designating 66 new Creative Cities". UNESCO. 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-11-05.
  22. ^ "City Hall shocked to find Goebbels still honorary citizen of Potsdam". dpa-international.com. Retrieved 2021-10-06.

Sources

  • Paul Sigel, Silke Dähmlow, Frank Seehausen und Lucas Elmenhorst, Architekturführer Potsdam Architectural Guide, Dietrich Reimer Verlag, Berlin 2006, ISBN 3-496-01325-7.

External links

  • Official website   (in German) and English
  • Extensive photoarchive about Potsdam

potsdam, other, uses, disambiguation, german, pronunciation, ˈpɔtsdam, listen, capital, with, around, inhabitants, largest, city, german, state, brandenburg, part, berlin, brandenburg, metropolitan, region, sits, river, havel, tributary, elbe, downstream, berl. For other uses see Potsdam disambiguation Potsdam German pronunciation ˈpɔtsdam listen is the capital and with around 183 000 inhabitants largest city of the German state of Brandenburg It is part of the Berlin Brandenburg Metropolitan Region Potsdam sits on the River Havel a tributary of the Elbe downstream of Berlin and lies embedded in a hilly morainic landscape dotted with many lakes around 20 of which are located within Potsdam s city limits It lies some 25 kilometres 16 miles southwest of Berlin s city centre The name of the city and of many of its boroughs are of Slavic origin PotsdamCityFrom top and left to right Potsdam City Palace with St Nicholas Church old city hall Brandenburg Gate New Palace Palace of Sanssouci Potsdam skylineFlagCoat of armsLocation of PotsdamPotsdamShow map of GermanyPotsdamShow map of BrandenburgCoordinates 52 24 N 13 4 E 52 400 N 13 067 E 52 400 13 067 Coordinates 52 24 N 13 4 E 52 400 N 13 067 E 52 400 13 067CountryGermanyStateBrandenburgDistrictUrban districtFounded1776Government Lord mayor 2018 26 Mike Schubert 1 SPD Area Total187 28 km2 72 31 sq mi Elevation32 m 105 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total183 154 Density980 km2 2 500 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes14467 14482Dialling codes0331Vehicle registrationPWebsitewww potsdam dePotsdam was a residence of the Prussian kings and the German Kaiser until 1918 Its planning embodied ideas of the Age of Enlightenment through a careful balance of architecture and landscape Potsdam was intended as a picturesque pastoral dream which would remind its residents of their relationship with nature and reason 3 The city which is over 1000 years old is widely known for its palaces its lakes and its overall historical and cultural significance Landmarks include the parks and palaces of Sanssouci Germany s largest World Heritage Site as well as other palaces such as the Orangery Palace the New Palace Cecilienhof Palace and Charlottenhof Palace Potsdam was also the location of the significant Potsdam Conference in 1945 the conference where the three heads of government of the USSR the US and the UK decided on the division of Germany following its surrender a conference which defined Germany s history for the following 45 years Babelsberg in the south eastern part of Potsdam was already by the 1930s the home of a major film production studio and it has enjoyed success as an important center of European film production since the fall of the Berlin Wall The Filmstudio Babelsberg founded in 1912 is the oldest large scale film studio in the world 4 Potsdam developed into a centre of science in Germany in the 19th century Today there are three public colleges the University of Potsdam and more than 30 research institutes in the city Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Subdivisions 1 2 Climate 2 Etymology 3 History 3 1 Pre and early history 3 2 Early modern era 3 3 Governorate of Potsdam 3 4 20th century 4 Demography 4 1 International residents 5 Governance 5 1 City government 5 2 Brandenburg state government 6 Twin towns sister cities 7 Infrastructure 7 1 Transport 7 1 1 Rail transport 7 1 2 Road transport 8 Education and research 9 Culture 10 Parks 11 Sports 12 Notable people 12 1 Honorary citizens 13 See also 14 References 15 Sources 16 External linksGeography Edit The Templiner See south of Potsdam The area was formed from a series of large moraines left after the last glacial period Today only one quarter of the city is built up the rest remaining as green space There are about 20 lakes and rivers in and around Potsdam such as the Havel the Griebnitzsee Templiner See Tiefer See Jungfernsee Teltowkanal Heiliger See and Sacrower See The highest point is the 114 metre 374 ft high Kleiner Ravensberg Subdivisions Edit Potsdam is divided into seven historic city Stadtteile quarters and nine new Ortsteile suburbs wards former separate villages which joined the city in 2003 The appearance of the city boroughs is quite different Those in the north and in the centre consist mainly of historical buildings the south of the city is dominated by larger areas of newer buildings The city of Potsdam is divided into 32 Stadtteile boroughs both quarters and suburbs wards together 5 which are divided further into 84 statistical Bezirke districts Today one distinguishes between the older parts of the city areas of the historic city and places suburbanized at the latest in 1939 these are the city center the western and northern suburbs Bornim Bornstedt Nedlitz Potsdam South Babelsberg Drewitz Stern and Kirchsteigfeld and those communities incorporated after 1990 which have since 2003 become Otsteile these are Eiche Fahrland Golm Gross Glienicke Grube Marquardt Neu Fahrland Satzkorn and Uetz Paaren 6 The new Ortsteile are located mainly in the north of the city For the history of all incorporations see the relevant section on incorporation and spin offs Structure with statistical numbering 7 8 Stadtteile boroughs of Potsdam 1 Potsdam Nord 11 Bornim 12 Nedlitz 13 Bornstedt 14 Sacrow 15 Eiche 16 Grube 17 Golm 2 Nordliche Vorstadte 21 Nauener Vorstadt 22 Jagervorstadt 23 Berliner Vorstadt 3 Westliche Vorstadte 31 Brandenburger Vorstadt 32 Potsdam West 4 Innenstadt 41 Historische Innenstadt 43 Zentrum Ost und Nuthepark 44 Hauptbahnhof und Brauhausberg Nord 5 Babelsberg 51 Klein Glienicke 52 Babelsberg Nord 53 Babelsberg Sud 6 Potsdam Sud 61 Templiner Vorstadt 62 Teltower Vorstadt 63 Schlaatz 64 Waldstadt I und Industriegelande 65 Waldstadt II 7 Potsdam Sudost 71 Stern 72 Drewitz 73 Kirchsteigfeld 8 Nordliche Ortsteile 81 Uetz Paaren 82 Marquardt 83 Satzkorn 84 Fahrland 85 Neu Fahrland 86 Gross Glienicke At the end of 2019 a change was made to the administrative structure 7 Borough 41 has been renamed previously Nordliche Innenstadt now Historische Innenstadt Borough 42 Sudliche Innenstadt has been divided into two boroughs 43 Zentrum Ost und Nuthepark and 44 Hauptbahnhof und Brauhausberg Nord The number 42 was thus repealed Some very sparsely populated urban boroughs have been disbanded Borough 33 Wildpark was incorporated into borough 32 Potsdam West Borough 66 Industriegelande was incorporated into borough 64 formerly Waldstadt I The borough was then renamed Waldstadt I und Industriegelande Borough 67 Forst Potsdam Sud was incorporated into borough 61 Templiner Vorstadt Climate Edit Officially the climate is oceanic more degraded by being far from the coast and to the east Koppen Cfb 9 but using the 1961 1990 normal and the 0 C isotherm the city has a humid continental climate Dfb which also shows a slight influence of the continent different from the climates predominantly influenced by the Atlantic Ocean Low averages below freezing for almost all winter causing snows that are frequent and winters are cold but not as stringent as inland locations or with greater influence from the same Summer is also relatively warm with temperatures between 23 and 24 C the heat waves being influenced by the UHI of Potsdam 10 The average winter high temperature is 3 5 C 38 3 F with a low of 1 7 C 28 9 F Snow is common in the winter Spring and autumn are short Summers are mild with a high of 23 6 C 74 5 F and a low of 12 7 C 54 9 F citation needed Climate data for Potsdam Teltower Vorstadt elevation 100 m 1961 1990 normals and extremesMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 13 6 56 5 18 6 65 5 25 7 78 3 31 8 89 2 32 5 90 5 34 2 93 6 36 3 97 3 36 5 97 7 32 9 91 2 27 8 82 0 21 2 70 2 15 5 59 9 36 5 97 7 Average high C F 1 7 35 1 3 5 38 3 8 1 46 6 13 5 56 3 19 1 66 4 22 4 72 3 23 6 74 5 23 4 74 1 19 2 66 6 13 7 56 7 7 1 44 8 3 0 37 4 13 2 55 8 Daily mean C F 0 9 30 4 0 2 32 4 3 7 38 7 8 0 46 4 13 2 55 8 16 6 61 9 17 9 64 2 17 5 63 5 13 9 57 0 9 4 48 9 4 2 39 6 0 7 33 3 8 7 47 7 Average low C F 3 4 25 9 2 7 27 1 0 0 32 0 3 4 38 1 8 0 46 4 11 5 52 7 13 0 55 4 12 7 54 9 9 8 49 6 6 0 42 8 1 7 35 1 1 7 28 9 4 9 40 8 Record low C F 20 9 5 6 19 9 3 8 14 0 6 8 5 8 21 6 2 6 27 3 2 2 36 0 6 2 43 2 5 4 41 7 0 1 32 2 3 5 25 7 16 6 2 1 24 5 12 1 24 5 12 1 Average precipitation mm inches 44 1 7 38 1 5 38 1 5 44 1 7 56 2 2 69 2 7 52 2 0 60 2 4 46 1 8 36 1 4 47 1 9 55 2 2 585 23 0 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 11 8 9 9 10 10 9 9 8 7 10 12 112Mean monthly sunshine hours 47 1 73 7 124 2 168 3 226 9 231 1 231 9 220 1 161 3 114 4 54 0 39 3 1 692 2Source NOAA 10 Etymology EditThe name Potsdam originally seems to have been Poztupimi A common theory is that it derives from an old West Slavonic term meaning beneath the oaks 11 i e the corrupted pod dubmi dubimi pod beneath dub oak However some question this explanation 12 History EditPre and early history Edit Document from the Holy Roman Empire in 993 mentioning Poztupimi New Palace today Stadtschloss Potsdam in 1773 The area around Potsdam shows signs of occupancy since the Bronze Age and was part of Magna Germania as described by Tacitus After the great migrations of the Germanic peoples Slavs moved in and Potsdam was probably founded after the 7th century as a settlement of the Hevelli tribe centred on a castle It was first mentioned in a document in 993 as Poztupimi when Emperor Otto III gifted the territory to the Quedlinburg Abbey then led by his aunt Matilda 12 By 1317 it was mentioned as a small town It gained its town charter in 1345 In 1573 it was still a small market town of 2 000 inhabitants Early modern era Edit Potsdam lost nearly half of its population due to the Thirty Years War 1618 1648 A continuous Hohenzollern possession since 1415 Potsdam became prominent when it was chosen in 1660 as the hunting residence of Frederick William I Elector of Brandenburg the core of the powerful state that later became the Kingdom of Prussia It also housed Prussian barracks Voltaire at the residence of Frederick II in Potsdam Partial view of an engraving by Pierre Charles Baquoy after N A Monsiau After the Edict of Potsdam in 1685 Potsdam became a centre of European immigration Its religious freedom attracted people from France Huguenots Russia the Netherlands and Bohemia The edict accelerated population growth and economic recovery Later the city became a full residence of the Prussian royal family The buildings of the royal residences were built mainly during the reign of Frederick the Great One of these is the Sanssouci Palace French without cares by Georg Wenzeslaus von Knobelsdorff 1744 famed for its formal gardens and Rococo interiors Other royal residences include the New Palace and the Orangery In 1815 at the formation of the Province of Brandenburg Potsdam became the provincial capital until 1918 except for a period between 1827 and 1843 when Berlin was the provincial capital as it became once again after 1918 The province comprised two governorates named after their capitals Potsdam and Frankfurt Oder Governorate of Potsdam Edit Bond of Potsdam issued 22 May 1852 Between 1815 and 1945 the city of Potsdam served as capital of the Regierungsbezirk of Potsdam de German Regierungsbezirk Potsdam The Regierungsbezirk encompassed the former districts of Uckermark the Mark of Priegnitz and the greater part of the Middle March It was situated between Mecklenburg and the Province of Pomerania on the north and the Province of Saxony on the south and west Berlin with a small surrounding district was an urban governorate and enclave within the governorate of Potsdam between 1815 and 1822 then it merged as urban district into the governorate only to be disentangled again from Potsdam governorate in 1875 becoming a distinct province like entity on 1 April 1881 Towards the north west the governorate was bounded by the rivers Elbe and the Havel and on the north east by the Oder The south eastern boundary was to the neighbouring governorate of Frankfurt Oder About 500 000 inhabitants lived in the Potsdam governorate which covered an area of about 20 700 square kilometres 7 992 sq mi divided into thirteen rural districts partially named after their capitals 13 Angermunde Beeskow Storkow as of 1836 East Havelland East PrignitzJuterbog Luckenwalde Lower Barnim Prenzlau RuppinTeltow as of 1836 Teltow Storkow until 1835 Templin Upper BarnimWest Havelland West Prignitz Zauch BelzigThe traditional towns in the governorate were small however in the course of the industrial labour migration some reached the rank of urban districts The principal towns were Brandenburg upon Havel Kopenick Potsdam Prenzlau Spandau and Ruppin 13 Until 1875 Berlin also was a town within the governorate After its disentanglement a number of its suburbs outside Berlin s municipal borders grew to towns many forming urban Bezirke within the governorate of Potsdam such as Charlottenburg Lichtenberg Rixdorf after 1912 Neukolln and Schoneberg all of which as well as Kopenick and Spandau incorporated into Greater Berlin in 1920 The urban Bezirke were years indicating the elevation to rank of urban Bezirkor affiliation with Potsdam governorate respectively Berlin 1822 1875 Brandenburg Havel as of 1881 Charlottenburg 1877 1920 Eberswalde as of 1911 Lichtenberg 1908 1920 Schoneberg 1899 1920 Deutsch Wilmersdorf 1907 1920 Rixdorf Neukolln 1899 1920 Potsdam Rathenow as of 1925 Spandau 1886 1920 Wittenberge as of 1922 20th century Edit Berlin was the capital of Prussia and later of the German Empire but the court remained in Potsdam where many government officials settled In 1914 Emperor Wilhelm II signed the Declaration of War in the Neues Palais New Palace The city lost its status as a second capital in 1918 when Wilhelm II abdicated and Germany became a Republic at the end of World War I After the Nazis seized power in 1933 there was a ceremonial handshake between President Paul von Hindenburg and the new Chancellor Adolf Hitler on 21 March 1933 in Potsdam s Garrison Church in what became known as the Day of Potsdam This symbolised a coalition of the military Reichswehr and Nazism Potsdam was severely damaged by Allied bombing raids during World War II Potsdam Conference in 1945 with Winston Churchill Harry S Truman and Joseph Stalin The Cecilienhof Palace was the scene of the Potsdam Conference from 17 July to 2 August 1945 at which the victorious Allied leaders Harry S Truman Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin met to decide the future of Germany and postwar Europe in general The conference ended with the Potsdam Agreement and the Potsdam Declaration The Glienicke Bridge used for exchanging spies during the Cold War The government of East Germany formally known as the German Democratic Republic German Deutsche Demokratische Republik DDR tried to remove symbols of Prussian militarism Many historic buildings some of them badly damaged in the war were demolished When in 1946 the remainder of the Province of Brandenburg west of the Oder Neisse line was constituted as the state of Brandenburg Potsdam became its capital In 1952 the GDR disestablished its states and replaced them by smaller new East German administrative districts known as Bezirke Potsdam became the capital of the new Bezirk Potsdam until 1990 Potsdam south west of Berlin lay just outside West Berlin after the construction of the Berlin Wall The walling off of West Berlin not only isolated Potsdam from West Berlin but also doubled commuting times to East Berlin The Glienicke Bridge across the Havel connected the city to West Berlin and was the scene of some Cold War exchanges of spies After German reunification Potsdam became the capital of the newly re established state of Brandenburg Since then there have been many ideas and efforts to reconstruct the original appearance of the city including the Potsdam City Palace and the Garrison Church Demography EditSince 2000 Potsdam has been one of the fastest growing cities in Germany 14 Development of Population since 1875 within the Current Boundaries Blue Line Population Dotted Line Comparison to Population Development of Brandenburg state Grey Background Time of Nazi rule Red Background Time of Communist rule Recent Population Development and Projections Population Development before Census 2011 blue line Recent Population Development according to the Census in Germany in 2011 blue bordered line Official projections for 2005 2030 yellow line for 2017 2030 scarlet line for 2020 2030 green line Potsdam Population development within the current boundaries 2020 15 YearPop p a 187561 719 189077 301 1 51 1910101 950 1 39 1925107 734 0 37 1939125 664 1 11 1950114 663 0 83 1964117 711 0 19 YearPop p a 1971118 923 0 15 1981139 746 1 63 1985146 746 1 23 1990147 252 0 07 1995144 118 0 43 2000140 668 0 48 2005147 583 0 96 YearPop p a 2010156 906 1 23 2015167 745 1 34 2016171 810 2 42 2017175 710 2 27 2018178 089 1 35 2019180 334 1 26 2020182 112 0 99 International residents Edit People at the Fanfarenzug Largest groups of foreign residents Rank Nationality Population 31 12 2019 1 Syria 2 4152 Russia 1 4253 Poland 1 1154 Ukraine 9205 Romania 795Governance Edit Potsdamer Stadthaus the city hall City government Edit Potsdam has had a mayor Burgermeister and city council since the 15th century From 1809 the city council was elected with a mayor Oberburgermeister at its head During Nazi Germany the mayor was selected by the NSDAP and the city council was dissolved it was reconstituted in token form after 1945 but free elections did not take place until after reunification Today the city council is the city s central administrative authority Local elections took place on 26 October 2003 and again in 2008 Between 1990 and 1999 the Chairman of the City Council was known as the Town President but today the post is the Chairman of the City Council The mayor is elected directly by the population Results of the second round of the 2018 mayoral election The current mayor is Mike Schubert of the Social Democratic Party SPD since 2018 The most recent mayoral election was held on 23 September 2018 with a runoff held on 14 October and the results were as follows Candidate Party First round Second roundVotes Votes Mike Schubert Social Democratic Party 23 872 32 2 28 803 55 3Martina Trauth The Left 14 161 19 1 23 283 44 7Gotz Friederich Christian Democratic Union 12 892 17 4Lutz Boede The Others 8 449 11 4Dennis Hohloch Alternative for Germany 8 215 11 1Janny Armbruster Alliance 90 The Greens 6 586 8 9Valid votes 74 175 99 3 52 086 97 7Invalid votes 549 0 7 1 251 2 3Total 74 724 100 0 53 337 100 0Electorate voter turnout 140 963 53 0 141 109 37 8Source City of Potsdam 1st round Archived 2022 08 15 at the Wayback Machine 2nd round Archived 2022 08 15 at the Wayback Machine Winning party by district in the 2019 city council election The city council governs the city alongside the mayor The most recent city council election was held on 26 May 2019 and the results were as follows Party Votes Seats Social Democratic Party SPD 49 898 19 3 4 0 11 2Alliance 90 The Greens Grune 48 739 18 8 6 9 10 3The Left Die Linke 46 761 18 1 7 2 10 4Christian Democratic Union CDU 32 078 12 4 3 1 7 2The Others aNDERE 26 754 10 3 2 6 6 2Alternative for Germany AfD 24 508 9 5 5 0 5 2Free Democratic Party FDP 12 620 4 9 2 4 3 2CitizensAlliance BB 10 124 3 9 2 2 2 1Die PARTEI 3 955 1 5 New 0 NewBrandenburg United Civic Movements Free Voters BVB FW 2 985 1 2 0 3 1 0Independent Charnow 214 0 1 New 0 NewTotal 258 636 100 0Total votes 88 055 100 0 56 0Electorate voter turnout 141 443 62 3 13 5Source City of Potsdam Archived 2022 07 12 at the Wayback MachineBrandenburg state government Edit The Landtag Brandenburg the parliament of the state of Brandenburg is in Potsdam It has been housed in the Potsdam City Palace since 2014 16 Twin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany Potsdam is twinned with 17 Opole Poland 1973 Bobigny France 1974 Jyvaskyla Finland 1985 Bonn Germany 1988 Perugia Italy 1990 Sioux Falls United States 1990 Lucerne Switzerland 2002 Versailles France 2016 Zanzibar City Tanzania 2017 Infrastructure EditTransport Edit The Kaiserbahnof building Rail transport Edit Potsdam included in the fare zone C Tarifbereich C 18 of Berlin s public transport area and fare zones A and B of its own public transport area is served by the S7 S Bahn line The stations served are Griebnitzsee Babelsberg and the Central Station Hauptbahnhof the main and long distance station of the city Other DB stations in Potsdam are Charlottenhof Park Sanssouci including the monumental Kaiserbahnhof Medienstadt Babelsberg Rehbrucke Pirschheide and Marquardt The city also possesses a 27 km long tramway network Road transport Edit Potsdam is served by several motorways the A 10 a beltway better known as Berliner Ring the A 115 using part of the AVUS and is closely linked to the A 2 and A 9 The B 1 and B 2 federal roads cross the city Potsdam features a network of urban and suburban buses Education and research Edit The University of Potsdam Potsdam is a university town The University of Potsdam was founded in 1991 as a university of the State of Brandenburg Its predecessor was the Akademie fur Staats und Rechtswissenschaften der DDR Walter Ulbricht a college of education founded in 1948 which was one of the GDR s most important colleges There are about 20 000 students enrolled at the university The Einstein Tower was built in 1921 to house research on the theory of relativity In 1991 the Fachhochschule Potsdam was founded as the second college It had 3 518 students as of 2017 19 Konrad Wolf Film University of Babelsberg HFF founded in 1954 in Babelsberg is the foremost citation needed centre of the German film industry since its birth with over 600 students There are also several research foundations including Fraunhofer Institutes for Applied Polymer Research and Biomedical Engineering Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics Albert Einstein Institute Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces and Max Planck Institute for Molecular Plant Physiology the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences the Potsdam Astrophysical Institute the Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies The Leibniz Institute for Agricultural Engineering and Bioeconomy and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research which employs 340 people in researching climate change 20 As well as universities Potsdam is home to reputable secondary schools Montessori Gesamtschule Potsdam in western Potsdam attracts 400 students from the Brandenburg and Berlin region Culture EditMain article List of sights of Potsdam The historical centre of Potsdam Sanssouci Palace Cecilienhof palace Potsdam was historically a centre of European immigration Its religious tolerance attracted people from France Russia the Netherlands and Bohemia This is still visible in the culture and architecture of the city The most popular attraction in Potsdam is Sanssouci Park 2 km 1 mi west of the city centre In 1744 King Frederick the Great ordered the construction of a residence here where he could live sans souci without worries in the French spoken at the court The park hosts a botanical garden Botanical Garden Potsdam and many buildings The Sanssouci Palace Schloss Sanssouci a relatively modest palace of the Prussian royal and later German imperial family The Orangery Palace Orangerieschloss former palace for foreign royal guests The New Palace Neues Palais built between 1763 and 1769 to celebrate the end of the Seven Years War in which Prussia held off the combined attacks of Austria and Russia It is a much larger and grander palace than Sanssouci having over 200 rooms and 400 statues as decoration It served as a guest house for numerous royal visitors Today it houses parts of University of Potsdam The Charlottenhof Palace Schloss Charlottenhof a Neoclassical palace by Karl Friedrich Schinkel built in 1826 The Roman Baths Romische Bader built by Karl Friedrich Schinkel and Friedrich Ludwig Persius in 1829 1840 It is a complex of buildings including a tea pavilion a Renaissance style villa and a Roman bathhouse from which the whole complex takes its name The Chinese Tea House Chinesisches Teehaus an 18th century pavilion built in a Chinese style the fashion of the time Three gates from the original city wall remain today The oldest is the Hunters Gate Jagertor built in 1733 The Nauener Tor was built in 1755 and close to the historic Dutch Quarter The ornate Brandenburg Gate built in 1770 not to be confused with the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin is situated on the Luisenplatz at the western entrance to the old town St Nicholas Church on the Alter Markt The Old Market Square Alter Markt is Potsdam s historical city centre For three centuries this was the site of the City Palace Stadtschloss a royal palace built in 1662 Under Frederick the Great the palace became the winter residence of the Prussian kings The palace was severely damaged by Allied bombing in 1945 and demolished in 1961 by the Communist authorities In 2002 the Fortuna Gate Fortunaportal was rebuilt in its original historic position which was followed by a complete reconstruction of the palace as the Brandenburg Landtag building inaugurated in 2014 Nearby the square in the Humboldtstrasse block which also was demolished after getting damaged in 1945 reconstructions of several representative residential palaces including Palazzo Pompei and Palazzo Barberini housing an arts museum were completed in 2016 2017 alongside buildings with modernized facades to restore the historical proportions of the block The old town main shopping street Brandenburger Strasse The Old Market Square is dominated today by the dome of St Nicholas Church built in 1837 in the Neoclassical style It was the last work of Karl Friedrich Schinkel who designed the building but did not live to see its completion It was finished by his disciples Friedrich August Stuler and Ludwig Persius The eastern side of the Market Square is dominated by the Old City Hall built in 1755 by the Dutch architect Jan Bouman 1706 1776 It has a characteristic circular tower crowned with a gilded Atlas bearing the world on his shoulders Potsdam s Brandenburg Gate North of the Old Market Square is the oval French Church Franzosische Kirche erected in the 1750s by Boumann for the Huguenot community To the south lies the Museum Barberini a copy of the previous building the Barberini Palace The museum was funded by the German billionaire Hasso Plattner The former Baroque building was built by Carl von Gontard in 1771 1772 inspired by the Renaissance palace Palazzo Barberini in Rome The newly built museum was scheduled to open in spring 2017 Another landmark of Potsdam is the two street Dutch Quarter Hollandisches Viertel an ensemble of buildings that is unique in Europe with about 150 houses built of red bricks in the Dutch style It was built between 1734 and 1742 under the direction of Jan Bouman to be used by Dutch artisans and craftsmen who had been invited to settle here by King Frederick Wilhelm I Today this area is one of Potsdam s most visited quarters North of the city centre is the Russian colony of Alexandrowka a small enclave of Russian architecture including an Orthodox chapel built in 1825 for a group of Russian immigrants Since 1999 the colony has been part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site Palaces and Parks of Potsdam and Berlin East of the Alexandrowka colony is a large park the New Garden Neuer Garten which was laid out from 1786 in the English style The site contains two palaces one of them the Cecilienhof was where the Potsdam Conference was held in July and August 1945 The Marmorpalais Marble Palace was built in 1789 in Neoclassical style Nearby is the Biosphare Potsdam a tropical botanical garden Babelsberg a quarter south east of the centre houses the UFA film studios Babelsberg Studios and an extensive park with some historical buildings including the Babelsberg Palace Schloss Babelsberg a Gothic revival palace designed by Schinkel The Einstein Tower is located within the Albert Einstein Science Park which is on the top of the Telegraphenberg within an astronomy compound Potsdam also features a memorial centre in the former KGB prison in Leistikowstrasse In the Volkspark to the north there is one of the last monuments dedicated to Lenin in Germany Potsdam joined UNESCO s Network of Creative Cities as a Design City on October 31 2019 on the occasion of World Cities Day 21 Parks EditThere are many parks in Potsdam most of them UNESCO World Heritage Sites Among their attractions are The Chinese House in Sanssouci Park Glienicke Hunting Lodge as seen from Babelsberg Park The Marmorpalais in New Garden Sanssouci the Orangery Palace The Belvedere auf dem Klausberg Babelsberg PalaceSports Edit1 FFC Turbine Potsdam one of the most successful German female football clubs Bundesliga women Potsdam Royals American football team competing in the German Football League SV Babelsberg 03 football club Regionalliga Nordost Olympic Training Centre Potsdam de USV Potsdam rugby union 2nd Rugby Bundesliga and football Kreisklasse List of football clubs in Potsdam The Potsdamer Schlossermarathon de Potsdam Palace Marathon is a marathon in that is held annually in June Thousands of runners run the course past the palaces for the half marathon and several hundred repeat the course to complete the full marathon Notable people EditSee also Category People from Potsdam 18th century Graf Henckel von Donnersmarck Wilhelm von Humboldt Abraham Abramson 1754 1811 medalist Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg 1759 1830 Prussian field marshal Wilhelm von Humboldt 1767 1835 scholar and statesman founder of the Berlin Humboldt University Frederick William III of Prussia 1770 1840 King of Prussia 1797 1840 Wilhelm Ludwig Viktor Henckel von Donnersmarck 1775 1849 Prussian general lieutenant Eleonore Prochaska 1785 1813 woman soldier during the liberation war unrecognized as a man disguised as a drummer later as an infantryman in the Prussian army against Napoleon Friedrich Wilhelm von Rauch 1790 1850 lieutenant general in the Prussian Army Heinrich Wilhelm Krausnick 1797 1882 lawyer and Lord Mayor of Berlin19th century Frederick III Moritz Hermann von Jacobi 1801 1874 physicist and engineer Ludwig Persius 1803 1845 architect Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi 1804 1851 mathematician Adolf von Rauch 1805 1877 Prussian cavalry officer Philipp Galen 1813 1899 writer and physician Julius Lange 1815 1905 numismatist Hermann von Helmholtz 1821 1894 physiologist and physicist one of the most important natural scientists of his time Alfred Bonaventura von Rauch 1824 1900 Prussian general Friedrich Wilhelm von Rauch 1827 1907 Prussian general leutnant Egmont von Rauch 1829 1875 Prussian cavalry officer and later colonel in the Prussian Army Frederick III German Emperor 1831 1888 Emperor of the German Empire and King of Prussia 1888 Alfred von Waldersee 1832 1904 field marshal Ernst Haeckel 1834 1919 zoologist philosopher Gottlieb Graf von Haeseler 1836 1919 Prussian field marshal Hermann Schubert 1848 1911 mathematician Wilhelm II German Emperor 1859 1941 Emperor of the German Empire and King of Prussia 1888 1918 Friedrich Adolf Steinhausen 1859 1910 doctor and physiologist Friedrich Wilhelm von Rauch 1868 1899 Prussian officer Friedrich Ludwig 1872 1930 music historian and rector of the University of Gottingen Hasso von Manteuffel May 1944 Friedrich Wilhelm von Bissing 1873 1956 egyptologist Elisabeth von Knobelsdorff 1877 1959 engineer and architect Prince Eitel Friedrich of Prussia 1883 1942 second son of King William II of Prussia Ludowika Jakobsson 1884 1968 German Finnish figure skater Leo Geyr von Schweppenburg 1886 1974 general of tank troops and military attachee Luise Schulze Berghof 1889 1970 German composer and pianist Hans Karl Freiherr von Esebeck 1892 1955 general Paul Blobel 1894 1951 Nazi war criminal hanged for war crimes Hasso von Manteuffel 1897 1978 General in the Wehrmacht and later spokesman for defense of the Free Democratic Party in the Bundestag20th centuryMargarete Buber Neumann 1901 1989 writer Egon Eiermann 1904 1970 architect Louis Ferdinand of Prussia 1907 1994 German and Prussian heir to the throne and head of the House of Hohenzollern Marie Eleonore of Albania 1909 1957 princess Adam von Trott zu Solz 1909 1944 lawyer diplomat and resistance fighter Carol Victor 1913 1973 Hereditary Prince of Albania Peter Weiss 1916 1982 writer graphic artist and painter Hans Richter 1919 2008 actor Bernhard Hassenstein 1922 2016 biologist and behaviorist Burkhard Heim 1925 2001 theoretical physicist Gunther Schramm born 1929 actor Hilla Becher 1934 2015 photographer Nicole Heesters born 1937 actress Manfred Wolke born 1943 boxer and boxing coach Klaus Katzur 1943 2016 swimmer and Olympic medalist Wolfgang Joop born 1944 fashion designer Oliver Bendt born 1946 actor gymnast singer Christiane Lanzke born 1947 diver and actress Lothar Doering born 1950 handball player and coach Brigitte Ahrenholz born 1952 rower Matthias Platzeck born 1953 politician Minister President of Brandenburg Klaus Thiele born 1958 athlete Gabriele Berg born 1963 biologist and biotechnologist Ralf Brudel born 1963 rower Jens Peter Berndt born 1963 swimmer Birgit Peter born 1964 rower Carsten Wolf born 1964 cyclist world champion Daniela Neunast born 1966 steward in rowing Rene Monse born 1968 heavyweight boxer Klara Geywitz born 1976 politician Aleksandr Sayenko born 1978 footballer 20th centuryErmyas Mulugeta assaulted in a nationally significant case Honorary citizens Edit 1845 Wilhelm Ludwig Viktor Henckel von Donnersmarck Lieutenant General 1856 Friedrich von Wrangel Field Marshal 1863 Peter Joseph Lenne gardener and landscape architect 1891 Hermann von Helmholtz naturalist 1905 Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg president of the province of Brandenburg 1933 Paul von Hindenburg Fieldmarshal and Reichsprasident 1933 Adolf Hitler chancellor withdrawn 15 August 1990 by decision of the Potsdam City Council 1938 Josef Goebbels 22 Minister of Propaganda 1955 Max Volmer physical chemist 1960 Hans Marchwitza writer and proletarian poet 1965 Otto Nagel painterSee also Edit Germany portalMostar FriedensprojektReferences Edit Ergebnis der Burgermeisterwahl in Potsdam accessed 30 June 2021 Bevolkerungsentwicklung und Flachen der kreisfreien Stadte Landkreise und Gemeinden im Land Brandenburg 2021 PDF Amt fur Statistik Berlin Brandenburg in German June 2022 The Potsdam project 1996 HRH The Prince of Wales Charles Hanson Brian Steil Lucien Prince of Wales s Urban Design Task Force Prince of Wales s Institute of Architecture Prince of Wales s Institute of Architecture 1998 Introduction About us Stadtteilkatalog der Landeshauptstadt Potsdam in German Retrieved 2016 12 28 Stadtteile in German Landeshauptstadt Potsdam Retrieved 2016 12 31 a b Landeshauptstadt Potsdam Stadtteile im Blick 2019 PDF 12 3 MB in German 2020 10 15 p 4 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 05 14 Retrieved 2022 02 22 Landeshauptstadt Potsdam Stadtteile im Blick 2010 PDF 5 4 MB in German 2011 06 30 p 5 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 12 28 Retrieved 2016 12 28 Note Reports from later years omit mention of borough designations with single digit numbers Potsdam climate Average Temperature weather by month Potsdam weather averages Climate Data org en climate data org Retrieved 2019 01 30 a b Potsdam Climate Normals 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved December 8 2015 993 From Poztupimi to the Royal Seat potsdam de 1 December 2004 a b August Kopish Die Koniglichen Schlosser u Garten zu Potsdam Berlin 1854 p 18 Google Books a b Thomas Curtis 1839 The London encyclopaedia or Universal dictionary of science art literature and practical mechanics by the orig ed of the Encyclopaedia metropolitana Volume XVIII p 11 Zuwachs in Potsdam und kein Ende in Sicht permanent dead link Detailed data sources are to be found in the Wikimedia Commons Population Projection Brandenburg at Wikimedia Commons Jennerjahn Yvonne 13 November 2013 Landtag Umzug ins neue Domizil Archived from the original on 17 March 2016 Retrieved 4 January 2014 via Potsdamer Neueste Nachrichten Die Partnerstadte der Landeshauptstadt Potsdam potsdam de in German Potsdam 17 November 2004 Retrieved 2021 03 11 in German BVG Berliner public transport pdf maps showing fare zones Archived 2011 05 29 at the Wayback Machine FH Potsdam in Zahlen und Fakten www fh potsdam de in German Archived from the original on 2019 04 27 Retrieved 2019 04 27 http www pioneers in polymers com index html http www ibmt fhg de fhg ibmt en profile locations index potsdam golm jsp http www mpikg mpg de en http www mpimp golm mpg de https web archive org web 20090913060315 http www gfz potsdam de portal http www aip de http www iass potsdam de http www pik potsdam de UNESCO celebrates World Cities Day designating 66 new Creative Cities UNESCO 2019 10 30 Retrieved 2019 11 05 City Hall shocked to find Goebbels still honorary citizen of Potsdam dpa international com Retrieved 2021 10 06 Sources EditPaul Sigel Silke Dahmlow Frank Seehausen und Lucas Elmenhorst Architekturfuhrer Potsdam Architectural Guide Dietrich Reimer Verlag Berlin 2006 ISBN 3 496 01325 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Potsdam Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Potsdam Official website in German and English Extensive photoarchive about Potsdam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Potsdam amp oldid 1137456519, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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