Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/05/27
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]They are still hot on documenting everything, it's unbelievable what's still in the regional and national archives. My wife and I were recently researching the past of her father, a banker, who was apparently involved in some kind of scandal involving Hjalmar Schacht (finance minister), some familiar indutrial barons and Hitler himself, and nearly got himself shot. It is fascinating and frightening to see what is still stored and accessible - not on microfile, original documents! Even today the authorities have detailed documentation on each and every citizen from the cradle to the grave,even more on "foreigners" like me. A recent two part documentary on TV, here in Germany, tried to throw some light on the ambiguous relationship between Speer and Hitler, all it really managed to show was that Speer was a better architect of structures consisting of lies, and should have been hung a lot higher than the other Nazi brass. His Germania, as Berlin was to be known, looked like a mixture between Fritz Lang's Metropolis and the wet dreams of a greco-roman archaeologist. Hitler's personal correction to the plans was replacing the Swastika in the claws of the Eagle, atop the 300 meter high dome,with a globe denoting Germany's grip on the world. Hitler spoke of organising "delegations" from conquered countries to vist the centre of Germania to renew their fears of German might. There are still traces of Speer's plans in Berlin, the column with "Winged Victory" (Gold Else) used to be in front of the Reichstag and was moved to its present position, at the end of one axis of the city, just before the war. There is still a ferro-concrete tower weighing tens of thousands of tons which was erected to test the resistance of the subsoil to the planned massive buildings.Below ground there are also parts of the underground road system planned to keep traffic out of the centre of Germania.I recently met the authors (the Arnold brothers) of several books about "Berlins Underworld" and a historian (M. F?drowitz, bunker expert) and had the opportunity to gain access to some of these "monuments", the scale is both scary and fascinating. Strangely enough the EXPO 2000 world fair held in Hannover (the advertising was so bad that even the Dutch didn't hear about it) was designed, in part,by Albert Speer - the son of the F?hrer's Albert. cheers Douglas B. D. Colen wrote: > I have - and in some weird way they remind me of the plans for houses I > would design as a kid...fantasyland... > > > On 5/27/05 12:21 PM, "Christopher Williams" <leicachris@worldnet.att.net> > wrote: > > >>Obsessive is the word: did you ever see the plans they had for Berlin? That >>city was going to be the next Utopia. >> >>Chris >>