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1910 April: Liebermann Villa completed. 1 May: Berlin-Frohnau station opened. 24 May: Berlin-Dahlem Botanical Garden and Botanical Museum opened. 15 July: Berlin-Spandau station opened. 7 August: Last horse-drawn tram line closed. 17 November: Hohenzollern-Sport-Palast opened. 1 November: Berlin Hohenzollerndamm station opened. 1 December:
The history of Berlin starts with its foundation in the 12th century. It became the capital of the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1237, and later of Brandenburg-Prussia, and the Kingdom of Prussia. Prussia grew about rapidly in the 18th and 19th centuries and formed the basis of the German Empire in 1871. The empire would survive until 1918 when ...
22.5 ha (56 acres) The Pergamon Museum (German: Pergamonmuseum; pronounced [ˈpɛʁ.ɡa.mɔn.muˌzeː.ʊm] ⓘ) is a listed building on the Museum Island in the historic centre of Berlin, Germany. It was built from 1910 to 1930 by order of Emperor Wilhelm II and according to plans by Alfred Messel and Ludwig Hoffmann in Stripped Classicism ...
22 June – The DELAG Zeppelin dirigible, Deutschland, makes the first commercial passenger flight from Friedrichshafen to Düsseldorf in Germany. The flight takes nine hours. 16 August – Berliner FV, German association football club founded. Gymnasium Lerchenfeld is founded in Hamburg.
The unarmed student Benno Ohnesorg, a member of the German student movement, was shot and killed by Karl-Heinz Kurras, a Berlin Police inspector and East German spy, while protesting the state visit of shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran. 6 July. Langenweddingen level crossing disaster. 1968.
World Chess Championship 1910 (Lasker–Janowski) World Chess Championship 1910 (Lasker–Schlechter) Categories: Decades in Berlin. 20th century in Berlin. 1910s in Germany by city. 1910s in Prussia. Hidden category: Category series navigation decade and century.
Große Berliner Kunstausstellung (Great Berlin Art Exhibition), abbreviated GroBeKa or GBK, was an annual art exhibition that existed from 1893 to 1969 with intermittent breaks. In 1917 and 1918, during World War I, it was not held in Berlin but in Düsseldorf. In 1919 and 1920, it operated under the name Kunstausstellung Berlin.
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner: Fünf Frauen auf der Straße, 1913. The New Secession (German: Neue Secession) was an association of expressionist artists organizing joint exhibitions in Berlin 1910–1914. The New Secession, initially led by Georg Tappert and Max Pechstein, was formed after 27 expressionistic works of art had been excluded from a 1910 ...