Zossen

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Template:Infobox German location

File:Zossen Nunsdorf church.jpg
Church in Nunsdorf

Zossen (Script error: No such module "IPA".; Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA".) is a German town in the district of Teltow-Fläming in Brandenburg, about Script error: No such module "convert". south of Berlin, and next to the B96 highway. Zossen consists of several smaller municipalities, which were grouped in 2003 to form the city.

Geography

Since the 2003 municipal reform, Zossen consists of the following districts and municipalities:

  • Glienick
  • Horstfelde
  • Schünow
  • Werben
  • Kallinchen
  • Nächst Neuendorf
  • Nunsdorf
  • Schöneiche
  • Wünsdorf
  • Funkenmühle
  • Lindenbrück
  • Neuhof
  • Waldstadt
  • Zesch am See
  • Zossen
  • Dabendorf

History

Zossen, like many places in Brandenburg, was originally a Slavic settlement. Its name (Template:Langx) may derive from "Sosna", meaning pine, a tree quite common in the region.

In 1875, Zossen railway station opened on the railway line from Berlin to Dresden and the Prussian military railway to the artillery range at Kummersdorf-Gut in present-day Am Mellensee. Between 1901 and 1904, Zossen adopted the use of various high-speed vehicles, such as electric locomotives and trams, for transportation to and from Berlin-Marienfelde. These vehicles were powered by an alternating current of 15 kV and used a variable frequency. The power was transmitted by three overhead lines arranged one above the other.

Imperial German Army garrison

File:Halbmondlager Mosque in camp.jpg
Mosque view in the POW camp: In July 1915, the first mosque on German soil was erected in the so-called Crescent Camp Wünsdorf (Halbmondlager Wünsdorf). The POW camp held enemy soldiers of the Islamic faith, allowing them to practice their religion in the mosque. The construction was financed by the Prussian Army. (Photo circa 1915)

In 1910, an artillery proving ground and garrison of the Imperial German Army were established in the Waldstadt section of the Wünsdorf community, a site that remains in use today. During World War I, it housed several prisoner-of-war camps, including the "Crescent Camp" (Halbmondlager), which was designated for Muslim soldiers who had fought for the Triple Entente.[1] Notably, the first mosque in Germany was erected here.[1] The mosque's wooden construction, financed by the Prussian Army, featured a 25-meter high minaret that was built in just five weeks in July 1915.[1] The camp operated from 1915 until 1917, serving as a showcase for Germany's war propaganda. It was designed not only to display the supposed humane treatment of prisoners but also to persuade them to join the Central Powers' cause. Named after the structure, the adjacent Mosque Street (Script error: No such module "Lang".) has kept its name to this day.[2][3]

German Reichswehr complex

File:Eingang Turnanstalt Wünstorf Zossen.jpg
The entrance to the former Imperial Gymnastics Gymnasium (Kaiserliche Turnanstalt) and later German Army Sports School Wünsdorf, built between 1914 and 1916. Today, the buildings are falling into disrepair.

The military complex in Wünsdorf continued to be used after the end of the First World War in 1918. On 1 October 1924, the first German Armed Forces (Reichswehr) military sports courses were initiated at the Imperial Gymnastics Gymnasium (Kaiserliche Turnanstalt) as part of the newly founded popular sports movement (Volkssportbewegung), which ran nationwide until 1933. In 1934, it was converted into the Army Sports School Wünsdorf, promoting competitive sports in the German Reichswehr. For the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, German athletes were prepared here, while athletes from other nations were accommodated in the Olympic Village. The first director of the Reichswehr sports school, from 1919 to 1924, was Template:Interlanguage link, a German army officer, instructor, sports author, and advocate of the early Freikörperkultur (naturism) movement in Germany. Additional barracks, a hospital, and horse stables were later constructed.

Underground military bunkers

From 1939 to 1945, during World War II, Wünsdorf served as the largest and most advanced German army headquarters, housing the Zeppelin signals intelligence (SIGINT) bunker, as well as the Maybach I and II underground headquarters of the German Wehrmacht (OKW) and the Army's Supreme High Command (OKH).

Soviet occupation and military base

After World War II, the area became the site of a Soviet military base in East Germany known as the "House of Officers" or "Lenin City", the largest outside Russia, accommodating up to 75,000 Soviet men, women, and children with daily trains to Moscow.[4] Soviet troops remained until their withdrawal following the German reunification in August 1994. Since then, the area has returned to civilian use as the Wünsdorf-Waldstadt book and bunker town, founded in 1998.[5] Although much of it lies abandoned, evidence of Soviet occupation remains visible.[6] By late 2019, roughly 1,700 apartments had been converted from the old barracks, with another 700 planned for subsequent years.

A 2017 news report indicates that, at its peak, the military base was home to approximately 75,000 Soviet people, with access to stores, schools, and leisure centres. After the base was abandoned, authorities discovered "98,300 rounds of ammunition, 47,000 pieces of ordnance, 29.3 tonnes of munitions and rubbish, including chemicals... houses were full of domestic appliances".[7]

While new uses have not been found for the installations and bunkers of the unmodified areas of the military base,[6] they are somewhat maintained, and there are various guided tours, exhibits, and events.[5] Some parts remain off-limits.[4][8][9]

File:Zossen Bahnhof KME.jpg
Zossen station
File:Dorfkirche Schünow Südseite.jpg
Church in Schünow

Timeline

  • 1809/1810: Kietz and the vineyards of Zossen are suburbanised
  • 1885: Monument to the fallen soldiers of the 1864, 1866, and 1870 wars is erected in Kietz
  • 1906: School on Kirchplatz is expanded
  • 1910: Military area between Zossen and Wünsdorf is developed
  • 1915: First mosque built on German soil in the POW camp
  • 1919: Reichswehr military sports school
  • 1932: Flyers of the town councillor and deacon Template:Interlanguage link multi regarding the threatening change in the Protestant community and the city Zossen
  • 1933: As a result of the National Socialists' rise to power, Socialists and Communists in Zossen are arrested by SS troops and are held in the school on Kirchplatz. Emil Phillip is removed from his post, upon the order of Pastor Eckerts
  • 1934: Expansion of the town hall
  • 1939: The military zone in Zossen is developed into military headquarters
  • 1956: The city park is created
  • 1992: The "Alter Krug" Zossen society is founded
  • 1994: Formation of the administrative district of Teltow-Fläming from the old districts of Jüterbog, Luckenwalde, and Zossen
  • 1996: 450th anniversary of Prince Elector Joachim II's awarding of rights and privileges to Zossen
  • 1998: Wünsdorf Book Town declared, the only book town in Germany[5] – though Mühlbeck-Friedersdorf, which started in 1997, claims to be the first book town in Germany.[10]

Demography

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Mayors

  • Hans-Jürgen Lüders (SPD) 1993–2003
  • Michaela Schreiber: 2003-2019
  • Wiebke Schwarzweller: since 2019

Notable people

File:Budeus, Walter.jpg
Walter Budeus

See also

References

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  4. a b "The Forbidden City: inside the abandoned Soviet camp of Wünsdorf", The Guardian, Ciarán Fahey, 11 January 2017
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  7. The Forbidden City: inside the abandoned Soviet camp of Wünsdorf
  8. "This abandoned 'Forbidden City' was once the largest Soviet military base in East Germany". CNN Travel
  9. "Contact & Getting There". buecherstadt.com
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External links

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