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The Goslar familiy's address in Berlin

This was the address of the Goslar family in Berlin until 1933.

The street no longer exists, the area has changed significantly and this location is indicated based on an address book from 1932.[1]

The historic street name In den Zelten in Berlin-Tiergarten goes back to linen tents that stood here in the mid-eighteenth century. In this area, Huguenot refugees were the first to receive permission from King Frederick II (aka Frederick the Great) to offer refreshments in this part of the zoo in 1745. The street had a number of prominent residents, including pianist and composer Clara Schumann, writers Bettina von Arnim and Käthe Brodnitz (at number 21), publisher and film producer Willi Münzenberg, and actor Max Reinhardt (also at number 21). The Institut für Sexualwissenschaft was located on the corner of In den Zelten 10 and Beethovenstraße 3, which also served as the home address of sexologist and sexual reformer Magnus Hirschfeld.[2]

Two Stolpersteine ​​(stumbling stones) commemorate the stay of Hans Goslar and his wife at this address.[3]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Berliner Adreßbuch 1932 unter Benutzung amtlicher Quellen, deel 4, Berlijn: August Scherl, 1932, p. 981-982.
  2. ^ Zie https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_den_Zelten (geraadlpeegd 10 januari 2024).
  3. ^ Stolpersteine in Berlin (geraadpleegd 10 januari 2024).