Nazi architecture was an
architectural plan and integral part of
the Nazi party's plans to create a
cultural and spiritual rebirth in Germany
as part of
the Third Reich.

The tribune of the Zeppelinfeld
stadium in Nuremberg, where the annual Party rally took place
Adolf Hitler was an admirer of
imperial Rome and aware that some ancient
Germans had, over time, become part of
the social fabric and exerted influence on the Empire. On the other
hand, the Germanic tribes were traditionally regarded by the Romans
as enemies of the
Pax Romana.
Nonetheless, he considered the Romans an early Aryan empire, and
emulated their architecture in an original style inspired by both
neoclassicism and
art deco, sometimes known as "severe" deco,
erecting edifices as cult sites for the
Nazi
party. He also ordered construction of a type of
Altar of Victory, borrowed from the
Greeks, who were, according to Nazi ideology,
inseminated with the seed of the
Aryan
peoples. At the same time, because of his admiration for the
Classical cultures of the ancient Mediterranean, he could not
isolate and politicize German antiquity, as
Benito Mussolini had done with respect to
Roman antiquity.
Therefore he had to import political symbols
into Germany
and justify
their presence on the grounds of a spurious racial ancestry, the
myth that ancient Greeks were among the ancestors of the Germans -
linked to the same Aryan peoples.
Hitler's
fantasies about being the founder of a thousand-year Reich were in
harmony with the Colosseum
being associated with eternity. Hitler envisioned all
future Olympic games to be held in Germany in the Deutsches
Stadion
. It is clear that Hitler anticipated that
after winning the war, a subjected world would have no choice but
to send its athletes to Germany every time the Olympic games were
held. Thus, this building foreshadowed Hitler's craving for world
domination long before this aim was put into words. Hitler
habitually derived satisfaction from seeing world-famous monuments
being surpassed in size by German equivalents.
Most regimes, especially new ones, wish to make their mark both
physically and emotionally on the places they rule. The most
tangible way of doing so is by constructing buildings and
monuments. Architecture is considered to be the only art form that
can actually physically meld with the world as well as influence
the people who inhabit it. Buildings, as autonomous things, must be
addressed by the inhabitants as they go about their lives. In this
sense, people are "forced" to move in certain ways, or to look at
specific things. In so doing, Architecture affects not only the
landscape, but also the mood of the populace who are served. The
Nazis believed architecture played a key role
in creating their
new order. Architecture had
a special importance to the politicians, who like most totalitarian
leaders, sought to influence all aspects of human life.
Moreover, not only major cities but also small villages were to
express the achievement and the nature of the German people. The
very face of the land was to be transformed. It was not enough to
limit
Marxist or
liberal architecture. The new buildings must
proclaim to the world and to the unconverted German that the era of
the thousand-year Reich had dawned. Obviously, then, in seeking to
influence the foreign visitor with its overpowering representative
edifices, the Third Reich was didactic and theatrical.
Hitler the architect
Hitler was quite fond of the numerous theatres built by
Hermann and Ferdinand Fellner, who built
in the late
baroque style.
In addition, he
appreciated the stricter architects of the 19th century such as Gottfried Semper, who built the Dresden Opera House
, the Picture Gallery in Dresden
, the court
museums in Vienna
and Theophil Freiherr von Hansen,
who designed several buildings in Athens
in
1840. He raved about the Palais Garnier
, home of the Paris Opera, and the Law Courts of
Brussels
by the architect Poelaert.
Ultimately, he was always drawn back to inflated
neo-baroque such as
Kaiser Wilhelm II had fostered, through
his court architect
Ernst von Ihne.
Fundamentally, it was decadent baroque comparable to the style that
accompanied the
decline of
the Roman Empire. Thus, in the realm of architecture, as in
painting and sculpture, Hitler really remained arrested in the
world of his youth: the world of 1880 to 1910, which stamped its
imprint on his artistic taste as on his political and ideological
conceptions.
The Führer did not have one particular style; there was no official
architecture of the Reich, only the neoclassical baseline that was
enlarged, multiplied, altered and exaggerated, sometimes to the
point of ludicrousness. Hitler appreciated the permanent qualities
of the classical style as it had a relationship between the
Dorians and his own Germanic world.
Three primary roles
Nazi architecture has three primary roles in the creation of its
new order: (i)
Theatrical; (ii)
Symbolic; (iii)
Didactic.
In addition, the Nazis saw architecture as a method of producing
buildings that had a function, but also served a larger purpose.
For
example, the House of
German Art
had the function of housing art, but through its
form, style and design it had the purpose of being a community
structure built using an Aryan style, which
acted as a kind of temple to acceptable
German art.
Stage
Many Nazi buildings were stages for communal activity, creations of
space meant to embody the principles on which Nazi ideology was
based.
From Albert
Speer's seemingly iconoclastic use
of banners for the May
Day celebrations in the Lustgarten
, to the Nazi co-option of the Thing tradition, the Nazis wanted to
link themselves to a German past.
The link could be direct; a
Thingplatz
(or Thingstätte) was a meeting place near or directly on a site of
supposed special historical significance, used for the holding of
festivals associated with a
Germanic
past. This was an attempt to link the German people back to both
their history and their land. The use of 'Thing' places was closely
associated with the 'blood and soil' part of Nazi ideology, which
involved the perceived right of those of German blood to occupy
German land. The Thingplatz would contain structures, which often
included natural objects like stones and were built in the most
natural setting possible. These structures would be built following
the pattern of an ancient
Greek
theatre, following a structure of a historical culture
considered to be Aryan. This stressing of a physical link between
the past and
Nazism aided to legitimatize the
Nazi view of history, or even the Nazi regime itself. Still, the
'Thing' movement was not successful.
The link
could be indirect; the May Day celebrations
of 1936 in Berlin
took place
in a Lustgarten that had been transformed into a stage. This
transformation was not the standard dressing of a specific place
but a creation of a new anonymous, pure, cubic space that freed
itself from the immediate history of Berlin, the church and the
monarchy, yet was still associated with the distant aura of a
Hellenic past.
This was simply the
creation of a new ceremonial place in direct competition with the
former Royal Palace and Altes Museum
, both even in the 1930s, still symbols of a royal
Berlin. The symbolism was clear; any speaker at the event
would be standing in front of the Altes Museum, which housed
Germany's classical collection that could be seen by the audience
only through Nazi banners. There was a link between the new order
and the classical past, but the new order was paramount.
The Nazis would bring the community together using architecture,
creating a stage for the community experience.
These buildings were
also solely for the German people, the great hall in Berlin was not
a supranational People's House like those being built in the
Soviet
Union
, but the stage where tens of thousands of recharged
citizens would enter into a solemn mystic union with the Supreme Leader of the German Nation. The
sheer size of the stage itself would magnify the importance of what
was being said.
How these stages were set was also an issue, from the most mundane
building to the grandest, the form and style used in their
construction tell a great deal about and are symbols of those who
created them, when they were created and why they were created.
Designs of this kind occasionally occur by accident; however, the
architectural styles speak to the tastes of those who constructed
the building or paid for its construction. It also speaks to the
tastes of the general architectural movements of the time and the
regional variants that influenced them. Nazi buildings were an
expression of the essence of the movement, built as a National
Socialist building should be, regardless of the style used.
Symbolic
Determining what
National Socialists
saw as the concept of Nazi Architecture is problematic. Various
members of the leadership had differing views and tastes and
commentators see the same style in different ways.
Roger Eatwell sees the format used at the
Nuremberg rallies as a mixture of
Catholic ceremony and left-wing
Expressionist form and lighting, while Sir
Nevile Henderson saw a cathedral of
ice. Still, if a building was designed and built using the Nazi
version of what was German, it was considered Nazi
Architecture.
In general, there were two primary National Socialist styles of
architecture. Nazi Architecture in its crudest sense was either a
squared-off version of
neoclassical architecture, or a
mimicry of
völkisch and
national romanticism in
buildings and structures.
The most notable example of this is the
Wewelsburg
castle complex redesigned in a very mythological
way as a cult site for the SS
.
Especially in the North Tower of the castle medieval Romanesque and
Gothic architecture was imitated.
The Wewelsburg
was to become "centre of the world".
The
neoclassical style was primarily used for urban state buildings or
party buildings such as the Zeppelin Field
in Nuremberg, the planned Volkshalle
for Berlin and the Dietrich Eckart Stage in Berlin. This
style was not just used for physical construction, but on the
ordered columns of
searchlights that
formed
Speer's 'cathedral of light'
used at the
Nuremberg Party
Rallies.
The
völkish style was primarily used in rural settings for
accommodation or community structures like the Ordensburg
in Krössinsee
, the walls and watchtowers of KL
Flossenbürg
and KL Mauthausen
. It was also to be applied to rural new
towns as it represented a
mythical medieval time when Germany was free of foreign and
cosmopolitan influences. This style
was also used in a limited way for buildings with modern uses like
weather service broadcasting and the administration building for
the federal post office.
Most Nazi Architecture was novel neither in style nor concept; it
was not supposed to be. Even a cursory inspection of what was
intended for Berlin finds analogies all over the world.
Long
boulevards with important buildings along them can be found in the
grid pattern road structures of Washington
and New
York
, the Mall
and Whitehall
in London
, and the
boulevards of Paris
.
Large
domes can be found on the buildings of the Mughal Empire of India
, the
Capitol
in Washington, the Pantheon
and Basilica di San Pietro
in Rome
.
Even the
'Kraft durch Freude' "Strength
through Joy" resort at Prora
is not
wholly unlike the buildings envisaged by Le
Corbusier in his 'City of Three Million Inhabitants'.
The building of a formal governmental zone outside the centre of an
old city or totally on its own had become commonplace by the 1930s.
This is not to say their plans were simply an attempt to copy
others, but that they were following a pattern already established
in human society.
The forms used may have been inspired by
other city redevelopment plans like Edwin
Lutyens' Delhi
, Burnham's Chicago
or even Walter
Burley Griffin's Canberra
.
National Socialism is often viewed as
anti-modern and
romantic or having a
pragmatic willingness to use modern means in pursuit of anti-modern
purposes. This confuses the Nazi dislike of certain styles like the
Bauhaus with a blanket dislike of all modern
styles.
This was based mainly on what the Bauhaus
and others were seen as representing, like foreign influences or
the decadence of the Weimar Republic
. The lack of any
human scale details or plain exteriors may have
produced an overwhelming effect, but this style was common from the
1910s onwards. This modern approach was not limited to the
neo-classical buildings for city centres, but was also used for
völkisch buildings like Ordensburgs and
Autobahn garages.
The neo-classical style used was not novel for the time; it was
firmly anchored in time. Speer's style was assimilating the
international 1930s style of public architecture, which was then
being pursued as a modernising
classicism.
This is in direct contrast to Peter Adams's attempts to separate Nazi art from
the Zeitgeist and present it as something
that can be looked at through only the lens of Auschwitz
. This is trying to establish by default a
thesis that ugly regimes must produce ugly buildings and such
regimes are so evil that everything they produce must be evil or
third-rate. The reality was that destroying to build anew was a
standard polemical gesture of the
Modernist movement and the styles chosen were not
unlike the ones being used at the time. To criticize Speer's
architectural style is to criticise buildings being built at the
same time all over the world. Ultimately, Nazi Architecture was not
supposed to be pleasing; its purpose was to fulfil its task.
Hitler saw the buildings of the past as direct representations of
the culture that created them and how they were created. Hitler
believed they could be used by man to transmit his time and its
spirit to posterity and that in his time, ultimately, all that
remained to remind men of the great
epochs of history was their monumental
architecture. Nazi Architecture should speak to the conscience of a
future Germany centuries from now. As Hitler said in a speech, 'The
purpose of Nazi architecture and technology should be to create
ruins that would last a thousand years and thereby overcome the
transience of the market.'
Central to this was
Albert Speer's
Theory of Ruin Value, in which
the Nazis would build structures which even in a state of decay,
after hundreds or thousands of years would more or less resemble
Roman models.
Speer intended to produce this result by
avoiding elements of modern construction such as steel girders and
reinforced concrete which are
subject to weathering and by designing his buildings to withstand
the impact of the wind even if the roofs and ceilings were so
neglected that they no longer braced the walls. In this respect, it
can be seen that by going back to the materials of the past and by
the proper engineering of buildings it was possible to create a
permanence that was impossible with contemporary building materials
and styles.
It has been suggested that the use of stone
was more a result of economic necessity or the product of an
attempt by the SS
to build up
a stable position within the German economy, but both are at most
secondary to the desire for the permanence stone gives. To
Hitler, only the great cultural documents of
humanity made of
granite
and
marble could symbolize his new
order.
The theory of ruin value could be seen as a backward looking
concept; however, what it actually does is look at the types of
buildings that survive from the past, understand why they survived,
and attempt to build the new buildings of the
Reich based on such understanding. In addition,
the infrastructure and organization behind the provision of
building material was purely of the time. Hitler was not like
Shelley's Ozymandias, a leader boasting about his power to
the future, but rather a builder of symbolic expressions of the
Nazi movement and of the new Germany they would create.
Nazi
buildings were not to be like the Reichstag
, seen as a grandiose monument conjuring up
historical reminiscences, but as symbols of a new Germany.
The buildings had to be suitable for their intended role.
An
example of this is the rebuilt Reichskanzlei
that was planned as a symbol of the Greater German
Reich, which included Austria
even though at the time of planning the Anschluss was still three years away. So
important was the
symbolism of the
buildings that their form was decided on long before their
construction and in some cases, even before the events they were to
symbolize. Speer himself remarked that many of the buildings Hitler
asked him to construct were glorifying the victories he didn't yet
have in his pocket. Hitler drew sketches of buildings he hoped to
build as early as the 1920s, when there was not a shred of hope
that they could ever be built. The buildings had to look the part:
the Reichskanzlei must look like the centre of the Reich, not the
headquarters of a soap company. Nazi buildings would be the great
cultural documents that the new order would create in their
stronger, protected community.
Symbolic architecture need not be built as it often already
existed. In 1941 the SS newspaper
Das
Schwarze Korps published an essay by
Heinrich Himmler entitled "German Castles
in the East", in which he wrote, "When people are silent, stones
speak. By means of the stone, great epochs speak to the present so
that fellow citizens; are able to uplift themselves through the
beauty of self-made buildings. Proud and self-assured, they should
be able to look upon these works erected by their own community."
Himmler continues by creating a
cyclical process linking the people, their blood and their
buildings, "Buildings are always erected by people. People are
children of their blood, are members or their race. As blood
speaks, so the people build."
Where
buildings held important cultural items, they would either be
remodelled like Brunswick Cathedral
, which was the burial place of Henry the Lion, co-opted like Strasbourg
Cathedral
as the monument to Germany's unknown soldier, or
moved to a more appropriate position, like the Victory
Column
in Berlin.
Like the
Sacré-Coeur basilica
in Montmartre
or the Flavian
Amphitheatre
in Rome, the new buildings of the National
Socialists would replace the commercial buildings that were signs
of the cultural decay and general break-up of the Berlin of the
1930s. To express their true Aryan nature, the Nazis had to
destroy the creations of non-Germans and the decadent past and
accept
Hitler's judgment as to which way
German art must go in order to fulfil its task as the expression of
German character. The new Berlin, like the new National Socialist
Germany, would superimpose itself onto the decadence of the old.
The Nazi vision of a city would replace the visions of the past,
they would replace the twilight, or the past, with clarity,
cleanliness, and pure, distinct lines.
Symbols were not just limited to permanent buildings; familiar
symbols of the north
European past were used
regularly in the decorations for Nazi festivals. An example of this
is the use of the
Maypole at the May Day
celebrations. It is the traditional symbol throughout
northern Europe of the end of winter and of
the reawakening of nature and the focus of community events.
At the doors of the German Pavilion at the
1937 Paris Exhibition were two sets of seven meter high statues
that symbolized family and community. The pavilion that was
designed as a blatant symbol of Nazi Germany was planned by a
German, Albert Speer and built solely out of German materials
shipped from within Germany.
Symbolism, graphic art and hortatory inscriptions were prominent in
all forms of Nazi-approved architecture. The eagle with the
wreathed swastikas, heroic friezes and free-standing sculpture were
common. Often mottoes or quotations from Mein Kampf or Hitler's
speeches were placed over doorways or carved into walls. The Nazi
message was conveyed in friezes, which extolled labour, motherhood,
the agrarian life and other values. Muscular nudes, symbolic of
military and political strength, guarded the entrance to the Berlin
Chancellery
The three
NSDAP-Ordensburgen were Ordensburg Krössinsee
, Ordensburg Sonthofen
and Ordensburg Vogelsang
.
Didactic
Hitler saw architecture as "The Word In Stone," a method of
imparting a message. This is not regime architecture primarily for
general propaganda purposes as argued by
Benton, but is work meant to impart a
specific message.
This would be a message that all decent
Germans would understand, like the lessons of events at the
Degenerate Art exhibition staged in
Munich
in
1937. They would not understand it because they were told
to; they would understand it simply because of who they were.

A German autobahn in the 1930s
The Nazis chose new versions of past styles for most of their
architecture. This should not be viewed simply as an attempt to
reconstruct the past, but rather an effort to use aspects of the
past to create a new present. Most buildings are copies in some
form or other, but for the Nazis, copying the past not only linked
them to the past in general but also specifically to an Aryan past.
Neo-classical architecture and
Renaissance architecture were
direct representations of Aryan culture. Völkish architecture was
also Aryan but of a Germanic nature. Still, these analogues were
not part of an attempt to recreate an actual past, but were meant
to emphasize the importance of Aryan culture as a justification for
the actions of the present.
Many other nations from the Austro Hungarian Empire to the United States
have constructed major government buildings in
historical styles to get across a specific message.
While Hitler saw the architecture of the Weimar Republic as an
object lesson in cultural decline, the new buildings he would build
would teach a different lesson, that of national rebirth. The size
of the buildings proposed for Berlin would be among the largest in
the world, meant to instill in each individual German citizen the
insignificance of individuals in relation to the community as a
whole. The distinct lack of any detailing at a human scale in the
urban neo-classical building would have simply overawed, imparting
the message without any subtlety. If the message was not understood
it would be drummed in by making people go in straight lines to
predetermined positions. The message of community would even affect
holidays.
Clemens Klotz's
Prora
would not only have a Festhalle in which people would hear speeches and
get involved in communal events but also give everyone the same
view of the sea.
Engineering could be coupled with
architecture to teach lessons too. It is clear that the Autobahn
was seen as a way of creating a community, which was both
physically and symbolically linked.
When Carl
Theoder Protzen entitled his painting of the Autobahn bridge at
Leipheim
, "Clear the forest - dynamite the rock; conquer the
valley; overcome the distance; stretch the road through the German
land," he was linking clear connections between what should be done
and what it was to accomplish. Building the Autobahn would
not only teach the German people that they were linked together but
also would show that it had been accomplished by Germans working
together. It would be an inspiration for the construction of the
community of the
German People. The
effort that went into the styling of Autobahn bridges and garages
shows plainly that it was more than just a motorway. In some
circumstances, the design used for the Autobahn actually affects
the functioning of its supposed purpose.
The role the Nazis hoped architecture would play in the creation of
a new order was like that of a book: to provide a place to hold the
message, the symbols to impart it and a teacher to read it.
Architecture, like every other art form, would be produced to serve
the new
Nazi order. For them, if this meant
following existing architectural styles or providing analogues of
other buildings, then so it is.
Cult of victory
Both the Nazis and the Romans employed architecture of colossal
dimensions to overawe and intimidate. Both cultures were
preoccupied with architectural monuments that celebrated or
glorified a victory ideology: triumphal arches (the largest in the
world on Berlin's north-south axis), columns, trophies, and a cult
of pageantry associated with the subjugation of others. As Albert
Speer remarked, when it was safe to do so: "The Romans built arches
of triumph to celebrate the big victories won by the Roman Empire,
while Hitler built them to celebrate victories he had not yet
won."
The Nazis planned and built many military trophies and memorials
(
Gr Mahnmäler), on the eastern
borders of the Reich. In the same way, the Romans had built
celebratory trophies on the borders of their empire to commemorate
victories and warn off would-be attackers. One of the most
prominent memorial buildings intended to commemorate Germany's past
and anticipated military glory was
Wilhelm
Kreis's
Soldatenhalle. This was to
be yet another cult centre to promote the regime's glorification of
war, patriotic self-sacrifice and virtutes militares. The main
architectural features of this building were overtly Roman. A
groin-vaulted crypt beneath the main
barrel-vaulted hall was intended as a
pantheon of generals exhibited here in
effigy. In addition, it functioned as a
herõon, since the bones of
Frederick the Great were to be placed in
the building.
Flags and insignia played an important part in Nazi ceremonial and
in the decoration of buildings. The eagle-topped standards carried
by the SA at Nuremberg rallies were reminiscent of Roman legionary
standards, the uniformity of which Hitler admired. There can be
little doubt that Hitler's state architecture, even when seen today
in photographs of architectural models, conveys a sense of "Power
and Force" (
Gr Macht und Gewalt),
which of course Hitler wanted it to embody.
Inevitably, after Hitler's defeat, the colossal dimensions of his
buildings tended to be seen, as they were by Speer in his memoirs,
as symbols of Hitler's megalomania. This is perhaps a valid view
point, but it is also something of an oversimplification, since at
the time the buildings were planned and erected, they were valid
symbols of Germany's rapidly rising power and expressed the
optimism generated by Hitler's spectacular initial victories.
The vast
public buildings of ancient Rome have rarely been explained as
symptoms of imperial megalomania, except perhaps for the Domus Aurea
, since Roman imperialism, which generated money and
labour necessary for the erection of Rome's monumental buildings,
was supremely successful and long-lived. Hitler's
architecture is sometimes misjudged because he was building for the
future in anticipation of a greatly enlarged Reich. Here it is
worth noting that
Vitruvius perceived that
Augustus was building on a large scale for future greatness.
Hitler's optimistic expectations were frustrated and in the
aftermath of catastrophe his architectural plans seemed by many to
be those of a madman. However difficult it may be to view these
plans objectively, it would be a mistake to regard his buildings as
either psychologically ineffective or symbolically impotent. This
is certainly not the impression given by Speer or Giesler at the
time they were articulating Hitler's architectural plans.
Had Hitler achieved all his political and military aims and had his
successors consolidated and perhaps even expanded his territorial
gains, the art and architecture of Germany would undoubtedly have
reflected the sentiment that pervaded much of Rome's art in the
Augustan period, that is, a confidently assumed right to dominate
others, which
Virgil elegantly, if brutally,
expressed in
Aeneid 6.851-53: "Remember,
Roman, to exercise dominion over nations. These will be your
skills: to impose culture on peace, to spare the conquered and to
war down the proud." This passage, so much in tune with Nazi
aspirations is repeatedly referred to in the political literature
of Germany at the time.
Berlin's reshaping
In (
Mein Kampf 1.10),
Adolf Hitler states that industrialized German
cities of his day lacked dominating public monuments and a central
focus for community life. In fact, criticism of the rapid
industrialization of German cities after 1870 had already been
voiced.
The ideal Nazi city was not to be too large, since it was to
reflect pre-industrial values and its state monuments, the products
and symbols of collective effort (
Gr.), were to be given maximum prominence by
being centrally situated in the new and reshaped cities of the
enlarged Reich.
Hitler's
comments in (Mein Kampf 1.10) indicated
that he saw buildings such as the Colosseum
and the Circus Maximus
as symbols of the political might and power of the
Roman people. Hitler stated,
"Architecture is not only the spoken word in stone, but also is the
expression of the faith and conviction of a community, or else it
signifies the power, greatness and fame of a great man or ruler."
In
Hitler's cultural address, "The Buildings of the Third Reich,"
delivered in September 1937, in Nuremberg
, he affirmed that the new buildings of the Reich
were to reinforce the authority of the Nazi party and the state and
at the same time provide "gigantic evidence of the community"
(Gr. gigantischen Zeugen unserer
Gemeinschaft). The architectural evidence of this authority
could already be seen in Nuremberg, Munich and Berlin and would
become still more evident when more plans had been put into
effect.
On September 19, 1933, Hitler told the mayor of Berlin that his
city was "unsystematic", but it was not until January 30, 1937,
that Speer was officially put in charge of
plans for the reshaping of Berlin,
although he had been working on them unofficially in 1936.

200px-Bundesarchiv_Bild_146III-373,_Modell_der_Neugestaltung_Berlins_("Germania").jpg"
style='width:200px' alt="" />
The masterplan model of reshaped Berlin.
The plan that Speer coordinated as 'Inspector General of
Construction' (GBI) for the centre of Berlin was based on Roman,
not Greek, planning principles, which might or might not have been
influenced by Roman-derived town plans in Fascist Italy. Speer's
plan was to create a central north-south axis, which was to
intersect the major east-west axis at right angles.
On the north side of
the junction a massive forum of about 350,000 square metres was
planned, around which were to be situated buildings of the greatest
political and physical dimensions: a vast domed Volkshalle
on the north side, Hitler's vast new palace and
chancellery on the west side and part of the south side, and on the
east side the new High Command of the German armed forces and the
now-dwarfed pre-Nazi Reichstag. These buildings were to be
placed in strong axial relationship around the forum designed to
contain one million people, and were collectively to represent the
"maiestas imperii" (The Majesty of the Empire) and make the new
world capital,
Germania,
outshine its only avowed rival, Rome.
The plan for the centre of Berlin differed only in its dimensions
from the plans drawn up for the reshaping of smaller German cities
and for the establishment of new towns in conquered territories.
The order for the reshaping of other German cities was signed by
Hitler on October 4, 1937.
In each town, the new community buildings were not to be sited
randomly, but were to have prominent (usually central) positions
within the town plan. The clarity, order and objectivity that
Hitler aimed at in the layout of his towns and buildings were to be
achieved in conquered territories in the East by founding new
colonies and in Germany itself by reshaping the centres of already
established towns and cities. In order to provide a town with
centrally located community centres, principles of town planning
reminiscent of Greek, but more especially Roman, methods were
revived.
Nazi architecture was, both in appearance and symbolically,
intimidating, an instrument of conquest. Total architecture was an
extension of total war. Speer wrote in 1978 "My architecture
represented an intimidating display of power."
The
airport halls of Tempelhof International
Airport
built by Nazi architect Ernst Sagebiel are still known as the largest
built entities worldwide. The colossal dimensions of Roman
and Nazi buildings also served to emphasize the insignificance of
the individual engulfed in the architectural vastness of a state
building.
The philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau's reactions on
visiting the Pont du
Gard
in 1737 produced in him the response that Hitler
hoped for Berlin, to impress with its grandeur.
Architecture as religion
A major difference between the neoclassical state architecture of
Nazi Germany and neoclassical architecture in other modern
countries in Europe and America is that in Germany it was but one
facet of a severely authoritarian state. Its dictator aimed to
establish architectural order; gridiron town plans, axial symmetry,
hierarchical placement of state structure within urban space on a
scale intended to reinforce the social and political order desired
by the Nazi state, which anticipated the displacement of Christian
religion and ethical values by a new kind of worship based on the
cult of Nazi martyrs and leaders and with a value system close to
that of pre-Christian Rome.
The first
Nazi forum, Königsplatz
, in Munich was planned in 1931-32 by Hitler and his
architect Paul Ludwig Troost, whom Speer
says Hitler regarded as the greatest German architect since
Karl Friedrich
Schinkel. Troost had already redecorated the interior
of the so-called Brown House on Brienner
Strasse
in 1930 after its acquisition by the Nazi party
(Lehmann-Haupt 113). Troost, who like
his successor, Speer, aimed to revive an early classical or
Doric architecture, could not have found
a more encouraging context for his endeavours than the neo
classical architectural setting of Königsplatz. However, like
Hitler, he found
Bauhaus architecture
distasteful, the
Ehrentempel he designed
was not uninfluenced by modernist tendencies, in no respect were
his temples conventionally Doric. In the summer of 1931 Troost
prepared drawings for four party buildings that were to be erected
at the east end of the forum, symmetrically placed along
Arcisstrasse. The Nazi literature of the period
leaves little doubt that this new forum was regarded as a sacred
cult centre, which was even referred to as "Acropolis
Germainiae."
Priority was given to the erection of two "martyrs" temples of
identical shape named the
Ehrentempel,
placed just to either side of the square's long axis. The
Ehrentempel were demolished in 1947.
In 1935, Hitler said the martyrs' bodies were not to be buried out
of sight in
crypts, but should be placed in
the open air, to act as eternal sentinels for the German nation.
Hitler
later insisted on this detail when Hermann Giesler planned the Volkshalle for
Weimar
's
forum. He asked his architect to ensure that the
two crypts, which were to contain the bodies of Brown Shirts
SA
killed in
Thuringia
, which were to placed at the entrance to the
Volksahlle, be lit by open oculi. It is interesting too that
later still 1940 Hitler asked Giesler to plan his own mausoleum in
Munich in such a way that his
sarcophagus would be exposed to sun and rain.
It is
worth noting that in Hitler's will of May
2, 1938, written the day before he left Germany for his state visit
to Rome, Hitler instructed that his body was to be put in a coffin
similar to that of the other martyrs and placed in the Ehrentempel
next to the Führerbau
.
Troost's temples in Königsplatz were thus regarded as guard posts,
a notion reinforced by the presence of SS sentinels who stood guard
at the entrance of each temple. A year earlier Hitler had said that
the blood of the martyrs was to be the baptismal water (
Gr.) of the Third Reich. Such imagery
perhaps disturbed devout Christians, yet it left no doubt that the
cult of Nazi heroes was to replace the worship of Christian
martyrs. This objective was demonstrated in another way: No Nazi
forum planned for any German city was to incorporate a new church.
Indeed, a cathedral (
Gr.) was turned
into a shrine by the SS, who planned to treat the cathedrals of
Brunswick and Strasbourg in the same way; in Munich a church was
demolished to make way for new Nazi buildings. Yet, overseas the
impression was created that the building of new churches was an
integral part of the new Nazi building program. Temples for martyrs
were given pride of place, as at Königsplatz or, as at the
Weimar forum, martyrs' crypts at the entrance
of the Volkshalle were given prominence.
On September 6, 1938, Hitler made his position clear about the
attitude of the Nazis toward religion. He said that in its purpose
National Socialism had no mystic cult, only the care and leadership
of a people defined by a common blood relationship. He continued
with the remark that Nazis had no rooms for worship but only halls
for the people (that is, no churches, but Volkshallen) no open
spaces for worship, but spaces for assemblies and parades (
Gr.ätze). Nazis had no religious retreats,
only sports arenas and playing fields (
Gr.) and the characteristic feature of Nazi
places of assembly was not the mystical gloom of a cathedral, but
the brightness and light of a room or hall that combined beauty
with fitness for its purpose. Three days prior to making this
statement, which relates precisely to the functions of Nazi state
building plans and types, Hitler had stated that worship for Nazis
was exclusively the cultivation of the natural (that is, the
Dionysiac). In addition,
Alfred
Rosenberg made it clear that Nazism and the
Christian Church were incompatible.
However, Hitler's model was that of a Roman Catholic Church. The
mysticism of Christianity, created buildings with a mysterious
gloom which made men more ready to submit to the renunciation of
self. Hitler was deeply impressed by the organization, ritual and
architecture of the church. In writing of the spell which an orator
can weave over an audience, Hitler stated:
He might have envied the powerful influence, which the church
exerted on the masses, for on one occasion Hitler declared:
Whereas the Nazi buildings should reflect the devout spirit of the
movement, there was no place for mysticism in them. Nazism was
cool-headed and realistic. It mirrored scientific knowledge. It was
not a religious cult. Hitler noted that the Nazi party had no
religious retreats and no rooms for worship with the mystical gloom
of the cathedral but rather halls for the Volk
Thus, the huge Volkshalle was to dominate Berlin's new forum and
north-south axis, whereas at EUR the new Church of the Saints Paul
and Peter dominated the new town's decumanus.
Its dome is the
second largest in Rome after that of St. Peter's
Basilica
, whereas the dome of Saint Peter's would have
fitted through the oculus in the dome of the Berlin
Volkshalle. No two buildings could better illustrate the
differences between Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy with respect to
Christian worship. Fascist Italy incorporated Rome of the Caesars
and of the Popes. Nazi Germany espoused only the values of pagan
Rome where Christians who flouted the cult of the emperor were
penalized.
The globe on the lantern of St. Peter's
Basilica
is surmounted by a cross. The globe of the
world, which was to be placed on the lantern of the Berlin
Volkshalle, was firmly gripped in the talons of an imperial eagle,
which were also
Reichsadler and the
attribute of
Zeus/
Jupiter. The political theme of a globe
gripped by an eagle was rendered in bronze by the sculptor
Ernst Andreas Rauch for the exhibition
of art in the House of German Art in 1940.
Not only were churches excluded from the new fora but also so was
the town hall (
Gr.) since the mayor
(
Gr.ürgermeister) yielded to the
Führer as the representative of local community and nation. This
was an essential feature of the leader principle (
Gr.Füherprinzip).
In the Nuremberg Party Rallies, leader and led met together and
everyone was filled with wonder at the event, in one of Hitler's
Nuremberg speeches he stated, "Not every one of you sees me and I
do not see every one of you. But I feel you and you feel
me!."
A notable feature of these rallies was that they were often held at
night with spectacular light effects, such as powerful search
lights, creating pillars of white light many kilometres long around
the perimeter of an assembly ground. The effect of such a
contrivance was described as a "Cathedral of Light" (
Gr. Lichtdom). The term is most appropriate,
since Hitler had already stated in Mein Kampf that the Church in
its wisdom had studied the psychological appeal made upon
worshippers by their surroundings: the use of artificially produced
twilight casting its secret spell upon the congregation, as well as
incense and burning candles. If the National Socialist speaker were
to study the psychology of these effects, it would be beneficial.
The lighting effects in Nuremberg, particularly at the Zeppelinfeld
stadium, owed nothing to chance. The congregationalizing of Nazi
souls in assembly buildings needed a suitable political framework
to make it possible.
Theory of Ruin Value
The "Theory of Ruin Value" (
Gr.
Ruinenwerttheorie) was conceived by Albert Speer, who
recommended that, in order to provide a "bridge to tradition" to
future generations, modern "anonymous" materials such as steel
girders and
ferroconcrete should
be avoided in the construction of monumental party buildings
wherever possible, since such materials would not produce
aesthetically acceptable ruins. Thus the most politically
significant buildings of the Reich would to some extent even after
falling into ruins after thousands of years, resemble their Roman
models. The quarries of the Reich could not supply enough granite
to build Hitler's monuments for posterity. Consequently, vast
quantities of granite and marble were ordered from quarries in
Sweden, Finland, Denmark, France and Italy.
In
Mein Kampf, Hitler had stressed the
need for increased expenditure on public buildings that in terms of
durability and aesthetic appeal would match the
opera publica of the ancient world.
After the total collapse of the Third Reich in 1945, one of Speer's
major state buildings, the new
Chancellery in Berlin, did not become an
aesthetic ruin but was treated like the monuments of ancient Rome,
after its political collapse.
For example the Russians in 1947 demolished
the hated Machtzentrum of the Führer,
the marble that had once decorated the representative rooms of the
palace was reused to build a Russian war memorial in East Berlin's Treptower Park
and to construct the Thälmann-Platz and the Mohrenstraße
U-Bahn stations
.
Hitler's mausoleum
During
Hitler's tour of Paris in June 1940 he visited Les Invalides
, where he stood silently gazing upon Napoleon's tomb. In late 1940, Hitler
advised Giesler about the Pantheon and the mausoleum he wanted to
build.
"Imagine
to yourself, Giesler, if Napoleon's sarcophagus were placed beneath
a large oculus, like that of the Pantheon
." He goes on to express an almost mystical
delight in the thought that the sarcophagus would be exposed to
darkness and light, rain and snow and thus be linked directly to
the
universe.
Thus, Hitler decided on a mausoleum the design of which was based
on that of the Pantheon, not in its original function as a temple
but in its later function as a tomb of the famous: the artist
Raphael and the kings
Victor Emannuel II and
Umberto I.
The mausoleum was to be connected to the
Halle der Partei at Munich by a bridge over
Gabelsbergerstrasse, to become a
party-political cult centre in the city regarded by Hitler as the
home of the Nazi party. The dimensions were slightly smaller than
the Pantheon. The oculus in the centre of the dome was to be one
metre wider in diameter than that of the Pantheon (8.92 metres) to
admit more light on Hitler's sarcophagus, placed immediately under
it on the floor of the rotunda. The modest dimensions of the
structure and its lack of rich decoration are at first sight
puzzling in light of Hitler's predilection for gigantic dimensions,
but in this case the focal point of the building was the Führer's
sarcophagus, which was not to be dwarfed by dimension out of all
proportion to the size of the sarcophagus itself. Likewise, rich
interior decoration would have distracted the attention of
"pilgrims."
Giesler's scale model of the building
apparently pleased Hitler, but the model and plans, kept by Hitler
in the Reichskanzlei
, are now probably in the hands of the Russians or
have been destroyed. It was perhaps because Hitler was so pleased
with the design of his own mausoleum that in late autumn 1940 he
asked Giesler to design a mausoleum for his parents in Linz
.
Giesler gives no details of the structure, but it is clear from the
photograph of his model that once more Hadrian's Pantheon was the
model.
Sculpture
Sculpture was used as part of, and in conjunction with, Nazi
architecture to embody the "German Spirit" of divine destiny.
Sculpture expressed the National Socialist obsession with the ideal
body and espoused nationalistic, state approved values like
loyalty, work, and family.
Josef Thorak
and
Arno Breker were the most famous
sculptors of the Nazi regime.
Arno Breker was in a certain sense both the best and the worst of
the Nazi artists. Nominated as official state sculptor on Hitler's
birthday in 1937, his technique was excellent, and his choice of
subject, poses, theme were outstanding. Breker uses his numerous
"naked men with swords" to unite the notions of health, strength,
competition, collective action and willingness to sacrifice the
self for the common good seen in many other Nazi works with
explicit glorification of
militarism.
Labour and plunder
The number of skilled and unskilled workers required to erect
Hitler's increasingly gigantic buildings created a labour problem.
When he assumed power in 1933, there were still many unemployed
workers in Germany, some of whom were given work on public building
schemes that Hitler thought would stimulate a sluggish German
economy and at the same time provided him with popular propaganda
"Hitler Creates Jobs" (
Gr Hitler
Schafft Arbeit). The majority of the unemployed were quickly
absorbed by the armaments factories and not by the construction
industry, as Nazi propaganda suggested.
However, the unemployed did not always thank Hitler for their
employment; German workers employed on the building of the
autobahns repeatedly went on strike from 1934 onward because of
their atrocious working conditions, which led to graffiti such as
"Adolf Hitler's roads are built with the blood of German workers."
The
Gestapo
was ruthlessly used for strike-breaking and
recalcitrant workers were sent to concentration camps on the
assumption that they were communists.
As preparations for war and later as the demands of war absorbed
increasingly larger quantities of steel, concrete and manpower, the
state building program slowed down to the point where in 1943 all
work virtually came to a halt at the Nuremberg rally grounds.
New
quarries within Germany and Austria were established by the SS, who
set up concentration camps such as Mauthausen
, Flossenbürg
, Natzweiler
and Gross-Rosen
, where inmates were forced to quarry stone for
Hitler's buildings. The inmates were to be given minimal,
low-cost diets, in which Himmler took a special interest. On March
23, 1942, Himmler asked
Oswald Pohl "to
gradually develop a diet which, like that of Roman soldiers or
Egyptian slaves, contains all the vitamins and is simple and
cheap."
Plans were also made to import three million
slavic peoples into Germany to work for
twenty years on the Reich's building sites. By May 1941 more than
three million people were being forced to work in Germany and of
these a third were prisoners of war and the rest of the people
forcibly removed from conquered territories.
This use of forced slave labour and the massive expenditure of
funds on buildings commissioned by an autocrat under no constraint
to disclose or justify such an expenditure, invites comparison with
Roman methods of paying for and erecting the
opera publica.
Rome's vast state buildings, admired and envied by Hitler, could be
built only because Roman imperialism over a period of centuries
generated the wealth and made available the manpower to pay for and
erect the structures that enhanced the "sovereign power of the
Roman people or the emperor" (
Lt Maiestas) and
spread the propaganda of the emperor. In Rome public buildings were
customarily paid for out of plunder (
Lt
Manubiae) derived from foreign wars. For example,
Trajan's vast forum was financed from booty derived
from his
Dacian wars.
Julius Caesar's grandiose building plans,
partly put into effect after his death by Augustus, were made
possible thanks to the plunder he had gained from his wars in
Gaul. The acquisition of works of art for the
embellishment of private and public buildings was also frequently
based on plunder.
Here one can point to the aftermath of the
sack of Corinth
by Lucius
Mummius Achaicus in 146 B.C., when shiploads of art treasures
were sent to Rome. So too Hitler "collected" works of art from
all conquered territories for eventual exhibition in the vast
gallery that was to have been built in Linz
.
The use of forced labour on building sites both in Rome and in the
provinces was a normal Roman practice. Thus, buildings like the
Congress Hall in Nuremberg and the Volkshalle in Berlin, inspired
by the Colosseum and the Pantheon, respectively, were not merely
symbols of tradition, order and reliability, but signaled a far
more sinister intention on the part of the autocrat who
commissioned them: a return to Roman ethics, which recognized the
natural right of a conqueror to enslave conquered peoples in the
most literal sense of the word, a right already made manifest even
within the sphere of architecture by the creation of concentration
camps, whose inmates were forced to quarry the stone for the
Reich's buildings.
Thus, it seems clear that Hitler's grandiose plans for the
architectural embellishment of Berlin and Germany's regional
capitals could have been achieved only by using the same methods as
those employed by the Romans: forcible acquisition of funds and
forced labour. This would have caused two distinct
socio-demographic classes; those that are slave owners and those
that are slaves.
See also
General
Nazi construction
Hitler's builders
References
- Scobie 92
- Scobie 80
- Taylor 11
- Speer, Third Reich,
75-76
- Speer, pp. 93-4
- Taylor 13
- Scobie 133-134
- Petsch 112
- Scobie 134
- Hitler, Table Talk,
146
- Taylor
- Scobie 136
- Krier 219
- Taylor 250-269
- Scobie 41
- Lehmann-Haupt 111
- Giesler 121
- Giesler 116-117
- Thies, Hitlers Stadte,
60
- Scobie 65
- Baynes 577
- Taylor 33
- Petsch 82
- Baynes 197
- Mein Kampf pg.
532
- Thies, Weltherrschaft,
100
- Scobie 94
- Mein Kampf
1.10
- Scobie 95-96
- Roland Harder: Reichskanzlei
- Giesler 31
- Scobie 116
- Giesler 35
- Lärmer 52-55
- Lärmer 54
- Schönberger
164-166
- Thies, Nazi Architecture,
58
- Homze 68
- Scobie 131
- De Jaeger 52-56
- Scobie 137
Further reading
Books
- Baynes, Norman H. The Speeches of Adolf
Hitler, April 1922-August 1939, V1 & V2. London: Oxford
University Press, 1942. V1 - ISBN 0-598-75893-3 V2 - ISBN
0-598-75894-1
- Cowdery, Ray and Josephine. The New German
Reichschancellery in Berlin 1938-1945
- De Jaeger, Charles. The Linz File,
New York: Henry Holt & Co, 1982. ISBN 0-03-061463-5.
- Giesler, Hermann. Ein Anderer Hitler:
Bericht Seines Architekten Erlebnisse, Gesprache, Reflexionen, 2nd
Edition (Illustrated), Druffel, 1977. ISBN 3-8061-0820-X.
- Helmer, Stephen. Hitler's Berlin: The
Speer Plans for Reshaping the Central City (Illustrated). Ann
Arbor: UMI Research Press, 1985. ISBN 0-8357-1682-1.
- Hitler, Adolf. Hitler's Table Talk
1941-1944: His Private Conversations, 3rd Edition. New York:
Enigma Books, 2000. ISBN 1-929631-05-7.
- Homze, Edward L. Foreign Labor in Nazi
Germany. New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 1967. ISBN
0-691-05118-6.
- Jaskot, Paul. The Architecture of
Oppression: The SS, Forced Labor and the Nazi Monumental Building
Economy. New York: Routledge, 2000.
- Krier, Leon. Albert Speer
Architecture. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1989.
ISBN 2-87143-006-3.
- Lärmer, Karl. Autobahnbau in Deutschland
1933 bis 1945. Berlin: 1975.
- Lehmann-Haupt, Hellmut. Art under a
Dictatorship (Illustrated). New York: Octagon Books, 1973.
ISBN 0-374-94896-8.
- Lehrer, Steven. The Reich Chancellery and
Fuhrerbunker Complex
- Petsch, Joachim. Baukunst Und Stadtplanung
Im Dritten Reich: Herleitung, Bestandsaufnahme, Entwicklung,
Nachfolge (Illustrated). C. Hanser, 1976. ISBN
3-446-12279-6.
- Rittich, Werner, Architektur und
Bauplastik der Gegenwart, published by Rembrandt-Verlag
G.M.B.H., Berlin, 1938
- Schönberger, Angela. Die Neue
Reichskanzlei Von Albert Speer, Berlin: Mann, 1981. ISBN
3-7861-1263-0.
- Scobie, Alexander. Hitler's State
Architecture: The Impact of Classical Antiquity. University
Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1990. ISBN
0-271-00691-9.
- Schmitz, Matthias. A Nation Builds:
Contemporary German Architecture. New York: German Library of
Information, 1940.
- Speer, Albert. Inside The Third
Reich. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1970. ISBN
0-02-037500-X.
- Spotts, Frederic. Hitler and the Power of
Aesthetics. Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press, 2002. ISBN
1-58567-345-5
- Taylor, Robert. Word in Stone: The Role of
Architecture in the National Socialist Ideology. Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1974. ISBN 0-520-02193-2.
- Thies, Jochen. Hitlers Stadte: Baupolitik
Im Dritten Reich E. Dokumentation (Illustrated). Wird
verschickt aus, Germany: Böhlau Köln, 1978. ISBN
3-412-03477-0.
- Thies, Jochen. Architekt der
Weltherrschaft. Die Endziele Hitlers. 1982. ISBN
3-7700-0425-6.
- Zoller, Albert von. Hitler privat,
1949. ISBN B0000BPY63.
Documentaries
- This
film takes viewers on a then and now tour of the various Nazi sites such as Tannenberg Memorial
, Hindenburg's Neudeck Estate,Maginot Line, big guns batteries of The Atlantic Wall, U-boat Submarine pens, Hitler's campaign headquarters
of Wolfsschanze
and Wolfsschlucht 2
, Obersalzberg
, Nazi party rally grounds
, D-Day landing beaches of the Normandy campaign, Ardennes
, scene of the infamous battle of the Bulge.
Archival film is 1st generation 35mm film from the Nazi Ministry of
Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, as well as current footage
of each site as they appear today. English, DVD, 4 discs,
232 minutes.
- this production captures the mystic Teutonic fortresses of Nazi
Germany. The inside look at the Third Reich's
secretive Order Castles of Hitler's political soldiers, Hitler Youth and SS
.
DVD, English, 60 minutes
- Goebbels, Joseph. Hitler's
Constructions/Die Bauten von Adolf Hitler (propaganda film),
International Historic Films, 1938.
- This
propaganda film shows the varieties of
National Socialist constructions: youth hostels and party schools,
bridge projects and the Autobahn, ministries and party buildings,
as well as the famous monumental works, such as the Zeppelinfeld
at Nuremberg. German language, English subtitles; , 17 minutes.
- This film analyzes the aesthetic's created and evisioned by
Adolf Hitler and the top echelon of the
Third Reich. Using
never-before-seen footage, the film attempts to shed light on the
Nazis obsession with concepts of order and stability borrowed from
ancient Greece
and
Rome. The film also attempts to show how the Nazi aesthetic
led to the banning of such modern artists as Picasso. This
disturbing film documents the Nazi philosophy of beauty through
violence, highlighting Hitler's views on culture, art and
architecture. Includes exclusive archival footage of the
last days of the Third Reich, with film shot inside Hitler's
bunker
.
- Kiefer, Kent. Ruins of the Third
Reich, Kiefer Entertainment, 2005.
- This
film was shot in 1947 by an American
industrialist and covers the destruction of the
Third Reich in World War II.
Many of the Nazi Party's most sacred and
important sites appear in this film in total ruins. Included is rare and
never before seen footage of Hitler's bunker, the Reich
Chancellery
, Hitler's office, Nuremberg rally sites and much
more. Included is footage of Goebbels residence after being partially
destroyed by Russian gunfire, Luftwaffe Administrative
Headquarters (Post War American Military Government H.Q.), the
Reichstag and the 1870 Victory
Column that Hitler had raised by 30 feet (9 meters).
Also seen
is the Olympic
Stadium
where the 1936
Summer Olympics took place, the Krupp Steelworks in Essen, the former
Krupp Estate (British Administrative
H.Q.), the ruins of Cologne, a trip up the
Rhine
, the Nuremberg Palace of Justice
and the Munich beer garden Burger Brau Keller where Hitler's career
began. This film is a fascinating historical document and
time capsule depicting the aftermath of Germany's destruction in
World War II.
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