Other Definitions
berchtesgaden (dest)

Berchtesgaden

Berchtesgaden is a German municipality in the Bavarian Alps with a population of around 9,000. It is located in the district of Berchtesgadener Land in Bavaria, close to the border with Austria, 30 km south of Salzburg and 180 km south-east of Munich. It is situated north of the Berchtesgaden National Park.
Map
align="center" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Das Wappen von Berchtesgaden align="center" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Lage Berchtesgadens in Deutschland
colspan="2" bgcolor="#FFDEAD" | Data
State: Bavaria
Region: Oberbayern
District: Berchtesgadener Land
Area: 34,78 km²
Population: 7.672 (30.06.2002)
Population per km²: 221 people/km²
Altitude: 520m to 1100m above sea-level
Postal code: 83471
Telephone prefix number: +49 8652
Geographic location: 41 37' n. Br.
13 0' . L.
number plate: BGL
Address of townhall: Rathausplatz 1
83471 Berchtesgaden
Website: www.berchtesgaden.de
colspan="2" bgcolor="#FFDEAD" | Politics
Mayor: Rudolf Schaupp (FWG)
Nearby to the south is the second highest mountain in Germany, Mount Watzmann (2713 m) and a lake called the Knigssee (5.2 km²). Also there is the Kehlstein mountain (1835 m), at the top of which is the Kehlsteinhaus (sometimes called "The Eagle's Nest"), offering remarkable views. The area was historically noted for its salt mines, close by is the Obersalzberg (literally upper salt mountain). The site was appropriated by the Nazis for senior leaders to enjoy in the 1930s, one of Hitler's residences, the Berghof was there (demolished in 1953, ruins removed in 1996). A number of other relics of the Nazi era are in the area, the Kehlsteinhaus was build as a present for Hitler's 50th birthday and was only fortunately saved from being demolished post-war, the Gestapo HQ at Hotel Zum Trken, the remains of houses belonging to Hermann Gring, Albert Speer, and Martin Bormann, a massive railway station, the Hotel Platterhof (renamed the General Walker Hotel, 1953 and demolished, 1999) and a number of bunkers and similar fortifications. Post-war the Nazi buildings were acquired by the US military and during the Cold War the area was a Armed Forces Recreation Center. Today there is a documentation centre on the Obersalzberg which not only shows the Obersalzberg in the 1930s and 40s, but also the crimes of the Nazi-regime.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
collecting
salvador dal
ides of march
escherichia coli
william makepeace thackeray
petrus peregrinus
vanity fair
acetic acid bacteria
arthrobacter
mineral salts pyridone broth
the muppet show
bacillus cereus
lumen gentium
dei verbum
bacterial growth
bdellovibrio
botulism
witenagemot
divorce
harold ii of england
godwin, earl of wessex
parser
alappuzha
library of congress classification:class h social sciences
khlysts
russian orthodox church
darmstadtium
broca's area
atf
lead azide
botulin toxin
8th century bc
9th century bc
joseph priestley
550s bc
7th millennium bc
6th millennium bc
bessemer process
9th millennium bc
photomontage
10th century bc
8th millennium bc
conjugate acid
founding of rome