Home

Home

News Service Palaces & Gardens Foundation Shop
 

Search

 

Information for :

Get our newsletter

 
English
Deutsch
Contact



English Français Italiano Español Português Polski Russkiy Deutsch







THE NEW PAVILION
Panoramaansicht vom Neuem Pavillion

A Jewel from Schinkel's Era

In 1824 Frederick William III had Karl Friedrich Schinkel build him a square, two-story, summer house, east of the New Wing at Charlottenburg Palace and very close to the Spree River. Its model was taken from the Neapolitan Villa Reale del Chiatamone, where the king had stayed during his trip to Italy in 1822. The most obvious reason for erecting the pavilion seems to have been to mark the king's second, morganatic marriage to Auguste Princess of Liegnitz that same year.

The summer villa of simple, middle-class décor, which was predominantly used as Frederick William III's private sanctuary, was almost completely destroyed during World War II.

Since 1970, the interior, which has had to be reconstructed to a great extent, has housed a museum with masterpieces from Schinkel's era. Paintings from the Romantic Movement and the Biedermeier period - by Carl Blechen, Karl Friedrich Schinkel and Eduard Gaertner - as well as furniture, sculpture, porcelain and decorative cast ironwork made in Berlin are on display.


 Address, arrival, prices
 Position Plan

Frederick William III of Prussia
Frederick William III of Prussia

Auguste Countess of Liegnitz New Pavilion
Auguste Countess of Liegnitz New Pavilion
 
 


Visitor´s center

 
 

 Events

 

 
  Palaces in Berlin

 
  Palaces in the Mark Brandenburg

 
  Potsdam's Park Landscape

 
 
 
 
 
 
  zum Seitenanfang