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The Charlottenburg Mausoleum
Vorderansicht des Mausoleums mit Statue

Queen Luise's Temple for Eternity

Immediately following the death in 1810 of the beloved Queen Luise, who was highly esteemed by the people, her mausoleum was built according to a design by Heinrich Gentz.

The original sandstone columned façade, presumably designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, was transferred to Peacock Island in 1828-29 and replaced by a replica made of red granite.

The interior hall was initially intended only for the Queen's marble sarcophagus, which was erected in 1815. When Luise's husband, Frederick William III, died in 1840, the mausoleum was enlarged according to Schinkel's designs. After the deaths of Emperor William I in 1888 and his wife Augusta in 1890, the building was enlarged once again and their marble sarcophagi were placed here in 1894.

Aside from the royal couples mentioned above, other members of the royal family were also interred in a crypt beneath the mausoleum that is not open to the public: Auguste Princess von Liegnitz (the second wife of Frederick William III), and Prince Albrecht (Luise and Frederick William III's youngest son), as well as Frederick William's heart placed at the feet of his parents.


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Grabmonument aus Carrara-Marmor, 1814
Grabmonument aus Carrara-Marmor, 1814

Marmorsarkophag Kaiser Wilhelm I. Innenansicht des Mausoleums
Marmorsarkophag Kaiser Wilhelm I. Innenansicht des Mausoleums
 
 


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