Preparations and burial in 1848 The first people to be buried in the Cemetery of the March Fallen were 183 civilian victims of the
barricade battles of the March Revolution on March 18, 1848. They were buried on March 22, 1848, on Lindenberg, the highest elevation of the , which was still under construction at the time and was also popularly known as . The Berlin City Council only decided to build the new cemetery on a site the day before the burial based on a motion by city council member
Daniel Alexander Benda. It was intended that the fallen soldiers should also be buried here alongside the civilian victims. The decision for a joint burial had already been widely discussed and mostly rejected by the population, but in the end the military decided not to make the bodies of the dead soldiers available. The two windmills that existed at the time were to be demolished for the construction of the burial site. In addition, a memorial was to be erected in the cemetery, which was not yet part of the Berlin city area at the time, and another in the city. Despite this decision, only one mill was demolished and the area was considerably smaller as a result. The second mill burned down in 1860. The burial of the soldiers did not take place here either, but only on March 24 at the
Invalids' Cemetery in . The planned monuments were not erected either. The cemetery was originally laid out in a square with diagonal paths leading to a surrounding path along which the graves were located. A traffic circle with a summer
lime tree stood at the center of the cemetery. by Wilhelm Loeillot de Mars, 1848. After an opportunity for a private farewell on March 21, the funeral took place on March 22. On this day, a procession was prepared and the whole of Berlin, including the
Berlin City Palace and the Scharnhorst and Blücher memorials in the city center, were decorated in red, gold and black. Helpers decorated the coffins of the fallen with flowers from the royal garden. The March Fallen (1848) were laid out on the . 100,000 people gathered, and
Adolf Glaßbrenner even spoke of 300,000. The relatives of the dead gathered for a Protestant service in the New Church, the church next to the
German Cathedral on the Gendarmenmarkt. Those present sang the hymn "Jesus, My Confidence", after which they left the church.The Protestant
preacher of the Neue Kirche
Adolf Sydow, the Catholic
chaplain Johann Nepomuk Ruhland from the
St. Hedwig's Cathedral and the
rabbi Michael Sachs held a short consecration speech in front of the door, an interreligious meeting which the commented on as follows: "it was a historic moment which is as unprecedented in history as this whole ceremony itself". The procession from the New Church to the cemetery consisting of 20,000 participants and 3,000 stewards, was about long and lasted four hours. The (later ), whose entire editorial staff attended the funeral, noted that the symbols carried "seemed to embody the entire history of our fatherland". The participants carried flags from other cities as well as those of individual trades in the city. There were hardly any medals or uniforms. On the way across Berlin's ,
Prussian King
Friedrich Wilhelm IV took off his helmet on the balcony, as previously planned. In the cemetery itself, Adolf Sydow preached first, followed by Assessor
Georg Jung, the spokesman for the Berlin Democrats, who also gave a speech. In the following weeks, other victims of the fighting who succumbed to their injuries were buried on this site. The total number of graves rose to 254.
1848–1849 The Cemetery of the March Fallen became a symbol of the German democratic movement from 1848 onwards. The site regularly served as an important memorial and demonstration site. In June 1848, around 100,000 Berlin students took part in the first demonstration at the graves at this site. They wanted to commemorate the dead and at the same time warn those in power not to hastily reverse the changes brought about by the revolution. A letter from the students to the magistrate makes this clear:"The purpose of the procession is to react to the widespread disapproval and condemnation of a revolution to which we owe our political rights, and to honor the names of the fallen, crowned by their wounds."As early as March 25, 1848, a public announcement was published in several Berlin newspapers asking for donations and designs for a monument in the cemetery, for which the foundation stone was to be laid on the anniversary of the revolution. This announcement was addressed to the entire German people, pointing out that the March Revolution had a national significance and that Berliners were therefore not solely responsible. The money raised by the committee to erect the monument was administered by the merchant and shoe manufacturer F. H. Bathow. However, as this committee was not officially authorized, Bathow was forced by the police to hand over the money. The whereabouts and the amount of money collected remained unclear; according to contradictory reports, it was either deposited at the municipal court in 1854 or transferred to the
pension fund of the policemen. Due to the confiscation of the money, there was no memorial to mark the anniversary of the revolution. By this date, not all graves had even been fitted with simple wooden crosses and the city government did not want to finance them. So the Berliners provided the about 60 missing crosses through a spontaneous collection between March 18 and 22, 1849. Due to the political situation leading up to the first anniversary of the revolution, both the magistrate and the city council anticipated new uprisings in Berlin. For this reason, the military and police forces were massively reinforced. The wrote on March 20, 1849: "The city itself already presented a completely warlike appearance on the 17th, and every measure that could be taken in a state of siege had been taken. In every village and suburb around Berlin significant numbers of troops were camped (...). in front of the Landsberg Gate was particularly heavily garrisoned. The few buildings located at the entrance to were filled with soldiers down to the smallest rooms (...) Large units of dragoons patrolled every road, and was also guarded by a division of guards."The city itself already presented a completely warlike appearance on the 17th, and every measure that could be taken in a state of siege had been taken. In every village and suburb around Berlin significant numbers of troops were camped (...). in front of the Landsberg Gate was particularly heavily garrisoned. The few buildings located at the entrance to were filled with soldiers down to the smallest rooms (...) Large units of dragoons patrolled every road, and was also guarded by a division of guards."Despite this military and police presence, thousands marched to the graves of the March Fallen on March the 18th. Most of them were workers. The graves had already been decorated with flowers the previous night and employees of had erected a steel pillar at each of the four corners of the cemetery, which was topped with two torches. In the afternoon of the day, the feared clashes between demonstrators and the security guards did indeed occur, but the outcome was relatively mild. When
Otto von Bismarck visited the cemetery in September 1849, he wrote bitterly to his wife:"Yesterday I was with Malle [Malwine von Arnim-Kröchlendorff, Bismarck's sister] in , and I could not even forgive the dead. My heart was full of bitterness against the worship of the graves of these criminals, in which every inscription on the crosses boasts of 'freedom and justice', a mockery of God and man. I say to myself that we are all sinners, and God alone knows how to tempt us; but my heart swells with poison when I see what these murderers have made of my fatherland, and how Berliners still worship their graves today."
From 1850 to 1900 To avoid riots in the following years, the
Prussian State Ministry banned people from entering the cemetery on March 18, 1850, and on the anniversaries of the following years. As early as March 17, 1850, all entrances were cordoned off by police forces. On the same day and the following day, workers arrived at the park and attempted to enter the cemetery grounds to lay flowers and wreaths. The commemorative events were then held in the surrounding garden pubs, and there were also clashes between the police and the demonstrators that year. On March 20, 1850, the announced that the cemetery of the March Fallen was to be levelled and the graves relocated. The site was to make way for a new railroad station. However, this announcement was never carried out, and so many workers came to the cemetery on March 18, 1851. This day again ended in riots, which this time did not end without casualties. By March 18, 1852, all paths to the cemetery, except the main path from Landsberger Tor, had been planted with flowers and thus made impassable. However, in the run-up to the
Cologne communist trial that year, 10,000 demonstrators came to the park and once again the day ended in violence. From 1853, the entire park was cordoned off with a high wooden fence, later a bar fence. By this means, the authorities prevented a gathering at the cemetery that year. The planned construction of the station was not reported again until February 1854, after the construction of an
orphanage on the edge of the park was rejected in 1853 on the grounds that the sight of the cemetery could remind young people of the March Revolution of 1848 daily and thus incite them to rebellion once again. Once again, the cemetery was not relocated, and until 1856, many people gathered at the cemetery every year to commemorate the revolution and the fallen. In a letter dated October 22, 1856, the Chief of Police of Berlin asked the city magistrate to make access to the cemetery impossible by planting a thorny hedge, "with the intention of allowing the site to fall into oblivion if possible". The magistrate rejected these plans and once again suggested relocating the dead, which the police commissioner agreed to on the condition that this should be done as quietly as possible. In October 1857, the press and thus the public became aware of the magistrate's plans through relatives of the dead, from whom the magistrate wanted to obtain permission to relocate the dead in return for money. In September 1858, the magistrate presented a plan to the city council for an immediate relocation, which the council approved. As a result, an unknown number of coffins were also dug up, but a complete relocation did not take place. On May 15, 1861, the announced that access to the cemetery was once again permitted without restriction. Between 1868 and 1874, the
municipal hospital was built on
Landsberger Allee near the cemetery. Since then, the cemetery itself has been located directly next to the hospital wall, separated from the rest of the Volkspark by the access road to the hospital's main entrance. The next important date for the cemetery was March 18, 1873, the 25th anniversary of the revolution. At the same time, this day became a day of remembrance for the
Paris Commune of 1871. Large crowds gathered at the Cemetery of the March Fallen, and the anniversary again led to major clashes between demonstrators and the police. The latter cleared the park by force in the late afternoon. In the years that followed, the cemetery continued to be visited by thousands of people every year, mainly
Communist and
Social Democratic workers. Local politicians and the Social Democratic faction of the also repeatedly honored the dead by laying wreaths. Before the 50th anniversary in 1898, there was a dispute between the city authorities and the
Berlin police headquarters over the redesign of the cemetery; historian Helke Rausch describes the behavior of the monarch and the authorities as "massive obstruction". In March 1895, the General Workers' Association of Berlin had revived the plans of 1848 in a resolution and demanded that a memorial be erected to the "fighters" of 1848. The city councillors approved the erection of a representative entrance portal with an iron gate in the cemetery, for which
Ludwig Hoffmann submitted a design, while the Chief President of the
province of Brandenburg,
Heinrich von Achenbach, expressed reservations if the
Berlin Magistrate were to participate in honoring the insurgents. In January 1898, the Berlin Magistrate rejected the proposal under pressure from the Council of Ministers, against which the city councillors protested and appealed to the Higher Administrative Court without success, so that the "reactionary" view of the authorities prevailed. In 1899, the dispute arose again when the placement of a memorial plaque at the entrance portal was suggested instead of a monument. The police headquarters now refused permission to build on the grounds that "the building was intended to pay tribute to the March fallen buried there, i.e. a political demonstration to glorify the revolution, which cannot be permitted for public order reasons". A tribute to those who died in March was still rejected, and the cemetery was restored to an "orderly" state without taking into account its historical peculiarity. In relation to these disputes about the memorial, the inscription on the wreath of the Social Democratic group of city councillors stated:"You have erected your own monument."The Marxist historian
Franz Mehring empathetically summarized the history of the cemetery in his 1897/1898 History of Social Democracy:"[The bourgeoisie] betrayed [the work of March 18], and its guilty conscience allowed the cemetery where the fallen people's fighters had been laid to rest to run wild. Rust began to gnaw at the letters and numbers on the crosses, and the grass blew over the sunken grave mounds. But then came the day when the awakened class consciousness of the proletariat understood the historical significance of the March Revolution and consecrated the gravesite of anew."
From 1900 to 1945 In 1908, the 60th anniversary of the cemetery coincided with the political dispute over voting rights in Germany. In March, the Social Democrats passed their resolution on this issue at the graves of the March Fallen as the March Resolution, in which they called for universal, equal, secret and direct suffrage in Germany. Wreaths were laid at the cemetery and several thousand people gathered there. The ribbons on the wreaths in particular drew attention to the demands of the people and especially to the demands for voting rights. One of the wreaths laid by the editors of newspaper carried the
dedication "To the first suffrage fighters". Around 60 ribbons were removed by the police because of the inscriptions, resulting in visitors clashing with the police. On March 18, 1917, the traditional annual workers' procession to the graves was combined with a demonstration of solidarity with the
February Revolution in Russia. In November of the following year, 1918, there was also a revolution in Germany, which became known as the
November Revolution. On November the 20th, eight people who died in these uprisings were buried in a separate burial ground at the Cemetery of the March Fallen in order to emphasize and underline the connection between the two revolutions. The memorial service, at which several speakers emphasized the parallels between the two revolutions, took place on ; several thousand people took part in it and in the funeral procession that followed. An honorary company of the
Alexander Regiment led the procession, followed by a large crowd of wreath bearers, representatives of the Reich, state and city authorities, the Social Democratic Party and the
trade unions. Next came the carriages with the coffins and the relatives of the fallen, as well as a special company of sailors. The workers followed with red and black flags. When the first coffin was lowered into the pit at around 3 p.m.,
Emil Barth (
USPD) gave the eulogy for the dead on behalf of the
Council of the People's Deputies;
Luise Zietz (USPD) and
Karl Liebknecht also spoke."Let us not deceive ourselves. The political power of the proletariat, which was seized on November 9th, has already largely vanished and continues to disappear hour by hour (...) Hesitation delays death - the death of revolution" — Karl Liebknecht From December 6th–11th, 1918, there were conflicts with
counter-revolutionary troops in Berlin. In a violent clash on December 6th in the area of , 16 revolutionaries were killed, including members of the (see ).
Willi Budich, a leading member of the
Spartacus League and one of the two chairmen of the Soldiers' League, was wounded. The victims of this attack were also buried in the cemetery on December 21st. On December 24th, government troops attacked the
People's Naval Division, which was stationed in the
Berlin City Palace and was considered
Spartacist. Eleven people lost their lives in the successful defensive battles of the sailors, who were buried in a third pit in the Cemetery of the March Fallen on December the 29th. In January 1919, the
KPD and
USPD requested the burial of 31 people who had died in the
Spartacus Uprising in the Cemetery of the March Fallen, including
Karl Liebknecht. As the magistrate refused to honor them, these victims of the revolution were buried at the . During the
Weimar Republic, workers as well as representatives of the SPD, the KPD, the trade unions and the visited the cemetery as a
memorial site every year. At the beginning of the 1920s, the district council decided, with a majority of SPD and KPD votes, to "give the cemetery a dignified appearance". This mainly related to the redesign of the entrance gate according to Ludwig Hoffmann's design. On October 11, 1925, Hoffmann's new gate was inaugurated as his last construction project and with a rally in honour of the "fighters for German freedom" (speech by district mayor Mielitz). According to the newspaper , this took place with the participation of a "large crowd"; before the unveiling of the new portal, 10,000 men from the Berlin comradeship of the marched past it with lowered flags and to the beat of drums. At this point, Hoffmann had already been out of office for a year as Berlin's city planning officer. The gate was forged from iron and supported on both sides by pillars, on each of which the figure of the Greek god of death
Thanatos was kneeling and naked, leaning on a lowered torch. wrote: The simple, almost austere moderation of republican views is also expressed in the new gate, which (...) finally opens the entrance to the small cemetery of the March Fallen in in a dignified form. A simple portal made of hard stone and tough iron, designed by an artist, will be handed over to the public. In addition, the remaining gravestones and crosses were arranged on three sides of the cemetery in the manner that can still be seen today (2023). During the
National Socialist regime, the cemetery received little attention and was forgotten by large sections of the population. Publicly honoring the fallen of the revolutions could lead to political persecution, and even the social democratic and communist opponents of the Nazis stayed away out of fear.
After 1945 After the end of
World War II, the cemetery also came back into the public eye; it was now located in the
Soviet sector of the city. In 1947, the Berlin magistrate drew up a plan to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the revolution and, above all, to redesign the cemetery. The district office proposed removing the cemetery's narrow paths in favor of a central meeting place and erecting a memorial stone in the center. The decorated gate based on Hoffmann's design still existed at this time and was to be replaced by a simpler version during this redesign, but instead only the ornamental figures were removed at first: "Only the entrance gate requires a minor redesign, with the removal of its less attractive figurative decoration." On March 18, 1948, the new memorial stone was unveiled in a central location at the beginning of the celebrations. The area had been planted with grass and a narrow path led to the memorial stone. The back of the stone is inscribed with the names of 249 soldiers who died in March 1848, while the front bears the text by Peter A. Steinhoff: To the dead of 1848/1918. You erected the memorial yourselves – Only a serious warning speaks from this stone / That our people will never renounce the cause for which you died – to be united and free. The cemetery was redesigned again in 1956/57 in preparation for the 40th anniversary of the November Revolution. Under the direction of
Franz Kurth, the western section was fitted with three gravestones as memorials to the victims of 1918. The gate was also replaced by a new, four-meter-wide entrance gate facing . In 1960, the bronze figure of the Red Sailor by Berlin sculptor Hans Kies was erected directly in front of the entrance. Larger than life, it represents an armed sailor of the November Revolution. Throughout the
GDR era, annual commemorations and wreath-laying ceremonies were held at the cemetery, but these rarely attracted much attention. Since 1979, the West Berlin initiative ('March 18 Action') has also organized an annual wreath-laying ceremony at the cemetery, which the GDR authorities did not like, but tolerated. == Since 1990 ==