History up to 1871 The palace replaced an earlier fort or castle guarding the crossing of the Spree at
Cölln, a neighbouring town which merged with Berlin in 1710. The castle stood on Fishers' Island, as the southern end of the
Museum Island in the Spree is known. In 1443
Frederick II "Irontooth",
Margrave and Prince Elector of Brandenburg, laid the foundations of Berlin's first fortification in a section of swampy wasteland north of Cölln. At the completion of the castle in 1451, Frederick moved there from the town of
Brandenburg. The main role of the castle and its garrison in this period was to establish the authority of the margraves over the unruly citizens of Berlin, who were reluctant to give up their medieval privileges to a monarchy. In 1415 King
Sigismund had
enfeoffed the Hohenzollern princes with Brandenburg, and they were now establishing their power and withdrawing privileges which the cities had attained in the Brandenburg interregnum of 1319–1415. In 1454 Frederick II, after having returned via
Rome from his pilgrimage to
Jerusalem, made the castle chapel a parish church, richly endowing it with relics and altars.
Pope Nicholas V ordered
Stephan Bodecker, then Prince-
Bishop of Brandenburg, to consecrate the chapel to
Erasmus of Formiae. On 7 April 1465, at Frederick's request,
Pope Paul II attributed to
St Erasmus Chapel a
canon law College named
Stift zu Ehren Unserer Lieben Frauen, des heiligen Kreuzes, St. Petri und Pauli, St. Erasmi und St. Nicolai. This
collegiate church became the nucleus of today's
Evangelical Supreme Parish and Collegiate Church (
Berliner Dom (
Berlin Cathedral)), adjoining the site of the castle. In 1538, the Elector
Joachim II demolished the castle and engaged the master builder
Caspar Theiss to build a new and grander palace in the
Italian Renaissance style. The plans were made by his teacher
Konrad Krebs, similar to the castle in
Torgau, which he also designed. Toward the end of the 16th century
Rochus Graf zu Lynar designed the Pharmacy Wing. After the
Thirty Years War (1618–1648),
Frederick William, the "Great Elector", embellished the palace further. In 1688,
Nicodemus Tessin the Younger designed courtyard arcades with massive columns in front. Not much is known about the alterations of 1690–1695, when
Johann Arnold Nering was the court architect.
Martin Grünberg continued the alterations in 1695–1699. In 1699, the Elector
Frederick III of Brandenburg (who took the title
King in Prussia in 1701, becoming Frederick I), appointed the architect
Andreas Schlüter to execute a "second plan" in the Italian manner. Schlüter's first design probably dates from 1702; he planned to rebuild the palace in the Protestant
Baroque style. His overall concept in the shape of a regular cube enclosing a magnificently ornamented courtyard was retained by all the building directors who succeeded him. In 1706, Schlüter was replaced by
Johann Friedrich Eosander von Göthe, who designed the western extension of the palace, doubling its size. In all essentials, Schlüter's balanced, rhythmic composition of the façades was retained, but Göthe moved the main entrance to the new west wing.
Frederick William I, who became king in 1713, was interested mainly in building up Prussia as a military power, and dismissed most of the craftsmen working on the palace. As a result, Göthe's plan was only partly carried out. The palace was namely the original location for the
Amber Room in the
Catherine Palace of
Tsarskoye Selo near
Saint Petersburg, but
Peter the Great of Russia admired it during a visit, and in 1716 Frederick William I presented the room to Peter as a gift. Nevertheless, the exterior of the palace had come close to its final form by the mid-18th century. Interior decoration continued, engaging the talents of
Georg Wenzeslaus von Knobelsdorff,
Carl von Gontard and many others. The final stage was the erection of the dome with a palace chapel in 1845, during the reign of
Frederick William IV. The dome was built by
Friedrich August Stüler after a design by
Karl Friedrich Schinkel. The palace was itself the epicenter of the
Revolution of 1848 in Prussia. Huge crowds gathered outside the palace to present an "address to the king" containing their demands for a constitution, liberal reform and German unification. Frederick William IV emerged from the palace to accept their demands. On 18 March, a large demonstration outside the palace led to bloodshed and the outbreak of street fighting. Frederick William later reneged on his promises and reimposed an autocratic regime. From that time onwards, many Berliners and other Germans came to see the palace as a symbol of oppression and "Prussian militarism". File:Berliner Schloss um 1690 von der langen Brücke Abraham Jansz. Begeyn.jpg|The Renaissance residence (palace) in the 17th century (as painted by
Abraham Begeyn) File:Stadtschloss_1702.jpg|A draft for the redesign based on plans by A. Schlüter, depicted by
Schenk, 1702 File:Rosenberg Schloss 1781.jpg|The partially redesigned residence and the
Equestrian statue of Friedrich Wilhelm I, 1781 File:Stadtschloss_schlueterhof_1.jpg|The Baroque
Schlüterhof, interior courtyard of the palace (painting by
Gaertner, 1830)
History during the German Empire, Weimar Republic and National Socialist Era (1871–1945) In 1871, King
Wilhelm I was elevated to the status of
German Emperor (
Kaiser) of a united Germany, and the palace became the symbolic heart of the
German Empire. The Empire was (in theory) a constitutional state, and from 1894 onwards, the new
Reichstag building, the seat of the German parliament, came to not only rival, but overshadow the palace as the Empire's centre of power. In conjunction with Germany's defeat in
World War I, Kaiser
Wilhelm II was forced to abdicate, both as German Emperor and as King of Prussia. In November 1918, during the immediate vacuum of power following the abdication of the Kaiser,
Spartacist leader
Karl Liebknecht declared a German socialist republic from a balcony of the palace. It was an attempt to steer the
German revolution towards a communist Germany and stood in contrast to the proclamation of a republic that
Philipp Scheidemann of the
Social Democratic Party had made a few hours earlier from a balcony of the
Reichstag building. The
duelling proclamations underscored that the more than 400 years of royal Hohenzollern occupation of the Berlin Palace had come to an end. During the
Weimar Republic, parts of the palace were turned into a museum, while other parts continued to be used for receptions and other state functions. Under
Adolf Hitler's
National Socialist (Nazi) Party, which laid to rest monarchist hopes of a Hohenzollern restoration, the building was mostly ignored. During World War II, the palace was twice
struck by Allied bombs: on 3 and 24 February 1945. On the latter occasion, when both the air defences and fire-fighting systems of Berlin had been destroyed, the building was struck by incendiaries, lost its roof, and was largely burnt out. File:Gigantentreppe Schlueter.jpg|Grand Staircase, the palace's ceremonial entrance from Schlüterhof File:Berliner Schloss Rittersaal um 1900.png|Knights' Hall viewed towards the Grand Staircase, c. 1900 File:Berliner_Schloss_Bildergalerie_um_1900.png|Picture Gallery viewed towards the White Hall, c. 1900 File:Reichstagseröffnung.jpg|Emperor
Wilhelm II opening the
Reichstag in the White Hall of the Berlin Palace, 1888 (painting by
Anton von Werner, 1893) File:Berlin, Mitte, Berlin - Kgl. Schloss, Kapelle (Zeno Ansichtskarten).jpg|Palace chapel under the dome, c. 1900 File:Berlin Stadtschloss 1920er.jpg|The palace's west and north façades seen from across the
Spree in 1920 File:Berlin Stadtschloss um 1900.jpg|View from the
Lustgarten to the palace, c. 1900
Postwar debate and demolition The end of the war saw the palace a burned-out shell of its former glory, although the building remained structurally sound and much of its interior decoration was still preserved. It could have been restored, as many other bombed-out buildings in Central Berlin later were. The area in which it was located was within the
Soviet zone, which became the
German Democratic Republic. The building was used for a Soviet war movie ("the Battle of Berlin") in which the palace served as a backdrop, with live artillery shells fired at it for the realistic cinematic impact. The new socialist government declared the palace a symbol of Prussian militarism, although at that time there appeared to be no plans to destroy the building. Some parts of it were in fact repaired and used from 1945 to 1950 as an exhibition space. A secret 1950 GDR Ministry of Construction report, only rediscovered in 2016, calculated that reconstruction of the damaged Palace could be achieved for 32 million
East German marks. But in July 1950
Walter Ulbricht, the new General Secretary of the Central Committee of the
Socialist Unity Party of Germany, announced the demolition of the palace. Despite objections, its removal commenced in September 1950, the process taking four months and consuming 19 tons of dynamite. So solid was its construction that the dome and its entire mount remained intact even after the rest of the building fell to the ground. Only one section was preserved, a portal from the balcony from which
Karl Liebknecht had declared the German Socialist Republic. In 1964 it was added to the
State Council Building, with an altered cartouche, where it forms the main entrance. The empty space where the palace had stood was named Marx-Engels-Platz and used as a parade ground. From 1973 to 1976, during the government of
Erich Honecker, a large modernist building was built, the
Palast der Republik (Palace of the Republic), which occupied most of the site of the former palace. File:The_car_of_President_Harry_S._Truman_passes_(distance_view)_through_the_Wilhelmstrasse_during_President_Truman's_tour..._-_NARA_-_198770_(cropped).jpg|The Schlossplatz with the burned out palace in 1945, after the
Fall of Berlin File:Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-08687-0010,_Berlin,_Stadtschloss,_Abriss.jpg|The demolition of the Schlüterhof, up to this point still largely preserved, 1950 File:Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-12003-05,.jpg|The Marx-Engels-Platz on the former ground of the palace and Schlossplatz, 1951 File:19860503400NR_Berlin_Palast_der_Republik_Marx-Engels-Platz.jpg|The front façade of the
Palast der Republik in 1986 from
Unter den Linden Reunification (
Staatsratsgebäude), now housing the
European School of Management and Technology. Shortly before
German reunification in October 1990, the Palast der Republik was found to be contaminated with
asbestos and was closed to the public. After reunification, the Berlin city government ordered the removal of the asbestos, a process which was completed by 2003. In November 2003, the German federal government decided to demolish the building and leave the area and the adjacent Marx-Engels Platz (renamed Schlossplatz) as parkland, pending a decision as to its future. Demolition started in February 2006 and was completed in 2009. The demolition was lengthy because of the presence of additional asbestos, and because the palace acted as a counterbalance to the Berliner Dom, across the street, on the unstable grounds of the Museum Island. East Germans resented the demolition, especially those for whom the Palace of the Republic had been a place of fond memories, or who felt a sense of dislocation in a post-Communist world. From 2008, until the commencement of construction in 2013, the large area of the original Schlossplatz became a grassed field, laid out on minimal lines, with wooden platforms. At the same time, the Berlin Monument Authority (Landesdenkmalamt) undertook extensive archaeological excavations. Parts of cellars that had been situated in the south-west corner of the former Palace were discovered and it was decided these would be preserved and made accessible to visitors as an "archaeological window".
Reconstruction The debate Following reunification, a 20-year-long debate commenced as to whether the palace should be reconstructed, and whether this should be in part or whole. Pro-reconstruction lobby groups argued that the rebuilding of the palace would restore the unity and integrity of the
historic centre of Berlin, which includes the
Berliner Dom, the
Lustgarten, and the museums of
Museum Island. Opponents of the project included those who advocated the retention of the
Palast der Republik on the grounds that it was itself of historical significance; those who argued that the area should become a public park; and those who believed that a new building would be a
pastiche of former architectural styles, would be an unwelcome symbol of Germany's imperial past, and would be unacceptably expensive for no definite economic benefit. Opponents also argued that it would be impossible to accurately reconstruct the exterior and interiors of the building as neither detailed plans nor the necessary craft skills were available. Others disputed this, claiming that sufficient photographic documentation of both existed when the palace was converted to a museum following 1918. The ideological divide was epitomized by two opposing groups. The Association for the Preservation of the Palace of the Republic (
Verein zur Erhaltung des Palastes der Republik) championed a renovation of the GDR building that would incorporate a re-creation of the principal western facade of the City Palace, for a multipurpose "people's center" similar to the
Centre Pompidou in Paris. The Berlin Palace Friends' Association (
Förderverein Berliner Schloss) argued for the complete external reconstruction of the City Palace, as they considered it the only option that would restore the aesthetic and historic ensemble of Berlin's heart; it also rejected suggestions that the proposed meticulous reconstruction would be an unauthentic "Disney" replica, as most centuries-old stone buildings are, by dint of aging and repair, at least partial reconstructions; and arguing that the allegation that the present time can only represent itself in its own architectural language, is simply ideology. The Sponsoring Association also drew attention to the observation in the
Venice Charter that "historic edifices have a material age and an immaterial significance": an importance that transcends time and that, provided sufficient documentation for a truly authentic copy exists, justifies their reconstruction to preserve a vital part of urban identity and historical memory. In 1992, he and
Kathleen King von Alvensleben founded, what evolved to be the Berlin City Palace Sponsoring Association – which became the most influential lobby group. The Association accumulated plans that had been believed lost, and funded a research project at
Technische Universität Berlin to measure surviving photos and drawings of the palace to create precise architectural plans. In 1993, on the world's largest scaffolding assembly, it audaciously erected a ''
trompe-l'œil mockup of two frontages of the palace façade on a 1:1 scale on plastic sheeting. Privately funded by donations and sponsorship, this coup de théâtre'' stood for a year and half. Showing a vision of central Berlin lost for fifty years, and how the palace could provide the missing link to the historical ensemble of the
Zeughaus, the
Altes Museum, and
Berlin Cathedral, the spectacle brought the debate to a temporary climax in 1993–94. While opinion continued to remain divided, the association succeeded in winning over many politicians and other key figures to its efforts. In view of the previous opposition, including high cost, and most importantly, the psychological and political objections, successive German governments had declined to commit themselves to the project. However, by 2002 and 2003, cross-party resolutions of the
Bundestag reached a compromise to support at least a partial rebuilding of the palace. In 2007, the Bundestag made a definitive decision about the reconstruction. According to this compromise, which had been drawn up by a commission, three façades of the palace would be rebuilt, but the interior would be a modern structure to serve as a cultural museum and forum. An architectural competition was held, and in 2008 the jury chose the submission by the Italian architect
Franco Stella. Some of the internal spaces in Stella's design follow the exact proportions of the original state rooms of the palace; this would allow for their reconstruction at a later date should this be desired. The reconstruction also reproduces the original metre-thick width of the outer walls. These have been rebuilt as a sandwiched construction as follows: an inner retaining wall of concrete, followed by a layer of insulation, and an outer wall of brick, sandstone and stucco which replicates the original. Reconstruction of the Renaissance-gabled Pharmacy Wing, which connected to the palace on the north side, would be another possible future project. German government budget cuts delayed the construction of the "Humboldtforum", as the new palace was titled. The
foundation stone was finally laid by President
Joachim Gauck in a ceremony on 12 June 2013 which heralded the launch of a €590 million reconstruction project. In 2017, there was a debate whether to feature a cross on the dome of the palace, in relation to adhering to historical accuracy or secularism. Afterwards, a statue of
Antinous was installed on the palace façade in the Schlüterhof courtyard. However, the cross was installed on the top of the dome on 29 May 2020. File:Berlin, Germany (April 2016) - 044.JPG|Reconstruction work under way, 20 April 2016 File:Humboldt Forum Kuppel 201606.jpg|The dome under reconstruction, 11 June 2016 File:Wikipedianer im Humboldt Forum-17.jpg|Scaffolding on the south façade, 3 November 2018 File:Wikipedianer im Humboldt Forum-46.jpg|The inner courtyard, 3 November 2018 File:AufgesetzteKuppelkrone.JPG|The dome topped by a cross, installed on 29 May 2020 On completion in 2020, the building housed a museum containing collections of African and other non-European art, as well as two restaurants, a
theatre, a cinema, and an auditorium. In July 2022, the bronze reliefs originally made by
Otto Lessing in 1897 and mounted in 1903 were reconstructed and mounted on the Eosander Portal, the originals (like many of the exterior designs), having vanished after the demolition of the City Palace. These were soon followed by the mounting of the reconstructed plaques with the words of
Frederick II, Elector of Brandenburg, and
Frederick I of Prussia, the first Prussian king. The surrounding area around the Berlin Palace which included the granite
Adlersäule (Eagle Pillar), the bronze
Rossebändiger (Horse Tamers), and the
Neptunbrunnen (
Neptune Fountain), collectively called the Schlossplatz, were planned to be redesigned by 2023 in a modern way, that will still be able to bring back the mentioned original items surrounding the palace if desired. These terrace designs ended up being implemented in a more modernistic design, different than the more ornate original design. In front of the Schlossplatz is planned the
Denkmal für Freiheit und Einheit (
Monument to Freedom and Unity). In early April 2023, the
Große Wappenkartusche (Great Coat of Arms) of the Kingdom of Prussia, was mounted on the center of the Eosander Portal, marking the completion of the façade decorations on Portal III. In June 2025, the last of the total 19 statues on the balustrade were installed, marking the completion of the reconstruction of the historical palace façade. The palace's interior has been designed in a way that allows to rebuild Schlüter's baroque
state rooms such as the Grand Staircase (
Großes Treppenhaus), the Knights' Hall (
Rittersaal) and the Picture Gallery (
Bildergalerie) in the long term. File: Berlin-BerlinerSchloss-6-Asio.JPG|The palace with the reconstructed bronze reliefs and plaques on the portal initially designed by the architect Eosander File:Berlin-BerlinerSchloss-5-Asio.JPG|Closeup of the Eosander portal File:Berlin Schloß Wiederaufbau .jpeg|South and east façades of the palace, housing the
Humboldt Forum File:Humboldt Forum (51703469014).jpg|Foyer of the Humboldt Forum File:Exterior of Humboldt Forum 04.jpg|
Schlüterhof File:The Dome Of Berlin Palace.jpg|The dome with statues, 2025 File:Berlin-Mitte Stadtschloss 203.jpg|View from the
Lustgarten to the palace with the statues on the balustrade, 2025 ==See also==