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Befreiungshalle

Befreiungshalle
Befreiungshalle Hall of Liberation Kelheim.jpg
Befreiungshalle Kelheim
Befreiungshalle is located in Germany
Befreiungshalle
Location in Germany
General information
Architectural style Neoclassical
Town or city Kelheim
Country Germany
Coordinates 48°55′06″N 11°51′38″E / 48.91833°N 11.86056°E / 48.91833; 11.86056Coordinates: 48°55′06″N 11°51′38″E / 48.91833°N 11.86056°E / 48.91833; 11.86056
Client King Ludwig I of Bavaria
Owner Bavarian Administration of State-Owned Palaces, Gardens and Lakes
Design and construction
Architect Friedrich von Gärtner,
Leo von Klenze
Designations Baudenkmal (listed monument)

The Befreiungshalle ("Hall of Liberation", German: [bəˈfʀaɪ̯ʊŋsˌhalə]) is a Neoclassical monument on the hill Michelsberg above the town of Kelheim in Bavaria, Germany. It stands upstream of Regensburg on the river Danube at the confluence of the Danube and the Altmühl, i.e. the Rhine-Main-Danube Canal. It was commissioned by King Ludwig I of Bavaria to commemorate the victory over Napoleon in the Befreiungskriege of 1813-15.

King Ludwig I of Bavaria ordered the Befreiungshalle to be built in order to commemorate the victories against Napoleon during the Wars of Liberation that lasted from 1813 to 1815.

The construction was started in 1842 by Friedrich von Gärtner in a mixture of Neoclassical and Christian styles. It occurred on Michelsberg, in a place previously occupied by a part of the ruins of a pre-historic fortification or town, thought by some to have been Alcimoennis. At the behest of the King, Leo von Klenze later altered the plans and completed the building in 1863. The ceremonial opening took place on 18 October 1863 – the 50th anniversary of the Battle of Nations (Völkerschlacht) near Leipzig.

The following dictum by King Ludwig I, embedded into the marble floor, commemorates the occasion of the construction of the Befreiungshalle:


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