Private tour in Berlin Martin S
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Martin S.
5.0
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Hi, my name is Martin, and I'm a trained and certified Berlin Tour Guide with an MA from Bath University and a PhD from Warwick. Additionally, I am also fully vaccinated and boostered against Covid 19. I'm (West-)German born and raised and settled in (West-)Berlin in 1989, by sheer coincidence at the time of The Fall of The Wall. I was young, restless, and curious, and subsequently thoroughly inspected all those areas previously inaccessible to Westerns, areas like Prenzlauer Berg , Mitte . and so on. I lived through the heyday of the Techno era (E-Werk, Bunker, Tresor, etc. ) and relished every minute of it. But in the mid-1990s, I felt tired of Berlin and the staleness that followed the hype over the Fall of The Wall. So I moved first to London - where I lived for 3 years - and then to Paris - where I lived for more than 7 years, working at Chanel and Yves Saint Laurent, before, at the not so tender age of 41, I decided to go back to studying. So I applied at Bath University and did an MA in Film Studies, graduating with Distinction. Following that, the University of Warwick offered me a generous Vice Chancellor's bursary to do a PhD, where I explored German-Jewish rescue organisations that emerged as a result of the Nazi takeover in January 1933. This research sent me to archives around the globe (the Center for Jewish History In New York; the American Film Institute; the University of Southern California; the German Literature Archive, and so forth), and, eventually . . . back to Berlin! Because their Holocaust Memorial offered me an internship and a participation in their Spring 2011 exhibition on the Adolf Eichmann Trial in Jerusalem in 1961. And so, here I was, back in the city which I'd left 15 years earlier. But unlike in 1995, Berlin, I quickly realized, had become a lot more dynamic. So much was going on, torn down, rebuilt, newly built, and the changes the city had undergone (and is still undergoing) finally prompted me to stay. So much had changed, that I literally had to discover the city anew. But what fun it was. And still is! Especially, since I have a very faithful companion, my adorable Sealyham-Terrier I adopted, Whiley. Let me tell you, there's no better way to explore a city than having a dog who never tires of walking and keeps you on your toes. Usually, when I'm out guiding he has to stay home (most of the time, unless my customers don't mind or even ask to get to know him, which does happen!). But when I'm out to explore and discover, on the trail for new, exciting tours in previously unexplored parts of town - he's always by my side. Most travellers who don't know Berlin forget that Berlin is nine times the size of Paris! That alone makes navigating the city a challenge, especially so, when you want to go off the beaten track. And that's what I like the most. Needless to say, I can show you and explain every detail of Berlin's tumultuous history, be that the 20th or the 18th century, where Prussian King Frederick The Great left his mark on Berlin to a degree hardly any other ruler did. Until Hitler came around, that is, which in turn led to the destruction of much of it and worse, to the persecution and murder of much of Europe's Jewry, its Sinti&Roma population, not to mention the homosexuals, Communists, and so on! Indeed I can tell you all about all that and more, however, what I equally relish in, is surprising my customers by showing them neighbourhoods of Berlin most of them didn't even know existed. Neighbourhoods that are so diverse and so ethnically and architecturally different, that some first-time visitors are virtually stunned because it's not what they expected to find in Berlin. But then, there is also all that architecture, and all those amazing museums, not to mention all those parks and lakes - some of which come with veritable lidos! - . . . well, there is so much to see and do here in Berlin, so the way I see it: You may be able to do Paris or London without a local guide, but in Berlin, having one is virtually essential! - MA (with Distinction) from Bath University/ UK - PhD from Warwick University/ UK (topic of my dissertation: German-Jewish exile organisations in the US that emerged as a result of the Nazi takeover in Germany) - Internship: Holocaust Foundation & Memorial, Berlin - Tour Guide Certificate for Berlin, based on DIN and EU guidelines - Tri-lingual (English - French - German) - Contemporary witness as I witnessed the fall of the Wall first hand - COVID 19 vaccinated and boostered I am not a driver. I can accompany you in your vehicle or I can arrange for a separate car and driver. I am only able to guide groups up to four people through historical monuments and museums.
Have a question or want to customize this tour? Message Martin S.
Though Munich was were the world's most evil dictator came into his own and Berchtesgaden was where he he had his favourite getaways, Berlin happened to be the capital of the German Empire (1871 - 1918) as well as the subsequent Weimar-Republic (1919 - 1932/33), and so Hitler had little choice but basing himself in Berlin. Which he did, despite himself, but here was where the Parliament, known as the Reichstag, and the Chancellery were located. The very same Chancellery which he had later added a massive annex to, designed by his favourite architect and subsequent Minister of Armaments, Albert Speer. Needless to say, few visible traces of Hitler's Berlin remain. However, in this tour, we look at the invisible ones as well we the remnants of those which have survived.
We start our tour at the Reichstag, from which we walk over to the site of the "Kroll Opera", used as a parliament after the Reichstag was burnt down in February 1933. Stop 2: Brandenburg Gate, through which the Nazis marched triumphantly after Hindenburg had appointed Hitler as Chancellor. Stop 3: The Holocaust Memorial Stop 4: Site of the Führer Bunker, where Hitler, his newly wed wife, and Goebbels and his family came to an end that is as pathetic as it was cowardly. Stop: 5: Georg Elser Memorial: Elser, a lone ranger of rare courage, who - sadly unsuccessfully - tried to assassinate Hitler on November 9th 1939 Stop 6: Sites of the Old and New Chancellery (the latter designed by Speer) Stop 7: Ministries of Propaganda and Aviation, now Germany's Ministry of Finance Stop 8: Site of the SS and Gestapo HQ are next, now the Topography of Terror Stop 9: Anhalter Bahnhof, the station used not only by Hitler and Göring, but after autumn 1941, also for deportations going East This is where our tour finishes!
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walking tour
1 Platz der Republik, Berlin, Berlin, 11011, Germany
Airport: ,Cruise: ,ByGuide: in front of the Reichstag/ outside subway stop "Bundestag" (= parliament). Ubahn Line 5
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