Difference between revisions of "Deutsches Theater [Munich] (Q8090)"

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Theatre building in Munich, Germany, opened in 1895

(‎Created claim: Modern Opera Houses ID (P368): 1070, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1739449457936)
(‎Added qualifier: Source (P63): CARTHALIA (Q495), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1757591661939)
 
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aliases / en / 0aliases / en / 0
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Varieté-Theater
Property / Burnt down date
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February 1896Gregorian
Timestamp+1896-02-00T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 month
Before0
After0
Property / Burnt down date: February 1896Gregorian / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Burnt down date: February 1896Gregorian / qualifier
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context: In course of construction. Considerable damage done. (English)
Property / Burnt down date: February 1896Gregorian / reference
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Property / Modern Opera Houses index
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III. pp. 57, 58.
Property / Modern Opera Houses index: III. pp. 57, 58. / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Preservation state
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Property / Preservation state: extant building / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Preservation state
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Property / Preservation state: Used as theatre today / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Note
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Built 1895-1896 by Alexander Bluhm, Joseph Rank, and Karl Stöhr as a complex including a variety theatre, a smaller hall (Silbersaal), restaurants, a café, 20 shops and 30 apartments. Opened 26 Sep 1896 with Julius Schaumberger's Die Sünde wider den heiligen Geist. In 1918, briefly used as parliament by the Volksrat Bayern. 1939 auditorium alterations to simplified plans by Paul Baumgarten sr. Re-opened 14 July 1939. Destroyed by bombs on 9 Mar 1943. 1949-1951 reconstruction to altered plans by Ludwig Reiber and Willi Reiber. Re-opened 21 Dec 1951. 1976-1982 major rebuilding by Reinhard Riemerschmid, auditorium decorated in pop art style. Re-opened 8 Oct 1982 as a municipal theatre with a festive gala. Originally 1679 seats, today 1562 seats. Used for for guest performances of variety, operetta, musical, and ballet, as well as for carnival balls. (English)
Property / Note: Built 1895-1896 by Alexander Bluhm, Joseph Rank, and Karl Stöhr as a complex including a variety theatre, a smaller hall (Silbersaal), restaurants, a café, 20 shops and 30 apartments. Opened 26 Sep 1896 with Julius Schaumberger's Die Sünde wider den heiligen Geist. In 1918, briefly used as parliament by the Volksrat Bayern. 1939 auditorium alterations to simplified plans by Paul Baumgarten sr. Re-opened 14 July 1939. Destroyed by bombs on 9 Mar 1943. 1949-1951 reconstruction to altered plans by Ludwig Reiber and Willi Reiber. Re-opened 21 Dec 1951. 1976-1982 major rebuilding by Reinhard Riemerschmid, auditorium decorated in pop art style. Re-opened 8 Oct 1982 as a municipal theatre with a festive gala. Originally 1679 seats, today 1562 seats. Used for for guest performances of variety, operetta, musical, and ballet, as well as for carnival balls. (English) / rank
 +
Normal rank
Property / Note: Built 1895-1896 by Alexander Bluhm, Joseph Rank, and Karl Stöhr as a complex including a variety theatre, a smaller hall (Silbersaal), restaurants, a café, 20 shops and 30 apartments. Opened 26 Sep 1896 with Julius Schaumberger's Die Sünde wider den heiligen Geist. In 1918, briefly used as parliament by the Volksrat Bayern. 1939 auditorium alterations to simplified plans by Paul Baumgarten sr. Re-opened 14 July 1939. Destroyed by bombs on 9 Mar 1943. 1949-1951 reconstruction to altered plans by Ludwig Reiber and Willi Reiber. Re-opened 21 Dec 1951. 1976-1982 major rebuilding by Reinhard Riemerschmid, auditorium decorated in pop art style. Re-opened 8 Oct 1982 as a municipal theatre with a festive gala. Originally 1679 seats, today 1562 seats. Used for for guest performances of variety, operetta, musical, and ballet, as well as for carnival balls. (English) / qualifier
 +

Latest revision as of 12:47, 11 September 2025

Theatre building in Munich, Germany, opened in 1895
  • Deutsches Theater
  • Varieté-Theater
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Deutsches Theater [Munich]
Theatre building in Munich, Germany, opened in 1895
  • Deutsches Theater
  • Varieté-Theater

Statements

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48°8'14.006"N, 11°33'45.392"E
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Built 1895-1896 by Alexander Bluhm, Joseph Rank, and Karl Stöhr as a complex including a variety theatre, a smaller hall (Silbersaal), restaurants, a café, 20 shops and 30 apartments. Opened 26 Sep 1896 with Julius Schaumberger's Die Sünde wider den heiligen Geist. In 1918, briefly used as parliament by the Volksrat Bayern. 1939 auditorium alterations to simplified plans by Paul Baumgarten sr. Re-opened 14 July 1939. Destroyed by bombs on 9 Mar 1943. 1949-1951 reconstruction to altered plans by Ludwig Reiber and Willi Reiber. Re-opened 21 Dec 1951. 1976-1982 major rebuilding by Reinhard Riemerschmid, auditorium decorated in pop art style. Re-opened 8 Oct 1982 as a municipal theatre with a festive gala. Originally 1679 seats, today 1562 seats. Used for for guest performances of variety, operetta, musical, and ballet, as well as for carnival balls. (English)
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1895
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1951
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1970s
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1939
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1896
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1,540
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Schwanthalerstraße 13, 80336 München
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1070
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February 1896Gregorian
In course of construction. Considerable damage done. (English)
III. pp. 57, 58.
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Timeline

 

Wikidata