Munich at 850
The livable, culture-crazy, beer-loving capital of Bavaria is coming to terms with its history
- By Charles Michener
- Photographs by Toni Anzenberger
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
A model of 19th-century Munich showed wide boulevards lined with neo-Classical facades. "This is the influence of King Ludwig I," said Weidner. "In my opinion, he was determined to surpass the grandeur that Napoleon brought to Paris." Stopping before an alluring portrait of an exotic woman, Weidner told me she was Ludwig's mistress Lola Montez, a "Spanish" dancer and courtesan of Irish birth, whose tempestuous hold over the king led in part to his abdication in 1848.
In a heavily rural state that prides itself for upholding tradition, Munich is also notable for its adaptability. The city, which remained a walled Catholic stronghold in the 16th and 17th centuries after the Reformation, promoted a cult of the Virgin Mary (hence the name of the central square, Marienplatz). Yet in response to the German Enlightenment of the 18th century, the city fathers took down the surrounding medieval wall, leaving a few still-standing gates as evidence of the past while embracing the wider world.
Another example of Munich's openness is the city's great Englischer Garten (English Garden), one of the largest urban public parks in the world. It was designed in 1789 by Benjamin Thompson (later Count von Rumford), a polymath from Woburn, Massachusetts, who also brought the cultivation of potatoes to Bavaria, where he invented a double boiler, drip coffeepot, kitchen range and "Rumford Soup," a nutritious broth for the poor.
The City Museum's neighbor on St.-Jakobs-Platz is the new Jewish Center—three buildings housing a community center, a museum and a synagogue. By 1945, Munich's Jewish population had plummeted from more than 10,000 to 84. Since 1991, when Germany began officially welcoming Jewish refugees from the former Soviet Union, the number of Jews in the city has swelled to 9,585. The new Ohel Jakob synagogue, which opened in 2006, marks the visible return of Jewish life to the city center for the first time since 1938. Shortly before destroying the original Ohel Jakob synagogue during Kristallnacht that year, the Nazis had forced the city's Jews to tear down their own main synagogue on Herzog-Max-Strasse. The new complex is situated close to the great open-air Viktualienmarkt (food market), whose beer gardens and overflowing bins of vegetables, meat and fish bring residents together from dawn to dusk. As Charlotte Knobloch, a Holocaust survivor who spearheaded the building of the Jewish Center, noted, Munich has now restored to the city a place where "Jews and non-Jews [can] meet in the middle."
In a city whose love of the picturesque can overwhelm a visitor, I found the stark, monumental synagogue an inspiring statement. From an opaque base of Wailing Wall-like stone rises a glass cube enclosed in a protective bronze web—a suspended lantern that expresses the Bible's opening injunction, "Let there be light." Inside, the names of 4,500 Munich Jews murdered by the Nazis line a 105-foot-long "Corridor of Memory."
"For too long Munich's Jews, living and dead, did not have a place where they could be seen," Ellen Presser, the center's cultural director, told me. "Now it is here."
A short walk across town is the city's grandest building—the former palace of the Wittelsbachs, known simply as the Residenz. Despite its imposing Renaissance facade and size (a vast complex built around seven courtyards), it nestles comfortably amid the pedestrian-friendly streets and squares that constitute the city's commercial and historic hub. The spectacularly decorated rooms are open to the public and well worth seeing. But on this visit, I opted for the Wittelsbachs' suburban summer palace, Nymphenburg, a 20-minute tram ride from Marienplatz.
Begun in 1664 and greatly expanded over the next century, Schloss Nymphenburg (Nymphenburg Palace) rivals the Palace of Versailles for the majesty of its facade and decoration of its salons. The geometric layout of the gardens extends to an immense meadow and thickly wooded park that brings the sumptuous Bavarian countryside to the city's edge. The park contains what may be the most elegant fun house ever built—the diminutive Amalienburg hunting lodge, which Belgian architect François de Cuvilliés designed in the 18th century for Charles VII and his Austrian wife, Maria Amalia. As if the excitement of the royal hunt were not enough, Cuvilliés contrived a central room that is architecture as pure delirium—a fanciful Hall of Mirrors that is considered the epitome of the German Rococo style. As my eyes swam in the myriad reflections and dancing light created by the voluptuous mirrored and silvered surfaces, I imagined that Cuvilliés, a tiny man who first caught the attention of one of the Wittelsbachs as a court dwarf, might have been thumbing his nose at Louis XIV by making so much magic in a space a fraction the size of the Sun King's Hall of Mirrors at Versailles.
Cuvilliés is perhaps the star of Munich's 850th anniversary year. My visit coincided with the reopening of the city's most beloved theater—a Rococo opera house in the Residenz that the architect designed in the 1750s for Maximilian III Joseph. During the war, Allied bombs destroyed the shell of the old Cuvilliés-Theater. But much of its ornate interior was rescued before the bombing, and the theater was reconstructed in the 1950s. Four years ago, the Cuvilliés again closed for restoration and modernization—a project that eventually cost €25 million, or about $36 million. For the reopening in June 2008, the Bavarian State Opera staged a new production of Mozart's Idomeneo, which had its world première at the original Cuvilliés in 1781.
Court opera in the 18th century was an occasion to see and be seen, and with its 523-seat intimacy, rose-colored upholstery, lavishly gilded trim and softly sparkling chandeliers, the new Cuvilliés-Theater will make anyone in jeans and sneakers feel woefully out of place. Münchners take their opera very seriously, and the crowd for Idomeneo was dressed to the nines.
Several days later, I joined many of them again around the corner at the State Opera's principal venue, the National Theater, for a stirring performance of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, which had its world première in Munich in 1865. The opera began at 4 p.m. so there would be plenty of time for dinner between acts, dessert at the Spatenhaus an der Oper café and restaurant across the square when the performance ended at 10 p.m., and drinks at Schumann's bar on Odeonsplatz. Opera-going may be a serious endeavor in Munich, but it's also relaxed—honed by centuries of habit, and part and parcel with the laid-back rhythms of the city.
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Comments (11)
Thank you very much for sharing this post.
Posted by Daniel Craig suit 18 on October 25,2012 | 05:02 AM
As a young U.S. Marine, I spent almost two and a half years in Munich in the early '70's. I came to love the city and the people. The Olympic massacre was a tragedy for Israel and for the people of the city. They were so proud of Munich but the killings, I think, shamed them. It was a reminder of the Nazi past they were trying to put behind them.
Posted by Michael Gilbert on June 27,2011 | 02:52 PM
I have visited Munich many times and had a short teaching stint there. So, I know it reasonably well. It is my favorite German city, hands down! It is no surprise that Charles Michener's article is well researched and very informative. He provides first rate journalism. But the article is more than that, it displays the author's wonderful empathy with the culture of this city and its citizens and brings it to life. Now I intensely long for the opportunity of yet another visit.
Posted by Andre Oberle on August 25,2010 | 03:42 PM
I lived in Munich in 1958 when it turned 800. I was 11 years old. My father was in the US Army. I remember the parade and the Oktoberfest. I just loved the city and the people. I have fond memories of ice skating in the Englischer Garten. I can still taste the cheese we would get at a weekly market by a church. When we returned to our hometown in Pennsylvania which had recently celebrated 200 years, everybody told us we missed the bicentennial. After witnessing Munich celebrate 800 years, I didn't miss anything.
Posted by Rod Kline on April 20,2009 | 08:44 PM
A well written article of the "Weltstadt mit Herz" (Metropolitan City with Heart). I was born and raised in Munich and was fortunate to enjoy the bavarian lifestyle for more than 25 years before relocating to the US. The author accurately describes daily life as well as Munich's important connections to historical events that shaped the city to what it is today- a haven of culture, simple life and more importantly; a city of tolerance and great hospitality.
Posted by Peter Roder on February 28,2009 | 01:11 PM
I have been to Munich several times and I loved this city.I have picked up three BMWs and have explored beautiful Baveria and King Ludwig magnificent castles.And yes,I have also enjoyed the great beer halls.Great article!
Posted by frank de varona on November 22,2008 | 10:36 AM
Beautiful article and very enlightening! I sent it to my daughter who has lived about an hour away for the last few years and ia am sure it has given her a new appreciation for and knowledge about her city. It certainly did the same for me!
Posted by Mary Denton on November 20,2008 | 07:56 AM
Beautiful writeup. I was in Munich in 2007. Loved it.
Posted by Anne Bailey on November 18,2008 | 07:33 PM
As an American who lived in München for a year I enjoyed this well-informed article. Missing, from my perspective, were mention of the Biergarten by the famous Chinesiche Turm (Chinese Tower) in the Englischer Garten, the Haus der Kunst museum, the University, churches, etc. along Maximilianstr.from the Friedenstor to Odeon Platz, and Stachus, the busy commercial center near the main railroad station.
Posted by Jim Lacey on November 18,2008 | 03:38 PM
Great review about the beautiful city of Munich! Several suggestions : Add information about the beautiful BMW visitors center. the beautiful airport, and last but not least, the wonderful fun-filled Oktoberfest! Thanks.
Posted by Duncan J. Cameron on November 17,2008 | 04:08 PM
I appreciate this overview of Munich as it seems to give one an insider's view of the city.
Posted by Linda Troyer on November 1,2008 | 11:40 PM