Poor job-seeking immigrants found a home here as well.
![diagonal line diagonal line](https://clipartspub.com/images/line-clipart-black-and-white-diagonal-1.png)
Formally a part of Luisenstadt, this building was conceived as a visual anchor at the end of Markgrafenstrasse, as seen from the Gendarmenmarkt looking south.īy contrast, the adjacent Luisenstadt was developed mainly at the initiative of small-scale tradespeople who were given the freedom to build as they pleased. The planners deliberately added decorative edifices, such as the old building of the Jewish Museum Berlin, which from 1735 onward housed various legal institutions. Impressive urban spaces emerged at the gates of the Berlin Customs Wall: the square at Pariser Platz the octagon at Leipziger Platz the circle at present-day Mehringplatz. It was also built specifically for aristocratic and wealthy residents in addition to French religious refugees. The strict regulation of building activity was the result not only of the king’s baroque aesthetic program, but also of the fact that the settlement was promoted by the state. Middle Classes Contrast With Working Classesīeginning in 1688, the center of Berlin was significantly expanded with the addition of the Friedrichstadt quarter. This interface not only symbolizes the area’s past but will also determine its future. Indeed, the diagonal course of Lindenstrasse resulted from the convergence of the prestigious quarter of Friedrichstadt (marked by a rigid north-south orientation), and the disorderly Luisenstadt to the east (where working-class housing was built, often in an informal style), along the street to Köpenick in the southeast. Arons brought together many lines of historical development that continue to shape the area today, and that can be experienced spatially just in front of the Jewish Museum Berlin, which holds his papers. The building was financed by Leo Arons, a successful scholar, pioneer of social democracy, and son of an upper-class Jewish family. I hope everyone will be able to use my lists.When the first trade union building was built in imperial Berlin around 1900, the labor movement was still considered a “danger to the public safety.” The building still stands in Engeldamm in Luisenstadt, the part of the district of Kreuzberg that begins just behind the Jewish Museum Berlin. So if you know a challenge host, please direct them to my blog. I’ve put together a list of challenges and their hosts. Please check out my Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge to check out more of what this challenge is about. I usually will respond to your entry on your blog, rather than on my page.Remember to Follow My Blog to get your weekly reminders.
![diagonal line diagonal line](https://static.vecteezy.com/system/resources/previews/000/189/209/original/diagonal-lines-vector-background-design.jpg)
To make it easy for others to check out your photos and post, title your blog post “Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge” or “CFFC” tag.Then add a link to your blog in my comment box.
![diagonal line diagonal line](https://www.crushpixel.com/big-static15/preview4/blue-geometric-diagonal-lines-stripes-2048006.jpg)
Week 1 – Possible topics, geometry, bushes, window, brick, curtain, green, tan, wall, building, dark red, treeĬreate a Cee’s Fun Photo Challenge (CFFC) Post I will post the photo a week prior to the each challenge. You can pick colors, or objects from the photo.
#Diagonal line series
The Next Series – Pick a Topic from this Photoįor the next five weeks, I will be posting a photo for each week and you can pick a topic from the photo. The Current Series – Components of a Photo Go through your photo archives and see what photos you have that fits the current week’s challenge, or better yet grab you camera and take a new photo! ENJOY and have FUN. Let’s see how creative you can be on for this week’s challenge. Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: Diagonal Line(s)