Walhalla (memorial)

The Walhalla is a hall of fame that honours laudable and distinguished people in German history – "politicians, sovereigns, scientists and artists of the German tongue";[1] thus the celebrities honoured are drawn from Greater Germany, a wider area than today's Germany, and even as far away as Britain in the case of several Anglo-Saxons who are honoured. The hall is a neo-classical building above the Danube River, in Donaustauf, east of Regensburg in Bavaria.

The Walhalla is named for the Valhalla of Norse Paganism. It was conceived in 1807 by Crown Prince Ludwig I of Bavaria in order to support the gathering momentum for the unification of the many German states. Following his accession to the throne of Bavaria, construction took place between 1830 and 1842 under the supervision of the architect Leo von Klenze. The memorial displays some 65 plaques and 130 busts covering 2,000 years of history, beginning with Arminius, victor at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in AD 9.

Walhalla, Aerial View
Walhalla, seen from the Danube

History

Exterior view from northwest
360 degrees panorama view inside the Walhalla memorial, Germany
Walhalla colonnade
Walhalla main hall

By 1806 Napoleon's First French Empire had annexed German lands along the Rhine River and the North Sea. Central German states formed the Confederation of the Rhine, which sided with Napoleon. Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor, then formally dissolved the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation (6 August 1806) and instead styled himself Emperor of Austria. The War of the Fourth Coalition (1801807) pitted German forces on both sides against each other, and Napoleon again prevailed.

In 1807, 20-year-old Crown Prince Ludwig of the Kingdom of Bavaria (newly elevated from Electorate to Kingdom by Napoleon in 1806), had the idea of reminding all Germans of their common heritage – of the great figures and events in ethnic German history. He commissioned several sculptors to create busts of famous individuals of his choice. Johann Gottfried Schadow's bust of Nicolaus Copernicus became one of the first completed, in 1807. Further suggestions for individuals to be honoured were solicited in 1808 from Swiss historian Johannes von Müller.

By the time of Crown Prince Ludwig's coronation as King Ludwig I of Bavaria in 1825, 60 busts had been completed. In 1826 Ludwig commissioned the construction of a memorial above the Danube River, near Regensburg, modelled after the Parthenon in Athens. The southern pediment frieze features the 1815 creation of the German Confederation; the northern pediment frieze features scenes from the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest of 9 AD.[2] According to Pictorial Travels Continentally Described (circa 1892), the construction of the building cost £666,666.

A two thaler coin was minted commemorating the opening of the Walhalla, Krause catalog number KM# 811. It is moderately scarce.[3]

At Walhalla's inauguration on October 18, 1842, there were 96 busts, plus 64 plaques for persons or events of which no portrait was available on which to model a sculpture.

When the memorial was opened in 1842, Joseph Hartmann Stuntz authored a poem about Germany's greatness which was set to music by Joseph Hartmann Stuntz (two distinct men).[4]

Since being "of the German tongue" (viz., Germanic tongue) was the main selection criterion for the original 160 persons representing the 1,800 years of German history, the King included individuals of the wider Germanic sphere, including ancient Germanic notables as well as people from the Holy Roman Empire.

Whereas the Valhalla of Norse mythology served as home to those gloriously slain in battle, Ludwig intended his Walhalla not only for warriors but also for scientists, writers, and clerics, and specifically included both men and women. Decades before the foundation of the modern German state in 1871, "German" was understood as "Germanic", and included ancient Germanic (Gothic, Vandal, Lombardic, Anglo-Saxon) as well as medieval and modern Austrian, Dutch, Swedish and Swiss figures.

The first addition to the collection was the bust of Martin Luther. Ludwig, as a devout Catholic, had hesitated to include Luther. Several of the sculptors, including Ohnmacht and Schadow, had urged the king to include Luther, as did Johannes von Müller. Heinrich Heine (who would himself be inducted into the collection in 2010) mocked the omission in his satirical poem Praise to King Ludwig, saying: often, in naturalist collections of fish, the whale is missing.[5] Ludwig finally commissioned Luther's bust in 1831 from Ernst Friedrich Rietschel. It was not included at the inauguration of Walhalla in 1842, but added in 1848 by Ludwig himself. Luther's bust was placed just after the last of the original busts (Goethe's), disregarding the chronological arrangement by year of death.

Four further additions were made during Ludwig's lifetime: Archduke Charles, Duke of Teschen (died 1847, added 1853), Josef Wenzel Graf Radetzky von Radetz (died 1858, added in the same year), Friedrich Schelling (died 1854, added 1860) and Ludwig van Beethoven (added 1866).

In 1853, King Ludwig I established an additional Hall of Fame in Munich, specifically for Bavarians – the Ruhmeshalle. Nine of the Bavarian enshrinees have since become Walhalla enshrinees. Their busts in the Ruhmeshalle were destroyed in 1944, during a bombing raid, and have not been replaced. Instead, a plaque with their names tells of their transfer to Walhalla. King Ludwig I himself, who commissioned the Liberation Hall and other monuments, was also enshrined both at Walhalla and in the Ruhmeshalle.

Helmuth von Moltke the Elder was the last addition of a military leader (in 1910). After World War I, new additions focussed on artists and intellectuals. Beginning in 1933, when Kraft durch Freude and other National Socialist organizations promoted trips to Walhalla, visitor numbers increased exponentially. In 1937, when Hitler unveiled a Bruckner bust, 131,520 were counted.

The Walhalla memorial was reached by the Allied invasion of Germany in April 1945, by the US Third Army led by General George S. Patton.[6]

Additions since 1945 are proposed by private individuals or private foundations, who will also pay for the production of the new bust. Suggestions are reviewed by the Bavarian Academy of Sciences, based on which a recommendation is made by the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior. The final decision lies with the Bavarian Council of Ministers. Official practice since 1945 has been to favour "eminent figures from science or art, or individuals with extraordinary social or caritative merit".[7]

Nineteen busts have been added between 1945 and 2018, for an average interval of a little below four years between additions:

The addition of a bust of Max Planck is scheduled for 2019.[8]

List of people

Busts

Marble busts No. 6-14, Mozart in the bottom center
Copernicus, by Schadow (1807, No. 52)
The fifth bust group (No. 90 to 110)

The original busts are arranged in rows by date of death At the inauguration in 1842, a total of 96 busts were arranged, in two rows, in chronological order (by year of death), beginning with Henry the Fowler (d. 936) and ending with Goethe (d. 1832). The upper row comprised 70 busts, beginning with Henry the Fowler and ending with Maria Theresa. The lower row comprised a total of 26 busts of modern scholars, beginning with Lessing and ending with Goethe.

Upper Row

Busts to the left of the statue of Ludwig I
1. Henry the Fowler – Duke of Saxony and King of the Germans (1809)
2. Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor (Schadow, 1809)
3. Conrad II, Holy Roman Emperor (Schadow, 1809)
6. Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor (Schwanthaler, 1838)
7. Henry the Lion (d. 1195) – Duke of Saxony and Bavaria (Schadow, 1811)
8. Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor (d. 1250) – Stupor mundi (Tieck, 1814)
9. Rudolf I of Habsburg (d. 1291) – German king (Tieck, 1832)
15. Erwin von Steinbach – architect of the Straßburger Münster (Ohmacht, 1811)
16. Johannes Gutenberg – inventor of movable type (Matthiä, 1835)
17. Jan van Eyck (d. 1441) – Flemish painter (Tieck, 1817–1842)
18. Frederick I, Elector Palatinethe Victorious, Elector of the Palatinate (Lossow, 1842)
24. Johannes Müller Regiomontanus (d. 1476) – astronomer and mathematician (Lossow, 1842)
25. Nicholas of Flue (d. 1487) – Swiss hermit, ascetic and mystic (Tieck, 1812)
26. Eberhard I. of Württemberg – Duke of Württemberg (Wagner, 1830)
27. Hans Memling (d. 1494) – Flemish painter (Woltreck, 1841)
28. Johann von Dalberg (1455–1503) – Bishop of Worms (second bust by Lossow, added after 1867[9])
29. Hans von Hallwyl (14331504) – Swiss commander at the Battle of Morat (Christen, 1812)
35. Berthold von Henneberg – Elector and Archbishop of Mainz (Mayer, 1824)
36. Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor (P. Kaufmann, 1811)
37. Johannes von Reuchlin – German philosopher and humanist (Imhof, 1835)
38. Franz von Sickingen – leader of the knighthood in Rhineland and Swabia (von Bandel, 1827)
39. Ulrich von Hutten – German knight and Renaissance humanist (Kirchmayer, 1811)
40. Albrecht Dürer (14711528) – printmaker and painter (Rauch, 1837)
41. Georg von FrundsbergKnight and leader of Landsknechts (Widnmann, 1841)
47. Peter Vischer the Elder – German sculptor (F. Müller, 1839)
48. Johannes Aventinus (Johann Georg Turmair) – Bavarian scholar and historian (Horchler, 1841)
49. Wolter von Plettenberg – German Master of the Livonian Brothers of the Sword (L. Schwanthaler, 1832)
50. Erasmus of Rotterdam – Dutch humanist (Tieck, 1813)
51. Paracelsus (Theophrast von Hohenheim) – Swiss physician and alchemist (E. Wolff, 1827)
52. Nicolaus Copernicus – astronomer (Schadow, 1807)
58. Hans Holbein the Younger – German painter (Lossow, 1840)
59. Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor (Schwanthaler, 1842)
60. Christoph, Duke of Württemberg (Bissen, 1831)
61. Aegidius Tschudi – Swiss historian (Tieck, 1817)
67. William I of Orange – Dutch leader of the Eighty Years' War for the Dutch independence from Spain (Tieck, 1815)
68. Statue of Ludwig I of Bavaria (1890)
Busts to the right of the statue of Ludwig I
69. August II the StrongElector of Saxony and King of Poland (Rietschel, 1840)
70. Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn – Bishop of Würzburg (Scholl, 1840)
71. Maurice of Orange – Dutch captain-general of the army of the Dutch Republic (Tieck, 1815)
72. Johannes Kepler – mathematician and astronomer (Schöpf, 1842)
73. Albrecht von Wallenstein – general in the Thirty Years' War (Tieck, 1812)
79. Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar – general in the Thirty Years' War (Tieck, 1812/13)
80. Peter Paul Rubens – Flemish painter (Lamine, 1809)
81. Anthony van Dyck – Flemish painter and engraver (Rauch, 1812)
82. Hugo Grotius – Dutch jurist (Tieck, 1814)
88. Maximilian von und zu Trauttmansdorff – Austrian diplomat that negotiated the Peace of Westphalia (Schaller, 1824)
89. Maximilian I (15731651) – Prince-elector of Bavaria (Imhof, 1832)
90. Amalie Elisabeth – Countess of Hesse-Kassel (Tieck, 1817)
91. Maarten Harpertszoon Tromp – Dutch admiral (Kessels, 1825)
92. Paris Graf von Lodron – Archbishop of Salzburg (Eberhard, 1814)
93. Frans Snyders – Flemish painter (Rauch, 1814)
99. Charles X Gustav – King of Sweden (Tieck, 1816)
100. Johann Philipp von SchönbornArchbishop and Prince-elector of Mainz (Tieck, 1818)
101. Ernst I (16011675) – the Pious, Duke of Saxe-Gotha and Saxe-Altenburg (Tieck, 1815)
102. Michiel Adriaenszoon de Ruyter – Dutch admiral (Tieck, 1817)
103. Otto von Guericke – scientist and inventor (Rathgeber, 1811)
104. Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburgthe Great Elector (Wichmann, 1828)
105. Charles V, Duke of Lorraine (Tieck, 1817)
111. William III of Orange – Dutch Stadtholder and king of England, Scotland, and Ireland (Haller, 1816)
112. Ludwig Wilhelm von BadenTürkenlouis, Imperial commander (Widnmann, 1842)
113. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz – philosopher and mathematician (Schadow, 1808)
114. Herman Boerhaave – Dutch humanist and physician (Leeb, 1823)
115. Maurice of Saxony – German commander and military strategist (Tieck, 1813)
116. Georg Friedrich Händel (16851759) – composer (Schadow, 1815)
122. Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf – religious and social reformer, bishop of the Moravian Church (Tieck, 1818)
123. Burkhard Christoph von Münnich – German field marshal in Russian service (Lossow, 1841)
124. Johann Joachim Winckelmann – archeologist and art writer (R. Schadow, 1814)
125. William, Count of Schaumburg-Lippe – Commander of his army in the Seven Years' War and for Portugal (Schadow, 1809)
127. Albrecht von Haller – Swiss anatomist and physiologist (Schadow, 1808)
128. Raphael Mengs – Bohemian painter (Rauch, 1808)
129. Maria Theresia (Eberhard, 1811/2)

Lower Row

Marble busts No. 125-128, Sophie Scholl in the bottom center
Busts to the left of the statue of Ludwig I
4. Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (17291781) – poet (Tieck, 1813)
5. Frederick II of PrussiaFrederick the Great (Schadow, 1807)
10. Christoph Willibald Gluck – composer (Dannecker, 1812)
11. Ernst Gideon Freiherr von Laudon (17161790) – Austrian field marshal from Livonia (Kiesling, 1813)
12. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – composer (Schwanthaler, 1846)
13. Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-LüneburgPrussian Generalfeldmarschall (Schadow, 1808)
14. Justus Möser (1720–1794) – jurist and historian (Schmidt von der Launitz, 1821)
19. Gottfried August Bürger – poet (Tieck, 1817)
20. Catherine II of Russia (17291796) – the Great, Tsarina of Russia (Wredow, 1831)
21. Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock – poet (Schadow, 1808)
22. Johann Jakob Wilhelm Heinse – poet and scholar (Haller / Mayer, 1826)
23. Johann Gottfried Herder – poet and philosopher (Tieck, 1815)
30. Immanuel Kant – philosopher (Schadow, 1808)
31. Friedrich von Schiller – poet (Dannecker, 1794)
32. Joseph Haydn – composer (Robatz, 1810)
33. Johannes von Müller – Swiss historian (Schadow, 1808)
34. Christoph Martin Wieland – poet (Schadow, 1807)
42. Gerhard von Scharnhorst – Prussian general (Rauch, 1830)
43. Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly – Russian Field Marshal (Widnmann, 1841)
44. Gebhard Leberecht von BlücherPrussian Generalfeldmarschall (Rauch, 1817)
45. Karl Philipp Fürst zu Schwarzenberg – Austrian field marshal (Schaller, 1821)
46. Friedrich Wilhelm Herschel – astronomer (Eberhard, 1816)
53. Hans Karl von DiebitschRussian field marshal, born in Silesia
54. Karl vom und zum Stein – Prussian politician (1825)
55. August Graf Neidhardt von Gneisenau – Prussian field marshal (1842)
56. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe – poet and polymath (1808)
57. Martin Luther (1848) – Leader of the Reformation, translator of the Bible into German
62. Archduke Charles, Duke of Teschen (1853)
63. Josef Wenzel Graf Radetzky von Radetz – Bohemian military leader (1858)
64. Friedrich Schelling – German philosopher (1860)
65. Ludwig van Beethoven – composer (Lossow 1866)
66. Wilhelm I – German Emperor (1898)
68. Statue of Ludwig I of Bavaria (1890)
Busts to the right of the statue of Ludwig I
74. Otto von Bismarck (1908) – Chancellor of North German Confederation and then of the German Empire
75. Helmuth Graf von Moltke (1910) – German Generalfeldmarschall
76. Richard Wagner (1913) – German composer of operas
77. Johann Sebastian Bach (1916) – composer
78. Justus von Liebig – German chemist (1925)
83. Friedrich Ludwig Jahn (1928)
84. Franz Peter Schubert (1925) – Austrian Romantic composer
85. Joseph Görres (1931)
86. Anton Bruckner (1937) – Austrian composer
87. Max Reger (1948) – German composer and organist of the late romantic period
94. Adalbert Stifter (1954)
95. Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff (1957)
96. Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (1959) – German physicist
97. Max von Pettenkofer – chemist and hygienist (1962)
98. Jakob Fugger (1967)
106. Jean Paul (1973)
107. Richard Strauss (1973) – German composer
108. Carl Maria von Weber (1978) – German composer
109. Gregor Joh. Mendel (1983) – Silesian Augustinian monk and naturalist[10]
110. Albert Einstein (1990) – physicist
117. Karolina Gerhardinger (1998) – founder of the School Sisters of Notre Dame
118. Konrad Adenauer (1999) – first Chancellor of West Germany
119. Johannes Brahms (2000) – Composer
120. Carl Friedrich Gauss (2007) – mathematician, astronomer, and physicist[11]
121. Edith Stein (2009) – philosopher and saint
126. Heinrich Heine (2010) – German Romantic poet
130. Sophie Scholl (2003) – German passive resistance activist against the Nazi regime.[12]

Plaques

Statue of King Ludwig I (no. 63, 1890), builder of the hall
Fritigern, Leader of the Visigoths (second plaque from the top left)

Plaques were made for people (or acts) of which no portraits or descriptions were available to model sculptures after. The timeline spans from Arminius a.k.a. Hermann der Cherusker (born 17 BC) to watchmaker Peter Henlein, who died in 1542. In 2003 a plaque was added to commemorate the German Resistance against Nazi Germany.

Plaque numbers 132 represent the upper row, 3364 the lower row. Each plaque includes a short characterization of the individual, with the year of death given in Roman numerals. The year of death in the table below is that given on the plaque, even where modern historiography suggests a revised date.

NrNameDiedDescription
01Arminius0021Leader of the Cherusci, victorious at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in AD 9.
02Maroboduus0040Leader of the Marcomanni
03Veledaafter 65Prophetess
04Julius Civilisbefore 100Leader of the Batavi
05Ermanarich375King of the Ostrogoths
06Wulfilabefore 380Apostle of the Goths
07Fritigernafter 390Leader of the Tervingi
08Alaric I410King of the Visigoths
09Athaulf415King of the Visigoths
10Theodoric I451King of the Visigoths
11Horsa451Conqueror of Britain
12Geiseric477King of the Vandals
13Hengest480Conqueror of Britain
14Odoacer497King of the Heruli and Gepidae
15Clovis I511King of the Franks
16Theodoric the Great526King of the Ostrogoths
17Totila552King of the Ostrogoths
18Alboin573King of the Lombards
19Theudelindec. 626Queen of the Lombards
20Emmeram von Regensburg680Bishop and Saint
21Pippin of Herstal716Mayor of the Palace
22Beda Venerabilis735Abbot and historiographer
23Willibrord739Bishop and Saint
24Charles Martel741Charles "the Hammer", Duke and Prince of the Franks and Mayor of the Palace
25Bonifatius755Bishop and Saint
26Pippin the Younger768Pippin "the Short", King of the Franks
27Widukindc. 800Leader of the Saxons
28Paulus Diaconusafter 800Paul Warnefried, historiographer of the Lombards
29Alcuin804Abbot and scholar
30Ecgberht of Wessexc. 810First King of England
31Charlemagne814Charles the Great, Roman Emperor
32Einhard839Historiographer, biographer of Charlemagne
33Hrabanus Maurus856Bishop and scholar
34Arnulf von Kärnten900Roman Emperor
35Alfred the Great900King of England
36Otto of Saxonybefore 919Duke of Saxony
37Arnulf of Bavaria937Duke of Bavaria
38Matilda of Ringelheim968Queen of Germany and Saint
39Hrotsvithabefore 1000Dramatist
40Bernward of Hildesheim1028Artist, Bishop and Saint
41Heribert von Köln1028Bishop and Saint
42Henry III1056Holy Roman Emperor
43Lampert von Hersfeld1077Historian
44Otto von Bamberg1139Bishop
45Otto von Freising1158Bishop and historian
46Hildegard von Bingen1179Abbess and Saint
47Otto of Bavaria1183Duke of Bavaria
48Engelbert of Cologne1226Bishop and Saint
49The anonymous poet of the Nibelungenlied
50Walther von der Vogelweide1230Minnesinger
51Elisabeth von Thüringen1231Princess and Saint
52Leopold VI of Austria1234Leopold "the Glorious", Duke of Austria
53Hermann von Salza1240Grand Master of the Teutonic Order
54Wolfram von Eschenbach1251Minnesinger
55Master Gerhard1271Architect of Cologne Cathedral
56Arnold zum Turm1264Founder of the Rhenish League of Cities
57Albertus Magnus1280Bishop and scholar
58Rütlischwurafter 1306The three men of the Rütli oath, foundation of the Old Swiss Confederacy
59Friedrich der Schöne1330Anti-king during the Interregnum
60Bruno von Warendorp1369Leader of the Hanseatic League
61Arnold Winkelried1386Knight, Swiss hero at Sempach
62Wilhelm von Köln1388Painter
63Adrian von Bubenberg1479Bernese military leader
64Peter Henlein1542Inventor of the pocket watch

The 65th plaque, dedicated to the Widerstand (Resistance) against Nazi Germany, added in 2003, is not part of the two rows of 64 numbered plaques.


See also

References

  1. Official Guide booklet, 2002, p. 3
  2. Official Guide booklet, 2002, p. 6
  3. German States BAVARIA 2 Thaler KM# 811 1842
  4. Institute of Bavarian History
  5. Steger (2011:190).
  6. Anna Rosmus Hitlers Nibelungen, Samples Grafenau 2015, p. 178
  7. Steger (2011:199)
  8. "Käthe Kollwitz und Max Planck kommen in die Walhalla", Welt, 19 December 2017.
  9. Steger (2011:191).
  10. Hynčice lie in Silesia.
  11. http://www.stmwfk.bayern.de/downloads/aviso/2004_1_aviso_48-49.pdf
  12. The bust of Sophie Scholl was inaugurated on February 22, 2003, the 60th anniversary of her execution. It is also intended as a representative of all the members of the Widerstand (the German Resistance against Nazi Germany), who have been honored with an additional plaque.
  • Walhalla, official guide booklet, translated by Helen Stellner and David Hiley, Bernhard Bosse Verlag Regensburg, 2002
  • Eveline G. Bouwers, Public Pantheons in Revolutionary Europe. Comparing Cultures of Remembrance, c. 1790-1840, Basingstoke 2012, pp. 161-212 (ISBN 978-0-230-29471-4)
  • Adalbert Müller: Donaustauf and Walhalla (1846) at archive.org
  • Simone Steger, Die Bildnisbüsten der Walhalla bei Donaustauf Von der Konzeption durch Ludwig I. von Bayern zur Ausführung (18071842), dissertation, Ludwig–Maximilian University, Munich (2011).
  • Ludwig I of Bavaria, Walhalla's Genossen (1842, 2nd ed. 1847).

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