Museum for German HistoryThe Museum for German History (Museum für Deutsche Geschichte or MfDG) was the central historical museum of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), established in 1952 and closed in 1990. HistoryOn 20 October 1951 the seventh plenary of the Central Committee of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) called for the establishment of a museum of German history "to enlighten the population and especially young people". The historian Eduard Ullmann, scientific secretary of the Institute for Marxism-Leninism for the Central Committee of the SED,[1] came up with the initial plans for its objects and displays. All team heads, heads of department, directors and deputy directors were to belong to the SED, whilst an academic council ensured that the displays were always based on the Marxist-Leninist view of history. The Museum's first director was Alfred Meusel, with Ullmann as his deputy. The formal foundation was on 18 January 1952 in East Berlin and its first displays opened on 5 July that year in what had been a business school at 26 Clara-Zetkin-Straße,[2] until the restoration of the Museum's intended home, the Zeughaus, was sufficiently complete in March 1953.[3] A team of 85 historians, curators and conservators created the initial permanent display under severe time pressure, only completing as far as 1848 by opening day and adding the rest by 1953. Meusel was followed as director by Walter Nimtz (1963–1967) then Wolfgang Herbst (1967–1990). The GDR's Council of Ministers closed the Museum in 1990 following the Peaceful Revolution. The new federal government of reunified Germany transferred the Zeughaus and the former Museum's collections (including the objects it has loaned to the Velten Furnace and Ceramics Museum from 1970 to 1994) to the German Historical Museum. DisplaysPermanentThe 1950s scheme was essentially retained throughout the Museum's history. It was slightly adapted to the changing times in the 1960s but even after an early 1980s renovation (reworking "From Prehistory to Liberation from Fascism" in 1981 and the section on the GDR's history in 1984) its essential character remained unchanged. It interpreted German history as a class struggle consistent with Marx's historical materialism. It displayed texts and 100,000 objects, divided into seven departments, including:
Essentially it portrayed the foundation of the GDR as a 'socialist republic' as the natural end-point for all German history, including that of the areas then in West Germany. It also included a memorial to Lenin to commemorate his stays in Berlin. Temporary exhibitionsThe museum also had changing temporary exhibitions, such as:
Others included "Weapons and Uniforms of History" to mark the return of confiscated weapons stocks by the Soviet Union or “W. I. Lenin and the German Workers' Movement”. The GDR leadership intended the temporary exhibitions to have an even greater political impact than the Museum's permanent displays. Until the 1970s they aimed to present progressive traditions in what was then West and East Germany but during the 1980s they became more internationalist, interpreting German history in the context of socialism's international development. The Luther exhibition in 1983 was significant in significant for the change in how history was presented in the GDR, including non-socialsit aspects. Ninety-five special exhibitions had been designed by 1987, along with 107 touring exhibitions for abroad and 140 travelling exhibitions which toured the GDR and overseas. Bibliography
References
External links (in German)Wikimedia Commons has media related to Museum für Deutsche Geschichte.
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