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The Reich Air Ministry (German: Reichsluftfahrtministerium) was a government department during the period of Nazi Germany (1933-45). The German language (de ''Deutsch'') is a West Germanic language and one of the world's major languages. Nazi Germany and the Third Reich are the common English names for Germany under the regime of Adolf Hitler and the National Socialist German Workers It is also the original name of a building in Wilhelmstraße in central Berlin, the capital of Germany, which now houses the German Finance Ministry. The Wilhelmstrasse ( German Wilhelmstraße, see ß) is a street in the center of Berlin, the capital of Germany. Berlin is the capital city and one of sixteen states of Germany. Germany, officially the Federal Republic of Germany ( ˈbʊndəsʁepuˌbliːk ˈdɔʏtʃlant is a Country in Central Europe. The Federal Ministry of Finance (Bundesministerium der Finanzen is part of the German federal government and is responsible for managing the federal Budget.

The Air Ministry was in charge of development and production of aircraft, primarily for the German Air Force (the Luftwaffe). ( German 'luftvafe is a generic German term for an Air force. As was characteristic of government departments in the Nazi era, the Ministry was personality driven and formal procedure was often ignored in favour of the whims of the Minister, Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring (1893-1946). Hermann Wilhelm Göring (also spelled Goering) (12 January 1893 15 October 1946 was a German Politician, Military leader and a leading member As a result, development progressed only slowly and erratically during the war.

The Ministry was formed in April 1933 from the Reich Commissariat for Aviation (Reichskommissariat für die Luftfahrt), which had been established two months earlier with Göring at its head. In this early phase the Ministry was little more than Göring's personal staff. One of its first actions was to requisition control of all patents and companies of Hugo Junkers, the German aeronautical engineer. Hugo Junkers ( 3 February 1859 - 3 February 1935) was an innovative German Engineer, as his many Patents These included all rights to the Junkers Ju 52 aircraft. WikipediaWikiProject

Defence Minister General Werner von Blomberg decided that the importance of aviation was such that it should no longer be subordinate to the Army. Werner Eduard Fritz von Blomberg (2 September 1878 - 14 March 1946 was a leading member of the German Army until January 1938 In May 1933 he transferred the Luftschutzamt, the army's Department of Military Aviation, to the Air Ministry. This is often considered the birth of the Luftwaffe. The Ministry was now much larger, consisting of two large departments: the military Luftschutzamt (LA) and the civilian Allgemeines Luftamt (LB). Erhard Milch (1892-1972), the former head of Lufthansa, was placed in direct control of the LA, in his function as State Secretary for Aviation. Erhard Milch ( March 30, 1892 &ndash January 25, 1972) was a German Field marshal who oversaw the development of the

In September 1933 a reorganization was undertaken to reduce duplication of effort between departments. The primary changes were to move the staffing and technical development organizations out of the LB, and make them full departments on their own. The result was a collection of six: Luftkommandoamt (LA), Allgemeines Luftamt (LB), Technisches Amt (LC, but more often referred to as the T-amt) in charge of all research and development, Luftwaffenverwaltungsamt (LD) for construction, Luftwaffenpersonalamt (LP) for training and staffing, and the Zentralabteilung (ZA), central command. In 1934 an additional department was added, the Luftzeugmeister (LZM) in charge of logistics. Logistics is the management of the flow of Goods, Information and other resources including Energy and people between the point of origin and the point

With the rapid growth of the Luftwaffe following the outbreak of World War II in 1939, the Ministry grew so large that Göring was no longer able to maintain control. World War II, or the Second World War, (often abbreviated WWII) was a global military conflict which involved a majority of the world's nations, including This period was marked by an increasing inability to deliver the new aircraft designs that were desperately needed, as well as continued shortages of aircraft and engines. In 1943 Albert Speer took over from Milch, and things immediately improved. Berthold Konrad Hermann Albert Speer, commonly known as Albert Speer ( 19 March 1905 - 1 September 1981 was an Architect, author and for part of World He was able to cut through the rigid hierarchy and make needed changes almost overnight. Aircraft production shot up, and projects that had been hampered for political reasons, like the Heinkel He 219 Uhu were finally able to proceed. WikipediaWikiProject Aircraft. Please see WikipediaWikiProject Aircraft/page content for recommended layout

The former Reich Air Ministry building, which now houses the German Finance Ministry
The former Reich Air Ministry building, which now houses the German Finance Ministry
The GDR-era Max Lingner mural extolling Socialism on the walls of the former Air Ministry building
The GDR-era Max Lingner mural extolling Socialism on the walls of the former Air Ministry building

The Reich Air Ministry building, the largest office building in Europe at the time of its construction, was erected on the orders of Göring between February 1935 and August 1936, and designed by Ernst Sagebiel (1892-1970), who shortly afterwards rebuilt Tempelhof Airport on a similarly gigantic scale. Ernst Sagebiel (2 October 1892 in Braunschweig (Brunswick – 1970 in Bavaria) was a German Architect. For the United States Air Force military use of this facility see Tempelhof Central Airport Berlin-Tempelhof Airport also

One writer has described it as "in the typical style of National Socialist intimidation architecture. "[1] It ran for more than 250 m along Wilhelmstraße, partly on the site of the former Prussian War Ministry that had dated from 1819, and covered the full length of the block between Prinz-Albrecht-Straße and Leipziger Straße, even running along Leipziger Straße itself to join on to the Prussian Herrenhaus, the former Upper House of the Prussian Parliament. Niederkirchnerstraße, formerly Prinz-Albrecht-Straße, is a street in Berlin, the capital of Germany. Leipziger Straße is a street in central Berlin, capital of Germany. The Prussian House of Lords (Preußisches Herrenhaus was the first chamber of the Parliament of the Kingdom of Prussia from 1850-1918 It comprised a reinforced concrete skeleton with an exterior facing of limestone and travertine (a form of marble). Reinforced concrete is Concrete in which reinforcement bars (" Rebars quot or fibers have been incorporated to strengthen a material that would otherwise be Limestone is a Sedimentary rock composed largely of the Mineral Calcite ( Calcium carbonate: CaCO3 Travertine is a Sedimentary rock. It is a natural chemical precipitate of Carbonate minerals; typically Aragonite, but often recrystallized to Marble is a nonfoliated Metamorphic rock resulting from the Metamorphism of Limestone, composed mostly of Calcite (a crystalline form of With its seven storeys and total floor area of 112,000 sq m, 2,800 rooms, 7 km of corridors, over 4,000 windows, 17 stairways, and with the stone coming from no fewer than 50 quarries, the vast building served the growing bureaucracy of the Luftwaffe, plus Germany’s civil aviation authority which was also located there. Yet it took only 18 months to build, the army of labourers working double shifts and Sundays. The first 1,000 rooms were handed over in October 1935 after just eight months' construction. When finally completed, 4,000 bureaucrats and their secretaries were employed within its walls.

The Reich Air Ministry building was one of the few major public buildings in central Berlin to escape serious damage during the Allied bombing offensive in 1944-45. Afterwards the huge structure was quickly repaired, only the Ehrensaal (Hall of Honour) being much altered, remodelled into the Stalinist neo-classicist Festsaal (Festival Hall), and the enormous Prussian Eagle and Swastika that adorned its end wall being removed. The swastika (from Sanskrit: svástika sa स्वस्तिक Hindu IS CORRECT if 'ि' is positioned incorrectly see -->) is Elsewhere however, the stated desire to eliminate all traces of Nazi symbolism may not have been carried through as thoroughly as promised. Swastikas had originally been carved into several stone and marble panels set into the exterior, especially two rows of ground floor pillars along Wilhelmstraße; rumours persist to this day that these panels were simply turned round and reaffixed with their blank rear surfaces now showing.

Contents

East Germany

At any rate, once the work was complete, the building was then taken over by the Soviet military administration, and then from 1947-49 the German Economic Commission (Deutsche Wirtschaftskommission). In a ceremony in the Festsaal on 7 October 1949, the German Democratic Republic was founded, with Wilhelm Pieck as President and Otto Grotewohl as Prime Minister (Ministerpräsident). The German Democratic Republic ( GDR; Deutsche Demokratische Republik DDR; commonly known in English as East Germany) was a Socialist state Friedrich Wilhelm Reinhold Pieck ( January 3, 1876 - September 7, 1960) was a German communist and the first and only Otto Grotewohl ( March 11, 1894 - September 21 1964) was an East German politician Later the building served the GDR Council of Ministers and other affiliated organizations of the GDR, hence its new name Haus der Ministerien (House of the Ministries). The Ministerrat der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik ("Council of Ministers of the GDR" was the chief executive body or Government, of the German The German Democratic Republic ( GDR; Deutsche Demokratische Republik DDR; commonly known in English as East Germany) was a Socialist state

After Union

From 1991-96, after German re-unification, it housed the Treuhand (Trust Establishment), which sold off ex-GDR state-owned companies, putting many thousands out of work and making its first chairman, Detlev Karsten Rohwedder, a very unpopular man. The Treuhand ( Treuhandanstalt or Treuhand agency) was the agency that privatized the East German enterprises owned as Public property Detlev Karsten Rohwedder ( October 16, 1932 - April 1, 1991) was a German manager and Politician, as member of the He was murdered on 1 April 1991, after which the building was renamed Detlev-Rohwedder-Haus on 16 January 1992 in his honour. From 1990 the Berlin branch office of the German Finance Ministry was also located here, and since 1999, following a vast refurbishment, the building has served as the Ministry's headquarters. This refurbishment generated its own controversy by apparently failing to investigate the old rumours about the reversing of the swastika panels. If any were taken off again in the course of the work, or just out of curiosity to see what was behind them, the findings have never been made public, but certainly none were replaced with new stone, and so the rumours continue undiminished. It is claimed that there was a definite statement being made here, simply to encourage people to move on and let sleeping dogs lie. While still a source of contention for some, this appears to have been largely accepted by the majority.

At the north (Leipziger Straße) end of the building, a plaque commemorates the protest meeting of 16 June 1953, from which stemmed the following day’s Uprising of 1953 in East Germany. The Uprising of 1953 in East Germany took place in June 1953 A strike by Berlin construction workers on June 16 Also at the north end along Leipziger Straße, set back behind pillars, is an extraordinary 18 meter long mural, made out of Meissen porcelain tiles, created in 1950-52 by the German painter and commercial artist Max Lingner (1888-1959) together with 14 artisans, depicting the Socialist ideal of contented East Germans facing a bright future as one big happy family. Meissen porcelain is the first European Hard-paste porcelain that was developed from 1708 by Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus. In fact the mural’s creation had been a somewhat messy affair. Commissioned by Prime Minister Otto Grotewohl, Lingner had had to revise it no fewer than five times, so that it ultimately bore little resemblance to the first draft. Originally based on family scenes, the final version had a more sinister look about it, a series of jovial set-pieces with an almost military undertone, people in marching poise and with fixed, uniform smiles on their faces. Lingner hated it (and Grotewohl’s interference) and refused to look at it when going past, but it remained, and remains. Since 1993 though, it has been joined by another scene set into the ground nearby: a huge blown-up photograph of 1953 protesters shortly before their gathering was suppressed.

References

  1. ^ Rürup, Reinhard; et al (1995). Berlin 1945: Eine Dokumentation. Berlin: Willmuth Arenhövel, 91. ISBN 392291232X.  

See also

The Reichsluftfahrtministerium (RLM had a system for aircraft designation which was an attempt by the aviation bureaucracy of the Third Reich to standardize This list covers German aircraft of the Second World War that served in the Luftwaffe during World War II as defined by the years 1939 to 1945 This is a list of aircraft type numbers allocated by an institution under the direction of Heereswaffenamt (before May 1933 and the Reich Air Ministry (RLM between see List of RLM aircraft for a numerical listing or RLM aircraft designation system for explanation of naming system German WWII Luftwaffe Color System (Reichsluftfahrt Ministerium The Air Ministry was formerly a department of the British Government with the responsibility of managing the affairs of the Royal Air Force.
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