Cemeteries and Other Burial Sites
Soviet Memorial in Schönholzer Heide
Berlin Borough Pankow
Schönholzer Heide, a park that had been popular
with Berliners for family outings since the 19th century,
was converted into a huge camp for forced laborers
during World War II. After the war, a military cemetery
designed by a group of Soviet architects, Konstantin
A. Solovyev, M. Belarnzev, and W.D. Korolyev, and the
sculptor Ivan G. Pershutchev was laid out at the northwest
end of the park from May 1947 to November 1949. More
than 13,000 officers and soldiers of the Red Army who
were killed in the last stages of the war in Berlin
in April and May 1945, including 120 women, were buried
here.
An avenue of linden trees leads from a small clearing
off Germanenstrasse to the memorial. The approach
is flanked by two granite pillars embellished with
symbolic wreaths and bronze bowls holding a sculpted
eternal flame. Two square towers of red granite are
on either side of the main entrance, decorated with
large bronze reliefs depicting the Soviet people
in combat and in mourning. The exterior walls adjacent
to the towers display eight coats of arms in cartouche
form with the emblems of the various branches of
the Soviet armed forces. Quotes from Stalin in German
and Russian are inscribed on the walls of the two
towers, and inside each tower is an empty bronze
urn about 1.5 meters tall. A multicolored skylight
composed of hundreds of different pieces reproduces
the coat of arms of the Soviet Union inside the right
tower, which is reminiscent of an ancient Egyptian
burial chamber.
The center of the cemetery grounds is flanked by
16 tombs in which 1182 Red Army soldiers were laid
to rest.
The main monument, a Russian "Mother Homeland" mourning
her fallen son, who lies under the flag of victory,
is at the other end of the grounds and recalls a
Christian pietà. It stands in front of a 33.5-meter
obelisk of light gray syenite. The names of fallen
officers are found on the 42 grave markers on the
black ashlars making up the base of the obelisk.
Two Soviet colonels are buried in the crypt beneath
the obelisk's hall of honor. A monument behind the
obelisk commemorates the Soviet soldiers who died
in German captivity.
Another 100 grave markers, separated by stylized
torches, line the wall that surrounds the memorial.
Inscribed on the markers are the name, rank, and
year of birth of 2647 fallen Soviet soldiers. Less
than 1/5 of the people buried here were able to be
identified; the rest are unnamed.
Soviet Memorial in Schönholzer Heide
| Adress |
Germanenstrasse, 13156 Berlin |
| Opened |
7 November 1949 |
| Size |
27,500 m² |
| Number of graves |
More than 13,000 |
| Type of cemetery |
Military cemetery and memorial |
| Object of memorial |
Red Army soldiers in World War II |
| Location/Transport |
See city map |
 |
Schönholzer Heide Memorial - Tower at main entrance
Schönholzer Heide Memorial - Mother Homeland
Schönholzer Heide Memorial - Wall of honor
Further Information
|