- Roman Baths (Potsdam)
The Roman Baths (German: "die Römischen Bäder"), northeast of the Castle
Charlottenhof in thepark ofSanssouci inPotsdam , reflect the "Italiensehnsucht" ("Sehnsucht /longing forItaly ") of its creator Frederick William IV ofPrussia . Various Roman and antiquated Italian styles were melded into the architecturalensemble created between 1829-1840.While still a
crown prince Friedrich Wilhelm had firstCharlottenhof (1826-1829) and then the adjunct Roman Baths built. Coming up with numerous ideas and drawing many actual drafts, the artistically-giftedheir to the throne had great influence on the plans of the architect,Karl Friedrich Schinkel . Charged with managing the actual construction wasLudwig Persius , a student of Schinkel's.The garden house ("Gärtnerhaus") (1829/30) and the house for its keepers ("Gärtnergehilfenhaus") (1832) were both built in Italian country house style("Landhausstil"). The Roman bath (1834-1840) for which the whole ensemble was named was styled after
ancient villa s. Together with the tea-pavilion ("Teepavillon") (1830), modelled ontemple s of antiquity, it forms the complex of buildings, tied together bypergola s, arcades and sections of garden. The individuals buildings play on the memories of Schinkel's second trip to Italy in 1828.Thus the Roman bath, which has never been bathed in, came to be thanks purely to the romantic fantasy of the royal Italophile.The names of the rooms connote a mixture of antique villas und Roman baths. The atrium, the
courtyard of a Roman house, is the reception area. TheImpluvium , actually only a glorified rainwater-collection device, gives its name to the whole room in which it is located. TheViridarium (greenhouse ) is actually a small garden.Names associated with Roman thermal baths areApodyterium for the changing room, andCaldarium .The whole nostalgic creation borders on an artificial lake created during
Peter Joseph Lenné 's formation of the Charlottenhofareal . The so-called machine pond ("Maschinenteich") gets its name from a steam engine house and adjacent pumpstation torn down in 1923. The large hull of a well marks the former location of the building. The steam engine was not just responsible for keeping the artificial waters of Charlottenhof moving - its smokestacks were also a symbol of progress and what was at this time highly-developed technology.Sources
* Gert Streidt, Klaus Frahm: "Potsdam. Die Schlösser und Gärten der Hohenzollern". Könemann Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Köln 1996. ISBN 3-89508-238-4
* Amtlicher Führer der Stiftung Preußische Schlösser und Gärten Berlin-Brandenburg: "Schloss Charlottenhof und die Römischen Bäder". 7. neu bearbeitete Auflage, Potsdam 1998External links
* [http://www.potsdam-tour.co.uk/?lc=18 Potsdam from Above - Roemische Baeder]
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