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   Germany > Postam > Palace of Sans-souci > Temple of Friendship
Temple of Friendship
Temple of Friendship
Freundschaftstempel
Section 9 on 15

Palace of Sans-souci
Outdoor Architecture

between 1768 and 1770

Open daily excepted monday

UNESCO World Heritage Site (Définitif) : 1990

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The Temple of Friendship is a small, round temple in the western part of Sanssouci Park in Potsdam. It was built by Friedrich the Great of Prussia in memory of his favorite sister, Markgravine Wilhelmine of Bayreuth, who died in 1758.
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History   
The Temple of Friendship was built south of the main alley from 1768 to 1770 by Carl von Gontard, to complement the Antique Temple, which lies due north of the alley.

The Neuruppin Pavilion
The basis for the Temple of Friendship was the Temple of Apollo in the Amalthea Garden of Neuruppin. The first work of architect Georg Wenzeslaus von Knobelsdorff, it was built in the flower and nut gardens by Crown Prince Frederick (later Frederick the Great) at his residence there, where he lived from 1732-1735 while he was the commander of a regiment there.

The Temple of Apollo was an open round temple, which was closed by a brick wall between its columns in 1791. In August 1735, Fredrick described the building to his sister Wilhelmine: "... Das Gartenhaus ist ein Tempel aus acht dorischen Säulen die eine Kuppel tragen. Auf ihr steht die Statue des Apollos. Sobald es fertig ist, werden wir Opfer darbringen - natürlich Dir, liebe Schwester, der Beschützerin der schönen Künste." (... "The garden house is a temple of eight doric columns holding up a domed roof. On it stands a statue of Apollo. As soon as it is finished, we shall bring it a sacrifice - naturally it will be you, dear sister, protectress of the fine arts.")

The Sanssouci Pavilion
To honor his favorite sister's memory, Frederick decided, as in Neurippin, to build a round temple, whose shallow domed roof is supported by eight corinthian columns. This form, typical of a monopteros, has its origins in ancient Greece, where such buildings were erected over cult statues and grave markers.

The life-sized statue of a seated Wilhelmine of Bayreuth in a shallow alcove on the temple wall, comes from the workshop of the sculptor brothers Johann David and Johann Lorenz Whilhem Räntz. For a model for the marble figure, they used a painting by the court painter Antoine Pesne. The medallions on the columns of ancient personalities and the book the statue shows in her hand, stem from the Markgravine and her love of that age.

From Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_of_Friendship
Text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License
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Johann David Räntz (1729-1783)
Statue
Johann Lorenz Whilhem Räntz (1733-1776)
Statue
Antoine Pesne (1683-1757)
Statue
More pictures   
Place(s) related   
Temple de l'Amour (Trianon Gardens)
Palace of Sans-souci
Temple of Friendship (1)