Unter den Linden (German:[ˈʊntɐdeːnˈlɪndn̩]ⓘ, "under thelinden trees") is aboulevard in the centralMitte district ofBerlin, Germany. Running from theBerlin Palace to theBrandenburg Gate, it is named after thelinden trees (known as lime in the UK and Ireland and basswood in North America, not related to citrus lime) that line the grassed pedestrian mall on the median and the two broadcarriageways. The avenue links numerous Berlinsights, landmarks and rivers for sightseeing.
In 1873 he department store Kaisergalerie was opened housing more than 50 shops and cafes. In the early 1930s, the architectAlfred Grenander redesigned the department store in theNew Objectivity style. The building was demolished in the 1950s.[4] Eastward the boulevard crosses theSpree river, slightly kinked due to the oblique position of the long side of the palace compared to the boulevard, at the Lustgarten withBerlin Cathedral, and continues asKarl-Liebknecht-Straße, itself continued asPrenzlauer Allee, to the northern outskirts. The western, dead straight continuation behind Brandenburg Gate is theStraße des 17. Juni (formerlyCharlottenburger Chaussee), which in turn is extended to the west by the straight sequence of Bismarckstrasse andKaiserdamm, an axis, widened in 1904, that runs from Berlin Palace more than 10 kilometers across the city to the western outskirts where, slightly elevated, one can survey the length of the axis. The extension of theLinden alley to this gigantic axis was inspired by theBoulevards of Paris. TheKurfürstendamm, the magnificent shopping mile in the historically elegant west of Berlin, was similarly inspired.
Parade on Opernplatz (byFranz Krüger, between 1824 and 1830). In the very background the planting with the linden trees begins towards the Brandenburg Gate.Unter den Linden (byEduard Gaertner, 1852). In the background is the Berlin Palace.
Unter den Linden, which sits at the heart of the historic section of Berlin, developed from a bridle path laid out by ElectorJohn George of Brandenburg in the 16th century to reach his hunting grounds in theTiergarten from his palace. It was replaced by a boulevard of linden trees when the ElectressDorothea Sophie planned a new suburb in 1674, named after herDorotheenstadt. She is said to have planted the first linden tree in 1680. Parts of the fortification of Berlin built in the aftermath of theThirty Years' War (the baroqueBerlin Fortress) were later integrated into the boulevard, around the historicOpernplatz, the present-dayBebelplatz, visible until today as there are no trees on this stretch up to the palace on the Spree river island itself. Bebelplatz itself was planned byFrederick the Great as a much largerForum Fridericianum, albeit on a smaller scale actually realized with hisState Opera,St. Hedwig's Cathedral, theOld Library Building and thePalace ofPrince Henry, today the main building ofHumboldt University, giving the square an almost complete surround of 18th-century buildings.
By the 19th century, as Berlin grew and expanded to the west, Unter den Linden became the most renowned and grandest street in Berlin. In 1851 the famousequestrian statue of Frederick the Great, designed byChristian Daniel Rauch, was erected on the central strip.Johann Strauss III wrote the waltz "Unter den Linden" in 1900. In the course of the building of theNord-Süd-Tunnel for theBerlin S-Bahn in 1934-1935, most of the linden trees were cut down and during the last days ofWorld War II the remaining trees were destroyed or cut down for firewood. The present-day linden were replanted in the 1950s.
As the location of the pre-1914 German Foreign Ministry building, "the Under den Linden" was sometimes used as a shorthand for the German government when talking of German foreign policy.
At the western end are theRussian Embassy (former Soviet Embassy, Nos. 63-65, theHungarian Embassy, No. 76, standing at the junction with Wilhelmstrasse, and finally theHotel Adlon, No. 77, at the corner of Pariser Platz, which has been completely rebuilt on the site of the pre-war hotel. Well-known statues ofAlexander andWilhelm von Humboldt in front of the university as well as of thePrussian generalsScharnhorst andBülow, also adorn the street. A street sign carrying the name Unter den Linden dating from before the 1930s was taken away by British forces and can now be seen at theImperial War Museum, London.