The photos are from an internet auction from the year 2010. I only own the files as JPG and not the originals. These have been restored and colored. Possibly are few photos of reporter Eitel Lange.
The music had me rolling, it was like an episode of some Discovery Channel show on buying lake property. 'Here we have the Reichminister's Lodge, a quaint 15 bedroom bungalow just a hop, skip and a jump from the extensive lake front. No need to worry about neighbors as they have been forcibly removed for your benefit...'
Ich war jetzt dort,leider wurden die Überreste von Land Brandenburg zerstört und bepflanzt. Aber an diesem Ort zu stehen und auf Enddeckungstour zu gehen ist genial.
War in dieser Woche da, es ist sogar schwierig geworden hinter dem Gedenkstein in den aufgeforsteten Wald zu kommen. Da liegen Bäume quer, sieht aus als wäre es absichtlich so gewollt.
The place looked amazing and such a German hunting influence. Although it is now completely destroyed and gone, surely some of those magnificent bronze sculptures, lamps, etc. must have survived the destruction, or been taking as war booty by the Allied army, when they overran the place ?
Very detailed , it have this very unic and special Arichtecture that ervy person that seen it standig reportet , im also supriesed about the interior work ther . Was very intresting to see , ther must had been a live televison room (ws only live that time and only... ) as Cinema under it that i nerver done seen ; just new for me was the Roofspace with the mini/toy railway.
Whenever I think of Herman Goring, I ALWAYS think of light, airy music such as this, or..... Herman Goring at my local shopping mall, wearing his full Reichsmarshall's uniform, with his baton, looking in the jewelry store window, or ordering at the local Macdonald's drive- thru.... Or maybe out on the golf-course... ...I don't know...
Carin was long dead..interestingly he was remarried but named the place after his first wife ..perhaps his city house was to be named for his 2nd wife.. As with most big houses the books were for the owner and presumably his guests. Carins remains were disturbed by treasure hunters after the war but a Minister gathered them and sent them home to Sweden I believe.
@@georgetreepwood1119 Actually he did have an "Emmyhall". It was the Reichsjägerhof, Goering’s smaller hunting lodge at Rominten Heath, in East Prussia (Now part of Russia, on the Polish border). It was smaller, more rustic, but the inside was no less over the top, as Carinhall. "Emmyhall" was burned to the ground, on Goering's orders, in Oct of 1944, well before Carinhall was demolished. You are correct about Carin Goering. She was found in the ruins of the crypt that was made for her, in 1991, on the estate of what was Carinhall. After identification, the remains were sent to Sweden, and reburied by the family. I've been there 2 times. Surprisingly, the two guard posts, made out of carved stone, still have his Marshal's Batons, carved into them. With all the people looking to erase history, I'm shocked they are still there. It's hard to realize how expansive the property is, until you see it in person. It had to be something else when it was still intact.
What a magnificent interior!! It would be completely in style with today's trends. Such a shame it was destroyed. It would have made more sense to have left it as a reminder of how a few evil men conquered the Fatherland and destroyed it.
@@johnwright291 Please look at the "Jagdschloss Grunewald" , the carinhall is a copy of them. And the Jagdschloss is a normal thing today. We all use the Berliner Olympiastadion, not depending who was the "father" of it....the same as the Volkswagen Wolfsburg factory....
You think Goering and the Germans were solely respinsible for the 70 plus million lives lost in WW2? Your knowledge of history must come solely from the victors sources
In opulence and grandeur, the American ‘robber barons’ mansions of Newport had nothing on this German ‘robber baron’s’ mansion!! Absolutely enormous!!…and very grand!!