On both sides of the street is the famous Humboldt University, which has produced many talented people and made outstanding contributions to the splendid German civilization.
Nobel laureates who have studied or worked at Humboldt University, including 3 Instein, Planck, Kirchhoff, Franck, Hertz, Wien, Schrödinger, Bayer, Hegel, Schopenhauer, Feuerbach, Heine, Marx, Engels, etc., have studied or worked there.
Germany has earned the title of "European thinker", thanks to Humboldt University.
The Lucis burned more than 20,000 books confiscated from bookstores, Humboldt University libraries, and other places.
Authors include Marx, Heine, Freud, and others, who were either Jewish or ideologically alien to Hitler's Nazis.
A symbolic "underground library" was built under the surface of the site in front of Humboldt University, where the city of Berlin burned books, and through the glass covered parallel to the ground, one could see empty bookshelves lined up in the dark basement.
The Berliners did this with good intentions.
Not far from Humboldt University Square, there are two larger churches, one called the "German Church" and the other the "French Church".
The existence of the "French Church" shows that Prussia was also a tolerant and wise man Louis XIV of the Lunar Republic annulled the Edict of Nantes, issued by Henry IV, and promulgated the Edict of Fontainebleau, a Catholic French decree against the Huguenots.
The Huguenots were forced to flee.
Prussia took the opportunity to issue the Edict of Potsdam, which encouraged the Huguenots in France to emigrate to Prussia, mainly for its own development.
Later, about 30,000 Huguenots came to Prussia, and some of them settled in Berlin.
Today's "French Church" was built by the Huguenots in Berlin to hold religious activities.
In World War II, the "French church" was not bombed in the slightest, while the adjacent "German church" was bombed.
War is a continuation of politics, which is vividly reflected here.
At the eastern end of the Boulevard "Under the Linden" there are statues of two men in the Marx-Engels Square.
This place was originally the site of the Prussian royal palace.
The Prussian royal palace was laid after successive Prussian additions and expansions, which can be called architectural treasures, and the Prussian royal palace was damaged during the bombing of Berlin, but the structure and sculpture are still relatively intact The Prussian royal palace was destroyed and demolished in East Berlin, and many Germans disagreed with it.
The Berlin Cathedral, which was built in the same year, was also damaged during the bombing, but has been restored and is now reopened.
Today, standing on the roof of the church, you can see the bustling scene of Berlin and the gentle flow of the River Spree nearby.
In fact, the Berlin Cathedral has been destroyed three times before, and the three periods of the church's existence are years Kurtstraße is one of the main commercial streets of the former "West Berlin", which was formed in the 16th century and has been gradually expanded into the current "commercial and cultural center of Berlin".
On the side of Kurtörstraße, stands the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, which was blown up at the top of World War II, which has become a symbol of the destruction of Germany during World War II and one of Berlin's main postcard images.
This city is no longer just a simple city for people to live in, but a history of blood and tears of a country and a nation's endless struggle, who has the ability to become the source of two consecutive world wars, who can be ashamed and then bravely defeated again and again.
Only Prussia and only Prussia.
Standing in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows and looking at the bustling streetscape, William was stunned when he thought of what he had said to Frederick the Great.
In later life, William once read an article that reads as follows: At the beginning of the month, Charles de Gaulle, the leader of the French resistance, set out from Paris and drove to Berlin to attend the German surrender ceremony, and at this moment he could say that he had nothing but revenge in his heart.
But when he arrived at his destination, the feeling of revenge was gone.
Because from the moment he crossed the Franco-German border, he never saw a whole city again.
An entire village.
There is not even a whole building anymore, except for women.
Children and old people, he did not see a healthy adult male Europeans As the saying goes, the Germans fought a war of 12 to 5 points, and they paid a heavy price for their sins.
More than 20 years later, two Soviet writers visited a small West German city with a population of just over 100,000.
In the square in the center of the town, a monument was erected, through which they learned that at the outbreak of the war, the town sent more than 10,000 children to the front, and they formed a division.
The division was destroyed three times during the war, and the inhabitants of the town refilled it three times, and by the end of the war more than 30,000 people had never returned, leaving only the words engraved on the monument: Even if we all die in battle, Germany will still exist.
The town is just a microcosm of wartime Germany.
The total population of Germany was only 80 million, and this included all the Rìlmans in Austria and the Sudetenland in the Czech Republic, but the 80 million people were mobilized to the front during the war.
From the hot equator to the cold Arctic, from the Pyrenees to the distant Volga, Germany's best sons and daughters died on the land of more than 50 countries.
Boys born in certain age groups are almost entirely killed.
During the war of less than six years, Germany had the strongest mobilization capacity and the highest casualty ratio in the world at that time.
What makes you give everything for it, and what stands in the way of your iron ambitions, does God have to fight against us, Prussia, or is Prussia destined not to rise, and why does it always fall short at the most critical moments.
But I came, I saw, I conquered, none of this will happen, Prussia will not weep, it will be the enemies of Prussia who will cry.
At this moment, William's body entrusts the souls of the ancestors of the Hohenzollern family, and on the road, he is no longer alone.
Just then, there was a knock at the door "Your Majesty, are you there?"
As the voice came, William turned and walked towards the door, and as he went, William said "Please come in", and then they were pushed away, and Marshal Dessau walked in under the leadership of Bouel.
"Your Majesty, Marshal Ziten has asked me to convey to you that the morning's subjects have been completed, and that all the papers of the subsequent examinations will be collected in Brandenburg for review, and the marshal would like to ask if you will have some personnel sent by the royal family to review with us," Dessau asked Lian thought about it for a while and agreed In fact, it is not unreasonable for Dessau to come and ask William to send someone to review the examination paper together, in case someone does not open his eyes and write something in the examination paper, doesn't it make it difficult for them, so they will come to ask William to send someone from the royal family to help review it to prove their innocence.