Mödlareuth

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Open-air museum
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Open-air museum
Open-air museum
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Open-air museum

Mödlareuth is a German village situated partly in Bavaria and partly in Thuringia. The northern part was in East Germany and the southern part in West Germany. The Thuringian part of the village belongs to Gefell while the Bavarian part belongs to Töpen. It was called Little Berlin by the Americans[1] because a wall divided it, like the Berlin Wall divided Berlin. Now a museum shows the history of the village and gives information about the political system at that time.

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[edit] History

In 1810 (see Napoleonic Wars) the Tannbach River (only one foot wide), which flows through Mödlareuth, became the new border between the Kingdom of Bavaria and the principality of Reuß Younger Line. For 140 years this border made little difference to the local populace. There was just one school and one restaurant.

In 1945, Thuringia (to which Reuß had belonged since 1920) became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. When the constitutions of West Germany and East Germany were ratified in 1949, the village was split by a border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town.

In 1952, East Germany began to strengthen its western border. Residents of areas close to the border were forced to relocate, including some residents of Mödlareuth. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966.

From that point on the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. The Americans nicknamed the town Little Berlin.

In 1983, then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]

On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down by bulldozer. A small portion remained as a memorial.

[edit] Mödlareuth today

Border stone in Mödlareuth
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Border stone in Mödlareuth

The Thuringian part of the village of Mödlareuth belongs to the city of Gefell, and the Bavarian part to the community of Töpen.

Since 1994, Mödlareuth has had an open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. It includes a portion of the original wall as well as a rebuilt barrier typical of those on the border at the time.

Although there is free passage between the two parts of the village today, there are still many differences. They have different postal codes and telephone area codes; the residents vote separately and send their children to different schools.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b 'Little Berlin' marks 40th anniversary of its own Cold War wall

[edit] External links

This article incorporates text translated from the corresponding German Wikipedia article as of 2006-11-15.

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