List of streets named after Adolf Hitler
This is a partial list of streets and squares named after Adolf Hitler during the era of Nazi Germany.
The zeal with which German municipal authorities attempted, immediately after the seizure of power, to play their part in the "National Rising" (German: Nationale Erhebung) is shown by the practice of conferring honorary municipal citizenship on Hitler, and even more by naming a street (Straße), a square or place (Platz), a promenade (Anlage), an avenue (Damm, Allee), a stadium (Kampfbahn), or a bridge (Brücke) after the new chancellor. As early as March and April 1933, a wave of renamings swept through Germany's cities. Most of the examples in the list come from this period.
Table
City | 1933–1945 name | Pre-1933/Post-1945 name |
---|---|---|
Augsburg | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Königsplatz |
Berlin | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (Charlottenburg; further renamings were planned for after the "Final Victory") | Reichskanzlerplatz/Theodor-Heuss-Platz |
Berlin | Adolf-Hitler-Sport-Platz | At the Ostpreussendamm and Krahmerstrasse, opposite of Schlosspark Lichterfelde. Now a soccerfield. Still a stadium next to it. |
Bratislava | Hitlerovo námestie | Masarykovo námestie (1918–1938), (1945–1953)/ Námestie 4. Apríla (1953–1989) / Hlavné námestie (1989–present) |
Bremen | Adolf-Hitler-Brücke (Lüderitzbrücke after 1939) | Große Weserbrücke (torn down, 1961) |
Bremen | Adolf-Hitler-Brücke (new in 1939) | Westbrücke/Stephaniebrücke |
Bremen | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (Hemelingen) | Rathausplatz |
Bremen | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (Lesum) | An der Lesumer Kirche |
Bremen | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Aumund) | Hammersbecker Straße |
Bremen | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Lesum) | Kellerstraße |
Bromberg | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Gdańska |
Breslau (now Wrocław, Poland) |
Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Friedrich-Ebert-Straße/Mickiewicza street |
Budapest VI. | Hitler Adolf tér (1938–1945) | Kodály körönd |
Celje, Slovenia | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Prešernova ulica |
Cologne | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Platz der Republik/Deutscher Platz (Ebertplatz after 1950) |
Dortmund | Adolf-Hitler-Allee | Hainallee |
Düsseldorf | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Graf-Adolf-Platz |
Düsseldorf | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Haroldstraße |
Engerau (now Bratislava, Slovakia) |
Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Masarykova (1918–1938) / Benešova (1945–1948) / Stalinova (1948–1989) / Zadunajská cesta (1989–present) |
Eppingen | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Brettener Straße |
Essen | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Burgplatz |
Essen | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Kettwiger Straße; Viehofer Straße |
Esslingen | Adolf Hitlerplatz | – / Marktplatz |
Euskirchen | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Hochstraße |
Festenberg (Now Twardogóra, Poland) |
Adolf Hitler Platz | Plac Piastow |
Frankfurt am Main | Adolf-Hitler-Anlage | Gallus-Anlage |
Freising | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Obere Hauptstraße |
Gotenhafen (now Gdynia, Poland) |
Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Świętojańska |
Hagen | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Ebertstraße (1945–1960); function as main street and B7 taken over by nearby Graf-von-Galen-Ring and half of the street being destroyed in 1960; (1960–present) Am Hauptbahnhof |
Hamburg | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Rathausmarkt |
Hamburg | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Winterhude) | Bebelallee |
Hamburg | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (Altona) | Platz der Republik |
Hamburg | Adolf-Hitler-Damm (Wandsbek) | Friedrich-Ebert-Damm |
Hamburg | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Wilhelmsburg) | Wilhelmsburger Reichsstraße |
Hannover | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (Hermann-Göring-Platz after 15 September 1933) | Corvinusplatz |
Hannover | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Theaterplatz |
Hannover | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Bahnhofstraße |
Iglau (now Jihlava, Czech Republic) |
Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Masarykovo náměstí |
Jägerndorf (now Krnov, Czech Republic) |
Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Hlavní náměstí (Main Square) |
Kiel | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Neumarkt/Rathausplatz |
Königsberg (now Kaliningrad, Russia) |
Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Ploshchad Pobedy (Victory Square) |
Krakau (now Kraków, Poland) |
Adolf-Hitler-Platz (1939–1944) | Rynek Główny (Main Square) |
Leslau (now Włocławek, Poland) |
Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Plac Wolności (Freedom Square) |
Litzmannstadt (now Łódź, Poland) |
Adolf-Hitler-Straße (1939–1944) | Piotrkowska Street[1] |
Memel (now Klaipėda, Lithuania) | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | before 1939, Prezidento Smetonos Alejo / Präsident Smetona Allee |
Mulhouse, France | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | rue du Sauvage |
Mulhouse, France | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | place de la Réunion |
Munich | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (Pasing) | Avenariusplatz |
Munich | Adolf-Hitler-Allee (Solln) | Diefenbachstraße |
Munich | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Obermenzing) | Verdistraße |
Munich | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Untermenzing) | Eversbuschstraße |
Munich | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Allach) | Vesaliusstraße |
Munich | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Aubing) | Limesstraße |
Munich | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Lochhausen) | Schussenrieder Straße |
Neuburg an der Donau | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Luitpoldstraße / Luitpoldstraße (1945-2014), Adolf-Hitler-Straße (2014-2016, by accident), Luitpoldstraße (planned 2016) |
Nuremberg | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Hauptmarkt |
Osnabrück | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | Neumarkt |
Osnabrück | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Bramstraße |
Považská Bystrica (Slovakia) | Adolf-Hitler-Strasse | Továrenská (-1939), Stalinova (1945-1989), Robotnícka (from 1990) |
Riga, Latvia | Adolf-Hitler-Allee (1942–1944) Adolf-Hitler-Straße (1942–1944) |
Brīvības bulvāris Brīvības iela |
Rome, Italy | Viale Adolf Hitler | Viale dei Partigiani |
Saarbrücken | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (1935–1945) | Bahnhofstraße |
Soultz-sous-Forêts, France | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | rue des Barons-de-Fleckenstein |
Strasbourg, France | Adolf-Hitler-Platz | place Broglie |
Stuttgart | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Planie |
Stuttgart | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (Birkach) | Bei der Linde |
Stuttgart | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (Stammheim) | – |
Stuttgart | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Feuerbach) | Stuttgarter Straße |
Stuttgart | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Plieningen) | Paracelsusstraße |
Stuttgart | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Möhringen) | Laustraße |
Stuttgart | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (Vaihingen) | Böblinger Straße/Hauptstraße |
Stuttgart | Adolf-Hitler-Kampfbahn (Bad Cannstatt) | Neckarstadion |
Tallinn, Estonia | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (1942–1944) | Narva maantee |
Tarnowskie Góry, Poland | Adolf-Hitler-Straße (1939–1944) | ul. Parkowa/ul. Stanisława Wyspiańskiego |
Tartu, Estonia | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (1942–1944) | Raekoja plats |
Valkenburg, Netherlands | Adolf Hitler-Allee (1942–1944) | Kloosterweg |
Vienna | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (1938–1945) | Rathausplatz |
Sofia, Bulgaria | Adolf Hitler blvd. | Evlogi and Hristo Georgievi Boulevard [2] |
Warsaw, Poland | Adolf-Hitler-Platz (1939–1944) | Piłsudski Square, formerly Plac Saski (Saxon Square, named after the Saxon Palace) 1818–1928, 1939–40, 1945–46 |
Yaphank, New York, USA | Adolf-Hitler-Street (1930's–?)[3] | |
Zittau | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | |
Wilhelmshaven | Adolf-Hitler-Straße | Paul-Hug-Straße |
Brazil
Before 1931, there are records of a street named Rua Adolpho Hitler in the Campo Belo district of Santo Amaro, Brazil. Its name was changed in 1931 to Rua Almirante Barroso, but when Santo Amaro was merged into São Paulo on the next year, the street was again renamed to Rua Gil Eanes, due to a homonym street in Brás. The street still retains Gil Eanes’s name.[4]
See also
Notes
- ↑ Die Chronik des Gettos Lodz/Litzmannstadt: 1943. Wallstein Verlag. 2007. p. 334. ISBN 978-3-89244-834-1.
- ↑ http://novinar.bg
- ↑ "New York's Nazi town: For years it had streets named after Hitler and Goebbels and hedges trimmed into swastikas. Now you 'STILL have to be Aryan to live there'" by Tom Leonard, Daily Mail, 10 November 2015
- ↑ "A Rua Adolf Hitler e outras ruas de alemães que mudaram de nome em São Paulo". saopauloantiga.com.br (in Portuguese). São Paulo Antiga/Douglas Nascimento. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
References
- Christian Zentner, Friedemann Bedürftig (1991). The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich, pp. 6–7. Macmillan, New York. ISBN 0-02-897502-2