- Source: Hauptfriedhof Karlsruhe
The Hauptfriedhof in Karlsruhe is one of the oldest German communal rural cemeteries. In 1871, the first plans to build a new burial ground outside the city center began. The cemetery was laid out in 1874 by Josef Durm in the Rintheim district, east of the actual city, after the inner-city Alter Friedhof Karlsruhe in the Oststadt had become too small. The main cemetery has grown from its original size of 15.3 hectares in 1873 to over 34 hectares. The graves of more than 32,000 deceased are currently in the cemetery.
Structuring
Curved avenues of plane trees instead of rigid axes were part of the new conception of the park cemetery. While the representative monuments stood on the main paths, the simpler tombs were hidden behind hedges. The former crematorium, today a chapel for burials on a small scale, is elevated.
Since 2003, natural burials have been offered in an area called Mein letzter Garten ("my last garden").
There is a Muslim burial ground in the cemetery. An Orthodox and a Liberal Jewish cemetery with the graves of Otto Nachmann and his son, the former chairman of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, Werner Nachmann are separated.
Buildings
The entrance, which is reached from Haid-und-Neu-Straße after passing an avenue and several outbuildings, is designed in the style of a Roman triumphal arch. Behind the portal there is a courtyard based on the pattern of the Campo santo, which is closed off by the Renaissance-style crypt hall as well as the mortuary and the burial chapel. The ensemble is the first example of the Neo-Renaissance building in Baden and was restored at the beginning of the 21st century.
In 1903 the crematorium was built according to designs by August Stürzenacker. It is clad with reddish sandstone. With its neo-Romanesque design, it is considered the first crematorium to look like Christian sacred buildings; Until then, oriental architectural styles had been chosen for the type of burial, which the churches rejected. The building has been used as a small funeral hall since 2002. A new and more modern crematorium was put into operation in 1998.
The former resting place of the Bürklin family is also located in the cemetery. Today's Bürklin'sches Mausoleum was handed over to the city of Karlsruhe in 1963, which has been using it as a Columbarium since 1985.
Information center
At the entrance to the cemetery area is the information center of the Verein zur Pflege der Friedhofs- und Bestattungskultur Karlsruhe. The information center was opened in April 2002 and is located in the former waiting hall of the former Karlsruhe local railway, which led to Hagsfeld. The building was designed by the Karlsruhe architect Friedrich Beichel and was built in Art Nouveau between 1905 and 1906. The association sees itself as a contact point for people who have ideas, questions and concerns about the topics of cemetery, burial and death. The association also offers cemetery tours, exhibitions and lectures.
Famous persons
Over the years, a number of famous persons, some of whom were known far beyond the borders of Karlsruhe and the region, found their final resting place in the main cemetery in Karlsruhe. The best known among them is probably the inventor of the forerunner of the bicycle Karl Freiherr von Drais. Other prominent persons who were buried here included the poet and author Joseph Victor von Scheffel, the painter Hans Thoma and the composer and court music director Johann Wenzel Kalliwoda.
= List of famous persons buried on the Hauptfriedhof Karlsruhe
=A–D
Engelbert Arnold (1856–1911), Engineer
Klaus Arnold (1928–2009), Painter and university professor
Hermann Baisch (1846–1894), Painter
Hermann Baumeister (1867–1944), Painter
Reinhard Baumeister (1833–1917), Engineer
Traugott Bender (1927–1979), Politician
Hermann Billing (1867–1946), Architect
Adolf Boettge (1848–1913), music director and conductor of the 1st Baden Leib Grenadier Regiment No. 109
Karl Braun (1902–1937), Motorcycle racer
Hans Bunte (1848–1925), Chemist
Luigi Colani (1928–2019), Designer
Karl Delisle (1827–1909), Lawyer and politician
Eduard Devrient (1801–1877), Actor, singer and theater director
Ludwig Dill (1848–1940), Painter
Edwin Dorner (1926–2012), Actor
Karl Drais (1785–1851), The inventor of the balance bike (draisine)
Arthur Drews (1865–1935), Philosopher and writer
Josef Durm (1837–1919), Architect, construction officer and university professor
Leopold Durm (1878–1918), Painter, doctor and son of Josef Durm
E–J
Carl Egler (1896–1982), Sculptor
Ludwig Egler (1894–1965), Composer and writer
Willi Egler (1887–1953), Painter
Friedrich Engesser (1848–1931), Engineer
Carl Engler (1842–1925), Chemist
Wilhelm Engler (1880–1958), Lawyer
Rudolf Fettweis (1882–1956), Board of Directors of Badenwerk AG
Kunigunde Fischer (1882–1967), Politician
Hermann Föry (1879–1930), Sculptor
Robert Gerwig (1820–1885), Railway engineer
Franz Grashof (1826–1893), Mechanical engineer and university professor
Franz Gurk (1898–1984), Lawyer and politician
Josef Heinrich (1879–1955), Politician and Lord Mayor of Karlsruhe in 1945
Johann Heinrich Jung-Stilling (1740–1817), Ophthalmologist, economist and writer
Wilhelm Hempfing (1886–1948), Painter
Julius Jolly (1823–1891), Baden politician, minister of state and head of government
K–Q
Johann Wenzel Kalliwoda (1801–1866), Composer
Herbert Kitzel (1928–1978), Artist
Wilhelm Klose (1830–1914), Painter and patron
Günther Klotz (1911–1972) from 1952 to 1970 mayor of Karlsruhe
Heinrich Köhler (1878–1949), Politician
Vinzenz Lachner (1811–1893), Composer and conductor
Hanne Landgraf (1914–2005), Politician
Heinrich Lang (1824–1893), Architect
Wilhelm Florentin Lauter (1821–1892), Mayor of Karlsruhe from 1870 to 1892
Otto Lehmann (1855–1922), Physicist
Carl Friedrich Lessing (1808–1880), Painter and director of the Grand Ducal Picture Gallery in Karlsruhe
Wilhelm Lorenz (1842–1926), Manufacturer and designer
Wilhelm Lübke (1826–1893), Art historian
Jakob Malsch (1809–1896), Mayor of Karlsruhe from 1848 to 1870
Karl Mathy (1807–1868), Journalist and politician
Heinrich Meidinger (1831–1905), Physicist
Willi Müller-Hufschmid (1890–1966), Painter
Theodor Nöldeke (1836–1930), Orientalist
Wilhelm Nokk (1832–1903), Lawyer and politician
Friedrich Ostendorf (1871–1915) Architect, architectural theorist and university professor
R–T
Ferdinand Redtenbacher (1809–1863), Engineer and scientist
Theodor Rehbock (1864–1950), Engineer
Adam Remmele (1877–1951), Politician
Toni Rothmund (1877–1956), Poet and journalist
Carl Wilhelm Ernst Schäfer (1844–1908), Architect and university professor
Josef Schmitt (1874–1939), President of Baden
Karl Schnetzler (1846–1906), Mayor of Karlsruhe from 1892 to 1906
Gustav Schönleber (1851–1917), Painter
Robert Schwebler (1926–2012), Economist
Harald Siebenmorgen (1949–2020), Director of the Baden State Museum
Karl Siegrist (1862–1944), from 1906 to 1919 mayor of Karlsruhe
Carl Steinhäuser (1813–1879), Sculptor
Emil Sutor (1888–1974), Sculptor
Ulli Thiel (1943–2014), Teacher and peace activist
Hans Thoma (1839–1924), Painter and graphic artist
Gabriele Thome (1951–2003), Professor of Philology
Fritz Trautz (1917–2001), Historian
Wilhelm Trübner (1851–1917), Painter and professor at the Karlsruhe Art Academy
Ludwig Turban der Jüngere (1857–1930), board member of Baden
U–Z
Hermann Veit (1897–1973), Lawyer and politician
Hermann Volz (1847–1941), Sculptor
Arthur von Brauer (1845–1926), Politician and lawyer
Berthold von Freydorf (1820–1878), General
Karl Wilhelm Eugen von Freydorf (1781–1854), Officer and Minister of War
Rudolf von Freydorf (1819–1882), Politician
Edgar von Gierke (1877–1945), Pathologist
Egon von Neindorff (1923–2004), Riding master
Joseph Victor von Scheffel (1826–1886), Poet
Friedrich von Weech (1837–1905), Privy councilor and archivist
Karl Weltzien (1813–1870), Chemiker
Karl Wolf (1912–1975), Athlete
Ernst Würtenberger (1868–1934), Painter
Wolfgang Zeidler (1924–1987), Judge and President at the Federal Constitutional Court
= Honor graves
=On the site of the Hauptfriedhof there are also the Ehrengräber of the two lawyers working in Karlsruhe Ludwig Marum (1882–1934) and Reinhold Frank (1896–1945). Both men were victims of the Nazi regime and were each honored with their own memorial stone.
See also
Lists of cemeteries
Pictures
Literature
Karl Zahn: Gräber, Grüfte, Trauerstätten. Der Karlsruher Hauptfriedhof. Karlsruhe 2001, ISBN 3-88190-282-1
Gerd Otto-Rieke: Gräber in Karlsruhe – Menschen, die uns bewegten. Geschichte entdecken auf Friedhöfen Band 4. München 2014, ISBN 978-3-938778-19-7
References
External links
Website of the Hauptfriedhof Karlsruhe
Information center of the Hauptfriedhof Karlsruhe