Tempelhof

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Location of Tempelhof in the Tempelhof-Schöneberg borough of Berlin
Location of Tempelhof in the Tempelhof-Schöneberg borough of Berlin
The Tempelhof town hall - due to the merger with Schöneberg now without a mayor
The Tempelhof town hall - due to the merger with Schöneberg now without a mayor

Tempelhof is an area in Berlin within the borough of Tempelhof-Schöneberg. It is the location of Tempelhof International Airport. Tempelhof is in the southern part of the city.

Before Berlin's 2001 administrative reform, the area of Tempelhof, together with the localities of Mariendorf, Marienfelde, and Lichtenrade, consistituted a borough of its own, also called Tempelhof. These districts grew from the villages Tempelhove, Margendorpe, Marienfelde and Lichtenrade, which were founded in the 13th century.

Tempelhove was founded 1247 as a Komturhof ("commander's court", smallest holding entity of a military knights' order) by Templars who were expelled from Palestine. The center of the settlement, consisting of the church and the original estate, was fortified and originally completely surrounded by water. The Templars were joined by 15 families of landless farmers' sons from the Rhine, who couldn't inherit any estate from their parents' possessions due to an over-fragmentation of their estate. Legates of the Templars offered them fertile soil and the protection of Tempelhove's stronghold.

After the order of the Templars was officially abolished, the order of the Knights of St. John took over the villages of Tempelhof, Mariendorf and Marienfelde.

The Lehnepfuhl in the Kleiner Park
The Lehnepfuhl in the Kleiner Park
The deer park that was once the Krumme Pfuhl
The deer park that was once the Krumme Pfuhl

Today, the former Komturei is a chain of parks, called Bosepark, Kleiner Park, Alter Park and Franckepark. Some of them still have ponds that were part of the inartificial moat surrounding the village's center. One of them, the Krumme Pfuhl, located in the Franckepark, after being turned into public swimming baths in the 19th century, has completely dried out and is now an enclosed deer park.

The church as it looks today
The church as it looks today

The original church, built from glacial boulders, was destroyed in the second world war and was replaced with one made of smaller paving stones and having a timber-frame tower.

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Coordinates: 52°28′N, 13°23′E

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