Beautiful palace, great views, unique architecture, a particularly nice experience.
It was founded by Auguste, the elector of the Holy Roman Empire, and was destroyed by Allied bombing during World War II. Later, the Germans rebuilt the ruins according to the drawings. Please note that the black parts are the remnants of the old palaces and the white ones are the new buildings.
There are the most Kangxi porcelains here. I don't remember the specific numbers. August, the ruler at the time, was very obsessed with porcelain. A Japanese palace was specially built to collect porcelain from India, China and Japan. Well, the Europeans at that time could not distinguish the composition of the Far East.
August II didn't like porcelain very much, but also orange trees. He has a pioneering work. Use our Tsinghua big pot to make a hole and plant an orange tree. It's really fun. By the way, he also ordered the development of Saxon porcelain.
Located in the ancient German city of Dresden, the Zwinger Palace is a world-famous baroque architectural work of art. It was built in 1709 in the age of August "the strong". In order to decorate this building, many sculptors created a large number of unparalleled sculptures for it. The Zwinger Palace did not escape the fate of being bombed during World War II. In the 18 years after being razed to the ground, Dresz The people's persistent, cautious, steady and precise character made the reconstruction of Zwinger Palace a reality. During the reconstruction process, people tried their best to select building materials from the ruins of the Zwinger Palace, re-splicing them, plus accurate reproduction based on photos and design drawings, and basically restored Zwinger Palace in 1963. The original appearance. The Zwinger Palace that is now unfolding before us is so magnificent and magnificent, it makes people forget to return!
Beautiful palace, great views, unique architecture, a particularly nice experience.
It was founded by Auguste, the elector of the Holy Roman Empire, and was destroyed by Allied bombing during World War II. Later, the Germans rebuilt the ruins according to the drawings. Please note that the black parts are the remnants of the old palaces and the white ones are the new buildings.
There are the most Kangxi porcelains here. I don't remember the specific numbers. August, the ruler at the time, was very obsessed with porcelain. A Japanese palace was specially built to collect porcelain from India, China and Japan. Well, the Europeans at that time could not distinguish the composition of the Far East.
August II didn't like porcelain very much, but also orange trees. He has a pioneering work. Use our Tsinghua big pot to make a hole and plant an orange tree. It's really fun. By the way, he also ordered the development of Saxon porcelain.
Located in the ancient German city of Dresden, the Zwinger Palace is a world-famous baroque architectural work of art. It was built in 1709 in the age of August "the strong". In order to decorate this building, many sculptors created a large number of unparalleled sculptures for it. The Zwinger Palace did not escape the fate of being bombed during World War II. In the 18 years after being razed to the ground, Dresz The people's persistent, cautious, steady and precise character made the reconstruction of Zwinger Palace a reality. During the reconstruction process, people tried their best to select building materials from the ruins of the Zwinger Palace, re-splicing them, plus accurate reproduction based on photos and design drawings, and basically restored Zwinger Palace in 1963. The original appearance. The Zwinger Palace that is now unfolding before us is so magnificent and magnificent, it makes people forget to return!