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Copyright © 2004 Martin Frech, All Rights Reserved
| Maas & Frech GbR
One autumn night an old man appeared at the homestead on the King's Fosse and asked for work as a shepherd. The owner wanted to send the uninvited guest away, but his wife prevailed and he was taken on. The taciturn old man owned nothing but a willow cane. This is my abbreviated version of a myth from the 18th century, which is said to have taken place in my neighbourhood. The farm is documented as Horstenstein Manor and the King's Fosse (Königsgraben) was a drainage canal. The willow was a silver willow of over 200 years old, which grew by a slough at Horstenstein Manor. In the 1930's it had a circumference of 6.5 m and was 25 m high. It was known as the biggest tree in Berlin and was protected as a natural monument, even after the King's Fosse was channelled into pipes. Nevertheless, the tree decayed and the trunk was removed in 1960. In 1952 a new willow was planted and a year later the erstwhile King's Fosse was renamed "An der Heilandsweide" (By the Saviour's Willow).
(Source: H.-W. Fabarius, Marienfelde. Vom Dorf zum Stadtteil Berlins. Berlin: 2001.) The willow is not marked, but according to my research the tree in my Spring-Panorama is likely that very same newly planted willow. The footpath in the picture is the street "An der Heilandsweide".
Translation: Catherine Hughes To view this stereo-pano properly, you need red/cyan-glasses. A 2D-version is also available online (see link below).
more infos and 2D-versions of the pano
Shortcut to this page: http://geoimages.berkeley.edu/wwp_rss/go/n307
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