Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Nordfriedhof (Munich)

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Phone
  
+49 89 370039820

Nordfriedhof (Munich)

Address
  
Ungererstraße 130, 80805 München, Germany

Hours
  
Open today · 8AM–5PMWednesday8AM–5PMThursday8AM–5PMFriday8AM–5PMSaturday8AM–5PMSunday8AM–5PMMonday8AM–5PMTuesday8AM–5PMSuggest an edit

The Nordfriedhof ("Northern Cemetery"), with 34,000 burial plots, is one of the largest cemeteries in Munich, Bavaria, Germany. It is situated in the suburb of Schwabing-Freimann. It was established by the former community of Schwabing in 1884. It is not to be confused with the Alter Nordfriedhof in Munich, which was set up only a short time previously within the then territory of the city of Munich.

A station on the Munich U-Bahn is also called Nordfriedhof after the cemetery, and the surrounding area is also known locally as "Nordfriedhof" from the station.

The imposing cemetery buildings include a chapel, a mortuary and a burial wall, which was designed between 1896 and 1899 by the municipal architect Hans Grässel. In 1962 a columbarium was added to the north by the architect Eugen Jacoby.

The chapel is described, slightly altered, in Thomas Mann's novella Death in Venice, when the sight of it precipitates a foreboding of death in the protagonist.

Selected burials

  • Peter Paul Althaus, poet of Schwabing
  • Herb Andress, actor
  • Annette von Aretin, first female announcer of Bayerischer Rundfunk
  • August Arnold, film producer and director
  • Karl Arnold, caricaturist in the journal Simplicissimus
  • Philip Arp, actor, cabaret performer, author and theatre director
  • Gert Bastian, brigadier-general, symbolic figure of the peace movement
  • Fritz Benscher, actor and quiz master
  • Otto Bezold, politician
  • Franziska Bilek, caricaturist and artist
  • Louis Braun, professor and historical painter
  • Beppo Brem, folk actor
  • Georg Britting, writer
  • Christine Buchegger, actress
  • Franz von Defregger, artist
  • Hans Dölle, legal academic
  • Sammy Drechsel, sports reporter and cabaret performer, and his wife Irene Koss, actress and the first television announcer in Germany
  • Constanze Engelbrecht, actress
  • Oskar Eversbusch, professor of ophthalmology
  • Theodore Feucht, painter
  • Josef Flossmann, sculptor
  • Leonhard Frank, writer
  • Hermann Frieb, resistance fighter against the Nazi regime
  • Marie Amelie von Godin, writer, supporter of women's rights and Albanologist
  • Günter Freiherr von Gravenreuth, lawyer
  • Klaus Havenstein, cabaret performer and actor
  • Johannes Heesters, actor and singer
  • Trude Hesterberg (Schönherr), cabaret performer
  • Heinrich Hoffmann, Hitler's official photographer, with his daughter Henriette von Schirach
  • Kurt Horwitz, actor, director at the Munich Kammerspiele, director of the Bayerisches Staatsschauspiel
  • Peter Igelhoff, musician, composer of pop music and jazz
  • Günther Kaufmann, actor
  • Eduard von Keyserling, writer (grave 25-4-1)
  • Kathi Kobus, landlady of the Alter Simpl
  • Wolfgang Koeppen, writer
  • Oskar Körner, killed during the Munich Putsch, Second Chairman of the NSDAP
  • Otto Kurth, actor and director
  • Inge Latz, composer and musical healer
  • Hermann Lenz, writer
  • Ernst Mach, physicist and philosopher
  • Ferdinand Marian, actor (grave now removed)
  • Georg Marischka, actor and director
  • Anton Neuhäusler, Bavarian dialect poet
  • Peter Pasetti, actor
  • Ludwig Petuel senior and junior, industrialists
  • Toni Pfülf, SPD politician
  • Bally Prell, performance artist
  • Sebastian Osterrieder, sculptor, Krippenwastl
  • Theodor von der Pfordten, killed during the Munich Putsch (in family grave)
  • Hans Pössenbacher, actor
  • Mady Rahl, actress (grave 178-U-66)
  • Anton Riemerschmid, founder of the first German business school for girls
  • Barbara Rudnik, actress
  • Wilhelm von Rümann, sculptor, formerly in the Alten Vereins-Urnenhalle (urn now secured)
  • Arnulf Schröder, actor
  • Carl-Heinz Schroth, actor
  • Oswald Spengler, political philosopher
  • Heinz-Günter Stamm, actor, radio and theatre director
  • Fedor Stepun, philosopher and sociologist
  • Karlheinz Summerer, Roman Catholic chaplain for the Munich Olympics, 1972
  • Siegbert Tarrasch, chess player, theoretician and writer
  • Kurt Weinzierl, actor, cabaret performer and director
  • Frederic Vester, biochemist, environmental expert and writer
  • Albert Weisgerber, painter
  • Annemarie Wendl, actress
  • Otto Wernicke, actor (grave now removed)
  • Josef Wittmann, church painter
  • Karoline Wittmann, painter
  • Paul Wittmann, sculptor
  • Eduard Zimmermann, journalist and television presenter
  • A mass grave for 2,099 victims of aerial bombardment during World War II has been converted to form a "grove of honour for air raid victims" (Ehrenhain für Luftkriegsopfer), with a monument by Hans Wimmer.
  • References

    Nordfriedhof (Munich) Wikipedia