All Object Lessons
Contested Heritage

A Piece of the Berlin Wall: Concrete with a History

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, ethics, geography, citizenship, art
Core question How did pieces of one city's wall become symbols across the whole world — and what does a piece of broken concrete teach us about division, change, and what stays after a wall comes down?
A piece of the Berlin Wall, displayed as a monument. Hundreds of these pieces now stand in cities around the world — fragments of a wall that once divided one city in two. Photo: Boscowall / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
Introduction

On 13 August 1961, the people of Berlin woke up to find their city split in two. Overnight, the government of East Germany had built a wall right through the middle of the city. The wall divided streets, parks, and even families. It separated the communist East from the capitalist West. For 28 years, the Berlin Wall stood as the most visible symbol of the Cold War — the long political conflict between the Soviet Union and the United States, with their allies. The Wall was 155 kilometres long. It had over 300 watchtowers. It had a 'death strip' between two parallel walls where any East German trying to escape could be shot. About 140 people died trying to cross it. Then, on the night of 9 November 1989, an East German official made a confused announcement at a press conference. People rushed to the Wall. Border guards, unsure what to do, eventually opened the gates. People climbed the Wall. They cheered. They danced on top of it. Over the next weeks, ordinary Berliners chipped pieces off the Wall with hammers and chisels. They were called the 'wall woodpeckers'. Over the next months, the Wall was officially demolished. Pieces of it were sold, given as gifts, displayed as monuments. Today, hundreds of large pieces stand in cities around the world. The piece of concrete is the same. The meaning has been changed by history. This lesson asks how one wall came to stand for so much, what it felt like when it fell, and what its scattered pieces still teach us.

The object
Origin
The Berlin Wall was built in August 1961 by the government of East Germany. It divided the city of Berlin into East and West for over 28 years. It was opened on 9 November 1989 and dismantled over the following months.
Period
Built 1961, fell 1989. Pieces of the Wall have been displayed around the world since 1990.
Made of
Reinforced concrete. The original Wall was made of concrete slabs about 3.6 metres tall, with steel reinforcement inside. The top was rounded so that no one could grip it. The Wall was painted on the western side over the years, often heavily.
Size
Each original slab was about 3.6 metres tall, 1.2 metres wide, and 22 cm thick. A whole slab weighs about 2.6 tonnes. Smaller pieces are also displayed.
Number of objects
Several hundred large pieces stand as monuments around the world. Many thousands of small pieces are in private hands and museums.
Where it is now
Pieces stand in over 50 countries — the United Nations garden in New York, the Vatican Museums, the European Parliament, the Reagan Library, the CIA headquarters, the Imperial War Museum in London, and many smaller monuments. Long sections still stand in Berlin itself, including the East Side Gallery.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Most students were not alive when the Wall fell. How will you bring the events of 1989 to life for them?
  2. The Cold War is taught differently in different countries. How will you keep the lesson balanced — not just a celebration of one side over the other?
  3. Some students may have family who lived in East Germany or other communist countries. How will you respect their experience without making it a single story of suffering?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine going to bed in your normal city. You wake up. There is a wall right through the middle of it. Your school is on one side. Your grandmother is on the other. Your father's job is on the third side. You cannot cross the wall to get to any of these places. The government says it has built the wall to keep your country safe. But you know your country is what is on both sides of the wall. This is what happened in Berlin in August 1961. Over a single weekend, the East German government built barbed wire along the line dividing the city. Within weeks, the barbed wire was replaced with a real wall. Over the next 28 years, the Wall grew taller, wider, and more complete. Why might one country build a wall through the middle of a city?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the East German government had a problem. After the Second World War, Germany was divided into East (controlled by the Soviet Union) and West (controlled by the United States, Britain, and France). East Germany was a communist state. Many East Germans did not want to live there — wages were lower, freedoms were fewer, food was sometimes scarce. They could escape to West Germany. The easiest way was to walk across the border in Berlin, where the city had been split into eastern and western zones, but movement between them was relatively free. Between 1949 and 1961, about 3.5 million East Germans escaped this way — about one-sixth of the population. The East German government realised it would lose its country if this continued. So it built the wall — not to keep enemies out, but to keep its own people in. The Wall worked, in that sense. It stopped most escapes. About 140 people died trying to cross it anyway. The Wall lasted for 28 years. Students should see that walls are sometimes built for the opposite reason from what they look like. The Berlin Wall was made by a government afraid of its own citizens. Knowing this is part of understanding the Cold War.

2
For 28 years, the Wall stood. Families were separated. People who tried to cross were sometimes shot. Children grew up looking at concrete every day. On the western side, artists painted the Wall — turning it into one of the longest art galleries in the world. On the eastern side, the Wall was kept blank, with a 'death strip' of sand and watchtowers. Visitors from the West sometimes came to the famous Checkpoint Charlie crossing point and looked at the watchtowers. Then, in 1989, things changed quickly. Across Eastern Europe, people were demanding democracy. Hungary opened its border with Austria, and East Germans started escaping that way. In East Germany itself, hundreds of thousands of people marched in cities like Leipzig, demanding change. The government tried to make small reforms. On 9 November 1989, an East German official named Günter Schabowski held a press conference. He read out new travel rules. A reporter asked when they would take effect. Schabowski looked confused, shuffled his papers, and said, 'As far as I know — immediately, without delay.' What happened next?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Chaos, then joy. People watching the press conference on television heard 'immediately' and rushed to the Wall. By 9 pm, thousands of East Berliners were at the border crossings, demanding to be let through. The border guards had no orders. They called their superiors. Their superiors had no orders. Some guards tried to stamp passports to stop people coming back; others gave up. Around 11 pm, one commander at the Bornholmer Strasse crossing simply opened the gates. Within hours, the rest opened too. Tens of thousands of East Berliners poured into the West. They were met by West Berliners who hugged them, gave them flowers, opened bottles of champagne. People climbed the Wall. They danced on top of it. They started chipping away at it with hammers. The night of 9 November 1989 is one of the most famous moments of the 20th century. The Wall did not 'come down' that night — it would take months to officially demolish — but the gates were open, and after 28 years, that was enough. Students should see that history sometimes turns on small moments. A confused press conference, a brave commander, a crowd that did not go home. The Wall fell because many things were already changing. But the night it fell, it fell because of people.

3
In the days and weeks after 9 November, ordinary Berliners began to take pieces of the Wall home. They came with hammers and chisels. They chipped away at the painted side. The Germans called these people 'Mauerspechte' — 'wall woodpeckers'. Some kept their pieces as souvenirs. Some sold them. Some gave them away. In 1990, the official demolition began. Cranes pulled down whole sections. Most of the concrete was crushed and used to build roads. But hundreds of large pieces were saved. Some were given as gifts to other countries. Some were sold at auction. Some were sent to museums. Today, you can see pieces of the Berlin Wall in over 50 countries — the United Nations garden, the Vatican Museums, the European Parliament, the Reagan Library, in shopping centres, in private gardens, even in some toilet stalls in casinos in Las Vegas (yes, really). What does it mean for one wall to be scattered around the world?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several things, all interesting. First: a single object becomes many. The Berlin Wall was one continuous structure. By breaking it into pieces and sending them around the world, it became hundreds of small monuments. Second: the meanings shift. A piece of the Wall in the United Nations garden means something about international peace. A piece in the Reagan Library means something about American victory in the Cold War. A piece in a casino bathroom means something else again — perhaps just a curiosity. The same concrete carries different meanings in different places. Third: the act of scattering is itself a message. The Wall was meant to divide. Breaking it up and sending it around the world reverses that — turning a symbol of division into a sign of connection. Fourth: pieces forgotten. Many pieces are in private hands, in basements, in garages, dusty and unappreciated. Some have been thrown away. Each piece is a small piece of history. None of them is just concrete. Students should see that scattering an object can change what it means. The Berlin Wall is not gone. It is everywhere.

4
Less than a year after the Wall fell, on 3 October 1990, East and West Germany were officially reunified into one country. The reunification was peaceful and fast. East Germany ceased to exist as a separate country. Its territory became part of the Federal Republic of Germany, which is still Germany today. But life in the former East was not easy. Factories closed. Many people lost their jobs. Some products and brands were replaced by Western ones overnight. Some East Germans felt they had been swallowed up rather than welcomed. The phrase 'Ostalgie' — nostalgia for the East — became common, even among people who had hated the old system. They missed certain foods, certain TV shows, certain ways of being together. Thirty-five years later, what is the legacy of the Wall?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Mixed, like most legacies. Most former East Germans say their lives are better now — more freedom, more opportunity, more travel. But many still feel that East and West are not fully equal. Wages in the former East are still lower on average than in the former West. Politics in the former East has been more unstable, with stronger far-right and far-left movements. Some call this 'the wall in our heads' — a continuing divide that the physical wall left behind. The pieces of the Wall around the world stand for a clean victory: communism fell, freedom won. The reality on the ground in Germany is more complicated. Pieces of the Wall outside Germany are often celebrated; pieces inside Germany are sometimes more painful. There are streets and buildings where the Wall used to be that are now ordinary, except for a thin line of cobblestones marking where the concrete once stood. Students should see that 'the Wall fell' is one moment, but its consequences are still being lived. End the discovery here. The pieces are still everywhere. So is the work of understanding what they mean.

What this object teaches

The Berlin Wall was a concrete and steel barrier built in 1961 by the government of East Germany to stop its citizens from escaping to the West. It divided the city of Berlin in two for 28 years. About 140 people died trying to cross it. On 9 November 1989, after pressure from democracy movements across Eastern Europe and a confused press conference by an East German official, the gates of the Wall were opened. Crowds celebrated. Within weeks, ordinary people began chipping away at the Wall with hammers — the 'wall woodpeckers'. The official demolition followed in 1990. Today, hundreds of large pieces of the Wall stand as monuments in over 50 countries — the United Nations, the Vatican, the European Parliament, presidential libraries, museums, and many private collections. Germany was reunified on 3 October 1990, less than a year after the Wall fell. The pieces of the Wall now stand for many things — the end of the Cold War, the power of peaceful change, the history of division — but the consequences of the Wall are still being lived in Germany today.

DateEventWhat changed
1949Germany divided into East and WestTwo German states emerge after the Second World War
1949-19613.5 million East Germans escape to the WestEast Germany loses one-sixth of its population
13 August 1961Berlin Wall built overnightEast-West division becomes physical and absolute
1961-1989About 140 people die trying to cross the WallThe Wall becomes the most visible symbol of the Cold War
Summer 1989Hungary opens border; East Germans escape through itPressure on East German government grows
9 November 1989Confused press conference; gates openedCrowds celebrate; the Wall is effectively over
3 October 1990Germany reunifiedEast and West become one country again
Key words
Berlin Wall
A concrete and steel barrier that divided the city of Berlin from 1961 to 1989. Built by East Germany to stop its citizens from escaping to the West.
Example: The Berlin Wall was 155 kilometres long. It had over 300 watchtowers. The concrete sections were 3.6 metres tall, with rounded tops to prevent climbing.
East Germany (GDR)
The German Democratic Republic — a communist state in eastern Germany from 1949 to 1990. Allied with the Soviet Union. Ceased to exist when East and West Germany reunified.
Example: East Germany had its own government, currency, sports teams, and TV channels. It was officially called the German Democratic Republic, though it was a one-party state.
Cold War
The long political and military conflict between the Soviet Union (and its allies) and the United States (and its allies) from about 1947 to 1991. The two sides did not directly fight each other but competed in many ways.
Example: The Berlin Wall was the most visible symbol of the Cold War. When the Wall fell in 1989, the Cold War was effectively over.
Mauerspechte
German for 'wall woodpeckers'. The nickname for ordinary people who chipped away at the Berlin Wall with hammers in the days and weeks after 9 November 1989.
Example: The Mauerspechte took small pieces of the Wall home as souvenirs. Many of these pieces are still in private collections today.
Reunification
The joining of East and West Germany into one country, on 3 October 1990. Also called German reunification or Wiedervereinigung in German.
Example: Reunification happened less than a year after the Wall fell. East Germany formally joined the Federal Republic of Germany.
Ostalgie
German for 'nostalgia for the East'. The feeling some former East Germans have for some aspects of their old country — particular foods, TV shows, brands — even when they are glad the regime is gone.
Example: Ostalgie has produced books, films, and museums about life in East Germany. The 2003 film 'Good Bye, Lenin!' is a famous example.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline of the Cold War: end of Second World War (1945), Germany divided (1949), Berlin Wall built (1961), Wall falls (1989), Soviet Union dissolved (1991). Discuss how a 45-year conflict shaped the world.
  • Geography: On a map of Europe, mark Germany. Now mark the line where the Berlin Wall ran through Berlin. Now mark the wider Iron Curtain — the boundary between communist Eastern Europe and democratic Western Europe. Discuss how borders shaped lives.
  • Citizenship: Hold a class discussion: 'When can a government legitimately stop its citizens from leaving?' East Germany said the Wall was for security. The reality was that it was to keep workers from escaping. Discuss what makes the difference between a fair restriction and an oppressive one.
  • Ethics: About 140 people died trying to cross the Berlin Wall. The border guards who shot them were following orders. After reunification, some were prosecuted. Discuss the ethics of obeying orders that turn out to be wrong. This is a famous question in ethics, called the Nuremberg defense.
  • Art: The western side of the Berlin Wall was covered in graffiti and art. The East Side Gallery, a long surviving section, has 105 paintings. Look at images of these paintings. Each student designs a small piece of 'wall art' on paper, choosing a message they would want to send.
  • Language: German has produced powerful words for this period — Mauerspechte (wall woodpeckers), Ostalgie (nostalgia for the East), Wiedervereinigung (reunification). Discuss how language captures specific historical experiences. Some words travel into other languages; some do not.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The Berlin Wall was built to keep enemies out.

Right

It was built to keep East Germans in. The East German government was losing its citizens to the West — about 3.5 million had escaped between 1949 and 1961. The Wall stopped most escapes.

Why

This is the central fact about the Wall. Knowing it is knowing what the Cold War was actually about for ordinary people on the eastern side.

Wrong

The Wall fell because of war or revolution.

Right

The Wall fell because of long pressure from democracy movements across Eastern Europe, combined with a confused press conference and a brave decision by border guards on 9 November 1989. There was no war. The fall of the Wall was peaceful.

Why

This matters because it shows that major changes can happen without violence. The peaceful end of the Cold War is one of the great political achievements of the 20th century.

Wrong

When the Wall fell, everything got better immediately.

Right

The fall of the Wall and reunification brought freedom and new opportunities, but they also brought job losses, social disruption, and a continuing 'wall in the heads' between former East and West. The legacy is mixed.

Why

'Communism fell, freedom won' is a tidy story. The truth is more complicated. Honest teaching includes both.

Wrong

The Berlin Wall is gone.

Right

Hundreds of pieces survive — in monuments around the world, in museums, in private collections. Long sections still stand in Berlin itself. The Wall is everywhere now, scattered across over 50 countries.

Why

'Gone' is one way the story gets told. 'Scattered' is more accurate. The pieces are doing different work in different places.

Teaching this with care

This lesson is about a major event of the late Cold War. Treat it carefully and accurately. The Berlin Wall is one of the clearest examples of a regime restricting its own people's freedom. Be honest about this without turning the lesson into anti-communist propaganda. Many former East Germans have complicated feelings — they may have hated the regime but loved their schools, their neighbours, their daily lives. The phrase 'Ostalgie' captures this. Be careful with stereotypes about communist countries: they were not all the same; they had real cultures, achievements, and people. The end of communism in Eastern Europe was largely peaceful and is genuinely something to celebrate, but it brought hardships too. Be honest about the deaths at the Wall — about 140 people — without giving graphic details. The deaths matter; they are part of why the Wall is remembered. Do not treat the West as automatically heroic; West Germany made many compromises and Western Cold War policies had complicated legacies. Be aware that some students may have family from East Germany or other former communist countries. Their family experiences may be more complicated than simple narratives. If you have such students, give them space to share if they want, but do not put them on the spot. Avoid using current geopolitical comparisons (Mexico-US border wall, Israeli wall, etc.) — these are different situations with different histories, and forcing comparisons turns the lesson into political advocacy. Stay focused on the Berlin Wall and what it teaches. Finally, end the lesson on the present. The pieces are still around the world. The work of understanding what happened continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Berlin Wall.

  1. What was the Berlin Wall, and when was it built?

    The Berlin Wall was a concrete and steel barrier that divided the city of Berlin from 1961 to 1989. It was built overnight by East Germany on 13 August 1961 to stop its citizens from escaping to the West.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the years (or at least 1961), the city, and the purpose. Specific dates are helpful but not essential.
  2. Why is it wrong to think the Wall was built to keep enemies out?

    It was built to keep East Germans in. About 3.5 million East Germans had escaped to the West between 1949 and 1961. The East German government was losing its workers and built the Wall to stop them.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the actual purpose (keeping people in) and the rough scale of the escape problem (millions). Either is enough for partial credit.
  3. What happened on 9 November 1989?

    After months of democracy protests in East Germany and other Eastern European countries, an East German official held a confused press conference about new travel rules. Crowds rushed to the Wall. Border guards eventually opened the gates. East and West Berliners celebrated together. The Wall was effectively over.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the press conference, the crowds, and the opening of the gates. Specific details are a bonus.
  4. What were the Mauerspechte?

    The 'wall woodpeckers' — ordinary people who chipped away at the Berlin Wall with hammers and chisels in the days and weeks after 9 November 1989. They took small pieces of the Wall home as souvenirs.
    Marking note: Strong answers will translate the word and explain who they were. Either is enough for full marks.
  5. Where are pieces of the Berlin Wall today, and what do they mean?

    Pieces stand as monuments in over 50 countries — the United Nations, the Vatican, the European Parliament, museums, and many private collections. They mean different things in different places — international peace, victory in the Cold War, historical memory, sometimes just a souvenir. The same concrete carries different meanings.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the wide spread and the variety of meanings. Specific examples are a bonus.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The Wall fell because of pressure from many directions — democracy movements, economic problems, a confused press conference, brave border guards. Are there any current situations where similar pressures might bring big change?

    This is a question about how change happens. Students may suggest current authoritarian regimes, environmental movements, or social changes in their own countries. Strong answers will see that big changes often look impossible until they happen. The Berlin Wall stood for 28 years and seemed permanent. Then in 24 hours, it was effectively over. End by saying that this is something humans should remember when changes feel impossible — sometimes the impossible turns out to be the next step.
  2. Pieces of the Berlin Wall are scattered in over 50 countries. The same piece of concrete means different things in different places. Are there other objects in your country that mean different things to different people?

    This is a question that brings the lesson home. Students may suggest national flags, statues, monuments, religious objects, sports trophies. Push them to think about how the same object can mean very different things. The deeper point is that meaning is added by people, not fixed in the object. The Berlin Wall is a clear case because it has travelled so widely. The same is true of many other objects.
  3. After reunification, many former East Germans had complicated feelings — glad the regime was gone but missing some things from before. Is it possible to be glad something ended and also miss it?

    This is an emotionally rich question. Students may say yes — humans hold many feelings at once. Examples: a difficult school you are glad to leave but where you had real friends; a relationship that ended for good reasons but left a real loss. Strong answers will see that 'good thing happened' and 'I lost something' can both be true. Ostalgie is a real word for this real feeling. End by saying that this kind of complexity is part of how humans actually experience change. Tidy stories are usually too tidy.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'You wake up tomorrow. There is a wall through the middle of your city. Your school is on one side, your friends are on the other. You cannot cross. How would you feel?' Take honest answers. Then say: 'In 1961, this happened to the city of Berlin. The wall stayed up for 28 years. We are going to find out what happened.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the Berlin Wall: a concrete and steel barrier built in 1961, dividing Berlin for 28 years, fell in 1989. Pieces of it are now scattered in over 50 countries. Pause and ask: 'Why might one wall become a symbol for so much?' Listen to answers. They will lead naturally into the ideas of division and what walls do.
  3. THE NIGHT IT FELL (15 min)
    Tell the story of 9 November 1989. The press conference. The confusion. The crowds at the Wall. The border guards calling for orders. The gates opening. People dancing on the Wall. Ordinary people chipping pieces off in the days that followed. Reunification on 3 October 1990. Ask: 'How does a wall that seemed permanent fall in one night?' Discuss the role of long pressures and small moments together.
  4. THE PIECES NOW ACTIVITY (10 min)
    On a world map drawn on the board, mark the locations of major Berlin Wall pieces — the United Nations in New York, the Vatican in Rome, the European Parliament in Brussels, the Reagan Library in California, the Imperial War Museum in London, others. Discuss: same concrete, different meanings, depending on where the piece sits. The Wall has been turned from a symbol of division into something scattered around the world. The journey of the pieces is itself a lesson.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'A wall built in one weekend stayed up for 28 years and fell in one night. What does this teach us?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'The Berlin Wall is one of the clearest lessons of the 20th century. It was built quickly. It stood for a long time. It fell suddenly. What it stood for — division between peoples — has not gone away. New walls have been built since. But the Berlin Wall also teaches that walls do not last forever. People do.'
Classroom materials
Two Sides of a Line
Instructions: Draw a line across the middle of the classroom (or use chairs to mark it). For five minutes, half the class is 'East', half is 'West'. They cannot cross the line, even to ask a question, even to borrow a pen. Discuss after: how did it feel? What did you notice? This is a small simulation of a city divided. Berliners lived this every day for 28 years.
Example: In Mr Müller's class, students were surprised how quickly the line started to shape behaviour. Some made faces across the divide. Others felt strangely lonely. The teacher said: 'Five minutes was enough to feel a small piece of it. Now imagine 28 years. Imagine your grandmother on the other side and you cannot visit. Imagine your father's job is on the other side and he loses it. The Wall was made of concrete. The harm was made of small everyday things, repeated for almost three decades.'
The Map of Pieces
Instructions: On a world map drawn on the board, mark these locations where pieces of the Berlin Wall now stand: the United Nations garden in New York, the Vatican Museums in Rome, the European Parliament in Brussels, the Reagan Library in California, the Imperial War Museum in London, the CIA headquarters in Virginia, the Korean DMZ Peace Park, a Las Vegas casino bathroom (yes, really). Discuss: what does each location say? Why might a piece of the Wall end up in each of these places?
Example: In Mrs Schmidt's class, students discussed each location. The UN garden — international peace. The Vatican — religious witness. The Reagan Library — American victory in the Cold War. The Las Vegas bathroom — possibly someone's personal joke or souvenir. The teacher said: 'Look at this map. The same concrete. Different meanings. The Wall has been broken into pieces and sent around the world. Each piece tells the same story differently. That is what scattering does to a symbol.'
What Would You Save?
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'When something painful ends — a war, a regime, an unhappy time — what should be saved as a reminder, and what should be let go?' Each group gives one example for each side. Discuss: the Berlin Wall could have been entirely destroyed. Most of it was. But pieces were saved on purpose. Why?
Example: In one class, students discussed memorials and what they keep alive. The teacher said: 'Some pieces of the Wall were saved so people would not forget what happened. Some were destroyed so people could move on. Both are reasonable choices. Most communities try to do both — save some, destroy some, build something new on top. Berlin today does exactly this. There are pieces of Wall, but most of the city has moved on. The remembering and the moving on go together.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Palestinian key for another object that carries the memory of division. The two stories illuminate each other.
  • Try a lesson on the Nansen passport for another 20th-century object that came from political division and displacement.
  • Try a lesson on the Yiddish prayer book carried through a war for another 20th-century object that carries memory of catastrophe and survival.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on the Cold War — the long competition between two systems that shaped the entire 20th century.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of walls, borders, and what they do. There are walls being built today; the Berlin Wall's lessons are still being studied.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on graffiti and political art. The painted side of the Berlin Wall is one of the world's most studied examples of public art.
Key takeaways
  • The Berlin Wall was a concrete and steel barrier built overnight by East Germany on 13 August 1961, dividing Berlin in two for 28 years.
  • The Wall was built to keep East Germans from escaping to the West. About 3.5 million had already escaped between 1949 and 1961. About 140 died trying to cross the Wall after it was built.
  • On 9 November 1989, after long pressure from democracy movements and a confused press conference, the gates of the Wall were opened. Crowds celebrated. East Germans and West Berliners met for the first time in years.
  • Ordinary people chipped pieces off the Wall in the following days — they were called the Mauerspechte, 'wall woodpeckers'. Official demolition followed in 1990.
  • Germany was reunified on 3 October 1990, less than a year after the Wall fell. The reunification was peaceful but life in the former East has not always been easy.
  • Hundreds of pieces of the Wall now stand in over 50 countries — at the United Nations, the Vatican, the European Parliament, presidential libraries, museums. Same concrete, many meanings.
Sources
  • The Berlin Wall: A World Divided, 1961-1989 — Frederick Taylor (2006) [academic]
  • The Collapse: The Accidental Opening of the Berlin Wall — Mary Elise Sarotte (2014) [academic]
  • The Berlin Wall — A Global History — BBC History (2019) [news]
  • East Side Gallery (museum and art collection) — East Side Gallery e.V. (2024) [museum]
  • Berlin Wall Memorial Bernauer Strasse — Stiftung Berliner Mauer (2024) [institution]