BRIXMIS 1988. Transit routes to and from DDR via Glienicke Bridge
BRIXMIS November 1988. Transit route from West Berlin to Mission House via Glienicke Bridge. Transit route from Michendorf in DDR on route 2 to Glienicke Bridge via Potsdam city centre and Mission House.
Glienicke Bridge, Berlin - Germany Trave Guide
Take a tour of Glienicke Bridge in Berlin, Germany -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats.
The unmistakable Glienicke Bridge connects the capital city of Berlin to Potsdam via the Havel River.
It was an active bridge during the Cold War.
Troops from the US and Soviet armies faced off several times on this bridge.
The bridge was famously used to swap spies from both sides of the Cold War back and forth, giving it the nickname The Bridge of Spies.
It wasn't until the year 1989 that the bridge finally reopened for public use again.
You won't want to miss visiting this famous bridge that has been the host of so much history.
Glienicke Bridge, Potsdam
Glienicke Bridge
The Bridge of Spies - Glienicke Bridge (english subtitles)
From 1962 to 1986, three widely publicized spy exchanges took place on Glienicke Bridge, over the Havel, between Berlin and Potsdam, south-west of the East German capital.
Find out more on:
Glienicke Bridge - The Bridge of Spies
Glienicke Bridge Glienicker Brücke on the Havel River connecting Berlin and Potsdam. During the Cold War there was a border between East Germany and West Berlin and this bridge was used several times for the exchange of captured spies.
July 25 2016, Sony HDR - PJ260, HD, filming location of Bridge of Spies movie, memorial monument, walkthrough, tour, travel.
..feel free to comment, like or share :)
Across Freedom Bridge into Potsdam! A trip soon after German Reunification
Tom Blake (Author of the Shield and the Storm Book)(Editor of the German American Magazine) took a walk into Babelsburg and Potsdam....then across Freedom Bridge with 2 year old Erin Rafferty and Michael Rafferty (Former MP of Checkpoint Charlie)
Glienicke Bridge - Berlin, Germany 2001 08 09
After earning billions on small content creators like me, You Tube now demands 1000 subscribers and 4000 hours of viewing to monetize this channel. Please help me by clicking on the subscribe button and letting the video play completely. Thank you very much!
This is film of the famous Glienicke Bridge at the border of Berlin with Potsdam. Although it is called the Bridge of Spies, only 2 spy exchanges actually took place on it.
Not related to the bridge... I'm carrying on a musical family tradition (Lawrence Duchow) with a different kind of music from my famous cousin, please take a listen to my music if you have the inclination to do so at my You Tube Channel (Link Below) or your favorite digital streaming site Thank you!!
Maxmilian:
Agentenaustausch auf der Glienicker Brücke, 1986
Zum letzten Mal werden auf der Glienicker Brücke Agenten ausgetauscht, zum ersten Mal öffentlich. Die Brücke der Einheit wird über die Jahre zur Brücke der Agenten. Dieser öffentliche Austausch wird als Zeichen der Entspannung gewertet.
Am 11. Februar geht es um den sowjetischen Bürgerrechtler Anatoli Schtscharanski, der jahrelang im Gulag in Haft saß. Er darf gegen die Übergabe von sechs Ost-Agenten in den Westen. Er hatte sich in der UdSSR für die Menschenrechte eingesetzt und einen Ausreiseantrag nach Israel gestellt.
Video-Angaben:
Zeitraum: 1986
Auflösung: SD
Seitenverhältnis: 4:3
Originalton: nein
Farbe: ja
Quelle: rbb - aus Mauerjahre, 04.08.2011
Für Archivrecherchen, Materialsichtung und -bereitstellung, Rechteklärung und kommerzielle Lizenzierungen besuchen Sie:
#footageberlin #KalterKrieg
Potsdam/Bridge of Spies/Potsdam Conf - Aug 2017
Visited Potsdam, just outside of Berlin, Germany. Wanted to see and walk the Bridge of Spies and also visit the location of the Potsdam Conference.
OSCE ministers walk across famous Potsdam bridge
(1 Sep 2016) German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier launched an informal meeting of Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) officials and foreign ministers on Thursday.
Steinmeier and other foreign ministers from the bloc posed on the iconic Glienicke Bridge, before walking down it together.
The bridge, which lies between Potsdam and West Berlin, was famously used for Cold War spy swaps.
Among them was the prisoner exchange for Francis Gary Powers, the US pilot whose spy plane was shot down in 1960 over the Soviet Union in a defining moment of the Cold War.
The span, set in a picturesque north German landscape, bridged the Iron Curtain for nearly 50 years after World War II.
It connects what was then West Berlin, occupied by the three major Western victors the United States, Britain and France, with the town of Potsdam, then part of Communist-ruled East Germany, closely tied to the Soviet Union.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
There's Another Side To The German City Of Potsdam
With 14 palaces, seven lakes and vast swathes of parkland, it’s easy to see why Potsdam was once the playground of Prussian kings and queens.
Yet this stately German city has a darker side to its history – as a key setting for Cold War espionage and Iron Curtain escape attempts.
It’s a past that has made Potsdam the perfect backdrop for Steven Spielberg’s Oscar-winning blockbuster Bridge of Spies starring Tom Hanks.
Nowadays it has an altogether friendlier feel, making it ideal for a fun and active city break for all the family.
Potsdam lies 15 miles south-west of Berlin and just a 20-minute train ride away.
It’s bike friendly so, along with my husband Tim and sons Harvey, 14, and Max, 12, I hired cycles and took off on a three-hour guided bike tour with local student Sebastian.
We pedalled past the grand lakeside mansions where British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and American and Soviet leaders Harry S. Truman and Josef Stalin stayed during 1945’s famous Potsdam Conference when defeated Germany’s future was decided.
Sebastian told how the “Big Three” competed to hold the best parties; Churchill’s lavish cocktail bashes won.
The lake itself, Griebnitzsee, later formed a natural border between East and West Germany and saw dozens of escape attempts from those fleeing the Soviet-controlled zone.
Today it’s a haven of serenity, but during the Cold War it contained a submerged wall of barbed wire and was patrolled by armed divers.
We cycled across the imposing green steel Glienicke Bridge, the border point where enemy agents were exchanged during the Cold War – hence its nickname, Bridge of Spies.
Spielberg’s espionage thriller of the same name, based on a true story, sees Tom Hanks as a lawyer tasked with freeing a US spy plane pilot shot down in Russia in exchange for a Soviet agent held in America.
The famous bridge featured in plenty of escape dramas: Sebastian recalled how one desperate East German found freedom by sprinting across holding gas canisters, knowing no border guard would shoot and risk an explosion.
Glienicke Bridge, bridge of spies, Berlin
This is the bridge which during the war, it seperate East & West Germany and they exchanged hostages. It's called Glienicke Bridge which also another name of Bridge of Spies. During the Cold War, Glienicke Bridge was one of the few places in the world where the Soviet Union and the Western powers stood directly opposite each other. Thus, deals could be made here without any of their allies having any say in the matter. The bridge lies at an isolated point where the US-occupied sector of West-Berlin met Soviet-occupied Potsdam, which was in East Germany.
The United States and the Soviet Union used it four times to exchange captured spies during the Cold War.
The first prisoner exchange between the superpowers took place on 10 February 1962. The U.S. released Soviet spy Colonel Rudolf Abel in exchange for U.S. spy-plane pilot Francis Gary Powers captured by the USSR following the U-2 Crisis of 1960.
The next swap took place on April 1964, when Konon Molody was exchanged for Greville Wynne.[3]
On 12 June 1985, there was a swap of 23 American agents held in Eastern Europe for Polish agent Marian Zacharski and another three Soviet agents arrested in the West. The exchange culminated after three years of negotiation.[4]
The final exchange was also the most public. On 11 February 1986 the human rights campaigner and political prisoner Anatoly Sharansky (Natan Shcharansky) and three Western agents were exchanged for Karl Koecher and four other Eastern agents.
Potsdam, Germany - 1990
Ten days after the reunification of Germany, we took our first trip to the city of Potsdam. Recorded on October 13, 1990.
Glienicke Bridge
The Glienicke Bridge is a bridge across the Havel River in Germany, connecting the Wannsee district of Berlin with the Brandenburg capital Potsdam.
During the Cold War, as this portion of the Havel River formed the border between West Berlin and East Germany, the bridge was used several times for the exchange of captured spies and thus became known as the Bridge of Spies
Potsdam, Germany
Pictures from my travels as an airline captain over the years.
Site of the Potsdam Conference where Churchill, Truman and Stalin figured out what to do with post war Germany.
During the Cold War, Potsdam housed 100,000 soviet soldiers and was the headquarters of the KGB outside of the USSR.
Potsdam / Berlin, Germany: Berliner Straße, Glienicker Brücke, Königstraße - 4K (2160p/60p) Ultra HD
Full Road View:
Please subscribe to channel for more videos, thank you!
Bitte den Kanal für weitere Videos abonnieren, vielen Dank!
Berlin, Germany (Google-Maps):
English:
Deutsch:
Camera: Panasonic Lumix DC-GH5S
Lens: Panasonic Leica DG Vario-Elmarit 8-18 mm F2.8-4
Recorder: Atomos Ninja V
Upload quality: UHD (3840x2160) 60p, 80-100Mbit/s, HEVC
Inside car sound recorded with: Zoom H4n Pro
Car Type / Autotyp: Hyundai i10 (64kW)
Front Video No.: 1122/6
Rechtliche Hinweise:
Alle Aufnahmen entstanden anlassbezogen im Rahmen einer künstlerischen Tätigkeit als Videofilmer und Publisher und nicht zu Überwachungszwecken des Straßenverkehrs oder zur Verfolgung von Verstößen gegen die Straßenverkehrsordnung.
Das Kamerafahrzeug wurde im Rahmen der StVO bewegt und die zum Zeitpunkt der Aufnahme gültigen Vorschriften mit größter Sorgfalt beachtet. Sollten andere Verkehrsteilnehmer erkennbar gegen diese Vorschriften verstoßen, so tragen diese selbst die Verantwortung. Um den künstlerischen Wert der Aufnahmen nicht zu beeinträchtigen, wurden Kennzeichen zufällig vorbeifahrender Kraftfahrzeuge bewusst nicht unkenntlich gemacht. Dieses ist zudem auch grundsätzlich nicht nötig, da der Normalbürger von einem Kennzeichen aus keinen Rückschluss auf eine Person ziehen kann, Persönlichkeitsrechte werden demnach folglich nicht verletzt.
Die mitunter zufällig aufgenommenen Personen erscheinen ausnahmslos als künstlerisches Beiwerk gemäß § 23 (1) Absatz 2 KUG.
Die Kameras wurden in der Art fest am Fahrzeug montiert, so dass zu keinem Zeitpunkt durch deren Verlust Gefahr für andere Verkehrsteilnehmer bestand. Kameras und deren Hilfsmittel gelten als Ladung, StVO §22 wurde in der jeweils geltenden Fassung beachtet.
Sollte das Kamerafahrzeug zufällig auf Unfallstellen treffen, so wurde in keiner Weise die Zufahrt, die Rettung oder Versorgung von Unfallbeteiligten gefährdet. Es werden nur Aufnahmen veröffentlicht, bei denen dieses im Rahmen geltender Gesetze erlaubt ist. Ein grundsätzliches Verbot, Unfallstellen zu filmen und die Aufnahmen zu veröffentlichen, besteht nicht. Solange keine Personen, inbesondere hilfsbedürftige Personen, in ihren Rechten verletzt werden und keine Behinderung gemäß StVO/StGB erfolgt, können Aufnahmen im Rahmen der Panoramafreiheit und künstlerischer Tätigkeit beliebig und problemlos verwendet und veröffentlicht werden.
Die StVO finden Sie hier:
Rechtsfahrgebot/Fahrstreifenbenutzung:
...
Videosequenzen für eigene Projekte lizenzieren? Hier finden Sie mehr Infos:
...
Glienicke Bridge
Glienicke Bridge
Glienicker Brücke
Bridge of Spies
Potsdam - Berlin
Il ponte delle Spie
Die Mauer ist weg! Teil 10: Grenzübergang Glienicker Brücke, Potsdam, Wachturm Steinstücken DDR 1990
Die Mauer ist weg! Teil 10:
Fahrt über die Glienicker Brücke mit DDR-Grenzkontrolle nach Potsdam, Brandenburger Tor, Nicolai-Kirche, DDR-Wachturm bei Steinstücken.
Musik:
Life in Romance von Twin Musicom ist unter der Lizenz Creative Commons Attribution ( lizenziert.
Interpret:
MMFL Glienicker Brücke - Le Pont des espions - POTSDAM
Pendant la Guerre froide, le Pont de Glienicke était notre point de passage obligé pour chaque départ en mission.
J'ai traversé ce pont plus de 700 fois pendant mon séjour à la MMFL..
Seuls les soviétiques étaient autorisés à nous contrôler, la France n'ayant pas officiellement reconnu le régime d'Allemagne de l'Est.
Le pont de Glienicke nous permettait de passer d'Est en Ouest, de Berlin Ouest à Potsdam.
C'est sur ce pont qu'eurent lieu plusieurs échanges d'espions des 2 blocs durant cette même Guerre froide.
President Reagan Photographed by Stasi Spies in West Berlin | This is the President
When President Reagan gave his famous tear down this wall speech in Berlin of June 1987, he had more than just the audience of West Germans watching him - he also had members of the East German Secret Police, also known as the Stasi, photographing every move of his visit.