Cecilienhof Country House
Churchill, Truman and Stalin wrote world history in Cecilienhof Country House. They met here in summer 1945 for the Potsdam Conference and sealed the fate of Germany and Europe. The house was built between 1913 and 1917 in the style of an English country house. Kaiser Wilhelm II had it built for his first-born son, Crown Prince Wilhelm, and his wife Cecilie.
After the collapse of the monarchy, Wilhelm was allowed to return to Potsdam in 1923 and was granted the right of residence for life in the palace, which had meanwhile been expropriated by the state. At the end of the Second World War, the former Crown Prince and his family fled from the approaching Red Army.
Today, the palace houses a historical memorial, where the conference rooms and workrooms of the participants of the Potsdam Conference can be visited. The palace can be visited during opening hours as part of a guided tour or with an audio guide.
Opening hours:
Neujahr : | geschlossen |
Good Friday : | geschlossen |
Easter Sunday : | geschlossen |
Easter Monday : | geschlossen |
Labor Day : | geschlossen |
Ascension Day : | geschlossen |
Pentecost Sunday : | geschlossen |
Whit Monday : | geschlossen |
German Unity Day : | geschlossen |
Reformation Day : | geschlossen |
Tuesday 01.11.2022 - 31.03.2023 : | 10:00-16:30 Uhr |
Wednesday 01.11.2022 - 31.03.2023 : | 10:00-16:30 Uhr |
Thursday 01.11.2022 - 31.03.2023 : | 10:00-16:30 Uhr |
Friday 01.11.2022 - 31.03.2023 : | 10:00-16:30 Uhr |
Saturday 01.11.2022 - 31.03.2023 : | 10:00-16:30 Uhr |
Sunday 01.11.2022 - 31.03.2023 : | 10:00-16:30 Uhr |
Price information:
Adultas: | 12,00 € |
reduced: | 8,00 € |
Adultas: | 8,00 € |
reduced: | 6,00 € |
Getting there:
by bicycle (a service of komoot GmbH)
by public transport (a service of VBB)
by train (a service of Bahn AG)
All about local traffic
Features and categories: