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Augusta Victoria Hospital: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 31°47′12″N 35°14′57″E / 31.78667°N 35.24917°E / 31.78667; 35.24917
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From [[1920]] to [[1927]], Augusta Victoria was the official residence of the [[United Kingdom|British]] [[High Commissioner]] of the [[British Mandate of Palestine|Palestine Mandate]] before British headquarters moved to [[Armon Hanatziv]], on the outskirts of [[Talpiot]]. Under [[Jordan]]ian administration, technically under [[United Nations Truce Supervision Organisation|UN]] control, it was a military hospital for soldiers from the [[Arab Legion]]<ref>Commander E H Hutchison USNR “Violent Truce: A Military Observer Looks at the Arab-Israeli Conflict 1951-1955” Chapter III The Barrel Incident p 20-30</ref>. In 1927, a severe earthquake caused extensive damage to the premises.<ref>http://www.jcjcr.org/index_item_view.php?iid=56</ref>
From [[1920]] to [[1927]], Augusta Victoria was the official residence of the [[United Kingdom|British]] [[High Commissioner]] of the [[British Mandate of Palestine|Palestine Mandate]] before British headquarters moved to [[Armon Hanatziv]], on the outskirts of [[Talpiot]]. Under [[Jordan]]ian administration, technically under [[United Nations Truce Supervision Organisation|UN]] control, it was a military hospital for soldiers from the [[Arab Legion]]<ref>Commander E H Hutchison USNR “Violent Truce: A Military Observer Looks at the Arab-Israeli Conflict 1951-1955” Chapter III The Barrel Incident p 20-30</ref>. In 1927, a severe earthquake caused extensive damage to the premises.<ref>http://www.jcjcr.org/index_item_view.php?iid=56</ref>

The [[Nazi]] party held meetings and assemblies at Augusta Victoria under the leadership of Ludwig Buchhalter, a Templer living in the [[Germany Colony]] who was appointed head of Jerusalem branch of the Nazi party in 1933. <ref>http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1035118.htmlSwastikas over Jerusalem</ref>


==Today==
==Today==

Revision as of 16:52, 7 December 2008

The Augusta Victoria church

Augusta Victoria is a 161-bed hospital on Mount Scopus, Jerusalem, financed by the Lutheran World Federation and the United Nations Refugee Works Administration. [1]

History

Augusta Victoria was built in 1907 as a center for the German Protestant community in Ottoman Palestine. The complex, completed in 1910, included the Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Ascension with a 65-meter belltower and a hospice for Christian pilgrims. During World War II, it was converted into a hospital by the British. [2]

The complex was named for Augusta Viktoria of Schleswig-Holstein, wife of German Kaiser Wilhelm II, who visited Jerusalem in 1898. The architect, Robert Leibnitz, was inspired by German palaces, such as the German Hohenzollern. [3]

After the Kaiser's visit, he commissioned the construction of a guesthouse for German pilgrims. Many of the building materials were imported from Germany. A 50-meter high church tower was constructed with four bells, the largest of them weighing six tons. To transport these bells from Jaffa, the road to Jerusalem had to be widened and paved. The expense was more than double the cost of transporting the bells from Hamburg to Jaffa. Augusta Victoria was the first building in the country to have electricity (provided by a diesel generator). [2]

From 1920 to 1927, Augusta Victoria was the official residence of the British High Commissioner of the Palestine Mandate before British headquarters moved to Armon Hanatziv, on the outskirts of Talpiot. Under Jordanian administration, technically under UN control, it was a military hospital for soldiers from the Arab Legion[4]. In 1927, a severe earthquake caused extensive damage to the premises.[5]

The Nazi party held meetings and assemblies at Augusta Victoria under the leadership of Ludwig Buchhalter, a Templer living in the Germany Colony who was appointed head of Jerusalem branch of the Nazi party in 1933. [6]

Today

Augusta Victoria courtyard

Augusta Victoria is now the second-largest hospital in East Jerusalem. [1]It also operates a guesthouse run by the Lutheran World Federation for international volunteers and guests. [7] A pediatric oncology ward for Palestinian children opened in April 2005 in a joint project with the Peres Center for Peace, various Italian foundations and the Hadassah University Hospital in Jerusalem, which trained the oncologist and nursing staff. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/03/31/news/journal.php?page=1/A Jerusalem hospital embodies spirit of cooperation
  2. ^ a b LWF Jerusalem History
  3. ^ "Jerusalem Architecture - Periods and Styles, European Christian Buildings Outside the Old City Walls, 1855-1918," David Kroyanker, Keter, 1987 (Hebrew)
  4. ^ Commander E H Hutchison USNR “Violent Truce: A Military Observer Looks at the Arab-Israeli Conflict 1951-1955” Chapter III The Barrel Incident p 20-30
  5. ^ http://www.jcjcr.org/index_item_view.php?iid=56
  6. ^ http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1035118.htmlSwastikas over Jerusalem
  7. ^ Segev, Tom (1999). One Palestine, Complete. Metropolitan Books. ISBN 0805048480.

31°47′12″N 35°14′57″E / 31.78667°N 35.24917°E / 31.78667; 35.24917