Kafka, Kant and Lost Capitals
Neil MacGregor visits Kaliningrad, now in Russia but formerly the German city Konigsberg, home of the philosopher Kant. He also visits Prague, birthplace of writer Franz Kafka.
Continuing the week's theme of Germany's floating frontiers, Neil MacGregor visits two cities now beyond Germany's present borders, but which played important roles in Germany's intellectual and literary history.
Kaliningrad, on the Baltic, became part of the Soviet Union in 1945, and is now part of Russia. But for centuries it was K枚nigsberg, a major Prussian city, and birthplace of the philosopher Immanuel Kant - and so central to the intellectual history of Germany.
Neil also visits the Czech city of Prague, once home to a large German-speaking community, which included Franz Kafka, one of the most acclaimed writers in the German language.
Today neither Russian-speaking Kaliningrad nor Czech-speaking Prague are in any sense German - but what is their place within the memories of Germany?
Producer Paul Kobrak.
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Amber tankard
K枚nigsberg聽grew rich thanks to trade in one commodity above all: amber. For centuries the local rulers exploited their near-monopoly of the material to give sumptuous diplomatic gifts that nobody could match and nobody would refuse.
Amber tankard lid
This tankard almost certainly belonged to Queen Christina of Sweden, a gift from the Elector of Brandenburg, who was Duke of Prussia, ruler of K枚nigsberg and in search of powerful allies.
Amber tankard base
Tankard photographs聽漏 Trustees of the British Museum.
K枚nigsberg manhole cover in Kaliningrad
All around, you see Soviet buildings and statues and the name of Kaliningrad in Cyrillic. But on the city's manhole covers you can still read the name K脰NIGSBERG.
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