Sunny day in Dresden - Zwinger Palace

Visiting the 17th century palatial complex with gardens and fountains.

The fountain was not running so we get this wonderful reflection.
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"The name "Zwinger" goes back to the name used in the Middle Ages for a fortress part between the outer and inner fortress walls, even though the Zwinger no longer had a function corresponding to the name at the start of construction.

The Zwinger was built in 1709 as an orangery and garden as well as a representative festival area. Its richly decorated pavilions and the galleries lined with balustrades, figures and vases testify to the splendor during the reign of Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony and elected King of Poland. In the original conception of the elector, the Zwinger was the forecourt of a new castle provided that the place should take up to the Elbe; therefore, the Zwinger remained undeveloped on the Elbe side (provisionally closed with a wall). The plans for a new castle were abandoned after the death of Augustus the Strong, and with the departure from the Baroque period, the Zwinger initially lost importance. It was only over a century later that the architect Gottfried Semper completed it with the Semper Gallery towards the Elbe.

The Sempergalerie, opened in 1855, was one of the most important German museum projects of the 19th century and made it possible to expand the use of the Zwinger as a museum complex, which had grown under the influence of time since the 18th century."
Source

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Both shots were taken with a mobile phone. The stiching of the panorama was not as succesful as we hoped. But we think you get the idea of what the place is like. Sometime in the future there should be a better shooting.

If you get to travel to Dresden you should absolutly put the Zwinger on your "To visit list". Even though its touristic yet there is a good reason for it. The beauty of it.

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