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Thingplatz

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Waldbühne
The Waldbühne (Woodland Stage or Forest Stage) is an amphitheatre at Olympiapark Berlin in Berlin, Germany. It was designed by German architect Werner March in emulation of a Greek theatre and built between 1934 and 1936 as the Dietrich-Eckart-Freilichtbühne (Dietrich Eckart Open Air Theater), a Nazi Thingplatz, and opened in association with the 1936 Summer Olympics. Since World War II it has been used for a variety of events, including boxing matches, film showings and classical and rock concerts. It seats more than 22,000 people. The venue is located off Friedrich-Friesen-Allee just northea
Góra Świętej Anny
mountain, Chełm mezoregion, Poland
Ordensburg Vogelsang
former Nazi elite school in Germany
Electoral Palace Koblenz
palace in Koblenz, Germany
Veste Oberhaus
fortress in Passau, Germany
Felsenbühne Rathen
open-air theatre in Rathen, Saxony, Germany
Rockelmann
The Rockelmann is a mountain in the Ore Mountains in Saxony, southeastern Germany. It is south-southwest of Schwarzenberg. It formerly had two granite quarries, one of which was converted into an open-air theatre in the 1920s, the other into a Nazi arena (Thingplatz) in the 1930s, and is also the site of a memorial to soldiers killed in World War I; all three are within Rockelmann Park, which was laid out in the 1930s.
Thingspiel
thumb|Thingplatz at Ordensburg Vogelsang thumb| at the Annaberg (hill)|Annaberg in [[Silesia in a Nazi-era photograph]] thumb|right|Heidelberg Thingstätte
Freilichtbühne Loreley
open-air theatre in St. Goarshausen, Germany
Thingstätte Heidelberg
open-air theatre in Heidelberg, Germany, originally built for Nazi performances