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・ Karl Offmann
・ Karl Ohs
・ Karl Olivecrona
・ Karl Olov Hedberg
・ Karl Olsen
・ Karl Olson
・ Karl Oppitzhauser
・ Karl Oskar Fjørtoft
・ Karl Oskar Medin
・ Karl Otfried Müller
・ Karl Marx (medical missionary)
・ Karl Marx and the Close of His System
・ Karl Marx House
・ Karl Marx in film
・ Karl Marx Library
Karl Marx Monument
・ Karl Marx Peak
・ Karl Marx Theatre
・ Karl Marx University
・ Karl Marx's Theory of Revolution
・ Karl Marx-Hof
・ Karl Marxbuurt
・ Karl Mathy
・ Karl Matthews Arndt
・ Karl Matthäus Woschitz
・ Karl Matzek
・ Karl Mauch
・ Karl Maurer
・ Karl Mauss
・ Karl Max Barthélémy


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Karl Marx Monument : ウィキペディア英語版
Karl Marx Monument

The Karl-Marx-Monument is a 7.10m-tall stylized head of Karl Marx, weighing approximately 40 tons. The heavy-duty sculpture, together with the base platform, stand over 13 meters tall.
On a wall behind the monument, the phrase "Workers of the world, unite!" (from the Communist Manifesto) is written in four languages: German, English, French and Russian.
It is the most famous monument in the inner city of Chemnitz and the second-largest bust in the world, after the 60 cm higher Lenin's head in Ulan-Ude, Russia. There is a well known local nickname for the monument: "Nischel", which is derived from the Central German term for head or skull.
== History ==
After renaming the city and the district of Chemnitz into Karl-Marx-Stadt on May 10, 1953, the East-German government decided to honor the namesake of the city, and hired a Soviet sculptor, Lev Kerbel, to design a monument.
The monument was cast in the art foundry Monument Skulptura in Leningrad in bronze and then broken down into 95 pieces. In Karl-Marx-Stadt, these items were to be welded together again, but the Soviet technology was not suitable. Instead, it was decided to transfer the job to the VEB Germania. The monument stands on two pedestals with Korninskij granite, named after the mining region in southern Ukraine.
On 9 October 1971, the monument was inaugurated before a crowd of around 250,000 people along Karl-Marx-Allee (popularly referred to as "Nischelgasse" ("Skull Alley"), today's Brückenstraße).
As the landmark of the city, it served during holidays in the German Democratic Republic as a backdrop for pageants and other mass events. The monument remained intact even after German reunification, although the proposed demolition of the monument led to a heated debate when Karl-Marx-Stadt returned to its former name of Chemnitz. Many other cities around the world at that time reported interest in buying the monument, there have been discussions about a sale to Cologne.
Until 2007, the motto of the city was "Stadt mit Köpfchen" (the city with heads/brains), referring to the monument.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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