Top 10 similar words or synonyms for lichtenrade

bretten    0.865229

heiligensee    0.863739

birkenwerder    0.862516

rummelsburg    0.859787

dorsten    0.859787

blankenfelde    0.858343

wittenberge    0.851336

westkreuz    0.848968

kaltenkirchen    0.848070

altenbeken    0.847234

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for lichtenrade

Article Example
Lichtenrade The locality was first mentioned in 1375, named "Lichtenrode". Autonomous Prussian municipality of the former Teltow district, Lichtenrade was incorporated into Berlin in 1920, with the "Greater Berlin Act". During World War II, a branch of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp was located in this locality. After 1941, Prisoners of War from Ukraine were interned in the camp. During the Cold War it was a part of West Berlin bordering with East Germany. Its long boundary with Brandenburg was surrounded by the Berlin Wall from 1961 to 1989.
Lichtenrade Lichtenrade is served by the "S-Bahn" line S2 at the stations of Schichauweg and Lichtenrade. The locality is also crossed, from north to south, by the federal highway B96.
Lichtenrade Lichtenrade is a German locality ("Ortsteil") within the borough ("Bezirk") of Tempelhof-Schöneberg, Berlin. Until 2001 it was part of the former borough of Tempelhof.
Lichtenrade Located in the southern suburb of Berlin, it is one of the southernmost areas of the city, largely bounded by the Brandenburger municipalities of Schönefeld (Dahme-Spreewald district), Blankenfelde-Mahlow and Großbeeren (both in Teltow-Fläming district). It borders with the Berliner localities of Marienfelde, Mariendorf and Buckow (this one in the district of Neukölln).
Lichtenrade station The railway line from Berlin to Dresden was opened on 17 June 1875. Eight years later, a station was built the still single-track line at the village of Lichtenrade, which was opened on 1 June 1883. The 30 metre-long gravel platform was located south of today's Bahnhofstrasse (“station street”). The Royal Prussian Military Railway ran on its western edge from 1875, but it was dismantled after the First World War in 1919.