Pony und Knappe

Last updated
Pony und Knappe
Encke Pony und Knappe 1896.jpg
The statue in 2009
Artist Erdmann Encke
Year1896;128 years ago (1896)
Medium Bronze
Location Berlin, Germany

Pony und Knappe (English: Pony and Knappe) is an outdoor 1896 bronze sculpture by German sculptor Erdmann Encke, has stood in the park of Bellevue Palace, Germany located in Central Berlin. Then moved to Fuchsiengarten in 1958. [1] The work itself depicts a boy standing on a rectangular gray granite slab with his back to his pony. He is seen feeding his pony with his right hand, which turns its head towards the boy's hand. His other hand rests on his pony's rump.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Johann Franz Encke</span> German astronomer (1791–1865)

Johann Franz Encke was a German astronomer. Among his activities, he worked on the calculation of the periods of comets and asteroids, measured the distance from the Earth to the Sun, and made observations of the planet Saturn.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Johann Eduard Erdmann</span> German philosopher

Johann Eduard Erdmann was a German religious pastor, historian of philosophy, and philosopher of religion, of which he wrote on the mediation of faith and knowledge. He was known to be a follower of Friedrich Schleiermacher, whom he studied under August Carlblom (1797-1877), and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, whom he regarded as his mentor. Erdmann also studied the works of Karl Daub. Historians of philosophy usually include Erdmann as a member of the Right Wing of the Hegelian movement, a group of thinkers who were also referred to variously as the Right Hegelians (Rechtshegelianer), the Hegelian Right, and/or as the Old Hegelians (Althegelianer).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ferdinand Schörner</span> German field marshal

Ferdinand Schörner was a German military commander who held the rank of Generalfeldmarschall in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany during World War II. He commanded several army groups and was the last Commander-in-chief of the German Army.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wilhelm Julius Foerster</span> German astronomer (1832–1921)

Wilhelm Julius Foerster was a German astronomer. His name can also be written Förster, but is usually written "Foerster" even in most German sources where 'ö' is otherwise used in the text.

Siegfried Knappe was an officer in the German Army (Heer) during World War II. Towards the end of the war, Knappe was stationed in Berlin, where he gave daily briefings at the Führerbunker.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Berlin Observatory</span>

The Berlin Observatory is a German astronomical institution with a series of observatories and related organizations in and around the city of Berlin in Germany, starting from the 18th century. It has its origins in 1700 when Gottfried Leibniz initiated the "Brandenburg Society of Science″ which would later (1744) become the Prussian Academy of Sciences. The Society had no observatory but nevertheless an astronomer, Gottfried Kirch, who observed from a private observatory in Berlin. A first small observatory was furnished in 1711, financing itself by calendrical computations.

Gerhard Stolze was a German operatic tenor.

Encke may refer to:

Carl Erdmann was a German historian who specialized in medieval political and intellectual history. He is noted in particular for his study of the origins of the idea of crusading in medieval Latin Christendom, as well as his work on letter collections and correspondence among secular and ecclesiastical elites in the eleventh century. He is often mentioned alongside Percy Ernst Schramm and Ernst H. Kantorowicz as one of the most influential and important German scholars of medieval political culture in the twentieth century. His promising and remarkably prolific career was cut short by his death in the German army at the end of World War II.

The Woman and the Stranger is a 1985 East German film directed by Rainer Simon. It is based on Leonhard Frank's novella "Karl und Anna" and tells the story of two friends in a POW camp during World War I. One of them escapes and forms a relationship with the other man's wife. After the war her husband returns. The film was entered into the 35th Berlin International Film Festival, where it won the Golden Bear.

Theoderich Heinrich August Wilhelm von Dufving (1907–2001), known as Theodor von Dufving, was a German officer of the Wehrmacht during the Second World War.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Otto Linné Erdmann</span> German chemist (1804–1869)

Otto Linné Erdmann was a German chemist. He was the son of Karl Gottfried Erdmann, the physician who introduced vaccination into Saxony.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Erdmann Encke</span> German sculptor

Erdmann Encke was a German sculptor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Johann Erdmann Hummel</span> German painter

Johann Erdmann Hummel was a German painter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Benno Erdmann</span> German scholar (1851–1921)

Benno Erdmann was a German neo-Kantian philosopher, logician, psychologist and scholar of Immanuel Kant.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Theodor Kalide</span> German sculptor

Theodor Erdmann Kalide was a German sculptor.

Kurt Erdmann was a German art historian who specialized in Sasanian and Islamic Art. He is best known for his scientific work on the history of the Oriental rug, which he established as a subspecialty within his discipline. From 1958 to 1964, Erdmann served as the director of the Pergamon Museum, Berlin. He was one of the protagonists of the "Berlin School" of Islamic art history.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elisabeth Erdmann-Macke</span> German writer

Elisabeth Erdmann-Macke was a German writer who focused on memoirs of her time as the wife of the expressionist painter August Macke, who had portrayed her more than 200 times. He died in World War I. Later, she lived in Berlin with her second husband, Lothar Erdmann, who died in a concentration camp during World War II. She saved Macke's paintings and copies of his letters by moving them from her house in Berlin before it was bombed in 1943.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lothar Erdmann</span> German journalist

Karl Hermann Dietrich Lothar Erdmann was a German journalist. During the Weimar Republic he was the editor of the trade union theory organ Die Arbeit. He was a main supporter of the turning away of trade unions from social democracy at the end of the Republic. Despite his rapprochement with National Socialism, he died after maltreatment in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp.

References

  1. "Knabe mit Pony – Bildhauerei in Berlin" (in German). Retrieved 2024-03-31.