Difference between revisions of "Oldenburg State Theatre [Oldenburg] (Q8071)"

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Theatre building in Oldenburg, Germany

(‎Added [nl] label: Oldenburgisches Staatstheater)
 
(‎Added qualifier: Source (P63): CARTHALIA (Q495), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1757591661939)
 
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Property / Wikidata instance
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Property / Wikidata instance: Q24354 / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Kunstenpunt Wiki Qid
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Property / Kunstenpunt Wiki Qid: Q187548 / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Carthalia ID
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Property / Carthalia ID: 2062 / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Modern Opera Houses ID
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950
Property / Modern Opera Houses ID: 950 / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Burnt down date
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24 November 1891Gregorian
Timestamp+1891-11-24T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 day
Before0
After0
Property / Burnt down date: 24 November 1891Gregorian / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Burnt down date: 24 November 1891Gregorian / qualifier
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context: Fire broke out at midnight, two hours after performance. A burning fortress had been represented on the stage. Origin of fire not known. Nothing saved. No lives lost. (English)
Property / Burnt down date: 24 November 1891Gregorian / reference
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Property / Preservation state
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Property / Preservation state: extant building / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Preservation state
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Property / Preservation state: Used as theatre today / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Note
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Built 1879-1881 as Großherzoglisches Residenztheater (also known as Hoftheater) by Gerhard Schnitger. Opened Oct 1881 with Goethe's Iphigenie auf Tauris. Destroyed by fire in 1891. 1892-1893 rebuilt and extended by Paul Schnitger. Re-opened 1893 with Shakespeare's Der Kaufmann von Venedig (The Merchant of Venice). 1919 renamed Oldenburgisches Landestheater. 1938 renamed Oldenburgisches Staatstheater. 1969-1974 extension by new foyers and backstage areas. 1998 major extension by the Kleines Haus. 2010-2011 major restoration. - The complex contains three halls: the Großes Haus (510 to 577 seats + 50 standing), the Kleines Haus (350 seats), and the studio theatre Spielraum (80 seats). Used for performances by the resident state opera, drama, ballet and youth theatre companies. Also used for drama performances in Low German by the August-Hinrichs-Bühne company. (English)
Property / Note: Built 1879-1881 as Großherzoglisches Residenztheater (also known as Hoftheater) by Gerhard Schnitger. Opened Oct 1881 with Goethe's Iphigenie auf Tauris. Destroyed by fire in 1891. 1892-1893 rebuilt and extended by Paul Schnitger. Re-opened 1893 with Shakespeare's Der Kaufmann von Venedig (The Merchant of Venice). 1919 renamed Oldenburgisches Landestheater. 1938 renamed Oldenburgisches Staatstheater. 1969-1974 extension by new foyers and backstage areas. 1998 major extension by the Kleines Haus. 2010-2011 major restoration. - The complex contains three halls: the Großes Haus (510 to 577 seats + 50 standing), the Kleines Haus (350 seats), and the studio theatre Spielraum (80 seats). Used for performances by the resident state opera, drama, ballet and youth theatre companies. Also used for drama performances in Low German by the August-Hinrichs-Bühne company. (English) / rank
 +
Normal rank
Property / Note: Built 1879-1881 as Großherzoglisches Residenztheater (also known as Hoftheater) by Gerhard Schnitger. Opened Oct 1881 with Goethe's Iphigenie auf Tauris. Destroyed by fire in 1891. 1892-1893 rebuilt and extended by Paul Schnitger. Re-opened 1893 with Shakespeare's Der Kaufmann von Venedig (The Merchant of Venice). 1919 renamed Oldenburgisches Landestheater. 1938 renamed Oldenburgisches Staatstheater. 1969-1974 extension by new foyers and backstage areas. 1998 major extension by the Kleines Haus. 2010-2011 major restoration. - The complex contains three halls: the Großes Haus (510 to 577 seats + 50 standing), the Kleines Haus (350 seats), and the studio theatre Spielraum (80 seats). Used for performances by the resident state opera, drama, ballet and youth theatre companies. Also used for drama performances in Low German by the August-Hinrichs-Bühne company. (English) / qualifier
 +

Latest revision as of 12:48, 11 September 2025

Theatre building in Oldenburg, Germany
  • Oldenburg State Theatre
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Oldenburg State Theatre [Oldenburg]
Theatre building in Oldenburg, Germany
  • Oldenburg State Theatre

Statements

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53°8'21.120"N, 8°12'36.000"E
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Oldenburger Staatstheater.jpg
2,048 × 1,536; 658 KB
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Built 1879-1881 as Großherzoglisches Residenztheater (also known as Hoftheater) by Gerhard Schnitger. Opened Oct 1881 with Goethe's Iphigenie auf Tauris. Destroyed by fire in 1891. 1892-1893 rebuilt and extended by Paul Schnitger. Re-opened 1893 with Shakespeare's Der Kaufmann von Venedig (The Merchant of Venice). 1919 renamed Oldenburgisches Landestheater. 1938 renamed Oldenburgisches Staatstheater. 1969-1974 extension by new foyers and backstage areas. 1998 major extension by the Kleines Haus. 2010-2011 major restoration. - The complex contains three halls: the Großes Haus (510 to 577 seats + 50 standing), the Kleines Haus (350 seats), and the studio theatre Spielraum (80 seats). Used for performances by the resident state opera, drama, ballet and youth theatre companies. Also used for drama performances in Low German by the August-Hinrichs-Bühne company. (English)
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1881
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1893
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1961
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1970s
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26122
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950
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24 November 1891Gregorian
Fire broke out at midnight, two hours after performance. A burning fortress had been represented on the stage. Origin of fire not known. Nothing saved. No lives lost. (English)

Timeline

 

Wikidata