07 May 2024

capital city of spies: Berlin's Spy Museum

Today’s German capital, Berlin, was the Capital of Spies in the Cold War. The situation of the divided city, which developed after WW2, was unique. The historical heritage provided for excit­ing tours through the city, but many places said that Berlin was still a real esp­ionage hotspot today, due to the 150+ embassies from which espionage still takes place.

Front entrance to the Spy Museum Berlin

The Glienicker Bridge at the border between Potsdam and Berlin wit­nessed some spect­ac­ular spy swaps during the Cold War. Having given much thought to spying since his run-ins with the East Ger­man Stasi under Communism, tv journalist Franz-Michael Gün­ther wanted a museum dedicated to the history of espionage. Berlin is not only regarded as an important historical site during the Cold War, but also as the former  capital city of spies.  Curator Günther opened the museum after starting his coll­ect­ion in 2004, sourcing objects and information from former secret ser­­vice workers, double agents and contemporary wit­nesses. 

A number of locations for the Spy Museum Berlin were consid­er­ed. In 2014 the final choice was made for a site on Leip­­ziger Platz, the ideal loc­­ation for a museum foc­ussing on esp­ion­age. The site of the form­er death­-strip i.e no-man’s land between the inner and outer perim­eter of the Berlin Wall that separated East and West Berlin, was located in the city’s his­toric division. This site feat­ured one of the few openings in the Wall and was the scene of many dramatic spy swaps in the Cold War. It was also close to the important Brand­en­burg Gate, Pots­damer Platz, Bund­es­rat, Martin-Gropius-Bau, Topo­graphie des Terrors and Kultur­for­um with the Philharmonie and Neuer Nationalgalerie.

Spy Museum Berlin opened 10+ years after first Gunther had his idea because it required much work to transform it into a state-of-the-art mus­eum. Combining rare exhibits with high-tech multi­media install­ations, the exhibition welcomed its first vis­it­ors in Sept 2015, and was internat­ionally acclaimed. En­t­irely privately funded, the Spy Museum was an immediate hit but finan­cially problematic.

An improved financial concept was required to secure the long-term future of the museum, which was relaunched by a new operator. It re-opened in July 2016 as the German Spy Museum. With a fresh pub­lic relations strategy and reduced entry fees, the renewed museum con­centrated on its educational role and its exhibit­ions.

The Spy Museum is the only museum of its kind in Germany. The visitor can ex­pl­ore, using state-of-the-art technology, a multi-media jour­ney through the history of espionage. Walk through the Zeit­tunnel/time tunnel which leads into the 3,000m² museum. On entering, feel the sin­ister world of espionage as several cam­eras peer down. Begin with sec­ret scriptures from antiq­u­ity and ends in the present, with the recent National Security Agen­cy deb­ate. He/she gain insight into elaborate spy techniques, leg­en­dary cases and spectacular sec­ret op­erations. And hear former agents talk.


Museum gallery, in a darkish atmosphere

The collection has 1,000+ exhibits. 300 of these are on dis­play, in various themed areas with int­er­act­ive installations, inviting participation. The historic­al objects on dis­play include gloves hiding a pistol and shoes with bugging devices in the heel. There was also the poisoned umbrella used to assass­inate Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov in 1978 and the infamous En­igma encryption machine.


The Museum actually linked thousands of years by displaying ob­jects like a cipher technique invented by Julius Caesar, still being used today. It depicted the fascinating secret service methods of: Oliver Cromwell and Napoleon.

The museum’s exhibition space showed many rare exhibits, as meticul­ously reproduced replicas which were presented using high-tech touchscreen displays to explain their us­age. Thanks for Mechtraveller's photos.

Camera hidden in a bra

 Cryptex from Da Vinci Code

 Enigma Machine

Pipe with bone conduction radio

 Bug in a shoe's heel

Ricky French exper­ien­ced the  romance and mystique con­jured by the apparently outdated world of espion­age. See the rows of cameras hidden in everyday household items, clunky con­trap­tions used for decoding messages, and cars with hidden smuggling comp­artments. It all seemed rather quaint since deception is lar­g­e­ly practised now online; it was difficult to imagine a museum ded­ic­ated to computer hacking having the same appeal. But the visitor can see what it took to become a top sec­ret agent and to crack codes. 

The laser maze room was just one of the many hands-on exhibits that helped spying. From encryption tech­niques to phone-bugging to code-cracking, the world of deceit and double-crossing was un­locked. The museum moved between entertain­ment and education, some of it really solemn, with commendable fin­esse. His forensic skills were tested in a laboratory where the quest was to compose and decipher secret mes­sages. And he was shown how documents that had been through a paper shredder could be painstakingly pieced together. One section was ded­­icated to the techniques used by the dreaded Stasi, who placed all East Germans under mass surveillance for years. Another explored the spying methods used in WW1, WW2 and throughout the Cold War. 

The spy museum was completed by a generous sect­ion devoted to the most famous spy in the world, 007. The chips and playing-cards used by James Bond/Daniel Craig in the 2006 adapt­at­ion of Casino Royale were on show, as was a car tyre with ice spikes from Die Another Day and M’s red telephone from Moonraker

The Costume Room shows a trench coat, top hat and sun-glasses where the visitor can become a dash­ing spy, posing for a photo against any back­drop eg opt for a street scene on a rainy night, the streetlight illum­inating the raindrops and the car’s head­lights giving the face a suspicious glow. 

Spies, Lies and Deception was a free exhibition at Imperial War Museum London about deception and espionage from WW1 on. Explore how deception plots have changed the course of conflict and the lives of those involved. The exhibition was showcasing objects, digitised film, photography and commissioned interviews until April 2024. Many thanks to Girl Gone London.





26 comments:

Katerinas Blog said...

Interesting post, thanks Hels.
This museum will really delight its visitors. Exhibits that you might not believe existed and that ended up playing such an important role in the war.
I had been to Berlin in 1992 and really East Berlin (after the fall of the wall) was a vast construction site with skyscrapers sprouting up everywhere.

jabblog said...

That must be a fascinating museum There seems to be no end to man's ingenuity.

Deb said...

Local architects had more freedom, so the architecture of West Berlin was filled with detail, especially in post war and into the late 20th-early 21st centuries. I like the Bird In Flight blog that showed how the West wanted to showcase the manifestations of the economic miracle that finally happened. The residential buildings were more humane; modern office buildings, shops and cinemas were built in West Berlin. The German Spy Museum, opening recently (2016) must have been part of this modernization.

Hels said...

Katerina

I haven't been to Berlin since the Wall came down in 1989. But I am assuming that Berlin already wanted to open up and modernise in order to attract financially valuable tourists. As you noted in 1992, when the city was arguably the most influential in Europe, exciting facilities were appearing all over the place.

Hels said...

jabblog

There is NO end to man's ingenuity, exactly! But especially in Berlin where people were very well educated, multi lingual and talented in design. It is not a coincidence that my favourite centre of design education in any country and in any century was Bauhaus: in Weimar, Dessau and Berlin.

Hels said...

Deb

I can absolutely understand why Berlin wanted to modernise rapidly, and to make it very popular with intellectual travellers. Plus I can understand why they found the site on Leip­­ziger Platz was a great loc­­ation for a museum foc­ussing on esp­ion­age. My only concern was that a darkish museum, filled with information and equipment involved in spying, would be sinister and full of deception.

roentare said...

What a fascinating part of history about spies in this wonderful city of Berlin. Pity that I have not visited this city all these years.

Luiz Gomes said...

Boa tarde. Aproveito para desejar uma excelente terça-feira minha querida amiga. Através do seu Blogger tempo oportunidade de aprender cada vez mais. Sobre a Gruta do Maquiné, acharam fósseis e vestígios que o homem da caverna, realmente viveu naquele lugar.

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

I would love to visit this museum it sounds so interesting, and like many people I have a fascination with spies.

DUTA said...

I've been to Germany, but not to Berlin.
I'm sure the Spy Museum is a fascinating place. However, I must admit that for some reasons, I have rather lost interest in visiting museums during the last years.

Andrew said...

I think the 'house of spooks' would be quite a fascinating museum to visit. Reassembling shredded paper must be the hardest jigsaw imaginable.

River said...

This is why I burn the contents of my paper shredder, just in case someone "out there" puts it all together and finds information I dont want found, like bank account numbers and stuff.

Hels said...

roentare

Berlin is fascinating, even after all the destruction. So it made perfect sense that the Spy Museum, the only museum of its kind, was created in Berlin. It re-opened in 2016 with a fresh public relations strategy and reduced entry prices, so the museum could concentrate on its educational role. What was the change needed?

The new management reorganised the permanent exhibition and extended its programme of events. So yes, time for a revisit!

Hels said...

Luiz

I never thought I would be so grateful to the blogging world for new learning, for both of us. And for all our blogging colleagues.

Hels said...

Jo-Anne

I agree with you; many people are fascinated with espionage, as we can see from the number of films and books that are hugely popular. But more importantly, The Museum is even more thoughtful and more carefully researched than the James Bond stories.

Hels said...

DUTA

the reason I like museums more than other sources of information is because the curators have done all the sweaty work for me. They research the history, collect the written and technical evidence, organise the displays and write up the histories in each cabinet. And as more information gets dug up, they can expand the museum displays.

Hels said...

Andrew

that is partially why I would be hopeless as a spy. Firstly very very fine work like
assembling tiny pieces (of paper etc) would drive me nuts. Secondly lying is a skill that I could never get away with... the blushing and giggling would give me away.

Hels said...

River

it goes to show... spies in the computer age needed to be much more skilled and paranoid than spies in earlier generations :)

Margaret D said...

How interesting. I've never heard of the spy museum, and I would be thrilled to visit.

Hels said...

Margaret

my sons loved every minute of their museum tour :)

My name is Erika. said...

You're right. Berlin is the perfect place for a spy museum. Those items you shared are really cool!

Hels said...

Erika

when Joe and I first drove around Europe, our parents were happy for us to go wherever we liked, as long as we did not go to the anti-Semitic nations where the worst exterminations had taken place in the Holocaust: Germany, Poland, Hungary and Ukraine. So it was YEARS before we drove in Germany! I was surprised that it was such a beautiful and intellectual country - the universities, art galleries, publishing centres and specialist museums were amazing.

Luiz Gomes said...

Bom dia, uma excelente quinta-feira, com muita paz e saúde. Obrigado pelos comentários sobre a Gruta do Maquiné. Espero que você goste da postagem de hoje. Sou apaixonado por museus, espero um dia, conhecer algum fora do Brasil.

Hels said...

Luiz

of course you must :) Museums are often the most historically researched collections in each country, hopefully not censored or perverted by politician.

CherryPie said...

The museum sounds fascinating. If we ever get to Berlin we will put it on our 'to do' list.

Hels said...

ahhh CherryPie

that is one of the great advantages of living in Europe... you can pop into a city for a weekend :)