Thank you for driving all the way to Dresden to show us the market. They truly have the most elaborate and fairy take like decorations on their stands. It is a pleasure to watch 💖🇨🇿🇺🇸🌲
Dresden's Christmas market is super beautiful 😍 I like the little houses with the puppets. It worths a visit. The nativity scene is also very nice and the city very elegant. Thanks for the beautiful video.
I'm dreaming of a white Christmas Just like the ones I used to know Where the treetops glisten and children listen To hear sleigh bells in the snow Oh, I'm dreaming of a white Christmas With every Christmas card I write May your days be merry and bright And may all your Christmases be white I'm dreaming of a white Christmas With every Christmas card I write May your days be merry and bright And may all your Christmases All your Christmases May all your Christmases be white
Completely destroyed, Dresden, a jewel of Baroque art, has risen from the ashes, and this walk 💕bears witness to the work accomplished in a city that is now proud 🙏. With the surrender of the Wehrmacht in May 1945, the city came under Soviet control and work began to save the architectural buildings and restore the city's population after the terrible night of February 13-14, 1945, when Germany capitulated and 25,000 people died. The reconstruction phase took place in the 1950s, under the impetus of the GDR, following the granting of sovereignty by the USSR in 1954. The choice was between rebuilding the capital of modern Saxony and restoring stone by stone this destroyed Baroque jewel. In Berlin, as in Moscow, the late 1950s saw a shift towards more industrial, less expensive and more standardized construction, albeit of lower quality, with the declared ambition of building a great socialist city. The example of Prague Street is eloquent: road traffic is separated from pedestrian traffic, stores are mixed with housing. In a way, the modernities of East and West have come closer together. While the city center gradually rose from the ashes in the 1960s, the same could not be said for the rest of the city, rebuilt in 1971 under Erich Honecker to meet the needs of the population on behalf of the workers, with a large number of housing units built in haste, leaving the old buildings in a state of disrepair. Rising from the ashes with reunification, the new Dresden bears witness to three quarters of a century of history. The monuments and social achievements of the socialist era coexist today with the new glory of Saxony's capital. In 1977, for example, it was finally decided to rebuild the Semperoper opera house, which dated from the late 19th century and had also been destroyed in 1945.
Thank you for going to Dresden🌻🌲
Thank you so much! 🖐😀 What Would I Do Without You ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
You are very welcome♥️🖐️🌻
Thank you for driving all the way to Dresden to show us the market. They truly have the most elaborate and fairy take like decorations on their stands. It is a pleasure to watch 💖🇨🇿🇺🇸🌲
I knew you'd understand! 🖐😀❤❤❤🎄
Dresden also has its charm 😊
The greenery arrangements throughout the first market are extraordinary! They would be worth seeing in and of themselves.
Beautiful walk 👣🌍🇩🇪 Dresden ✨️🎄👌
very nice! On my bucket list.
Super walking video tour beautiful Christmas market dresden Germany 🇩🇪 🎄🎁✨
Vladimir, thank you for the new video
Super Dresden, super tour, super Christmas
Dresden's Christmas market is super beautiful 😍 I like the little houses with the puppets. It worths a visit. The nativity scene is also very nice and the city very elegant. Thanks for the beautiful video.
Nice Video, thank you. Even though i dont like These kind of Markets , Cardiologists do!!!
🖐️😇🍺 Hahaha
We went last year. Very nice city. Not far to drive from Kytlice
🥰👍❤👍🥰
I'm dreaming of a white Christmas
Just like the ones I used to know
Where the treetops glisten and children listen
To hear sleigh bells in the snow
Oh, I'm dreaming of a white Christmas
With every Christmas card I write
May your days be merry and bright
And may all your Christmases be white
I'm dreaming of a white Christmas
With every Christmas card I write
May your days be merry and bright
And may all your Christmases
All your Christmases
May all your Christmases be white
❤🎄❤
🤩🌻🌻🌻🍺❤👍
Vladimir, have you bought a new Christmas cup?
❤❤❤Hi Volodja!!🥇😇🎩🌻🎞️😊📽️🎥🌲🍾💪🤝💯💥🔥👍👋🎉🎉
My dream country try I'm trying my dream man is
Completely destroyed, Dresden, a jewel of Baroque art, has risen from the ashes, and this walk 💕bears witness to the work accomplished in a city that is now proud 🙏.
With the surrender of the Wehrmacht in May 1945, the city came under Soviet control and work began to save the architectural buildings and restore the city's population after the terrible night of February 13-14, 1945, when Germany capitulated and 25,000 people died.
The reconstruction phase took place in the 1950s, under the impetus of the GDR, following the granting of sovereignty by the USSR in 1954. The choice was between rebuilding the capital of modern Saxony and restoring stone by stone this destroyed Baroque jewel.
In Berlin, as in Moscow, the late 1950s saw a shift towards more industrial, less expensive and more standardized construction, albeit of lower quality, with the declared ambition of building a great socialist city. The example of Prague Street is eloquent: road traffic is separated from pedestrian traffic, stores are mixed with housing. In a way, the modernities of East and West have come closer together.
While the city center gradually rose from the ashes in the 1960s, the same could not be said for the rest of the city, rebuilt in 1971 under Erich Honecker to meet the needs of the population on behalf of the workers, with a large number of housing units built in haste, leaving the old buildings in a state of disrepair.
Rising from the ashes with reunification, the new Dresden bears witness to three quarters of a century of history. The monuments and social achievements of the socialist era coexist today with the new glory of Saxony's capital. In 1977, for example, it was finally decided to rebuild the Semperoper opera house, which dated from the late 19th century and had also been destroyed in 1945.