Bendlerblock
The Bendlerblock is a neoclassical building complex located on Stauffenbergstraße in Berlin's Tiergarten district, originally constructed between 1911 and 1914 as administrative offices for the Imperial German Navy.[1][2] Following the First World War, it became the headquarters of the Reichswehr, the Weimar Republic's armed forces, and under the Nazi regime from 1933 onward, it housed the Army High Command (Oberkommando des Heeres).[3][4] The complex is most notably associated with the 20 July plot, an attempted coup d'état by Wehrmacht officers against Adolf Hitler; after the bomb failed to kill him, leaders including Colonel Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg were arrested, summarily tried by a drumhead court-martial, and executed by firing squad in the courtyard on the night of 20-21 July 1944.[2][5] Since 1955, the street has been renamed Stauffenbergstraße in honor of the plot's central figure, and in the post-war era, the site has served dual purposes: as the location of the German Resistance Memorial Center, established in 1980 to document and commemorate non-conformist and resistance activities against Nazism primarily within military circles, and as the contemporary seat of the German Ministry of Defence.[6][7] A memorial plaque and statue in the courtyard mark the execution site, underscoring the building's role in highlighting internal opposition to the totalitarian regime despite the plot's failure and the subsequent severe reprisals against thousands of suspected sympathizers.[4][8]