Belgradstraße

At the corner of Belgradstraße to Parzivalstraße is the "ladies club on Luitpoldpark", founded in 1862 by King Maximilian II of Bavaria, which moved in 1956 from the bombed Dragon Castle to the current premises.

The course of Belgradstraße follows the northern part of the Türkengraben,[3] built in 1702-1704 as a connecting channel from the Nymphenburg-Biedersteiner canal to Munich Residenz and was refilled in 1811 again.

In the plan of the royal capital and residence city of Munich from 1858/59, the Belgradstraße is marked as "leading to Georgenschwaig" and apart from a few buildings on the later Kurfürstenplatz, still completely undeveloped.

[6] The Swiss Heinrich Fürmann (* 1870, † 1936), operated the pension together with his wife Luise (Lulu), in a converted horse stable.

Stefan George lived with his most important son, Friedrich Gundolf, in the gable room of a gardener's house belonging to pension Fürmann, from March 1903[10] and there he was visited by Maximilian Kronberger.

[11] Friedrich Georg Jünger followed his resident friend Alexander Mitscherlich, who in turn got to know the two-year-old medical student Melitta Behr there.

/ Kein Spritzer Spiessergift trügt’ deinen Blankschild, / Im Dom der Herzen stehn als Denkbild, Dankbild / Dein gilbend Haus - Baracke oder Schloss?

/ Der Saal, wo Lied und Kuss den Alltag schloss, / Doch wer vom Bau pochte umsonst die Tür an, / Vernahm nicht gleich im Chor: „Boheimchen, führ an!

Belgradstraße 1