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  1. The New Palace (German: Neues Palais) is a palace situated on the western side of the Sanssouci park in Potsdam, Germany. The building was begun in 1763, after the end of the Seven Years' War , under King Friedrich II ( Frederick the Great ) and was completed in 1769.

  2. El Nuevo Palacio de Potsdam (en alemán: Neues Palais) es un palacio localizado en el extremo oeste del parque de Sanssouci, en la ciudad de Potsdam, Alemania. Se construyó entre 1763 y 1769 gracias al trabajo de varios arquitectos: Jean-Laurent Le Geay, Johann Gottfried Büring, Heinrich Ludwig Manger y Carl Philip Christian von Gontard.

  3. New Palace – Germany’s largest baroque palace. The New Palace was commissioned by King Frederick in the first half of the 1750s. The building plans were drawn up by Büring and Manger on the basis of sketches by King Frederick. Originally, the palace was to be built on the southern axis of Sanssouci Palace on the Havel.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SanssouciSanssouci - Wikipedia

    Sanssouci ( German pronunciation: [ˈsãːsusi]) is a historical building in Potsdam, near Berlin. Built by Prussian King Frederick the Great as his summer palace, it is often counted among the German rivals of Versailles.

    • Germany
    • 1990 (14th session)
  5. El Nuevo Palacio de Potsdam es un palacio localizado en el extremo oeste del parque de Sanssouci, en la ciudad de Potsdam, Alemania. Se construyó entre 1763 y 1769 gracias al trabajo de varios arquitectos: Jean-Laurent Le Geay, Johann Gottfried Büring, Heinrich Ludwig Manger y Carl Philip Christian von Gontard.

  6. The New Palace is the last royal residence Frederick the Great would have built in his park. It was a demonstration of the Prussian state’s undiminished power and wealth following the deprivations of the Seven Years’ War (1756–63).

  7. Palacio Nuevo en el Parque Sanssouci. El Palacio Nuevo (Neues Palais) se construyó entre 1763 y 1769 y es, por tanto, el último palacio que Federico el Grande mandó eirigir en el Parque Sanssouci. El edificio pretendía representar el poder intacto de Prusia tras la Guerra de los Siete Años.