The historic village of Lichtenberg, today also called Alt-Lichtenberg, was founded about 1230, due to the German colonization of the territory of Barnim. The settlement around the fieldstone church was first mentioned in a 1288 deed, its estates were acquired by the neighbouring City of Berlin in 1391.
The village came to be a residential area and a suburb of Berlin from the mid 19th century on. A new town hall was erected in 1898 and in 1907 Lichtenberg received town privileges. Originally an independent city, it became part of Berlin in 1920 in the Greater Berlin Act.
The locality is served by the Berliner S-Bahn lines S5, S7, S75 at its main railway station Berlin Lichtenberg, periodically used as terminal for international trains to eastern Europe, as for example the "Sibirjak". Lichtenberg station is also a stop on the U-Bahn line U5, which in addition serves Magdalenenstraße. Furthermore, the locality is crossed by several lines of the tramway.
Berlin's main arterial road to the east, the Frankfurter Allee, part of the Bundesstrasse 1 and 5, runs through Lichtenberg.
Berlin's Asiatown in the East
Lichtenberg is a developing center of Asian culture and dubbed the eastern Asiatown or Chinatown of Berlin. The Dong Xuan Center around Herzbergstrasse on former industrial grounds is a development quarter with many different Asian businesses, various shops, food producers and wholesalers/distributors, residential areas and cultural offers.[3]
Gallery
The kernel of Lichtenberg Village, about 1800
Queen Elizabeth Herzberge Hospital in Lichtenberg
View from south to north to the Normannenstraße, at right the former Stasi building near Ruschestraße