Gay männer berlin

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Gay matchmaking in Shöneberg

Berlin has changed and grown since the s and is back to a place where gay matchmaking is desired. A hub of some of the most astounding gay men globally, Jacqueline Burns makes it her business to meet every amazing man who is looking for love.

The gay scene in Berlin has always been ahead of its hour. Even if we take it help to the s or s in Shöneberg there was a definite homosexual area. Although lgbtq+ matchmaking did not exist, there were around LGBT bars and clubs- including one called Eldorado, a nightclub where trans women and drag queens performed. Still today you can do an LGBT walking tour around West Berlin’s gaybourhood of Shöneberg. Once the Berlin Wall was erected in the s and homosexuality was decriminalised in , the scene came back and there are great queer areas in Kreuberg, Noukoiln and Friedrichshain now too. Berlin is now on the map as one of the leading LGBTQI amiable cities in the world. In Germany legalised both same-sex attracted marriage and adoption rights

Berlin has earned its stripes as one of the great gay capitals of the world, with a huge LGBTQ+ community, one-of-a-kind queer bars and an attitude to life that encourages inhabitants to be whoever they please. Over time, this has lent itself to a ton of fantastic club nights, bars and saunas, and new venues are popping up all the time. 

Berlin is a city that is always moving forward, often at a lightning pace. Things move so quickly, it can be hard to keep up with. But we’ve got you covered. Our Berlin writer Nathan Ma knows this city like the back of his hand, and has handpicked the best LGBTQ+ spots all over the city for cocktails, dancing and a lot of queer happiness. Here’s our picks of the best. 

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🍷 The foremost bars in Berlin
🪩 The best clubs in Berlin
💃 The best nightlife spots in Berlin
🏘️ The foremost Airbnbs in Berlin

This manual was recently updated by Berlin-based writer Nathan Ma. At Time Out, all of our travel guides are written by local writers who perceive their cities inside out. For more about how we curate, see o

Gay Meetings in Berlin!

Welcome to Queer Meetings in Berlin! Are you a queer Berliner (or visitor) looking for events in which to meet people to dangle out with? Then you’re in the right spot. This organization is a platform intended to connect queer Berliners beyond the online interaction, by organizing social events where you can receive to know like-minded people living in this wonderful city!! MAIN EVENTS HOSTED REGULARLY: - Official monthly meeting (stay tuned for exact dates): this is our main event, the place and location is announced 2 weeks in advance and it takes place on a Friday or a Saturday. Everybody is welcome to join our official rendezvous. The event is held in a Pub and in command to promote integration of fresh comers and visitors the event is held in English. The administrator of this event is Louis Mcnall. - Do you want to improve your german skills while having a sip and make new friends? No problem, we organize a weekly/bi-weekly meeting in which people who want to get better at this language can chat with people with better skills. This event takes place during a week day in

Berlin Gay Travel Guide

Upcoming Events in Berlin

&#;  25 July

PiepShow Party: monthly Techno party for queers and friends. This Friday with DJ Chris Bekker, Tim Hagemann and Juan Del Chambo, among others.
Dresscode: sporty, kinky, creative, not casual nor street clothes.
From @ KitKatClub (Köpenicker Straße 76/Brückenstraße)

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About Berlin and its homosexual life

Berlin's origins move back more than years. In Berlin became the capital of the kingdom of Prussia and in of the German Empire. Although Prussia was dominated by a gay king from till (Fredrick II), Berlin's gay career started only hundred years later. In the s (the ›Golden Twenties‹) Berlin was seen as the city with the most lively and advanced gay subculture in Europe. That, of course, ended after  when Hitler and the Nazis were given power in Germany. (A memorial for gays persecuted by the Nazi regime was opened in Berlin in , prolonged overdue after more than 60 years.

After the end of Society War II in and with the start of the cold war, Berlin had been divided into West Berlin (co