thumb|300px|The Siegesallee, from a 1902 postcard. In the foreground is the statue of Albert I of Brandenburg ("Albert the Bear") (1100-1170). This was the northernmost statue on the west side. Other statues can be seen stretching away into the distance. thumb|300px|Map of Siegesallee from 1902
thumb|300px|The Siegesallee, from a 1902 postcard. In the foreground is the statue of Albert I of Brandenburg ("Albert the Bear") (1100-1170). This was the northernmost statue on the west side. Other statues can be seen stretching away into the distance. thumb|300px|Map of Siegesallee from 1902
The Siegesallee (, Victory Avenue) was a broad boulevard in Berlin, Germany. In 1895, Kaiser Wilhelm II ordered and financed the expansion of an existing avenue, to be adorned with a variety of marble statues. Work was completed in 1901.
2 mapped locations
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).