<p>Britain's King Charles III on Friday commemorated German victims of World War II Allied air raids, a gesture carrying great significance for both countries.</p>.<p>On the third and final day of his first state visit since ascending the throne, the monarch, accompanied by German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, visited the St Nikolai memorial in Hamburg, where he laid a wreath.</p>.<p>The move, in the ruins of a church, is unprecedented for a British sovereign. TV commentators on rolling news channel <em>NTV </em>calling it a "great, great symbol".</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/charles-warns-europes-security-under-threat-in-landmark-german-speech-1205039.html" target="_blank">Charles warns Europe's security under threat in landmark German speech</a></strong></p>.<p>When Charles's late mother, Queen Elizabeth II, visited Dresden in 1992, eggs were flung at her after she failed to get out of her car to lay a wreath at the rubble of the Frauenkirche -- a symbol of wartime destruction.</p>.<p>After laying the wreath alongside Steinmeier and Hamburg mayor Peter Tschentscher, Charles stood for a moment with his head bowed.</p>.<p>Then Queen Consort Camilla placed a white rose at the memorial.</p>.<p>Ahead of the ceremony, Germany's biggest-selling daily Bild said Charles' gesture at the memorial "will say more than any speech".</p>.<p>The issue of German suffering in World War II is historically and politically explosive.</p>.<p>Wracked with guilt over the extermination by the Nazis of six million Jews, mainstream Germany tends to shy away from discussing the suffering of Germans during the war.</p>.<p>The WWII air raids, which were among the most controversial actions taken by the Allies, were designed to terrorise the German population and force a surrender. They killed tens of thousands of civilians.</p>.<p>Hamburg's bishop Kirsten Fehrs, who said the Coventry Litany of Reconciliation at Friday's ceremony, stressed the importance of the event.</p>.<p>"The sign of reconciliation between two war enemies and the joint commemoration of the victims are an important signal today," she said, according to remarks carried by regional broadcaster <em>NDR</em>.</p>.<p>Engineer Rainald Erbacher, 54, who was at the memorial said Charles' action "sends a positive signal".</p>.<p>He underlined that it was a "difficult balance to strike between the past and looking ahead" but that the king's gesture was appropriate.</p>.<p>It was important attention to "the legacy of our ugly past", said rural tour guide Chrissi Breyer, 55, who was among hundreds of well-wishers who waited in the rain outside Hamburg city hall to catch a glimpse of Charles.</p>.<p>The king, who was greeted with cheers by the crowd, had set an "example" with his gesture, Breyer said.</p>.<p>Hamburg and Dresden were among the most heavily bombed cities in Nazi Germany.</p>.<p>On July 24, 1943, Britain and the United States began raiding Hamburg in what was described as a "Blitz week", with the Royal Air Force striking by night and the US forces bombing by day.</p>.<p>Codenamed Operation Gomorrah, it unleashed some 9,000 tonnes of explosives, killing more than 30,000 people and leaving the port city in rubble.</p>.<p>Originally designed by English architect George Gilbert Scott, who restored London's Westminster Abbey, St Nikolai has been left in its ruined state and now houses a WWII memorial and museum.</p>.<p>The themes of reconciliation and a future forged by common values have featured prominently during Charles's three-day visit, widely interpreted as a bid to build bridges after Brexit.</p>.<p>But during his inaugural foreign trip as king, he managed to score several firsts, including becoming the only monarch to address the German parliament.</p>.<p>In Berlin for the first two days of his visit, he also interacted with well-wishers at the Brandenburg Gate where he was given a formal welcome, as well as toured a reception centre for Ukrainian refugees.</p>.<p>The royal couple travelled on Friday morning to Hamburg on a regular scheduled train, to the delight of some passengers.</p>.<p>Medical student Henriette Czech, 20, was surprised to find herself using the same means of transport as the monarch.</p>.<p>"It's exciting for a mere mortal that a royal is on the train," she told <em>AFP</em>.</p>
<p>Britain's King Charles III on Friday commemorated German victims of World War II Allied air raids, a gesture carrying great significance for both countries.</p>.<p>On the third and final day of his first state visit since ascending the throne, the monarch, accompanied by German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, visited the St Nikolai memorial in Hamburg, where he laid a wreath.</p>.<p>The move, in the ruins of a church, is unprecedented for a British sovereign. TV commentators on rolling news channel <em>NTV </em>calling it a "great, great symbol".</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/charles-warns-europes-security-under-threat-in-landmark-german-speech-1205039.html" target="_blank">Charles warns Europe's security under threat in landmark German speech</a></strong></p>.<p>When Charles's late mother, Queen Elizabeth II, visited Dresden in 1992, eggs were flung at her after she failed to get out of her car to lay a wreath at the rubble of the Frauenkirche -- a symbol of wartime destruction.</p>.<p>After laying the wreath alongside Steinmeier and Hamburg mayor Peter Tschentscher, Charles stood for a moment with his head bowed.</p>.<p>Then Queen Consort Camilla placed a white rose at the memorial.</p>.<p>Ahead of the ceremony, Germany's biggest-selling daily Bild said Charles' gesture at the memorial "will say more than any speech".</p>.<p>The issue of German suffering in World War II is historically and politically explosive.</p>.<p>Wracked with guilt over the extermination by the Nazis of six million Jews, mainstream Germany tends to shy away from discussing the suffering of Germans during the war.</p>.<p>The WWII air raids, which were among the most controversial actions taken by the Allies, were designed to terrorise the German population and force a surrender. They killed tens of thousands of civilians.</p>.<p>Hamburg's bishop Kirsten Fehrs, who said the Coventry Litany of Reconciliation at Friday's ceremony, stressed the importance of the event.</p>.<p>"The sign of reconciliation between two war enemies and the joint commemoration of the victims are an important signal today," she said, according to remarks carried by regional broadcaster <em>NDR</em>.</p>.<p>Engineer Rainald Erbacher, 54, who was at the memorial said Charles' action "sends a positive signal".</p>.<p>He underlined that it was a "difficult balance to strike between the past and looking ahead" but that the king's gesture was appropriate.</p>.<p>It was important attention to "the legacy of our ugly past", said rural tour guide Chrissi Breyer, 55, who was among hundreds of well-wishers who waited in the rain outside Hamburg city hall to catch a glimpse of Charles.</p>.<p>The king, who was greeted with cheers by the crowd, had set an "example" with his gesture, Breyer said.</p>.<p>Hamburg and Dresden were among the most heavily bombed cities in Nazi Germany.</p>.<p>On July 24, 1943, Britain and the United States began raiding Hamburg in what was described as a "Blitz week", with the Royal Air Force striking by night and the US forces bombing by day.</p>.<p>Codenamed Operation Gomorrah, it unleashed some 9,000 tonnes of explosives, killing more than 30,000 people and leaving the port city in rubble.</p>.<p>Originally designed by English architect George Gilbert Scott, who restored London's Westminster Abbey, St Nikolai has been left in its ruined state and now houses a WWII memorial and museum.</p>.<p>The themes of reconciliation and a future forged by common values have featured prominently during Charles's three-day visit, widely interpreted as a bid to build bridges after Brexit.</p>.<p>But during his inaugural foreign trip as king, he managed to score several firsts, including becoming the only monarch to address the German parliament.</p>.<p>In Berlin for the first two days of his visit, he also interacted with well-wishers at the Brandenburg Gate where he was given a formal welcome, as well as toured a reception centre for Ukrainian refugees.</p>.<p>The royal couple travelled on Friday morning to Hamburg on a regular scheduled train, to the delight of some passengers.</p>.<p>Medical student Henriette Czech, 20, was surprised to find herself using the same means of transport as the monarch.</p>.<p>"It's exciting for a mere mortal that a royal is on the train," she told <em>AFP</em>.</p>