He King will remember those who died in the Allied bombing of Hamburg in 1943 and celebrate the Kindertransporte that saved thousands of children from the Nazis.
Karel will draw attention to the Second World War during his three-day state visit to the Second World War Germany with the queen consort is ending.
Speaking to the Bundestag on Thursday, Charles stressed how on the last day of his state visit he will remember those who died in the Allied bombing of Hamburg.
In Hamburg, the German President and his wife, Charles and the Queen Consort visit the St. Nikolai Monument, the remains of a church that was destroyed when the Allies bombed the city during World War II.
Hamburg was virtually razed to the ground by Operation Gomorrah, a major bombing campaign against the city described as unparalleled by any other Allied air raid in Europe during the conflict.
On site, the King and President lay wreaths during a short memorial ceremony.
In his address to the Bundestag, Charles said: “…we will once again stand solemnly before the German people.
“In Hamburg I will pay my respects at the memorial to the Kindertransporte, which 85 years ago saved the lives of more than 10,000 Jewish children from Nazism and gave them safe passage to a new life in Britain.”