|
Find more facts and information on our topic page about
Frankfurt
|
Frankfurt
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Frankfurt or Frankfurt am Main , city (1994 pop. 659,800), Hesse, central Germany, a port on the Main River. It is also known in English as Frankfort. The city is an industrial, media, commercial, and financial center and a transportation hub. It is headquarters of the leading German stock exchange, numerous commercial banks, and the Bundesbank, Germany's central bank; the European Central Bank also is there. Manufactures include river craft, pharmaceuticals, metals, machinery, oil products, and beer. Chemical production is concentrated in the Höchst district. Frankfurt is the site of major international trade fairs, including an annual book fair. Its international airport is one of the largest and busiest in Europe.
Points of Interest
Points of interest include the Römer (the city hall, begun in the 15th cent.); the Gothic Church of St. Bartholomew (13th-15th cent.), also called the coronation cathedral, which has a high (312 ft/95 m) tower; the house (now a museum) in which Goethe was born (1749); the Lutheran Church of St. Paul, or Paulskirche (built 1789-1833), where the Frankfurt Parliament met; the Städel Art Institute (founded 1816); the German Postal Museum; the Jewish Museum; and museums of applied arts, ethnology, film, and architecture. The Commerzbank Tower (850 ft/259 m) and Messeturm Building (843 ft/257 m) are among the tallest buildings in Europe. Frankfurt is the seat of a university (opened 1914) and a national library.
History
A Roman town founded in the 1st cent. AD, Frankfurt became (8th cent.) a royal residence under Charlemagne. After the Treaty of Verdun (843) it was briefly the capital of the kingdom of the Eastern Franks (i.e., Germany). It prospered as a commercial center and held annual fairs (first mentioned 1240) that drew merchants from all of Europe. Frankfurt was designated in the Golden Bull (1356) of Emperor Charles IV as the seat of the imperial elections, which took place in the chapel of the Church of St. Bartholomew. It was made a free imperial city in 1372.
After the emperors ceased to be crowned by the popes, the coronation ceremonies took place (1562-1792) at Frankfurt. The emperors-elect, after being crowned at St. Bartholomew's by the archbishop-elector of Mainz, proceeded with much pageantry to a banquet in the city hall, called Römer [Ger.,=Romans] because the emperors-elect were crowned kings of the Romans. The coronation (1764) of Joseph II has been described in the autobiography of the writer Goethe, a native of Frankfurt.
Frankfurt accepted the Reformation in 1530, and was a member of the Schmalkaldic League. It was occupied many times in the wars of the 17th and 18th cent. Frankfurt was the original home of the Rothschilds , who, along with other Jewish merchants and bankers, played a leading role in the economic growth of the city (especially after 1700). After the dissolution (1806) of the Holy Roman Empire, Frankfurt was included in the ecclesiastic principality of Regensburg and Aschaffenburg, created by Napoleon I for Karl Theodor von Dalberg. The principality was converted in 1810 into the grand duchy of Frankfurt, also under Dalberg.
The Congress of Vienna (1814-15) restored Frankfurt to the status of a free city and made it the seat of the diet of the German Confederation . The Frankfurt Parliament , the first German national assembly, met there in 1848-49. Having sided with Austria in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, Frankfurt was annexed by Prussia. In 1871 the Treaty of Frankfurt, which ended the Franco-Prussian War, was signed there. The city was heavily damaged in World War II, but after 1945 many of its historic landmarks were restored and numerous modern structures were built.
Author not available, FRANKFURT.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
Find more facts and information related to the .
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research
(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)
|
A plan for City Hall
; Give up on fixing City Hall and the plaza? Never! At least part of the...Much has been said and nothing done about our City Hall. It's a place with plenty of detractors, but I think City Hall is actually a pretty nifty building, simply...
Read more
|
|
ARCHITECTURE ; A new perspective on City Hall : Exhibition invites a reconsideration of the building
; ...reminds us how much we'd miss Boston City Hall if we let Mayor Menino get rid of it...recall, announced last year that he hated City Hall and planned to sell it and its plaza for private development, then build a new City Hall somewhere else. The exhibition, to say...
Read more
|
|
Deutsche backs GBP 2.2bn Frankfurt 'mini-city'
; ...get young, talented people to come and work in Frankfurt. We experience that at Deutsche Bank every day...here, the response isn't exactly enthusiastic. Frankfurt simply isn't attractive enough." Out of desperation...new district, to be known as the Messestadt. Frankfurt's answer to Canary Wharf will ...
Read more
|
|
Pledge to make city hall people-oriented
; ...the epitome of confidence. This fifth City Hall Director-General, who assumed his post...has tasked himself with cleaning up City Hall's image and turning it into a more people-orient...change the negative public perception of City Hall," he told a Press conference at his office...
Read more
|
|
GROWING-UP TIME; L.A. NEEDS REAL CITY HALL, NOT BAD JOKE OF LA-LA LAND.(VIEWPOINT)
; ...your best bet is to pay no attention to City Hall, and we stay away from it if we can...fast-moving doers in L.A., and dealing with City Hall is like getting your head stuck in a hole with no bottom. We just pretend City Hall doesn't exist. Los Angeles is a city...
Read more
|
|
City Hall renovation ruled out.(Government)
; ...to approve building a completely new City Hall someday. The City Council on Wednesday voted 6-2 to drop the idea of renovating City Hall, or using a combination of renovation...shift to focus solely on building a new City Hall somewhere in the downtown. That may or...
Read more
|
|
OPINION: Deutsche Bank Backs Frankfurt, Germany, Development.
; ...get young, talented people to come and work in Frankfurt. We experience that at Deutsche Bank every day...here, the response isn't exactly enthusiastic. Frankfurt simply isn't attractive enough. Out of desperation...new district, to be known as the Messestadt. Frankfurt's answer to Canary Wharf will ...
Read more
|
|
IT'S TIME WE STARTED TREATING BOSTON CITY HALL WITH PRIDE
; Boston City Hall is in the news. David Scondras, one of...suggested to the New York Times that City Hall ought to be sold because it's overcrowded...fitting home for a civic bureaucracy. A city hall is something different. It's supposed...
Read more
|
|
Soc: Frankfurt expects well-behaved England fans
; AAP Sports News (Australia) 06-09-2006 Soc: Frankfurt expects well-behaved England fans By Peter Starck FRANKFURT, June 8 Reuters - German and British authorities...British interior ministry, told a news conference in Frankfurt's city hall. England starts its World Cup campaign in ...
Read more
|
|
Drop appeal, NGOs tell City Hall
; ...NGOs) expressed disappointment with City Hall's insurer for its decision to go...for two years, nothing was done by City Hall. However, within 24 hours of the incident involving Putera Marzuqi, City Hall came to check and within six days...
Read more
|
For more facts and information,
see all related premium articles
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
Frankfurt School
Frankfurt School a group of researchers associated with the Institut...founded in 1923 as an autonomous division of the Univ. of Frankfurt. The institute's first director, Carl Grünberg...because of the Nazis, the institute returned in 1949 to Frankfurt, where Jürgen Habermas became its most ...
Read more
|
|
Frankfurt an der Oder
Frankfurt an der Oder , city (1994 pop. 83,850), Brandenburg, E...foodstuffs, shoes, and furniture. Lignite is mined nearby. Frankfurt was chartered in 1253. It joined the Hanseatic League in the 14th cent. and became an important commercial center. Frankfurt was frequently besieged, notably in 1631 (during ...
Read more
|
|
Frankfurt
Frankfurt, Germany 1. To distinguish the two cities with this name, the rivers on which they lie are included: Frankfurt am Main ‘Frankfurt on the Main’ in Hesse, and Frankfurt an der Oder ‘Frankfurt on the Oder’ in Brandenburg...
Read more
|
|
Frankfurt Parliament
Frankfurt Parliament 1848-49, national assembly convened at Frankfurt on May 18, 1848, as a result of the liberal revolution...revolutionary movement was suppressed, and the very basis of the Frankfurt assembly destroyed. At last, in Mar., 1849, the parliament...
Read more
|
|
Frankfurt school
...Institute for Social Research), founded in Frankfurt in 1923 by Felix J. Weil, Carl Grunberg...functioned until 1941; it was reestablished in Frankfurt in 1950. Though the institute was originally...doctrine common to all members of the Frankfurt school. Intellectually, the school is...
Read more
|