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Wikipedia

Mannheim

Mannheim (German pronunciation: [ˈmanhaɪm] (listen); Palatine German: Mannem[4] or Monnem), officially the University City of Mannheim (German: Universitätsstadt Mannheim), is the second-largest city in the German state of Baden-Württemberg after the state capital of Stuttgart, and Germany's 21st-largest city, with a 2020 population of 309,119 inhabitants.[5] The city is the cultural and economic centre of the Rhine-Neckar Metropolitan Region, Germany's seventh-largest metropolitan region with nearly 2.4 million inhabitants and over 900,000 employees.[6]

Mannheim
Location of Mannheim in Baden-Württemberg
Mannheim
Mannheim
Coordinates: 49°29′16″N 08°27′58″E / 49.48778°N 8.46611°E / 49.48778; 8.46611Coordinates: 49°29′16″N 08°27′58″E / 49.48778°N 8.46611°E / 49.48778; 8.46611
CountryGermany
StateBaden-Württemberg
Admin. regionKarlsruhe
DistrictUrban district
Founded1607
Subdivisions17 Stadtbezirke
Government
 • Lord mayor (2015–23) Peter Kurz[1] (SPD)
Area
 • City144.96 km2 (55.97 sq mi)
Elevation
97 m (318 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[3]
 • City311,831
 • Density2,200/km2 (5,600/sq mi)
 • Metro
2,362,046 (2,012)[2]
DemonymMannheimer
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
68001–68309
Dialling codes0621
Vehicle registrationMA
Websitewww.mannheim.de
Aerial view of the city center, showing the grid layout

Mannheim is located at the confluence of the Rhine and the Neckar in the Kurpfalz (Electoral Palatinate) region of northwestern Baden-Württemberg. The city lies in the Upper Rhine Plain, Germany's warmest region. Together with Hamburg, Mannheim is the only German city bordering two other federal states. It forms a continuous conurbation of around 480,000 inhabitants with Ludwigshafen am Rhein in the neighbouring state of Rhineland-Palatinate, on the other side of the Rhine. Some northern suburbs of Mannheim belong to Hesse. Upstream along the Neckar lies Heidelberg, the fifth-largest city of Baden-Württemberg and the third-largest of the Rhine-Neckar Region.

Mannheim is unusual among German cities in that the city center's streets and avenues are laid out in a grid pattern, leading to its nickname Quadratestadt (Square City). Within a ring of avenues surrounding the city centre, there are squares numbered from A1 to U6 instead of street names. At the southern base of that system sits Mannheim Palace, one of the largest palace complexes in the world, and the second-largest in Baroque style after Versailles. It was the former home of the Prince-elector of the Electoral Palatinate, and now houses the University of Mannheim, which repeatedly receives top marks in business administration and is sometimes known as the "Harvard of Germany".[7][8][9] The Mannheim May Market is the largest regional consumer exhibition of Germany.[10] The civic symbol of Mannheim is the Romanesque Mannheim Water Tower, completed in 1886 and rising to 60 metres (200 feet) above the highest point of the art nouveau area Friedrichsplatz. Mannheim is well-known for its inventions, including the automobile,[11][12] the bicycle,[13][12] and the tractor,[12] which is why the city is often called the "city of inventions".[14][15][16] The city is the starting and finishing point of the Bertha Benz Memorial Route that follows the tracks of the first long-distance automobile trip in history.

A Großstadt (major city with more than 100,000 inhabitants) since 1896,[17] Mannheim is now an important industrial and commercial city, a university town, and a major transportation hub between Frankfurt and Stuttgart, including an ICE interchange (the Mannheim Hauptbahnhof), Germany's second-largest marshalling yard[18] (the Mannheim Rangierbahnhof), and Germany's largest inland port[19] (the Mannheim Harbour). The city is home to many factories, offices and headquarters of several major corporations such as Roche, ABB, IBM, Siemens, Unilever and more. Mannheim's SAP Arena is home to German ice hockey record champions Adler Mannheim as well as popular handball team Rhein-Neckar Löwen. Since 2014, Mannheim has been a member of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network and holds the title of "UNESCO City of Music".[20] In 2020, Mannheim was classified as a global city with 'Sufficiency' status by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network (GaWC).[21] Mannheim is a smart city;[22] the city's electrical grid is installed with a power-line communication network.[23] The city's tourism slogan is "Leben im Quadrat" ("Life in the[a] Square").[24]

History

Early history

A brick kiln excavated in 1929 in the Seckenheim district, which operated from 74 AD to the early second century, attests to settlement in Roman times.[25]

The name of the city was first recorded as Mannenheim in a legal transaction in 766, surviving in a twelfth-century copy in the Codex Laureshamensis from Lorsch Abbey.[26] The name is interpreted as "the home of Manno", a short form of a Germanic name such as Hartmann or Hermann.[27] Mannheim remained a mere village throughout the Middle Ages.

Early Modern Age

In 1606, Frederick IV, Elector Palatine started building the fortress of Friedrichsburg and the adjacent city centre with its grid of streets and avenues. On 24 January 1607, Frederick IV gave Mannheim the status of a "city",[28] whether it really was one by then or not.

Mannheim was mostly levelled during the Thirty Years War around 1622 by the forces of Johan Tilly. After being rebuilt, it was again severely damaged by the French Army in 1689 during the Nine Years' War.

After the rebuilding of Mannheim that began in 1698, the capital of the Electorate of the Palatinate was moved from Heidelberg to Mannheim in 1720[29] when Karl III Philip, Elector Palatine began construction of Mannheim Palace and the Jesuit Church; they were completed in 1760.

18th and 19th centuries

 
Mannheim in 1758
 
Historical map of Mannheim in 1880

During the eighteenth century, Mannheim was the home of the "Mannheim School" of classical music composers. Mannheim was said to have one of the best court orchestras in Europe under the leadership of the conductor Carlo Grua. The royal court of the Palatinate left Mannheim in 1778. Two decades later, in 1802, Mannheim was removed from the Palatinate and given to the Grand Duchy of Baden.

In 1819, Norwich Duff wrote of Mannheim:

Mannheim is in the Duchy of Baden and situated at the confluence of the Rhine and Neckar over both of which there is a bridge of boats. This is the third town of this name having been twice burnt. The houses are large, and the streets broad and at right angles to each other, and is one of the most airy clean towns I have seen in Germany. It was formerly fortified, but the fortifications were razed in 1806 and gardens fill their places. There is a large château here belonging to the Grand Duke and a very good garden; part of the château was destroyed when the town was bombarded and has never since been repaired, the other part is occupied by the Grand Duchess, widow of the late Grand Duke who was succeeded by his uncle having left only three daughters. She is the sister of Eugene Beauharnais [sic; in fact, she was his second cousin]. There is a cathedral, a theatre which is considered good, an observatory, a gallery of pictures at the château, and some private collections. About two kilometres (one point two miles) below the town the Russian Army crossed the Rhine in 1813. Population 18,300.

In 1819, August von Kotzebue was assassinated in Mannheim.

The climate crisis of 1816–17 caused famine and the death of many horses in Mannheim. That year Karl Drais invented the first bicycle.

Infrastructure improvements included the establishment of Rhine Harbour in 1828 and construction of the first Baden railway, which opened from Mannheim to Heidelberg in 1840. Influenced by the economic rise of the middle class, another golden age of Mannheim gradually began. In the March Revolution of 1848, the city was a centre for political and revolutionary activity.

In 1865, Friedrich Engelhorn founded the Badische Anilin- und Soda-Fabrik (Baden Aniline and Soda Factory, BASF) in Mannheim, but the factory was constructed across the Rhine in Ludwigshafen because Mannheim residents feared air pollution from its operations. From this dye factory, BASF has developed into the largest chemical company in the world. After opening a workshop in Mannheim in 1871 and patenting engines from 1878, Karl Benz patented the first motor car in 1886. He was born in Mühlburg (now part of Karlsruhe).

Early 20th century and World War I

The Schütte-Lanz company, founded by Karl Lanz and Johann Schütte in 1909, built 22 airships. The company's main competitor was the Zeppelin works.

When World War I broke out in 1914, Mannheim's industrial plants played a key role in Germany's war economy. This contributed to the fact that, on 27 May 1915, Ludwigshafen was the world's first civilian settlement behind the battle lines to be bombed from the air. French aircraft attacked the BASF plants, thereby killing twelve people. The precedent was set for this attack by Germany's repeated air raids against British civilian populations throughout southeastern Britain during the first half of 1915.

When Germany lost the war in 1918, according to the peace terms, the left bank of the Rhine was occupied by French troops. The French occupation lasted until 1930, and some of Ludwigshafen's most elegant houses were erected for the officers of the French garrison.

Inter-war period

After the First World War, the Heinrich Lanz Company built the Bulldog, an advanced tractor, powered by heavy oil. As a result of the invention of the pre-combustion chamber by Prosper L'Orange, Benz & Cie. developed the world's first compact diesel-powered car at its motor works in Mannheim in 1923. In 1922, the Grosskraftwerk Mannheim (Mannheim large power station) was opened. By 1930, the city, along with its sister city of Ludwigshafen, which had developed out of the old Mannheim Rheinschanze, had a population of 385,000.

World War II

 
US troops in street fighting in Mannheim, 1945

During World War II, air raids on Mannheim completely destroyed the city centre. Mannheim was heavily damaged during aerial bombing by the Royal Air Force (RAF) and the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF). Allied bombing raids razed the city center of Mannheim with nighttime area bombing, killing thousands of civilians. In the meantime, 2,262 of Mannheim's Jews were sent to Nazi concentration camps. Some sources state that the first deliberate strategic bombing of the war occurred at Mannheim during a RAF night raid on 16 December 1940.[30]

The Allied ground advance into Germany reached Mannheim in late March 1945, which was potentially well-defended by German forces. However, the German forces suddenly abandoned the city and the U.S. 44th Infantry Division entered unopposed on 29 March 1945.[31] There had been a large American military occupation presence in the Mannheim area with up to 10 barracks. The first one shut down in 2007 going on until 2013 when the last one closed. (See United States military installations below).

1950s to 1980s

 
The Wasserturm Garden

Rebuilding of the city began laboriously. Mannheim Palace and the water tower (Wasserturm) eventually were rebuilt and the National Theatre was replaced by a new building at a new location. At the old location there is a monument to Friedrich Schiller and the Zum Zwischen-Akt pub. The housing shortage led to the development of many new residential areas.

In 1964, the City Hospital (Städtisches Krankenhaus) became part of the Heidelberg University for Clinical Medicine in Mannheim. In 1967, the University of Mannheim was established in the city.

In 1975, the Bundesgartenschau (Federal horticulture show) was celebrated in Luisen and Herzogenried parks. A number of pieces of infrastructure were developed for the show: the telecommunications tower and a second bridge across the Rhine (the Kurt Schumacher Bridge) were built, the pedestrian zone was established, the new Rosengarten conference centre was opened and the Aerobus was installed as a temporary transport system.

 
Mannheim skyline viewed from Heidelberg

A number of major projects were completed in the 1980s and 1990s: a planetarium, an extension to the art gallery, the new Reiß Museum, Stadthaus, a new May Market ground, synagogue, mosque, State Museum for Technology and Work, Carl-Benz stadium and the Fahrlach tunnel were opened.

Mannheim has lost many industrial jobs, although in the recent past the city was economically dominated by manufacturing. The city tried in the past to prevent the establishment of service providers by designating some locations as industrial areas. A prime example of the current trend is the construction of the Victoria Tower (Victoria-Turm) in 2001, one of the tallest buildings in the city, on railway land.

 
Victoria Tower Mannheim at the marshalling yard at night

Post-reunification

Mannheim celebrated its 400th anniversary with a series of cultural and other events throughout 2007. The 400th anniversary proper was in 2006, since Frederick IV, Elector Palatine laid the foundations of Mannheim citadel on 17 March 1606. In preparation for the anniversary, some urban activities were implemented, beginning in 2000: the building of the SAP Arena with access to the city's new eastern ring road, the rehabilitation of the pedestrian zone in Breite Straße, the arsenal and the palace, the complete transformation of the old fair ground, and the new Schafweide tram line. The concept of the anniversary of the city aimed at a diverse range of events without a dominant central event. In 2001, the City hospital was officially and legally awarded with the title University Hospital Mannheim.

Geography

Climate

Climate data for Mannheim, Germany for 1981–2010 (Source: DWD)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 16.4
(61.5)
20.2
(68.4)
26.1
(79.0)
32.0
(89.6)
33.2
(91.8)
38.9
(102.0)
39.0
(102.2)
39.8
(103.6)
34.3
(93.7)
28.5
(83.3)
22.6
(72.7)
17.5
(63.5)
39.8
(103.6)
Average high °C (°F) 4.7
(40.5)
6.7
(44.1)
11.6
(52.9)
16.2
(61.2)
20.6
(69.1)
23.7
(74.7)
26.1
(79.0)
25.9
(78.6)
21.2
(70.2)
15.3
(59.5)
8.9
(48.0)
5.3
(41.5)
15.50
(59.90)
Daily mean °C (°F) 1.8
(35.2)
2.8
(37.0)
6.7
(44.1)
10.7
(51.3)
15.2
(59.4)
18.2
(64.8)
20.3
(68.5)
19.9
(67.8)
15.6
(60.1)
10.7
(51.3)
5.7
(42.3)
2.8
(37.0)
10.85
(51.53)
Average low °C (°F) −1.3
(29.7)
−0.8
(30.6)
2.3
(36.1)
5.0
(41.0)
9.4
(48.9)
12.4
(54.3)
14.5
(58.1)
14.2
(57.6)
10.6
(51.1)
6.7
(44.1)
2.5
(36.5)
-0.0
(32.0)
6.28
(43.30)
Record low °C (°F) −18.7
(−1.7)
−21.1
(−6.0)
−13.6
(7.5)
−6.4
(20.5)
−0.1
(31.8)
4.0
(39.2)
4.7
(40.5)
5.3
(41.5)
2.5
(36.5)
−5.0
(23.0)
−8.7
(16.3)
−18.3
(−0.9)
−21.1
(−6.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 40.9
(1.61)
43.1
(1.70)
50.8
(2.00)
49.3
(1.94)
72.5
(2.85)
66.6
(2.62)
76.0
(2.99)
57.7
(2.27)
54.1
(2.13)
56.4
(2.22)
53.5
(2.11)
54.1
(2.13)
675.0
(26.57)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 55.2 85.6 124.0 180.2 214.1 219.1 235.1 222.1 164.1 108.8 59.0 44.9 1,712.2
Source: Data derived from Deutscher Wetterdienst[32]
Climate data for Mannheim 2019-present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 7.2
(45.0)
11.3
(52.3)
13.0
(55.4)
19.1
(66.4)
19.3
(66.7)
25.9
(78.6)
27.5
(81.5)
27.6
(81.7)
21.4
(70.5)
16.6
(61.9)
8.7
(47.7)
7.6
(45.7)
17.1
(62.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.4
(39.9)
6.1
(43.0)
8.2
(46.8)
12.3
(54.1)
13.7
(56.7)
19.9
(67.8)
21.0
(69.8)
20.9
(69.6)
16.0
(60.8)
12.6
(54.7)
6.0
(42.8)
4.8
(40.6)
12.2
(53.9)
Average low °C (°F) 1.0
(33.8)
1.6
(34.9)
3.1
(37.6)
4.8
(40.6)
7.0
(44.6)
12.9
(55.2)
13.8
(56.8)
14.8
(58.6)
10.2
(50.4)
9.0
(48.2)
3.0
(37.4)
1.9
(35.4)
6.9
(44.5)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 15.6
(0.61)
49.3
(1.94)
35.7
(1.41)
22.6
(0.89)
55.4
(2.18)
81.4
(3.20)
38.3
(1.51)
63.3
(2.49)
77.1
(3.04)
89.9
(3.54)
48.6
(1.91)
52.3
(2.06)
629.5
(24.78)
Average snowfall cm (inches) 4.0
(1.6)
1.6
(0.6)
1.2
(0.5)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
1.0
(0.4)
2.0
(0.8)
5.6
(2.2)
2.6
(1.0)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 57.3 116.2 164.0 251.2 247.9 268.1 286.1 248.9 199.1 97.5 38.2 53.4 2,027.9
Source: Deutscher Wetterdienst[33]

Mannheim is located in Germany's warmest summer region, the "Rhine shift". In summer, temperatures sometimes rise up to 35 °C (95 °F) and higher. The highest recorded temperature was 39.8 °C (104 °F) on 7 August 2015. The daily lows during heat waves can be very high by north European standards (around 25 °C / 77 °F). In September 2016, the average temperature in Mannheim was 18.6 °C, highest in Baden-Württemberg.[34]

In comparison to other regions of Germany, Mannheim has a higher humidity in summer which causes a higher heat index. Snow is rare, even in the cold months. Precipitation occurs mostly during afternoon thunderstorms during the warmer period (average days of thunderstorms in a year is 40–50). Climate in this area has mild differences between highs and lows, and there is adequate rainfall year-round. The Köppen Climate Classification subtype for this climate is "Cfb" (Marine West Coast Climate/Oceanic climate).[35]

Demographics

Population

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1450570—    
16633,000+426.3%
177725,353+745.1%
180218,818−25.8%
187139,606+110.5%
1900141,131+256.3%
1919229,576+62.7%
1925247,486+7.8%
1933275,162+11.2%
1939284,957+3.6%
1950245,634−13.8%
1961313,890+27.8%
1970332,163+5.8%
1987295,191−11.1%
2011290,117−1.7%
2017307,997+6.2%
Source:[36][circular reference]

Nationalities

The following list shows significant groups of foreigners in the city of Mannheim by nationalities.[37] In total 44,7% of all Mannheim inhabitants are from foreign descent. With 68,9% in the Neckarstadt-West district the population is the most foreign, in the Wallstadt district with 23,1% it is the least. A large part of the immigrants are from the Balkans and European countries.

Rank Nationality Population (31 December 2020)
1 Turkey 15,779 (5.12%)
2 Italy 8,165 (2.65%)
3 Bulgaria 6,997 (2.27%)
4 Poland 6,595 (2.14%)
5 Romania 5,663 (1.83%)
6 Croatia 4,565 (1.48%)
7 Greece 3,341 (1.08%)
8 Spain 1,754 (0.56%)
9 Bosnia and Herzegovina 1,680 (0.54%)
10 Syria 1,642 (0.53%)
11 India 1,541 (0.5%)
12 Hungary 1,341 (0.43%)
13 France 1,266 (0.41%)
14 Kosovo 1,164 (0.37%)
15 Serbia 1,023 (0.33%)
16 China 1,022 (0.33%)
18 United States 933 (0.30%)
19 Yugoslavia 876 (0.28%)
20 Iraq 831 (0.27%)

Religion

The distribution of Mannheim's population by religious affiliation (as of December 31, 2020) is Roman Catholic 25.4%, Protestant 20.0%, and other/none 54.6%.[38]

Culture

Theatre

The National Theatre Mannheim was founded in 1779 and is the oldest "Stage" in Germany. In 1782 the premiere of Die Räuber, written by Friedrich Schiller, was shown.[39]

Recently, more smaller stages have opened, such as the Oststadt-Theater, the TIG7 (Theater im Quadrat G7), the Theater Oliv, the Freilichtbühne, the Theater31, the Theater ImPuls, the Theater Felina-Areal, the Mannheimer Puppenspiele, the Kleinkunstbühne Klapsmühl', Schatzkistl, and zeitraumexit.

Sport

 

There are two nationally renowned football clubs in Mannheim, SV Waldhof Mannheim, who currently are playing in the third tier 3. Liga, but who have played in the top tier, the Bundesliga; and VfR Mannheim, winner of the German championship in 1949, now playing in the sixth tier Verbandsliga Baden.

The Adler Mannheim (formerly MERC, Mannheimer Eis- und Rollsport-Club) is an ice hockey team playing in the professional Deutsche Eishockey Liga, having won the German championship a total of eight times (7 times Deutsche Eishockey Liga and one time the former highest German ice hockey league known as Bundesliga).[40]

The city is home to the Mannheim Tornados, the oldest operational baseball and softball club in Germany. The Tornados play in the first division of the Baseball Bundesliga and have won the championship 11 times, more than any other club.[41]

In 2003, the American football club Mannheim Bandits [de] was founded. The Mannheim Bandits are playing in the first German Football League which is called GFL1. As of 2018, between 500 and 900 people watch each game.[42]

Rhein-Neckar Löwen are a handball team playing in the professional German Handball League.[43]

The WWE visited Mannheim in 2008. Around 10,000 fans attended the event.[44]

UFC fighter Dennis Siver lives and trains in Mannheim.[45]

Mannheim hosted the European Show Jumping Championships in 1997, and the FEI European Jumping Championships in 2007[46] 14–19 August, in the MVV-riding stadium.

In 2002, Hobby Horse Polo was invented in Mannheim, evoking the classical rivalry towards "polite society" in Heidelberg.[47][48][49]

The Maimarkt-Turnier Mannheim is an annual international horse show held during the Mannheimer Maimarkt since 1964.

Education

 
The University of Mannheim's main campus – the Palace in a 180-degree panoramic view

The University of Mannheim is one of Germany's younger universities. Although founded in 1967, it has its origins in the Palatine Academy of Sciences, established in 1763, and the former Handelshochschule (Commercial College), founded in 1907. Situated in Mannheim Palace, it is Germany's leading university in the fields of business and economics and attracts students from around the world. Described by Die Zeit as the 'Harvard of Germany',[7] it is seen as the training grounds of German business leaders. More than 12,000 students were enrolled in the 2013/14 semester.[50]

The university town also houses one of the medical schools of Heidelberg University (at the University Hospital Mannheim), the Hochschule Mannheim, a branch of the Duale Hochschule of the State of Baden-Württemberg and several musical and theatrical academies, including the Pop Academy Mannheim, the Musikhochschule and the Theaterakademie. These institutions draw a large and diverse student body.

Dependents of U.S. military personnel attended Mannheim Elementary School until it closed in June 2012.[51] In the 1980s the school had 2,200 students.[52]

Inventions

 
Monument of first motorcar in Mannheim

According to Forbes magazine, Mannheim is known for its exceptional inventive power and was ranked 11th among the Top 15 of the most inventive cities worldwide.[53]

Many significant inventions were made in Mannheim:

  • Karl Drais built the first two-wheeled draisine in 1817.
  • Karl Benz drove the first automobile on the streets of Mannheim in 1886. At his workshop in Mannheim he produced a lightweight three-wheeled vehicle powered by a single cylinder petrol/gasoline-fueled engine, first shown in public during 1886. This powered tricycle subsequently came to be widely regarded as the first automobile/motor car powered by an internal-combustion engine. Karl's wife Bertha Benz undertook the world's first road trip by automobile from Mannheim to Pforzheim and back,[54] about 65 miles then, on modern roads about 55 miles, in August 1888.
  • The Lanz Bulldog, a popular tractor with a rugged, simple Diesel engine was introduced in 1921.
  • Karl Benz developed the world's first compact diesel-powered car at the Benz & Cie. motor works in Mannheim during 1923.
  • Julius Hatry built the world's first rocket plane in 1929.

Government and politics

Mayor

 
Mayor Peter Kurz in 2021
 
Results of the second round of the 2020 mayoral election.

The mayor is the head of the city council and chairman of the council, being selected by direct suffrage for a term of eight years. The current mayor is Peter Kurz from the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), who was elected during 2007 with 50.53 percent on a turnout of 36.64 percent in the first round. He was reelected in 2015. The most recent mayoral election was held on 14 June 2015, with a runoff held on 5 July, and the results were as follows:

Candidate Party First round Second round
Votes % Votes %
Peter Kurz Social Democratic Party 33,323 46.8 34,563 52.0
Peter Rosenberger Christian Democratic Union 24,098 33.8 29,830 44.9
Christopher Probst Free Voters/Mannheimer List 11,354 15.9 Withdrew
Christian Sommer Die PARTEI 2,327 3.3 1,920 2.9
Other 123 0.2 112 0.2
Valid votes 71,225 99.1 66,425 99.3
Invalid votes 641 0.9 499 0.7
Total 71,866 100.0 66,924 100.0
Electorate/voter turnout 234,081 30.7 233,134 28.7
Source: City of Mannheim

The city leaders since 1810 are:

  • 1810–1820: Johann Wilhelm Reinhardt
  • 1820–1832: Valentin Möhl
  • 1833–1835: Heinrich Andriano
  • 1836–1849: Ludwig Jolly
  • 1849–1852: Friedrich Reiß
  • 1852–1861: Heinrich Christian Diffené
  • 1861–1870: Ludwig Achenbach
  • 1870–1891: Eduard Moll
  • 1891–1908: Otto Beck
  • 1908–1913: Paul Martin
  • 1914–1928: Theodor Kutzer
  • 1928–1933: Hermann Heimerich (SPD)
  • 1933–1945: Carl Renninger (NSDAP)
  • 1945–1948: Josef Braun (CDU)
  • 1948–1949: Fritz Cahn-Garnier (SPD)
  • 1949–1955: Hermann Heimerich (SPD)
  • 1956–1972: Hans Reschke (independent)
  • 1972–1980: Ludwig Ratzel (SPD)
  • 1980–1983: Wilhelm Varnholt (SPD)
  • 1983–2007: Gerhard Widder (SPD)
  • 2007–present: Peter Kurz (SPD)

City council

 
Town hall in E 5
 
Results of the 2019 city council election.

The council has 48 seats and is elected by direct suffrage for five years. In the local elections in Baden-Württemberg, voters are allowed to take advantage of cumulative voting and vote splitting. Since the Second World War the SPD, except in the elections of 1999 and 2004, has received more votes than the CDU. At the 2019 election the Greens received most votes for the first time. The next municipal election will take place in 2024.

The most recent city council election was held on 26 May 2019, and the results were as follows:

Party Votes % +/- Seats +/-
Alliance 90/The Greens (Grüne) 1,235,924 24.4   8.1 12   4
Social Democratic Party (SPD) 1,071,597 21.2   6.1 10   3
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) 968,098 19.1   7.0 9   3
Alternative for Germany (AfD) 465,694 9.2   1.4 4 ±0
Free Voters/Mannheimer List (ML) 372,461 7.4   1.9 4 ±0
Free Democratic Party (FDP) 307,305 6.1   1.6 3   1
The Left (Die Linke) 302,685 6.0   0.2 3 ±0
Die PARTEI (PARTEI) 151,449 3.0 New 1 New
Middle-Class for Mannheim (MfM) 67,163 1.3   0.1 1 ±0
Human Environment Animal Protection (Tierschutzpartei) 55,458 1.1 New 1 New
Mannheimer People's Party (MVP) 27,491 0.5 New 0 New
Alliance for Innovation and Justice (BIG) 22,928 0.5 New 0 New
National Democratic Party (NPD) 13,784 0.3 New 0 New
Total 5,062,037
Total ballots 118,721 100.0 48 ±0
Electorate/voter turnout 238,496 49.8   11.1
Source: City of Mannheim

United States military installations

A number of U.S. Army Europe installations were located in and near Mannheim during the Cold War. The following locations provided services to and housed the "U.S. Army Garrison Mannheim" and other units of the U.S. Army. The U.S. Army Garrison Mannheim was formally deactivated on 31 May 2011.[55]

  • Coleman Barracks and Coleman Army Airfield (Mannheim-Sandhofen): The headquarters of the American Forces Network-Europe, and Also, the location of the United States Army Corrections Facility-Europe.
  • Funari Barracks (Mannheim-Käfertal), vacated in 2014.
  • Spinelli Barracks (Mannheim-Feudenheim), vacated in 2015, the home of the Army's 28th Transportation Battalion.
  • Sullivan Barracks (Mannheim-Käfertal): formerly the headquarters of the U.S. Army's 7th Signal Brigade and the 529th Military Police Honor Guard Company's 2nd Platoon; vacated in 2014.
  • Taylor Barracks (Mannheim-Vogelstang): formerly the headquarters of the U.S. Army's 2nd Signal Brigade; vacated in 2011.
  • Turley Barracks (Mannheim-Käfertal): in the early 1990s was home to the 181st Transportation Bn, with companies of 40th, 41st, 51st, 590th, TTP, and HHC transportation companies and also the headquarters of the NATO ACE Mobile Force (Land) (AMFL).
  • The Benjamin Franklin Village (Mannheim-Käfertal), housing. Also, it was the home of the Mannheim American High School and the Middle School,[56] which closed on 9 June 2011. The last soldier and his family moved out in 2012.

The following locations were part of the "U.S. Army Garrison Heidelberg" but were within the area of the city of Mannheim; They were vacated in 2010 and 2011:

  • Friedrichsfeld Service Center (Mannheim-Friedrichsfeld)
  • Hammonds Barracks (formerly Loretto Kaserne) (Mannheim-Seckenheim)
  • Stem Kaserne (Mannheim-Seckenheim)

All personnel of the U.S. Army military community left Mannheim by 2015, some of them moving to Wiesbaden. With the exception of four barracks, all other barracks formerly occupied by the U.S. military had been returned to the German state for conversion to civilian use in 2011.

Main sights

 
Former City Hall and St. Sebastian's Church
 
 
Jesuit Church (background) and Sternwarte (defunct observatory; in the foreground)
 
At the Mannheim Fair (Mannheimer Mess [de]), Oct. 2014
 
Neckaruferbebauung Nord [de] in 2014
  • Fernmeldeturm Mannheim – 217.8-metre-high telecommunication tower, landmark of Mannheim
  • Synagoge (Mannheim) [de] – post World War II synagogue
  • Yavuz Sultan Selim Mosque
  • Luisenpark – named one of the most beautiful parks in Europe with around 1.2 million visitors annually[57]
  • Mannheim Palace (Mannheimer Schloss) – the city castle and main building of the University of Mannheim
  • Wasserturm – the town's landmark water tower
  • Jesuit Church
  • SAP Arena – multifunctional indoor arena, home of Mannheim's ice-hockey team "Die Adler" ("The Eagles")[58]
  • Breite Strasse, Kunststrasse, and Kapuzinerplanken – Mannheim's main shopping destinations
  • International Filmfestival Mannheim-Heidelberg
  • Kunsthalle Mannheim – museum of modern and contemporary art
  • Technoseum – technology museum
  • Multihalle - multi-purpose hall in Mannheim's Herzogenriedpark, the world's largest self-supporting wooden lattice-shell construction
  • Wildpark and Waldvogelpark am Karlstern
  • The city centre – designed in squares (Quadratestadt)
  • Reißinsel – a natural area that an honorary citizen of Mannheim, Carl Reiß, bequeathed to the residents of Mannheim[59]
  • Reiß-Engelhorn-Museen – museum with four exhibition halls presenting exhibits in archaeology, world cultures, history of art and culture, photography, and history of theater and music
  • Maimarkt – largest regional trade fair in Germany[60]
  • Marktplatz (Market square) – hosts a farmers' market every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday.[61] Fresh fruit, vegetables, and flowers are sold.
  • Mannheimer Mess [de] (Mannheim Fair) – twice a year (spring & autumn), a big fair that takes place on Neuer Messplatz-square.[62]

Economy

With a gross domestic product (GDP) of €20.921 billion, Mannheim ranks 17th on the list of German cities by GDP as of 2018.

In the 2019 edition of the Zukunftsatlas [de], the independent city of Mannheim ranked 35nd out of 401 counties and independent cities in Germany, making it one of the places with "high future opportunities".[63]

Mannheim is among the most attractive business locations in Germany thanks to its competitive business environment and growth opportunities and is considered the economic centre of the Rhine-Neckar Metropolitan Region, which is one of Germany's most important business locations.[22]

The New Economy Magazine elected Mannheim under the 20 cities that best represent the world of tomorrow emphasizing Mannheim's positive economic and innovative environment.[22]

The unemployment rate of Mannheim is 7.2% as of 2020.[64]

The successor to the Karl Benz automobile manufacturing companies begun in Mannheim, Daimler AG, has had a large presence in Mannheim. Today, diesel engines and buses are assembled there. The Swiss Hoffmann–La Roche diagnostic group (formerly known as Boehringer Mannheim) has its division headquarters in Mannheim.[65] Additionally, the city also hosts large factories, headquarters and/or offices of ABB,[66] IBM,[67] Alstom,[68][69] BASF (Ludwigshafen), Bilfinger Berger,[70] Reckitt Benckiser, Unilever,[71] Essity,[72] Phoenix Group,[73] Bombardier,[74] Pepperl+Fuchs,[75] Caterpillar, Fuchs Petrolub AG, John Deere, Siemens,[76] SCA, Südzucker, and other companies. The University Hospital Mannheim provides health care to the inhabitants of Mannheim and the Rhine-Neckar Metropolitan Region.

With €4.5 billion, Mannheim ranks 22nd on the list of cities by market value of its DAX, TecDAX and MDAX companies.[77]

 
MVV tower in Mannheim

MVV Energie based in Mannheim is the largest municipal energy supplier in Germany.

Media

In addition to the only local daily newspaper Mannheimer Morgen [de], the Ludwigshafen newspaper Die Rheinpfalz, the Heidelberg newspaper Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung [de] and the Bild Rhein-Neckar offer a local section for Mannheim. In addition, the weekly paper Wochenblatt Mannheim with its official gazette is published. The Kommunal-Info Mannheim is published fortnightly. Free district newspapers are distributed in almost all parts of the city.

Infrastructure

Road transport

 
Roadmap of Mannheim

The Mannheim/Ludwigshafen area is surrounded by a ring of motorways connecting it to Frankfurt in the north, Karlsruhe in the south, Saarbrücken in the west and Nuremberg in the east.

Railway transport

Mannheim Hauptbahnhof (central station) is at the end of the Mannheim-Stuttgart high-speed rail line and is the most important railway junction in the southwest of Germany, served by ICE high-speed train system with connections to Frankfurt am MainBerlin, KarlsruheBasel, and StuttgartMunich. A new high speed line to Frankfurt also is planned to relieve the existing Mannheim–Frankfurt railway.[78]

River transport

 
 
Mannheim on the rivers Rhine and Neckar

Mannheim Harbour is the second-largest river port in Germany. It has a size of 1131 hectare.[79] In 2016, 6.9 million tons of goods were handled on the water side.[80] Around 500 companies with about 20,000 employees are located in the Mannheim Harbour.[81]

Air transport

Although Frankfurt International Airport is only 65 km (40 mi) to the north, at various times over the years there were daily passenger flights from Mannheim City Airport (IATA code MHG) to London, Dresden, Berlin, Hamburg, Munich, and Saarbrücken. Currently, scheduled commercial passenger flights serve Berlin and Hamburg.

Local public transport

Local public transport in Mannheim includes the RheinNeckar S-Bahn, eleven tram lines, and numerous bus lines operated by Rhein-Neckar-Verkehr (Rhine-Neckar transport) (RNV).

The RheinNeckar S-Bahn, established in 2003, connects most of the Rhine-Neckar area including lines into the Palatinate, Odenwald, and southern Hesse. All S-Bahn lines run through Mannheim Hauptbahnhof, except S5. Further S-Bahn stations are at present Mannheim-Rangierbahnhof, Mannheim-Seckenheim, and Mannheim-Friedrichsfeld-Süd.

The 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge integrated Mannheim/Ludwigshafen tramway network also extends to Heidelberg. It is operated by RNV, a company wholly owned by the three cities mentioned and a couple of municipalities in the Palatinate. RNV is the result of a merger on 1 October 2009 between the region's five former municipal transportation companies.[82] Interurban trams are operated by RNV on a triangular route between Mannheim, Heidelberg, and Weinheim that was originally established by the Upper Rhine Railway Company (Oberrheinische Eisenbahn, OEG), and the company also operates interurban trams between Bad Dürkheim, Ludwigshafen, and Mannheim. In the 1970s a proposal to build a U-Bahn out of the Mannheim and Ludwigshafen tramways was begun, but only small sections were built due to lack of funds. The only underground station in Mannheim is the Haltestelle Dalbergstraße. U-Bahn planning now has stopped. All public transport is offered at uniform prices set by the Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Neckar (Rhine-Neckar transport union, VRN).


Block numbering and computer mapping

 
The squares with their numbers

The center of the city uses an addressing system unique within Germany. Rather than street names and numbers, each block is given a code and a number is given to each building, i.e. C3, 17 is block C3, building 17. This practice dates back centuries, and is a result of the original use of the city center as a fort, with the fort's internal system being adopted when it became public streets. The street themselves are unnamed. The codes are laid out in a simple progressive pattern, i.e. C3 is between C2 and C4 in one direction and B3 and D3 in the other, but those unused to the system will often become lost. A street named Breite Straße goes through the middle of the blocks from south to north, with blocks A-K on the west side of the street and L-U on the east, with each row going 1 to at most 7 based on distance from this road. House numbers begin on the south corner nearest Breite Straße and go counterclockwise for A-K and Clockwise for L-U.[83]

This causes major issues with most mapping software, as the databases they use are based on the standard street-number system, and thus aren't able to accommodate a completely different system for a small area. A variety of fixes have been tried, none with a high level of success. In particular, these systems have issues because an address on a block can be on any of up to 4 roads, so attempts to fix the issue by giving the roads false names within the database have often failed to give accurate addressing, though such can still be seen on some platforms, like Google Maps. Finding an address in this area thus generally requires resorting to asking directions or using one of the many posted public maps.[84]

Twin towns – sister cities

 
Telecommunication tower and Luisenpark

Mannheim is twinned with:[85]

Notable people

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ in dem → im

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Further reading

  • Wiederkehr, Gustav: Mannheim in Sage und Geschichte, H. Haas'schen Buchdruckerei, 1907, (Festgabe zur Feier des dreihundertjährigen Bestehens der Stadt).
  • David, Manfred: Mannheimer Stadtkunde. Edition Quadrat, Mannheim 1982, ISBN 3-87804-125-X.
  • Staatl. Archivverwaltung Baden-Württemberg in Verbindung mit d. Städten u. d. Landkreisen Heidelberg u. Mannheim (Hrsg.): Die Stadt- und die Landkreise Heidelberg und Mannheim: Amtliche Kreisbeschreibung. Band 1: Allgemeiner Teil. Karlsruhe 1966, DNB 458203858. Band 3: Die Stadt Mannheim und die Gemeinden des Landkreises Mannheim. Karlsruhe 1970, DNB 366145509.
  • Landesarchivdirektion Baden-Württemberg (Hrsg.): Das Land Baden-Württemberg – Amtliche Beschreibung nach Kreisen und Gemeinden. Band V.
  • Kohlhammer Verlag, Stuttgart 1976, ISBN 3-17-002542-2.
  • Huth, Hans: Die Kunstdenkmäler des Stadtkreises Mannheim. München 1982, ISBN 3-422-00556-0.
  • Oesterreich, Carmen And Volker (Hrsg.): Mannheim, wo es am schönsten ist – 55 Lieblingsplätze. Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-936962-43-7.
  • Schenk, Andreas: Mannheim und seine Bauten 1907–2007. Hrsg. v. Stadtarchiv Mannheim und Mannheimer Architektur- und Bauarchiv e. V. 5 Bde. Edition Quadrat, Mannheim 2000–2007, ISBN 3-923003-83-8.
  • Walz, Guido (Red.): Der Brockhaus Mannheim. 400 Jahre Quadratestadt – Das Lexikon. Bibliographisches Institut & F. A. Brockhaus, Mannheim 2006, ISBN 3-7653-0181-7.
  • Naturführer Mannheim. Entdeckungen im Quadrat. Hrsg. von der Stadt Mannheim und der Bezirksstelle für Naturschutz und Landschaftspflege Karlsruhe. Verlag Regionalkultur, Ubstadt-Weiher 2000, ISBN 3-89735-132-3.
  • Ellrich, Hartmut: Mannheim. Sutton, Erfurt 2007, ISBN 978-3-86680-148-6.
  • Nieß, Ulrich and Caroli, Michael (Hrsg.): Geschichte der Stadt Mannheim. Verlag Regionalkultur, Ubstadt-Weiher, Band 1: 2007, ISBN 978-3-89735-470-8. Band 2: 2007, ISBN 978-3-89735-471-5. Band 3: 2009, ISBN 978-3-89735-472-2.
  • Mannheimer Altertumsverein/Reiss-Engelhorn-Museen: Mannheim vor der Stadtgründung – Teile I und II. Hrsg. Hansjörg Probst, 4 Bände. Mannheim 2007/08, ISBN 978-3-7917-2074-6.
  • Vetter, Roland "Kein Stein soll auf dem andern bleiben" Mannheims Untergang während des Pfälzischen Erbfolgekrieges im Spiegel französischer Kriegsberichte ISBN 3-89735-204-4.

External links

  • Official website
  • Official tourism site
  •   Mannheim travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Literature from and about Mannheim in the German National Library
  • Parks in Mannheim
  • Mannheim in Britannica.com
  • The Mannheim Heritage of World Cultures

mannheim, this, article, about, city, germany, other, uses, disambiguation, german, pronunciation, ˈmanhaɪm, listen, palatine, german, mannem, monnem, officially, university, city, german, universitätsstadt, second, largest, city, german, state, baden, württem. This article is about the city in Germany For other uses see Mannheim disambiguation Mannheim German pronunciation ˈmanhaɪm listen Palatine German Mannem 4 or Monnem officially the University City of Mannheim German Universitatsstadt Mannheim is the second largest city in the German state of Baden Wurttemberg after the state capital of Stuttgart and Germany s 21st largest city with a 2020 population of 309 119 inhabitants 5 The city is the cultural and economic centre of the Rhine Neckar Metropolitan Region Germany s seventh largest metropolitan region with nearly 2 4 million inhabitants and over 900 000 employees 6 MannheimCityClockwise from top Friedrichsplatz Luisenpark Augustaanlage Mannheim Palace Mannheim Water Tower Jesuit ChurchFlagCoat of armsLocation of Mannheim in Baden WurttembergMannheimShow map of GermanyMannheimShow map of Baden WurttembergCoordinates 49 29 16 N 08 27 58 E 49 48778 N 8 46611 E 49 48778 8 46611 Coordinates 49 29 16 N 08 27 58 E 49 48778 N 8 46611 E 49 48778 8 46611CountryGermanyStateBaden WurttembergAdmin regionKarlsruheDistrictUrban districtFounded1607Subdivisions17 StadtbezirkeGovernment Lord mayor 2015 23 Peter Kurz 1 SPD Area City144 96 km2 55 97 sq mi Elevation97 m 318 ft Population 2021 12 31 3 City311 831 Density2 200 km2 5 600 sq mi Metro2 362 046 2 012 2 DemonymMannheimerTime zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes68001 68309Dialling codes0621Vehicle registrationMAWebsitewww mannheim deAerial view of the city center showing the grid layout Mannheim is located at the confluence of the Rhine and the Neckar in the Kurpfalz Electoral Palatinate region of northwestern Baden Wurttemberg The city lies in the Upper Rhine Plain Germany s warmest region Together with Hamburg Mannheim is the only German city bordering two other federal states It forms a continuous conurbation of around 480 000 inhabitants with Ludwigshafen am Rhein in the neighbouring state of Rhineland Palatinate on the other side of the Rhine Some northern suburbs of Mannheim belong to Hesse Upstream along the Neckar lies Heidelberg the fifth largest city of Baden Wurttemberg and the third largest of the Rhine Neckar Region Mannheim is unusual among German cities in that the city center s streets and avenues are laid out in a grid pattern leading to its nickname Quadratestadt Square City Within a ring of avenues surrounding the city centre there are squares numbered from A1 to U6 instead of street names At the southern base of that system sits Mannheim Palace one of the largest palace complexes in the world and the second largest in Baroque style after Versailles It was the former home of the Prince elector of the Electoral Palatinate and now houses the University of Mannheim which repeatedly receives top marks in business administration and is sometimes known as the Harvard of Germany 7 8 9 The Mannheim May Market is the largest regional consumer exhibition of Germany 10 The civic symbol of Mannheim is the Romanesque Mannheim Water Tower completed in 1886 and rising to 60 metres 200 feet above the highest point of the art nouveau area Friedrichsplatz Mannheim is well known for its inventions including the automobile 11 12 the bicycle 13 12 and the tractor 12 which is why the city is often called the city of inventions 14 15 16 The city is the starting and finishing point of the Bertha Benz Memorial Route that follows the tracks of the first long distance automobile trip in history A Grossstadt major city with more than 100 000 inhabitants since 1896 17 Mannheim is now an important industrial and commercial city a university town and a major transportation hub between Frankfurt and Stuttgart including an ICE interchange the Mannheim Hauptbahnhof Germany s second largest marshalling yard 18 the Mannheim Rangierbahnhof and Germany s largest inland port 19 the Mannheim Harbour The city is home to many factories offices and headquarters of several major corporations such as Roche ABB IBM Siemens Unilever and more Mannheim s SAP Arena is home to German ice hockey record champions Adler Mannheim as well as popular handball team Rhein Neckar Lowen Since 2014 Mannheim has been a member of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network and holds the title of UNESCO City of Music 20 In 2020 Mannheim was classified as a global city with Sufficiency status by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network GaWC 21 Mannheim is a smart city 22 the city s electrical grid is installed with a power line communication network 23 The city s tourism slogan is Leben im Quadrat Life in the a Square 24 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Early Modern Age 1 3 18th and 19th centuries 1 4 Early 20th century and World War I 1 5 Inter war period 1 6 World War II 1 7 1950s to 1980s 1 8 Post reunification 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 Population 3 1 1 Nationalities 3 1 2 Religion 3 2 Culture 3 2 1 Theatre 3 2 2 Sport 3 2 3 Education 3 2 4 Inventions 4 Government and politics 4 1 Mayor 4 2 City council 5 United States military installations 6 Main sights 7 Economy 7 1 Media 8 Infrastructure 8 1 Road transport 8 2 Railway transport 8 3 River transport 8 4 Air transport 8 5 Local public transport 9 Block numbering and computer mapping 10 Twin towns sister cities 11 Notable people 12 Notes and references 12 1 Notes 12 2 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory EditSee also Timeline of Mannheim Early history Edit A brick kiln excavated in 1929 in the Seckenheim district which operated from 74 AD to the early second century attests to settlement in Roman times 25 The name of the city was first recorded as Mannenheim in a legal transaction in 766 surviving in a twelfth century copy in the Codex Laureshamensis from Lorsch Abbey 26 The name is interpreted as the home of Manno a short form of a Germanic name such as Hartmann or Hermann 27 Mannheim remained a mere village throughout the Middle Ages Early Modern Age Edit In 1606 Frederick IV Elector Palatine started building the fortress of Friedrichsburg and the adjacent city centre with its grid of streets and avenues On 24 January 1607 Frederick IV gave Mannheim the status of a city 28 whether it really was one by then or not Mannheim was mostly levelled during the Thirty Years War around 1622 by the forces of Johan Tilly After being rebuilt it was again severely damaged by the French Army in 1689 during the Nine Years War After the rebuilding of Mannheim that began in 1698 the capital of the Electorate of the Palatinate was moved from Heidelberg to Mannheim in 1720 29 when Karl III Philip Elector Palatine began construction of Mannheim Palace and the Jesuit Church they were completed in 1760 18th and 19th centuries Edit Mannheim in 1758 Historical map of Mannheim in 1880 During the eighteenth century Mannheim was the home of the Mannheim School of classical music composers Mannheim was said to have one of the best court orchestras in Europe under the leadership of the conductor Carlo Grua The royal court of the Palatinate left Mannheim in 1778 Two decades later in 1802 Mannheim was removed from the Palatinate and given to the Grand Duchy of Baden In 1819 Norwich Duff wrote of Mannheim Mannheim is in the Duchy of Baden and situated at the confluence of the Rhine and Neckar over both of which there is a bridge of boats This is the third town of this name having been twice burnt The houses are large and the streets broad and at right angles to each other and is one of the most airy clean towns I have seen in Germany It was formerly fortified but the fortifications were razed in 1806 and gardens fill their places There is a large chateau here belonging to the Grand Duke and a very good garden part of the chateau was destroyed when the town was bombarded and has never since been repaired the other part is occupied by the Grand Duchess widow of the late Grand Duke who was succeeded by his uncle having left only three daughters She is the sister of Eugene Beauharnais sic in fact she was his second cousin There is a cathedral a theatre which is considered good an observatory a gallery of pictures at the chateau and some private collections About two kilometres one point two miles below the town the Russian Army crossed the Rhine in 1813 Population 18 300 In 1819 August von Kotzebue was assassinated in Mannheim The climate crisis of 1816 17 caused famine and the death of many horses in Mannheim That year Karl Drais invented the first bicycle Infrastructure improvements included the establishment of Rhine Harbour in 1828 and construction of the first Baden railway which opened from Mannheim to Heidelberg in 1840 Influenced by the economic rise of the middle class another golden age of Mannheim gradually began In the March Revolution of 1848 the city was a centre for political and revolutionary activity In 1865 Friedrich Engelhorn founded the Badische Anilin und Soda Fabrik Baden Aniline and Soda Factory BASF in Mannheim but the factory was constructed across the Rhine in Ludwigshafen because Mannheim residents feared air pollution from its operations From this dye factory BASF has developed into the largest chemical company in the world After opening a workshop in Mannheim in 1871 and patenting engines from 1878 Karl Benz patented the first motor car in 1886 He was born in Muhlburg now part of Karlsruhe Early 20th century and World War I Edit The Schutte Lanz company founded by Karl Lanz and Johann Schutte in 1909 built 22 airships The company s main competitor was the Zeppelin works When World War I broke out in 1914 Mannheim s industrial plants played a key role in Germany s war economy This contributed to the fact that on 27 May 1915 Ludwigshafen was the world s first civilian settlement behind the battle lines to be bombed from the air French aircraft attacked the BASF plants thereby killing twelve people The precedent was set for this attack by Germany s repeated air raids against British civilian populations throughout southeastern Britain during the first half of 1915 When Germany lost the war in 1918 according to the peace terms the left bank of the Rhine was occupied by French troops The French occupation lasted until 1930 and some of Ludwigshafen s most elegant houses were erected for the officers of the French garrison Inter war period Edit After the First World War the Heinrich Lanz Company built the Bulldog an advanced tractor powered by heavy oil As a result of the invention of the pre combustion chamber by Prosper L Orange Benz amp Cie developed the world s first compact diesel powered car at its motor works in Mannheim in 1923 In 1922 the Grosskraftwerk Mannheim Mannheim large power station was opened By 1930 the city along with its sister city of Ludwigshafen which had developed out of the old Mannheim Rheinschanze had a population of 385 000 World War II Edit US troops in street fighting in Mannheim 1945 During World War II air raids on Mannheim completely destroyed the city centre Mannheim was heavily damaged during aerial bombing by the Royal Air Force RAF and the United States Army Air Forces USAAF Allied bombing raids razed the city center of Mannheim with nighttime area bombing killing thousands of civilians In the meantime 2 262 of Mannheim s Jews were sent to Nazi concentration camps Some sources state that the first deliberate strategic bombing of the war occurred at Mannheim during a RAF night raid on 16 December 1940 30 The Allied ground advance into Germany reached Mannheim in late March 1945 which was potentially well defended by German forces However the German forces suddenly abandoned the city and the U S 44th Infantry Division entered unopposed on 29 March 1945 31 There had been a large American military occupation presence in the Mannheim area with up to 10 barracks The first one shut down in 2007 going on until 2013 when the last one closed See United States military installations below 1950s to 1980s Edit The Wasserturm Garden Rebuilding of the city began laboriously Mannheim Palace and the water tower Wasserturm eventually were rebuilt and the National Theatre was replaced by a new building at a new location At the old location there is a monument to Friedrich Schiller and the Zum Zwischen Akt pub The housing shortage led to the development of many new residential areas In 1964 the City Hospital Stadtisches Krankenhaus became part of the Heidelberg University for Clinical Medicine in Mannheim In 1967 the University of Mannheim was established in the city In 1975 the Bundesgartenschau Federal horticulture show was celebrated in Luisen and Herzogenried parks A number of pieces of infrastructure were developed for the show the telecommunications tower and a second bridge across the Rhine the Kurt Schumacher Bridge were built the pedestrian zone was established the new Rosengarten conference centre was opened and the Aerobus was installed as a temporary transport system Mannheim skyline viewed from Heidelberg A number of major projects were completed in the 1980s and 1990s a planetarium an extension to the art gallery the new Reiss Museum Stadthaus a new May Market ground synagogue mosque State Museum for Technology and Work Carl Benz stadium and the Fahrlach tunnel were opened Mannheim has lost many industrial jobs although in the recent past the city was economically dominated by manufacturing The city tried in the past to prevent the establishment of service providers by designating some locations as industrial areas A prime example of the current trend is the construction of the Victoria Tower Victoria Turm in 2001 one of the tallest buildings in the city on railway land Victoria Tower Mannheim at the marshalling yard at night Post reunification Edit Mannheim celebrated its 400th anniversary with a series of cultural and other events throughout 2007 The 400th anniversary proper was in 2006 since Frederick IV Elector Palatine laid the foundations of Mannheim citadel on 17 March 1606 In preparation for the anniversary some urban activities were implemented beginning in 2000 the building of the SAP Arena with access to the city s new eastern ring road the rehabilitation of the pedestrian zone in Breite Strasse the arsenal and the palace the complete transformation of the old fair ground and the new Schafweide tram line The concept of the anniversary of the city aimed at a diverse range of events without a dominant central event In 2001 the City hospital was officially and legally awarded with the title University Hospital Mannheim Geography EditClimate Edit Climate data for Mannheim Germany for 1981 2010 Source DWD Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 16 4 61 5 20 2 68 4 26 1 79 0 32 0 89 6 33 2 91 8 38 9 102 0 39 0 102 2 39 8 103 6 34 3 93 7 28 5 83 3 22 6 72 7 17 5 63 5 39 8 103 6 Average high C F 4 7 40 5 6 7 44 1 11 6 52 9 16 2 61 2 20 6 69 1 23 7 74 7 26 1 79 0 25 9 78 6 21 2 70 2 15 3 59 5 8 9 48 0 5 3 41 5 15 50 59 90 Daily mean C F 1 8 35 2 2 8 37 0 6 7 44 1 10 7 51 3 15 2 59 4 18 2 64 8 20 3 68 5 19 9 67 8 15 6 60 1 10 7 51 3 5 7 42 3 2 8 37 0 10 85 51 53 Average low C F 1 3 29 7 0 8 30 6 2 3 36 1 5 0 41 0 9 4 48 9 12 4 54 3 14 5 58 1 14 2 57 6 10 6 51 1 6 7 44 1 2 5 36 5 0 0 32 0 6 28 43 30 Record low C F 18 7 1 7 21 1 6 0 13 6 7 5 6 4 20 5 0 1 31 8 4 0 39 2 4 7 40 5 5 3 41 5 2 5 36 5 5 0 23 0 8 7 16 3 18 3 0 9 21 1 6 0 Average precipitation mm inches 40 9 1 61 43 1 1 70 50 8 2 00 49 3 1 94 72 5 2 85 66 6 2 62 76 0 2 99 57 7 2 27 54 1 2 13 56 4 2 22 53 5 2 11 54 1 2 13 675 0 26 57 Mean monthly sunshine hours 55 2 85 6 124 0 180 2 214 1 219 1 235 1 222 1 164 1 108 8 59 0 44 9 1 712 2Source Data derived from Deutscher Wetterdienst 32 Climate data for Mannheim 2019 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 7 2 45 0 11 3 52 3 13 0 55 4 19 1 66 4 19 3 66 7 25 9 78 6 27 5 81 5 27 6 81 7 21 4 70 5 16 6 61 9 8 7 47 7 7 6 45 7 17 1 62 8 Daily mean C F 4 4 39 9 6 1 43 0 8 2 46 8 12 3 54 1 13 7 56 7 19 9 67 8 21 0 69 8 20 9 69 6 16 0 60 8 12 6 54 7 6 0 42 8 4 8 40 6 12 2 53 9 Average low C F 1 0 33 8 1 6 34 9 3 1 37 6 4 8 40 6 7 0 44 6 12 9 55 2 13 8 56 8 14 8 58 6 10 2 50 4 9 0 48 2 3 0 37 4 1 9 35 4 6 9 44 5 Average precipitation mm inches 15 6 0 61 49 3 1 94 35 7 1 41 22 6 0 89 55 4 2 18 81 4 3 20 38 3 1 51 63 3 2 49 77 1 3 04 89 9 3 54 48 6 1 91 52 3 2 06 629 5 24 78 Average snowfall cm inches 4 0 1 6 1 6 0 6 1 2 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4 2 0 0 8 5 6 2 2 2 6 1 0 Mean monthly sunshine hours 57 3 116 2 164 0 251 2 247 9 268 1 286 1 248 9 199 1 97 5 38 2 53 4 2 027 9Source Deutscher Wetterdienst 33 Mannheim is located in Germany s warmest summer region the Rhine shift In summer temperatures sometimes rise up to 35 C 95 F and higher The highest recorded temperature was 39 8 C 104 F on 7 August 2015 The daily lows during heat waves can be very high by north European standards around 25 C 77 F In September 2016 the average temperature in Mannheim was 18 6 C highest in Baden Wurttemberg 34 In comparison to other regions of Germany Mannheim has a higher humidity in summer which causes a higher heat index Snow is rare even in the cold months Precipitation occurs mostly during afternoon thunderstorms during the warmer period average days of thunderstorms in a year is 40 50 Climate in this area has mild differences between highs and lows and there is adequate rainfall year round The Koppen Climate Classification subtype for this climate is Cfb Marine West Coast Climate Oceanic climate 35 Demographics EditPopulation Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2017 Historical populationYearPop 1450570 16633 000 426 3 177725 353 745 1 180218 818 25 8 187139 606 110 5 1900141 131 256 3 1919229 576 62 7 1925247 486 7 8 1933275 162 11 2 1939284 957 3 6 1950245 634 13 8 1961313 890 27 8 1970332 163 5 8 1987295 191 11 1 2011290 117 1 7 2017307 997 6 2 Source 36 circular reference Nationalities Edit The following list shows significant groups of foreigners in the city of Mannheim by nationalities 37 In total 44 7 of all Mannheim inhabitants are from foreign descent With 68 9 in the Neckarstadt West district the population is the most foreign in the Wallstadt district with 23 1 it is the least A large part of the immigrants are from the Balkans and European countries Rank Nationality Population 31 December 2020 1 Turkey 15 779 5 12 2 Italy 8 165 2 65 3 Bulgaria 6 997 2 27 4 Poland 6 595 2 14 5 Romania 5 663 1 83 6 Croatia 4 565 1 48 7 Greece 3 341 1 08 8 Spain 1 754 0 56 9 Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 680 0 54 10 Syria 1 642 0 53 11 India 1 541 0 5 12 Hungary 1 341 0 43 13 France 1 266 0 41 14 Kosovo 1 164 0 37 15 Serbia 1 023 0 33 16 China 1 022 0 33 18 United States 933 0 30 19 Yugoslavia 876 0 28 20 Iraq 831 0 27 Religion Edit The distribution of Mannheim s population by religious affiliation as of December 31 2020 is Roman Catholic 25 4 Protestant 20 0 and other none 54 6 38 Culture Edit Theatre Edit The National Theatre Mannheim was founded in 1779 and is the oldest Stage in Germany In 1782 the premiere of Die Rauber written by Friedrich Schiller was shown 39 Recently more smaller stages have opened such as the Oststadt Theater the TIG7 Theater im Quadrat G7 the Theater Oliv the Freilichtbuhne the Theater31 the Theater ImPuls the Theater Felina Areal the Mannheimer Puppenspiele the Kleinkunstbuhne Klapsmuhl Schatzkistl and zeitraumexit Sport Edit Carl Benz Stadion the home stadium of SV Waldhof Mannheim There are two nationally renowned football clubs in Mannheim SV Waldhof Mannheim who currently are playing in the third tier 3 Liga but who have played in the top tier the Bundesliga and VfR Mannheim winner of the German championship in 1949 now playing in the sixth tier Verbandsliga Baden The Adler Mannheim formerly MERC Mannheimer Eis und Rollsport Club is an ice hockey team playing in the professional Deutsche Eishockey Liga having won the German championship a total of eight times 7 times Deutsche Eishockey Liga and one time the former highest German ice hockey league known as Bundesliga 40 The city is home to the Mannheim Tornados the oldest operational baseball and softball club in Germany The Tornados play in the first division of the Baseball Bundesliga and have won the championship 11 times more than any other club 41 In 2003 the American football club Mannheim Bandits de was founded The Mannheim Bandits are playing in the first German Football League which is called GFL1 As of 2018 between 500 and 900 people watch each game 42 Rhein Neckar Lowen are a handball team playing in the professional German Handball League 43 The WWE visited Mannheim in 2008 Around 10 000 fans attended the event 44 UFC fighter Dennis Siver lives and trains in Mannheim 45 Mannheim hosted the European Show Jumping Championships in 1997 and the FEI European Jumping Championships in 2007 46 14 19 August in the MVV riding stadium In 2002 Hobby Horse Polo was invented in Mannheim evoking the classical rivalry towards polite society in Heidelberg 47 48 49 The Maimarkt Turnier Mannheim is an annual international horse show held during the Mannheimer Maimarkt since 1964 Education Edit The University of Mannheim s main campus the Palace in a 180 degree panoramic view The University of Mannheim is one of Germany s younger universities Although founded in 1967 it has its origins in the Palatine Academy of Sciences established in 1763 and the former Handelshochschule Commercial College founded in 1907 Situated in Mannheim Palace it is Germany s leading university in the fields of business and economics and attracts students from around the world Described by Die Zeit as the Harvard of Germany 7 it is seen as the training grounds of German business leaders More than 12 000 students were enrolled in the 2013 14 semester 50 The university town also houses one of the medical schools of Heidelberg University at the University Hospital Mannheim the Hochschule Mannheim a branch of the Duale Hochschule of the State of Baden Wurttemberg and several musical and theatrical academies including the Pop Academy Mannheim the Musikhochschule and the Theaterakademie These institutions draw a large and diverse student body Dependents of U S military personnel attended Mannheim Elementary School until it closed in June 2012 51 In the 1980s the school had 2 200 students 52 Inventions Edit Monument of first motorcar in Mannheim According to Forbes magazine Mannheim is known for its exceptional inventive power and was ranked 11th among the Top 15 of the most inventive cities worldwide 53 Many significant inventions were made in Mannheim Karl Drais built the first two wheeled draisine in 1817 Karl Benz drove the first automobile on the streets of Mannheim in 1886 At his workshop in Mannheim he produced a lightweight three wheeled vehicle powered by a single cylinder petrol gasoline fueled engine first shown in public during 1886 This powered tricycle subsequently came to be widely regarded as the first automobile motor car powered by an internal combustion engine Karl s wife Bertha Benz undertook the world s first road trip by automobile from Mannheim to Pforzheim and back 54 about 65 miles then on modern roads about 55 miles in August 1888 The Lanz Bulldog a popular tractor with a rugged simple Diesel engine was introduced in 1921 Karl Benz developed the world s first compact diesel powered car at the Benz amp Cie motor works in Mannheim during 1923 Julius Hatry built the world s first rocket plane in 1929 The world s first bicycle built in Mannheim by Karl Freiherr von Drais in 1817 The world s first motorcar built in Mannheim by Karl Benz in 1885 Official sign of Bertha Benz Memorial Route commemorating the world s first long distance journey by automobile from Mannheim to Pforzheim in 1888 104 km 65 mi Government and politics EditMayor Edit Mayor Peter Kurz in 2021 Results of the second round of the 2020 mayoral election The mayor is the head of the city council and chairman of the council being selected by direct suffrage for a term of eight years The current mayor is Peter Kurz from the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD who was elected during 2007 with 50 53 percent on a turnout of 36 64 percent in the first round He was reelected in 2015 The most recent mayoral election was held on 14 June 2015 with a runoff held on 5 July and the results were as follows Candidate Party First round Second roundVotes Votes Peter Kurz Social Democratic Party 33 323 46 8 34 563 52 0Peter Rosenberger Christian Democratic Union 24 098 33 8 29 830 44 9Christopher Probst Free Voters Mannheimer List 11 354 15 9 WithdrewChristian Sommer Die PARTEI 2 327 3 3 1 920 2 9Other 123 0 2 112 0 2Valid votes 71 225 99 1 66 425 99 3Invalid votes 641 0 9 499 0 7Total 71 866 100 0 66 924 100 0Electorate voter turnout 234 081 30 7 233 134 28 7Source City of MannheimThe city leaders since 1810 are 1810 1820 Johann Wilhelm Reinhardt 1820 1832 Valentin Mohl 1833 1835 Heinrich Andriano 1836 1849 Ludwig Jolly 1849 1852 Friedrich Reiss 1852 1861 Heinrich Christian Diffene 1861 1870 Ludwig Achenbach 1870 1891 Eduard Moll 1891 1908 Otto Beck 1908 1913 Paul Martin 1914 1928 Theodor Kutzer 1928 1933 Hermann Heimerich SPD 1933 1945 Carl Renninger NSDAP 1945 1948 Josef Braun CDU 1948 1949 Fritz Cahn Garnier SPD 1949 1955 Hermann Heimerich SPD 1956 1972 Hans Reschke independent 1972 1980 Ludwig Ratzel SPD 1980 1983 Wilhelm Varnholt SPD 1983 2007 Gerhard Widder SPD 2007 present Peter Kurz SPD City council Edit Town hall in E 5 Results of the 2019 city council election The council has 48 seats and is elected by direct suffrage for five years In the local elections in Baden Wurttemberg voters are allowed to take advantage of cumulative voting and vote splitting Since the Second World War the SPD except in the elections of 1999 and 2004 has received more votes than the CDU At the 2019 election the Greens received most votes for the first time The next municipal election will take place in 2024 The most recent city council election was held on 26 May 2019 and the results were as follows Party Votes Seats Alliance 90 The Greens Grune 1 235 924 24 4 8 1 12 4Social Democratic Party SPD 1 071 597 21 2 6 1 10 3Christian Democratic Union CDU 968 098 19 1 7 0 9 3Alternative for Germany AfD 465 694 9 2 1 4 4 0Free Voters Mannheimer List ML 372 461 7 4 1 9 4 0Free Democratic Party FDP 307 305 6 1 1 6 3 1The Left Die Linke 302 685 6 0 0 2 3 0Die PARTEI PARTEI 151 449 3 0 New 1 NewMiddle Class for Mannheim MfM 67 163 1 3 0 1 1 0Human Environment Animal Protection Tierschutzpartei 55 458 1 1 New 1 NewMannheimer People s Party MVP 27 491 0 5 New 0 NewAlliance for Innovation and Justice BIG 22 928 0 5 New 0 NewNational Democratic Party NPD 13 784 0 3 New 0 NewTotal 5 062 037Total ballots 118 721 100 0 48 0Electorate voter turnout 238 496 49 8 11 1Source City of MannheimUnited States military installations EditA number of U S Army Europe installations were located in and near Mannheim during the Cold War The following locations provided services to and housed the U S Army Garrison Mannheim and other units of the U S Army The U S Army Garrison Mannheim was formally deactivated on 31 May 2011 55 Coleman Barracks and Coleman Army Airfield Mannheim Sandhofen The headquarters of the American Forces Network Europe and Also the location of the United States Army Corrections Facility Europe Funari Barracks Mannheim Kafertal vacated in 2014 Spinelli Barracks Mannheim Feudenheim vacated in 2015 the home of the Army s 28th Transportation Battalion Sullivan Barracks Mannheim Kafertal formerly the headquarters of the U S Army s 7th Signal Brigade and the 529th Military Police Honor Guard Company s 2nd Platoon vacated in 2014 Taylor Barracks Mannheim Vogelstang formerly the headquarters of the U S Army s 2nd Signal Brigade vacated in 2011 Turley Barracks Mannheim Kafertal in the early 1990s was home to the 181st Transportation Bn with companies of 40th 41st 51st 590th TTP and HHC transportation companies and also the headquarters of the NATO ACE Mobile Force Land AMFL The Benjamin Franklin Village Mannheim Kafertal housing Also it was the home of the Mannheim American High School and the Middle School 56 which closed on 9 June 2011 The last soldier and his family moved out in 2012 The following locations were part of the U S Army Garrison Heidelberg but were within the area of the city of Mannheim They were vacated in 2010 and 2011 Friedrichsfeld Service Center Mannheim Friedrichsfeld Hammonds Barracks formerly Loretto Kaserne Mannheim Seckenheim Stem Kaserne Mannheim Seckenheim All personnel of the U S Army military community left Mannheim by 2015 some of them moving to Wiesbaden With the exception of four barracks all other barracks formerly occupied by the U S military had been returned to the German state for conversion to civilian use in 2011 Main sights Edit Former City Hall and St Sebastian s Church The University of Mannheim is housed in the Mannheim Palace Jesuit Church background and Sternwarte defunct observatory in the foreground At the Mannheim Fair Mannheimer Mess de Oct 2014 Neckaruferbebauung Nord de in 2014 Fernmeldeturm Mannheim 217 8 metre high telecommunication tower landmark of Mannheim Synagoge Mannheim de post World War II synagogue Yavuz Sultan Selim Mosque Luisenpark named one of the most beautiful parks in Europe with around 1 2 million visitors annually 57 Mannheim Palace Mannheimer Schloss the city castle and main building of the University of Mannheim Wasserturm the town s landmark water tower Jesuit Church SAP Arena multifunctional indoor arena home of Mannheim s ice hockey team Die Adler The Eagles 58 Breite Strasse Kunststrasse and Kapuzinerplanken Mannheim s main shopping destinations International Filmfestival Mannheim Heidelberg Kunsthalle Mannheim museum of modern and contemporary art Technoseum technology museum Multihalle multi purpose hall in Mannheim s Herzogenriedpark the world s largest self supporting wooden lattice shell construction Wildpark and Waldvogelpark am Karlstern The city centre designed in squares Quadratestadt Reissinsel a natural area that an honorary citizen of Mannheim Carl Reiss bequeathed to the residents of Mannheim 59 Reiss Engelhorn Museen museum with four exhibition halls presenting exhibits in archaeology world cultures history of art and culture photography and history of theater and music Maimarkt largest regional trade fair in Germany 60 Marktplatz Market square hosts a farmers market every Tuesday Thursday and Saturday 61 Fresh fruit vegetables and flowers are sold Mannheimer Mess de Mannheim Fair twice a year spring amp autumn a big fair that takes place on Neuer Messplatz square 62 Economy EditWith a gross domestic product GDP of 20 921 billion Mannheim ranks 17th on the list of German cities by GDP as of 2018 In the 2019 edition of the Zukunftsatlas de the independent city of Mannheim ranked 35nd out of 401 counties and independent cities in Germany making it one of the places with high future opportunities 63 Mannheim is among the most attractive business locations in Germany thanks to its competitive business environment and growth opportunities and is considered the economic centre of the Rhine Neckar Metropolitan Region which is one of Germany s most important business locations 22 The New Economy Magazine elected Mannheim under the 20 cities that best represent the world of tomorrow emphasizing Mannheim s positive economic and innovative environment 22 The unemployment rate of Mannheim is 7 2 as of 2020 64 The successor to the Karl Benz automobile manufacturing companies begun in Mannheim Daimler AG has had a large presence in Mannheim Today diesel engines and buses are assembled there The Swiss Hoffmann La Roche diagnostic group formerly known as Boehringer Mannheim has its division headquarters in Mannheim 65 Additionally the city also hosts large factories headquarters and or offices of ABB 66 IBM 67 Alstom 68 69 BASF Ludwigshafen Bilfinger Berger 70 Reckitt Benckiser Unilever 71 Essity 72 Phoenix Group 73 Bombardier 74 Pepperl Fuchs 75 Caterpillar Fuchs Petrolub AG John Deere Siemens 76 SCA Sudzucker and other companies The University Hospital Mannheim provides health care to the inhabitants of Mannheim and the Rhine Neckar Metropolitan Region With 4 5 billion Mannheim ranks 22nd on the list of cities by market value of its DAX TecDAX and MDAX companies 77 MVV tower in MannheimMVV Energie based in Mannheim is the largest municipal energy supplier in Germany Media Edit In addition to the only local daily newspaper Mannheimer Morgen de the Ludwigshafen newspaper Die Rheinpfalz the Heidelberg newspaper Rhein Neckar Zeitung de and the Bild Rhein Neckar offer a local section for Mannheim In addition the weekly paper Wochenblatt Mannheim with its official gazette is published The Kommunal Info Mannheim is published fortnightly Free district newspapers are distributed in almost all parts of the city Infrastructure EditRoad transport Edit Roadmap of Mannheim The Mannheim Ludwigshafen area is surrounded by a ring of motorways connecting it to Frankfurt in the north Karlsruhe in the south Saarbrucken in the west and Nuremberg in the east Railway transport Edit Mannheim Hauptbahnhof central station is at the end of the Mannheim Stuttgart high speed rail line and is the most important railway junction in the southwest of Germany served by ICE high speed train system with connections to Frankfurt am Main Berlin Karlsruhe Basel and Stuttgart Munich A new high speed line to Frankfurt also is planned to relieve the existing Mannheim Frankfurt railway 78 River transport Edit Mannheim on the rivers Rhine and Neckar Mannheim Harbour is the second largest river port in Germany It has a size of 1131 hectare 79 In 2016 6 9 million tons of goods were handled on the water side 80 Around 500 companies with about 20 000 employees are located in the Mannheim Harbour 81 Air transport Edit Mannheim City Airport Although Frankfurt International Airport is only 65 km 40 mi to the north at various times over the years there were daily passenger flights from Mannheim City Airport IATA code MHG to London Dresden Berlin Hamburg Munich and Saarbrucken Currently scheduled commercial passenger flights serve Berlin and Hamburg Local public transport Edit See also Trams in Mannheim Ludwigshafen Local public transport in Mannheim includes the RheinNeckar S Bahn eleven tram lines and numerous bus lines operated by Rhein Neckar Verkehr Rhine Neckar transport RNV The RheinNeckar S Bahn established in 2003 connects most of the Rhine Neckar area including lines into the Palatinate Odenwald and southern Hesse All S Bahn lines run through Mannheim Hauptbahnhof except S5 Further S Bahn stations are at present Mannheim Rangierbahnhof Mannheim Seckenheim and Mannheim Friedrichsfeld Sud The 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in metre gauge integrated Mannheim Ludwigshafen tramway network also extends to Heidelberg It is operated by RNV a company wholly owned by the three cities mentioned and a couple of municipalities in the Palatinate RNV is the result of a merger on 1 October 2009 between the region s five former municipal transportation companies 82 Interurban trams are operated by RNV on a triangular route between Mannheim Heidelberg and Weinheim that was originally established by the Upper Rhine Railway Company Oberrheinische Eisenbahn OEG and the company also operates interurban trams between Bad Durkheim Ludwigshafen and Mannheim In the 1970s a proposal to build a U Bahn out of the Mannheim and Ludwigshafen tramways was begun but only small sections were built due to lack of funds The only underground station in Mannheim is the Haltestelle Dalbergstrasse U Bahn planning now has stopped All public transport is offered at uniform prices set by the Verkehrsverbund Rhein Neckar Rhine Neckar transport union VRN Block numbering and computer mapping Edit The squares with their numbers The center of the city uses an addressing system unique within Germany Rather than street names and numbers each block is given a code and a number is given to each building i e C3 17 is block C3 building 17 This practice dates back centuries and is a result of the original use of the city center as a fort with the fort s internal system being adopted when it became public streets The street themselves are unnamed The codes are laid out in a simple progressive pattern i e C3 is between C2 and C4 in one direction and B3 and D3 in the other but those unused to the system will often become lost A street named Breite Strasse goes through the middle of the blocks from south to north with blocks A K on the west side of the street and L U on the east with each row going 1 to at most 7 based on distance from this road House numbers begin on the south corner nearest Breite Strasse and go counterclockwise for A K and Clockwise for L U 83 This causes major issues with most mapping software as the databases they use are based on the standard street number system and thus aren t able to accommodate a completely different system for a small area A variety of fixes have been tried none with a high level of success In particular these systems have issues because an address on a block can be on any of up to 4 roads so attempts to fix the issue by giving the roads false names within the database have often failed to give accurate addressing though such can still be seen on some platforms like Google Maps Finding an address in this area thus generally requires resorting to asking directions or using one of the many posted public maps 84 Twin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany Telecommunication tower and Luisenpark Mannheim is twinned with 85 Swansea Wales United Kingdom 1957 Toulon France 1959 Charlottenburg Wilmersdorf Berlin Germany 1961 Windsor Canada 1980 Riesa Germany 1988 Chișinău Moldova 1989 Bydgoszcz Poland 1991 Klaipeda Lithuania 2002 Zhenjiang China 2004 Haifa Israel 2009 Qingdao China 2016 Chernivtsi Ukraine 2022 Notable people EditSee also de Liste von Personlichkeiten der Stadt Mannheim List of personalities of Mannheim and de Liste der Ehrenburger von Mannheim List of honorary citizens of Mannheim Josepha von Heydeck 1748 1771 mistress of Charles Theodore Elector of Bavaria Johann Baptist Cramer 1771 1858 English pianist and composer Friedrich Engelhorn 1821 1902 industrialist founder of BASF Richard von Krafft Ebing 1840 1902 Austro German psychiatrist Carl Benz 1844 1929 engine designer and automotive engineer built the first practical motorcar Henry Morgenthau Sr 1856 1946 American politician and real estate investor Robert Kahn 1865 1951 composer and pianist Otto Hermann Kahn 1867 1934 investment banker collector and philanthropist Emmy Wehlen 1887 1977 musical comedy actress and silent screen star Sepp Herberger 1897 1977 football player and manager Wilhelm Fuchs 1898 1947 Nazi SS officer and Holocaust perpetrator executed for war crimes Hedwig Hillengass 1902 1970 operatic soprano Albert Speer 1905 1981 Nazi architect Minister for Armaments and Munitions during World War II Julius Hatry 1906 2000 aircraft designer and builder created the world s first purpose built rocket plane Hans Filbinger 1913 2007 politician Samuel Hans Adler born 1928 German American composer conductor and professor Claus Leininger 1931 2005 theatre director and manager Wolf Wolfensberger 1934 2011 German American psychologist Roger Fritz 1936 2021 actor Rudi Altig 1937 2016 cyclist Christiane Schmidtmer 1939 2003 actress Fred Breinersdorfer born 1946 writer Karl W Schweizer born 1946 historian and author Kurt Fleckenstein born 1949 artist sculptor Peter Dani 1956 2002 American footballer Norbert Schwefel 1960 2015 musician Juergen Adams born 1961 ice hockey player Uwe Rahn born 1962 footballer Christine Lambrecht born 1965 politician SPD Franz Jung born 1966 Roman Catholic bishop Steffi Graf born 1969 tennis player Xavier Naidoo born 1971 pop singer Christian Worns born 1972 footballer Lexi Alexander born 1974 director Bulent Ceylan born 1976 German Turkish comedian Jochen Hecht born 1977 ice hockey player Uwe Gensheimer born 1989 handball player Giulia Enders born 1990 writer and medical researcher Hakan Calhanoglu born 1994 Turkish footballerNotes and references EditNotes Edit in dem im References Edit Oberburgermeisterwahl Mannheim 2015 Staatsanzeiger Rhine Neckar Rhine Neckar in figures 7 July 2015 Archived from the original on 31 August 2014 Bevolkerung nach Nationalitat und Geschlecht am 31 Dezember 2021 Population by nationality and sex as of December 31 2021 CSV in German Statistisches Landesamt Baden Wurttemberg June 2022 Worterbuchnetz Pfalzisches Worterbuch woerterbuchnetz de Retrieved 9 September 2020 Mannheim wieder zweitgrosste Stadt im Land SWR Aktuell 13 June 2021 Archived from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2022 Wirtschaftsstandort www mannheim de Retrieved 19 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Deutsches Havard www zeit de 23 May 2002 Retrieved 17 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Haijtema Dominique 13 February 2005 Auf der Suche nach einem deutschen Harvard DIE WELT in German Retrieved 17 January 2022 The City of Mannheim isn t Germany at its Prettiest Foster Blog 18 January 2017 Retrieved 17 January 2022 Die 10 grossten Messen in Deutschland Wer liefert was wlw de in German Retrieved 17 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Benzin im Blut Der vergessene Mannheimer Auto Bauer Franz Heim Mannheim www rheinpfalz de in German Retrieved 19 December 2021 a b c The Manhattan of Germany the innovative Mannheim city The New Economy 21 March 2014 Retrieved 23 March 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Volklein Marco 200 Jahre Fahrrad Radfahrer erobern Mannheim zuruck Suddeutsche de in German Retrieved 19 December 2021 Mannheim Die Stadt der Erfindungen Mannheim Nachrichten und Informationen www mannheimer morgen de in German 25 January 2020 Retrieved 19 December 2021 Stadt der Erfinder Grunstadt Rhein Neckar Fernsehen de in German 28 October 2016 Retrieved 19 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Stadt der Erfinder Mannheimer Augustaanlage wird zur Allee der Innovationen in German 24 October 2016 retrieved 20 December 2021 Jan Van Deth 2015 Demokratie in der Grossstadt Ergebnisse des ersten Mannheimer Demokratie Audit Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden p 5 ISBN 978 3 658 05849 4 OCLC 964356167 Mannheim Dieser Rangierbahnhof stosst an Grenzen www rnz de in German Retrieved 19 December 2021 Infrastructure Hafen Mannheim in German Retrieved 23 December 2022 Mannheim ist jetzt offiziell Unesco City of Music in German RNZ Archived from the original on 28 December 2014 Retrieved 29 May 2016 The World According to GaWC 2020 GaWC Research Network Globalization and World Cities Retrieved 26 August 2020 a b c The rise of the smart city The New Economy Retrieved 23 March 2014 Smart City knows who needs power and when CNN 19 February 2015 Retrieved 31 May 2016 DPA Slogans Leben im Quadrat svz de svz Retrieved 18 December 2021 Emmi Brandi Ulrike 1957 Federhofer 2010 Ton Technik romische Ziegel Limesmuseum Aalen Zweigmuseum des Archaologischen Landesmuseums Baden Wurttemberg ISBN 978 3 8062 2403 0 OCLC 610821190 Minst Karl Josef Transl Lorscher Codex deutsch Urkundenbuch der ehemaligen Furstabtei Lorsch Band 2 Schenkungsurkunden Nr 167 818 Oberrheingau und Ladengau Lorsch 1968 digi ub uni heidelberg de Retrieved 18 December 2021 Sonja Steiner Welz 400 Jahre Stadt Mannheim Dokumente zur Stadtgeschichte Band 1 bis zur Kaiserzeit vol 1 2004 ISBN 978 3 936041 96 5 p 41 Grundriss der Stadt Mannheim im 17 Jahrhundert www landeskunde online de Retrieved 21 December 2021 Verlegung der kurfurstlichen Residenz nach Mannheim News lokalmatador www lokalmatador de in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Boog Horst Rahn Werner Stumpf Reinhard Wegner Bernd 15 November 2001 Germany and the Second World War ISBN 978 0 19 822888 2 Retrieved 7 April 2011 Stanton Shelby World War II Order of Battle An Encyclopedic Reference to U S Army Ground Forces from Battalion through Division 1939 1946 Revised Edition 2006 Stackpole Books Ausgabe der Klimadaten Monatswerte date July 2014 source 2 Dekadenrekorde Heidelberg historic weather averages weather online Retrieved 13 August 2020 Mannheim heisseste Stadt des Landes Mannheim Nachrichten und Informationen www mannheimer morgen de in German 7 October 2016 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Mannheim Germany Koppen Climate Classification Weatherbase Weatherbase Link Staatsangehorigkeiten der Auslanderinnen und Auslander zum 31 12 2017 Retrieved 18 June 2018 Religionszugehorigkeit in Mannheim Mannheim de www mannheim de Retrieved 18 December 2021 Fuhner Ruth 13 January 2007 Neues in der Theaterwelt Deutschlandfunk in German Retrieved 17 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Championnat d Allemagne de hockey sur glace 1979 80 www passionhockey com Retrieved 1 September 2020 1 dead link Leute sollen Spass am Sport haben Bitte keine Fussball Verhaltnisse im Football www vereinsleben de in German Retrieved 18 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Rhein Neckar Lowen Stuttgart und Goppingen mit Pleiten swr online in German 12 December 2021 Retrieved 18 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link RAW Survivor Series Tour 2008 Ergebnisse aus Mannheim Deutschland 5 11 08 Wrestling Infos de in German Retrieved 18 December 2021 Dennis Siver im Schnelldurchlauf UFC kr ufc com in Korean 14 September 2018 Retrieved 18 December 2021 FEI European Jumping Championship Mannheim Em2007 de Archived from the original on 18 July 2011 Retrieved 7 April 2011 Express 23 June 2013 Rheinpfalz July 25 2008 Eva Gerten dpa 27 September 2014 Steckenpferdpolo Trendsportart in Dusseldorf im Rheinpark SPIEGEL ONLINE PDF 4 February 2014 https web archive org web 20140204051309 http www uni mannheim de 1 universitaet profil zahlen geschichte statistiken statistik Studierendenstatistik hws13 pdf Archived from the original PDF on 4 February 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Casebeer Elizabeth Mannheim Elementary closes doors after 66 years Teachers students all attend ceremony to say goodb U S Army 14 June 2012 Retrieved on 16 November 2015 Montgomery Nancy Closing of bases in Mannheim ends special relationship between Germans U S troops Stars and Stripes 22 May 2011 Retrieved on 16 November 2015 World s 15 Most Inventive Cities Forbes com Retrieved 13 February 2014 Bertha Benz Memorial Route www bertha benz de Retrieved 19 December 2021 USAG BADEN WURTTEMBERG PUBLIC AFFAIRS 9 June 2011 Mannheim Deactivation Ceremony DoDEA Mannheim Middle School Archived from the original on 23 September 2007 Retrieved 7 June 2007 Tagesausflug Luisenpark Mannheim Club Behinderter und ihrer Freunde Sudpfalz e V in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 SAP Arena www mannheim citysam de in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Reissinsel in Mannheim Stadtmarketing Mannheim GmbH Retrieved 21 December 2021 Messehostessen fur die Maimarkt Messe in Mannheim in German Retrieved 24 December 2021 Marktplatz Mannheim Stadtmarketing Mannheim GmbH Retrieved 21 December 2021 Mannheimer Maimess Themen lokalmatador www lokalmatador de in German Retrieved 19 December 2021 TPMA TPMA www tp ma de in German Retrieved 17 December 2021 Arbeitslosenquote Mannheim bis 2020 Statista in German Retrieved 17 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Roche Diagnostics GmbH Mannheim Daten der digitale Schatz des medizinischen Fortschritts IHK Rhein Neckar in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Mannheim ABB kehrt in den Gewerbepark zuruck www rnz de in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Dietmar Hopp Sein Bruder Rudiger bester Freund www rnz de in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Alstom Auch Mannheim vom Stellenabbau betroffen www rnz de in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Alstom in Mannheim Neue Standortleiterin Karin Sautter sagt sehr positive Zukunft voraus Wirtschaft www mannheimer morgen de in German 24 July 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Bilfinger in Mannheim Neues Hauptquartier symbolisiert Neuanfang www rnz de in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Unsere Standorte im Uberblick Unilever in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Essity Unternehmen verlagert Tempo nach Mannheim www rnz de in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Mannheim Phoenix Gruppe auf stabilem Wachstumskurs in German 23 September 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Mannheim Beschaftigte von Bombardier kampfen um Arbeitsplatze in German 5 March 2020 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Exzellenzbetrieb Pepperl Fuchs SE Die Deutsche Wirtschaft in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Siemens Niederlassung Mannheim Siemens Deutschland in German Retrieved 21 December 2021 Platz 22 Mannheim Die 25 wertvollsten Stadte Deutschlands Top Ranking finanzen net in German Retrieved 20 December 2021 Kohler Manfred 14 October 2021 Bahnstreckenausbau In 29 Minuten mit dem ICE von Frankfurt nach Mannheim FAZ NET in German Retrieved 19 December 2021 Millenet Jan 9 January 2019 Mannheimer Binnenhafen ist einer der grossten seiner Art www echo online de in German Retrieved 9 September 2020 Mannheim und Ludwigshafen stabil Taglicher Hafenbericht de 31 January 2017 Hafen Mannheim Trockensommer forderte seinen Tribut www rnz de in German Retrieved 17 December 2021 Press release announcing the merger to form RNV German language 23 September 2009 Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 6 October 2009 Mannheim Germany 7 Awesome Things To Do twomonkeystravelgroup com 14 November 2015 Tom Scott 19 February 2018 The European City Centre With No Street Names Archived from the original on 2 November 2021 via YouTube Partner und Freundesstadte mannheim de in German Mannheim Retrieved 26 November 2019 Further reading EditSee also Bibliography of the history of Mannheim Wiederkehr Gustav Mannheim in Sage und Geschichte H Haas schen Buchdruckerei 1907 Festgabe zur Feier des dreihundertjahrigen Bestehens der Stadt David Manfred Mannheimer Stadtkunde Edition Quadrat Mannheim 1982 ISBN 3 87804 125 X Staatl Archivverwaltung Baden Wurttemberg in Verbindung mit d Stadten u d Landkreisen Heidelberg u Mannheim Hrsg Die Stadt und die Landkreise Heidelberg und Mannheim Amtliche Kreisbeschreibung Band 1 Allgemeiner Teil Karlsruhe 1966 DNB 458203858 Band 3 Die Stadt Mannheim und die Gemeinden des Landkreises Mannheim Karlsruhe 1970 DNB 366145509 Landesarchivdirektion Baden Wurttemberg Hrsg Das Land Baden Wurttemberg Amtliche Beschreibung nach Kreisen und Gemeinden Band V Kohlhammer Verlag Stuttgart 1976 ISBN 3 17 002542 2 Huth Hans Die Kunstdenkmaler des Stadtkreises Mannheim Munchen 1982 ISBN 3 422 00556 0 Oesterreich Carmen And Volker Hrsg Mannheim wo es am schonsten ist 55 Lieblingsplatze Berlin 2008 ISBN 978 3 936962 43 7 Schenk Andreas Mannheim und seine Bauten 1907 2007 Hrsg v Stadtarchiv Mannheim und Mannheimer Architektur und Bauarchiv e V 5 Bde Edition Quadrat Mannheim 2000 2007 ISBN 3 923003 83 8 Walz Guido Red Der Brockhaus Mannheim 400 Jahre Quadratestadt Das Lexikon Bibliographisches Institut amp F A Brockhaus Mannheim 2006 ISBN 3 7653 0181 7 Naturfuhrer Mannheim Entdeckungen im Quadrat Hrsg von der Stadt Mannheim und der Bezirksstelle fur Naturschutz und Landschaftspflege Karlsruhe Verlag Regionalkultur Ubstadt Weiher 2000 ISBN 3 89735 132 3 Ellrich Hartmut Mannheim Sutton Erfurt 2007 ISBN 978 3 86680 148 6 Niess Ulrich and Caroli Michael Hrsg Geschichte der Stadt Mannheim Verlag Regionalkultur Ubstadt Weiher Band 1 2007 ISBN 978 3 89735 470 8 Band 2 2007 ISBN 978 3 89735 471 5 Band 3 2009 ISBN 978 3 89735 472 2 Mannheimer Altertumsverein Reiss Engelhorn Museen Mannheim vor der Stadtgrundung Teile I und II Hrsg Hansjorg Probst 4 Bande Mannheim 2007 08 ISBN 978 3 7917 2074 6 Vetter Roland Kein Stein soll auf dem andern bleiben Mannheims Untergang wahrend des Pfalzischen Erbfolgekrieges im Spiegel franzosischer Kriegsberichte ISBN 3 89735 204 4 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mannheim Official website Official tourism site Mannheim travel guide from Wikivoyage Literature from and about Mannheim in the German National Library Parks in Mannheim Mannheim in Britannica com U S Army Garrison Mannheim homepage The Mannheim Heritage of World Cultures Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mannheim amp oldid 1143081249, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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