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Schleswig-Holstein

Schleswig-Holstein (pronounced [ˌʃleːsvɪç ˈhɔlʃtaɪn] (listen); Danish: Slesvig-Holsten; Low German: Sleswig-Holsteen; North Frisian: Slaswik-Holstiinj) is the northernmost of the 16 states of Germany, comprising most of the historical duchy of Holstein and the southern part of the former Duchy of Schleswig. Its capital city is Kiel; other notable cities are Lübeck and Flensburg.

Schleswig-Holstein
Schleswig-Holstein (German)
Slesvig-Holsten (Danish)
Sleswig-Holsteen (Low German)
Slaswik-Holstiinj (North Frisian)
Coordinates: 54°28′12″N 9°30′50″E / 54.47000°N 9.51389°E / 54.47000; 9.51389
CountryGermany
CapitalKiel
Government
 • BodyLandtag of Schleswig-Holstein
 • Minister-PresidentDaniel Günther (CDU)
 • Governing partiesCDU / Greens
 • Bundesrat votes4 (of 69)
 • Bundestag seats28 (of 736)
Area
 • Total15,763.17 km2 (6,086.19 sq mi)
Population
 (04.01.2022)[1]
 • Total2,920,850
 • Density190/km2 (480/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
ISO 3166 codeDE-SH
Vehicle registrationformerly: S (1945–1947), SH (1947), BS (1948–1956)[2]
GRP (nominal)€97,2 billion (2020)[3]
GRP per capita€33.400 (2020)
NUTS RegionDEF
HDI (2018)0.924[4]
very high · 13th of 16
Websiteschleswig-holstein.de

The region is called Slesvig-Holsten in Danish and pronounced [ˌsle̝ːsvi ˈhʌlˌste̝ˀn]. The Low German name is Sleswig-Holsteen, and the North Frisian name is Slaswik-Holstiinj. In more dated English, it is also known as Sleswick-Holsatia. Historically, the name can also refer to a larger region, containing both present-day Schleswig-Holstein and the former South Jutland County (Northern Schleswig; now part of the Region of Southern Denmark) in Denmark. It covers an area of 15,763 km2 (6,086 sq mi), making it the 5th smallest German federal state by area (including the city-states).

Schleswig was under Danish control during the Viking Age, but in the 12th century it escaped full control and became a duchy. It bordered Holstein, which was a part of the Holy Roman Empire. Beginning in 1460, both Schleswig and Holstein were ruled together by the Danish king acting as duke of both Schleswig and Holstein, with the latter remaining a part of Germany. In the 19th century, Danes and Germans each believed they had a claim to Schleswig-Holstein, the population of which was majority ethnic German. The resulting long-term political and territorial dispute was known as the Schleswig-Holstein Question. In 1848, Denmark tried to formally annex the area. Prussia responded by invading, thus beginning the First Schleswig War, which ended in a victory for Denmark and the signing of the 1852 London Protocol. But the fight broke out again in 1864 (the Second Schleswig War), and this time Prussia and Austria won and the territory was absorbed into Prussia in 1867. More than 50 years later, after the German defeat in World War I, the Allies required that the question of sovereignty over the territory be submitted to plebiscites (the 1920 Schleswig plebiscites), which resulted in the return of some of the territory to Denmark. After World War II, Schleswig-Holstein took in over a million refugees.

Today, Schleswig-Holstein's economy is known for its agriculture, such as its Holstein cows. Its position on the Atlantic Ocean makes it a major trade point and shipbuilding site; it is also the location of the Kiel Canal. Its offshore oil wells and wind farms produce significant amounts of energy. Fishing is a major industry, and the basis of its distinctive unique local cuisine. It is a popular tourist destination for Germans.

History

 
The historic settlement areas in present-day Schleswig-Holstein
 
The Limes Saxoniae border between the Saxons and the Obotrites, established about 810 in present-day Schleswig-Holstein

The term "Holstein" derives from Old Saxon Holseta Land, (Holz means wood in modern Standardized German; holt is a now-archaic English word for woods.) Originally, the term referred to the central of the three Saxon tribes north of the River Elbe: Tedmarsgoi (Dithmarschen), Holstein and Sturmarii (Stormarn). The area inhabited by the tribe of the Holsts lay between the Stör River and Hamburg; after Christianization, their main church was in Schenefeld. Saxon Holstein became a part of the Holy Roman Empire after Charlemagne's Saxon campaigns in the late eighth century. Beginning in 811, the northern border of Holstein (and thus of the Empire) was the River Eider.

The term “Schleswig” originally referred to the city of Schleswig. The city's name derives from Schleiinlet” in the east and vik, which meant inlet in Old Norse and settlement in Old Saxon, and is cognate with the "-wick" and "-wich" elements in place-names in Britain.

The Duchy of Schleswig, or Southern Jutland, was originally an integral part of Denmark, but in medieval times was established as a fief under the control of the Kingdom of Denmark, having the same relationship with the Danish Crown as, for example, Brandenburg or Bavaria had with the Holy Roman Emperor. Around 1100, the Duke of Saxony gave Holstein to Count Adolf I of Schauenburg.

Duchies in the Danish realm

Schleswig and Holstein have at different times belonged in part or completely to either Denmark or Germany, or have been virtually independent of both nations. Schleswig was never part of Germany until after the Second Schleswig War in 1864. But for many centuries, the king of Denmark was both a Danish Duke of Schleswig and a German Duke of Holstein. Essentially, Schleswig was either integrated into Denmark or was a Danish fief, and Holstein was a German fief and once, long before that, a sovereign state. Both were ruled for several centuries by the kings of Denmark. In 1721, all of Schleswig was united into a single duchy under the king of Denmark, and the great powers of Europe confirmed in an international treaty that all future kings of Denmark should automatically become dukes of Schleswig: consequently, Schleswig would always follow the order of succession that applied in the Kingdom of Denmark. Government business in both duchies was conducted in the German language, even though for a long time they were governed from Copenhagen. (Beginning in 1523, however, they were governed by the German Chancellery, which in 1806 was renamed the Schleswig-Holstein Chancellery). After the Protestant Reformation, church services were conducted in German in the southern part of Schleswig, and in Danish in the northern part. This difference would later contribute strongly to shaping the inhabitants’ national sentiments, as would the different languages spoken in different schools after 1814, when mandatory schooling was instituted.

Schleswig-Holstein Question

The German national awakening that followed the Napoleonic Wars gave rise to a strong popular movement in Holstein and Southern Schleswig for unification with a new Prussian-dominated Germany. This development was paralleled by an equally strong Danish national awakening in Denmark and Northern Schleswig. This movement called for the complete reintegration of Schleswig into the Kingdom of Denmark and demanded an end to discrimination against Danes in Schleswig. The ensuing conflict is sometimes called the Schleswig-Holstein Question. In 1848, King Frederick VII of Denmark declared that he would grant Denmark a liberal constitution and the immediate goal for the Danish national movement was to ensure that this constitution would give rights to all Danes, i.e. not only to those in the Kingdom of Denmark, but also to Danes (and Germans) living in Schleswig. Furthermore, they demanded protection for the Danish language in Schleswig (the dominant language in almost a quarter of Schleswig had changed from Danish to German since the beginning of the 19th century).

A liberal constitution for Holstein was not seriously considered in Copenhagen, since it was well known that the political élite of Holstein were more conservative than Copenhagen's. Representatives of German-minded Schleswig-Holsteiners demanded that Schleswig and Holstein be unified and allowed its own constitution and that Schleswig join Holstein as a member of the German Confederation. These demands were rejected by the Danish government in 1848, and the Germans of Holstein and southern Schleswig rebelled. This began the First Schleswig War (1848–51), which ended in a Danish victory at Idstedt.

In 1863, conflict broke out again when Frederick VII died without legitimate issue. According to the order of succession of Denmark and Schleswig, the crowns of both Denmark and Schleswig would pass to Duke Christian of Duchy of Glücksburg, who became Christian IX. The transmission of the duchy of Holstein to the head of the (German-oriented) branch of the Danish royal family, the House of Augustenborg, was more controversial. The separation of the two duchies was challenged by the Augustenborg heir, who claimed, as in 1848, to be rightful heir of both Schleswig and Holstein. The promulgation of a common constitution for Denmark and Schleswig in November 1863 prompted Otto von Bismarck to intervene and Prussia and Austria declared war on Denmark. This was the Second War of Schleswig, which ended in Danish defeat. British attempts to mediate in the London Conference of 1864 failed, and Denmark lost Schleswig (Northern and Southern Schleswig), Holstein, and Lauenburg to Prussia and Austria.

Province of Prussia

Contrary to the hopes of German Schleswig-Holsteiners, the area did not gain its independence, but was annexed as a province of Prussia in 1867. Also following the Austro-Prussian War in 1866, section five of the Peace of Prague stipulated that the people of Northern Schleswig would be consulted in a referendum on whether to remain under Prussian rule or return to Danish rule. This condition, however, was never fulfilled by Prussia. During the decades of Prussian rule within the German Empire, authorities attempted a Germanisation policy in the northern part of Schleswig, which remained predominantly Danish. The period also meant increased industrialisation of Schleswig-Holstein and the use of Kiel and Flensburg as important Imperial German Navy locations. The northernmost part and west coast of the province saw a wave of emigration to America, while some Danes of North Schleswig emigrated to Denmark.

Plebiscite in 1920

Following the defeat of Germany in World War I, the Allied powers arranged a plebiscite in northern and central Schleswig. The plebiscite was conducted under the auspices of an international commission which designated two voting zones to cover the northern and south-central parts of Schleswig. Steps were taken to also create a third zone covering a southern area, but zone III was cancelled again and never voted, as the Danish government asked the commission not to expand the plebiscite to this area.

In zone I covering Northern Schleswig (10 February 1920), 75% voted for reunification with Denmark and 25% voted for Germany. In zone II covering central Schleswig (14 March 1920), the results were reversed; 80% voted for Germany and just 20% for Denmark. Only minor areas on the island of Föhr showed a Danish majority, and the rest of the Danish vote was primarily in the town of Flensburg.[5]

 
Results of the 1920 plebiscites in North and Central Schleswig
Electorate German name Danish name For Germany For Denmark
percent votes percent votes
Zone I (Northern Schleswig), 10 February 1920 25.1 % 25,329 74.9 % 75,431
District of Hadersleben Haderslev 16.0% 6,585 84.0% 34,653
Town of Hadersleben Haderslev 38.6% 3,275 61.4% 5,209
District of Apenrade Aabenraa 32.3% 6,030 67.7% 12,653
Town of Apenrade Aabenraa 55.1% 2,725 44.9% 2,224
District of Sonderburg Sønderborg 22.9% 5,083 77.1% 17,100
Town of Sonderburg Sønderborg 56.2% 2,601 43.8% 2,029
Town of Augustenburg Augustenborg 48.0% 236 52.0% 256
Northern part of District of Tondern Tønder 40.9% 7,083 59.1% 10,223
Town of Tondern Tønder 76.5% 2,448 23.5% 750
Town of Hoyer Højer 72.6% 581 27.4% 219
Town of Lügumkloster Løgumkloster 48.8% 516 51.2% 542
Northern part of District of Flensburg Flensborg 40.6% 548 59.4% 802
Zone II (Central Schleswig), 14 March 1920 80.2 % 51,742 19.8 % 12,800
Southern part of District of Tondern Tønder 87.9% 17,283 12.1% 2,376
Southern part of District of Flensburg Flensborg 82.6% 6,688 17.4% 1,405
Town of Flensburg Flensborg 75.2% 27,081 24.8% 8,944
Northern part of District of Husum Husum 90.0% 672 10.0% 75

On 15 June 1920, Northern Schleswig officially returned to Danish rule. The Danish/German border was the only one of the borders imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles after World War I which was never challenged by Adolf Hitler.

In 1937, the Nazis passed the so-called Greater Hamburg Act (Groß-Hamburg-Gesetz), where the nearby Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg was expanded, to encompass towns that had formerly belonged to the Prussian province of Schleswig-Holstein. To compensate Prussia for these losses (and partly because Hitler had a personal dislike for Lübeck[6]), the 711-year-long independence of the Hansestadt Lübeck came to an end, and almost all its territory was incorporated into Schleswig-Holstein.

 
A German postage stamp conmemorating the Bonn-Copenhagen Declarations

State of Federal Germany

After World War II, the Prussian province Schleswig-Holstein came under British occupation. On 23 August 1946, the military government abolished the province and reconstituted it as a separate Land.[7]

Due to the forced migrations of Germans between 1944 and 1950, Schleswig-Holstein took in almost a million refugees after the war, increasing its population by 33%.[8] A pro-Danish political movement arose in Schleswig, with transfer of the area to Denmark as an ultimate goal. This was supported neither by the British occupation administration nor the Danish government. In 1955, the German and Danish governments issued the Bonn-Copenhagen Declarations confirming the rights of the ethnic minorities on both sides of the border.[9] Conditions between the nationalities have since been stable and generally respectful.

Geography

 
Topographic map of Schleswig-Holstein

Schleswig-Holstein lies on the base of Jutland Peninsula between the North Sea and the Baltic Sea. Strictly speaking, "Schleswig" refers to the German Southern Schleswig (German: Südschleswig or Landesteil Schleswig, Danish: Sydslesvig), whereas Northern Schleswig is in Denmark (South Jutland County, Region of Southern Denmark). The state of Schleswig-Holstein further consists of Holstein, as well as Lauenburg and the formerly independent city of Lübeck.

Schleswig-Holstein borders Denmark (Southern Denmark) to the north, the North Sea to the west, the Baltic Sea to the east, and the German states of Lower Saxony, Hamburg, and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern to the south.

In the western part of the state, the lowlands have virtually no hills. The North Frisian Islands, as well as almost all of Schleswig-Holstein's North Sea coast, form the Schleswig-Holstein Wadden Sea National Park (Nationalpark Schleswig-Holsteinisches Wattenmeer) which is the largest national park in Central Europe.

The Baltic Sea coast in the east of Schleswig-Holstein is marked by bays, fjords, and cliff lines. Rolling hills (the highest elevation is the Bungsberg at 168 metres or 551 feet) and many lakes are found, especially in the eastern part of Holstein called the Holstein Switzerland and the former Duchy of Lauenburg (Herzogtum Lauenburg). The longest river besides the Elbe is the Eider.

Schleswig-Holstein has the lowest quota of forest covered area, it is only 11.0% (national average 32.0%), which is even lower than in the city-states of Hamburg and Bremen.[10]

The German Islands of Sylt, Föhr, Pellworm, Amrum, Heligoland and Fehmarn are part of Schleswig-Holstein, with the latter being the largest and the only Island of Schleswig-Holstein located on the east coast.[11] Heligoland is Germany's only high-sea island.[11]

Administration

 
Districts of Schleswig-Holstein

Administrative Division

Schleswig-Holstein is divided into 11 Kreise (Districts) and four Kreisfreie Städte (Urban Districts).

Kreise License Plate Area
1
 
Dithmarschen
HEI[12] 1.428,17 km2[13]
2
 
Herzogtum Lauenburg
RZ[12] 1.263,07 km2[13]
3
 
Nordfriesland
NF[12] 2.083,56 km2[13]
4
 
Ostholstein
OH[12] 1.393,02 km2[13]
5
 
Pinneberg
PI[12] 664,25 km2[13]
6
 
Plön
PLÖ[12] 1.083,56 km2[13]
7
 
Rendsburg-Eckernförde
RD, ECK[12] 2.189,79 km2[13]
8
 
Schleswig-Flensburg
SL[12] 2.071,28 km2[13]
9
 
Segeberg
SE[12] 1.344,47 km2[13]
10
 
Steinburg
IZ[12] 1.055,70 km2[13]
11
 
Stormarn
OD[12] 766,22 km2[13]
Urban District
 
Kiel
KI[12] 118,65 km2[13]
Urban District
 
Lübeck
HL[12] 214,19 km2[13]
Urban District
 
Neumünster
NMS[12] 71,66 km2[13]
Urban District
 
Flensburg
FL[12] 56,73 km2[13]

Legislature

Schleswig-Holstein has its own parliament and government which are located in the state capital Kiel.[14]

Executive Branch

The Minister-President of Schleswig-Holstein is elected by the Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein.[14]

Portfolio Minister Party Took office Left office State secretaries
Minister-President
 
Daniel Günther
born (1973-07-24) 24 July 1973 (age 49)
CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent
Deputy Minister-President
Minister for Finance
 
Monika Heinold
born (1958-12-30) 30 December 1958 (age 64)
GRÜNE 29 June 2022 Incumbent
  • Silke Torp
  • Oliver Rabe
Minister for Justice and Health Kerstin von der Decken
born (1968-11-22) 22 November 1968 (age 54)
CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent
  • Otto Carstens
  • Oliver Grundei
Minister for Education, Training, Science, Research and Culture Karin Prien
born (1965-06-26) 26 June 1965 (age 57)
CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent
  • Dorit Stenke
  • Guido Wendt
Minister for Interior, Communities, Housing and Sport
 
Sabine Sütterlin-Waack
born (1958-02-15) 15 February 1958 (age 64)
CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent
  • Jörg Sibbel
  • Magdalena Finke
Minister for Energy Transition, Climate Protection, Environment and Nature Tobias Goldschmidt
born (1981-09-16) 16 September 1981 (age 41)
GRÜNE 29 June 2022 Incumbent
  • Katja Günther
  • Joschka Knuth
Minister for Economics, Transport, Labour, Technology and Tourism   Claus Ruhe Madsen
born (1972-08-27) 27 August 1972 (age 50)
Ind.
(CDU nomination)
29 June 2022 Incumbent
  • Tobias von der Heide
  • Julia Carstens
Minister for Social Affairs, Youth, Family, Seniors, Integration and Equality   Aminata Touré
born (1992-11-15) 15 November 1992 (age 30)
GRÜNE 29 June 2022 Incumbent
  • Johannes Albig
Minister for Agriculture, Rural Areas, Europe and Consumer Protection Werner Schwarz
born (1960-04-10) 10 April 1960 (age 62)
CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent
  • Anne Benett-Sturies
Chief of the State Chancellery Dirk Schrödter
born (1978-10-17) 17 October 1978 (age 44)
CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent
  • Johannes Callsen
  • Sandra Gerken

Recent elections

State elections were held on 8 May 2022. The current government is a coalition of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and The Greens, led by Minister-President Daniel Günther.

List of Minister-Presidents of Schleswig-Holstein

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
19602,309,409—    
19702,510,608+0.84%
19802,611,285+0.39%
19902,626,127+0.06%
20002,789,761+0.61%
20102,834,259+0.16%
20182,896,900+0.27%
source:[15]

Schleswig-Holstein has an aging population. Since 1972 there has been a decrease in the natural rate of population change. In 2016 the total fertility rate reached 1.61, highest value in 40 years (the average value being 1.4). In 2016 there were 25,420 births and 33,879 deaths, resulting in a natural decrease of -8,459.

Vital statistics

  • Births from January–September 2016 =   19,138[16]
  • Births from January–September 2017 =   19,086
  • Deaths from January–September 2016 =   25,153
  • Deaths from January–September 2017 =   25,832
  • Natural growth from January–September 2016 =   -6,015
  • Natural growth from January–September 2017 =   -6,746

Religion

Religion in Schleswig-Holstein - 2011
religion percent
EKD Protestants
53%
Roman Catholics
6%
Muslims
3%
Other or none
38%

The region has been strongly Protestant since the time of the Protestant Reformation. It is proportionally the most Protestant of the sixteen modern states. In 2018, members of the Evangelical Church in Germany make up 44.6% of the population, while members of the Catholic Church comprise 6.1%.

49.3% either adhere to other religions or disclaim any practising religious identity.[17]

Foreigners

Largest groups of foreign residents by 31 December 2020[citation needed]

  Syria 34,670
  Poland 28,975
  Turkey 27,895
  Romania 17,255
  Afghanistan 15,485
  Iraq 11,995
  Bulgaria 9,470
  Russia 8,240
  Denmark 7,065
  Italy 5,875

Culture

Schleswig-Holstein combines Danish, Frisian and German aspects of culture. The castles and manors in the countryside are the best example for this tradition; some dishes like Rødgrød (German: Rote Grütze, literal English "red grits" or "red groats") are also shared, as well as surnames such as Hansen.

The most important festivals are the Kiel Week, Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival, an annual classic music festival all over the state, and the Lübeck Nordic Film Days, an annual film festival for movies from Scandinavian countries, held in Lübeck. The Kiel Week is an annual event, except for 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID19-Pandemic.[18] It took place again in June 2022.[18]

The annual Wacken Open Air festival is considered to be the largest heavy metal rock festival in the world.

Symbols

The coat of arms shows the symbols of the two duchies united in Schleswig-Holstein, i.e., the two lions for Schleswig and the leaf of nettle for Holstein. Supposedly, Otto von Bismarck decreed that the two lions were to face the nettle because of the discomfort to their bottoms which would have resulted if the lions faced away from it.

Government agencies of Schleswig-Holsteins are using a logo showing a stylized version of the Schleswig Lions and the Holstein nettle combined with the abbreviation of Schleswig-Holstein "SH". Written either below or to the right of the lion and the nettle is "Schleswig-Holstein" below which either the Name of the agency using the logo is shown or the motto "Der echte Norden" (Germany's true North).[19]

 
Schleswig-Holstein Logo

The motto of Schleswig-Holstein is "Up ewich ungedeelt" (Middle Low German: "Forever undivided", modern High German: "Auf ewig ungeteilt"). It goes back to the Treaty of Ribe (Danish: Ribe Håndfæstning German: Handfeste von Ripen) in 1460. Ripen (Ribe) is a historical small town in Northern Schleswig, nowadays Denmark.[9]

The anthem from 1844 is called "Wanke nicht, mein Vaterland" ("Don't falter, my fatherland"), but it is usually referred to with its first line "Schleswig-Holstein meerumschlungen" (i.e., "Schleswig-Holstein embraced by the seas") or "Schleswig-Holstein-Lied" (Schleswig-Holstein song).

The old city of Lübeck is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Food and drink

Distinctive point of the cuisine is combination of sweetness with a taste contrast like sour or salty. These combinations are also described as "broken sweetness" is especially present in dishes which are sweet-sour.

Typical dishes are:

  • Birnen, Bohnen und Speck consist of pears, beans, savory, parsley, bacon and potatoes
  • Holsteiner Sauerfleisch is sour aspic
  • Holsteiner Katenschinken is ham with traditional cold-smoking method
  • Different using of Nordseekraben in soup, porrenpann, with toast or scrambled eggs
  • Famous is smoked Kieler Sprotten
  • Other fish also is popular: Flatfish or Herring
  • Grünkohl. In the Schleswig-Holstein there is a real cult around this vegetable. In the autumn and winter months groups of friends or colleagues go on a cabbage ride and choose their cabbage king, often combined with the typical regional sports of Boßeln and Klootschießen. The most popular dish is Grünkohl with Mettenden, but also possible other combination like Grünkohl with Kassler and 'Schweinebacke'. The Dithmarsch marshland is particularly suitable for growing cabbage. The soils are fertile, so that a good yield can still be achieved even in bad years. Due to the constant sea wind, there are far fewer pests in the area
  • Lübecker Marzipan is a sweet made from ground almonds, sugar and added flavorings
  • Lakritz confection flavored with extract of the roots of the liquorice plant (sweet, salt, salmiak and choco)
  • Lübecker Rotspon, Bordeaux wine, which is delivered in oak barrels to Lübeck and there it maturated.
  • Flensburger Rum-Verschnitt, braun mix of oversea rum, water and neutral alcohol (typical 40-42%)

Languages

The official language of Schleswig-Holstein is German.[20] In addition, Low German, Danish and North Frisian are recognized minority languages.[21]

Historically, Low German (in Holstein and Southern Schleswig), Danish (in Schleswig), and North Frisian (in Western Schleswig) were widely spoken in Schleswig-Holstein. During the language change in the 19th century some Danish and North Frisian dialects in Southern Schleswig were replaced by Standard German.[22][23][24]

Low German is still used in many parts of the state. Missingsch, a Low German dialect with heavy High German (Standard German) influence, is commonly spoken informally throughout the state, while a mixed language Petuh (mixture of High German and Danish) is used in and around Flensburg. Danish is used by the Danish minority in Southern Schleswig, and North Frisian is spoken by the North Frisians of the North Sea Coast and the Northern Frisian Islands in Southern Schleswig. The North Frisian dialect called Heligolandic (Halunder) is spoken on the island of Heligoland.

As is the case throughout Germany, High German, introduced in the 16th century, has come to steadily replace local dialects for official purposes, and is today the predominant language of media, law and legislature. It is spoken by virtually all inhabitants in formal situations. Since the end of World War II and widespread adoption of TV, radio and other mass media, it has gradually come to supplant local dialects in urban areas as well.

Economy

 
Schleswig-Holstein's islands, beaches, and cities are popular tourist attractions. Shown here is the Isle of Sylt.

The Gross domestic product (GDP) of the state was 62.7 billion euros in 2018, accounting for 1.9% of German economic output. GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power was 30,400 euros or 101% of the EU27 average in the same year. The GDP per employee was 95% of the EU average. The GDP per capita was the lowest of all states in West Germany.[25] In 2017, Schleswig-Holstein had an export surplus for the first time since 1989: export 22.6 billion euros/ import 20.8 billion euros.

Energy

Schleswig-Holstein is a leader in the country's growing renewable energy industry.[26] In 2014, Schleswig-Holstein became the first German state to cover 100% of its electric power demand with renewable energy sources (chiefly wind 70%, solar 3.8%, and biomass 8.3%).[27]

The largest German oil field Mittelplate is located in the North Sea off the Dithmarsch coast and connected with refinery in Hemmingstedt and chemical plants in Brunsbüttel via pipeline. It produce ca. 1.4 million tonnes of oil annually.

Nuclear power

There were three nuclear power plants in Schleswig-Holstein: Krümmel, Brunsbüttel and Brockdorf. The last operating plant in Schleswig-Holstein, the Brokdorf-plant was shut down on new-years eve 2021.[28]

There is also a nuclear research center known Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht (rebranded as Hereon) with 2 research reactors, located right next to the Krümmel plant.[29]

During the 1990s, ten more cases of leukemia among children than was expected were identified in Elbmarsch, near the Krümmel plant. Anti-nuclear activists believed it was due to the nuclear plant, which led to several investigations. The reported discovery of small spherical beads of nuclear material in the area led to further concern, as well as the presence of minute amounts of plutonium in the Elbe. The origins of the nuclear material were disputed, with one report determining them to not be that of the Krümmel plant. Another report claimed that they may have come from an undisclosed fire in 1986, however this theory has been questioned as it would have required a substantial government coverup. The Chernobyl disaster has also been suggested as a source, though is considered unlikely. The probable source of the material, especially in the Elbe, is nuclear reprocessing plants in France. A 2010 report exonerated the nuclear power plants on the Elbe as the cause of contamination. Further doubt was cast on the nature of the supposed beads of nuclear material, with a Federal commission chastising the original commission that claimed to have discovered the beads. The exact cause of the increased leukemia cases remains unknown, and could be due to other environmental factors, or even by chance.[30][31][32][33][34]

The nuclear plants have further been questioned as a source of the cases due to comparison to the Savannah River Site in the United States. Despite release of radiation at the Savannah River Site, there is no increase in cases of leukemia around it. Alternative hypotheses for the cause of the cases have included electromagnetic fields, parental radiation exposure prior to conception, other carcinogens, and benzene exposure; however, none have been supported by the existing evidence. Intriguingly, a larger case-control study in Lower Saxony found a correlation between the "untrained immune system" (as judged as contact with other children, vaccinations, etc.) and leukemia risk, suggested that an immature immune system that has not been challenged is at greater risk for developing malignancy, possibly secondary to an undetermined environment factor.[35][36]

Tourism

Located between the North Sea and the Baltic Sea, Schleswig-Holstein is also a popular tourist destination in Germany. Its islands, beaches and cities attract millions of tourists every year. It has the second highest tourism intensity per local among the German states, after Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, but in absolute value it is rank 6th and only 1/3 of top destination Bavaria.[37] According to a ruling by the Federal Administrative Court, everyone has the right to free access to the beach. Nevertheless, most of the seaside resorts kept cashing in (2-€3 /day/person).[38]

Agriculture

63% of land in Schleswig-Holstein (990 403 ha) is used for agriculture (national average 47%).[39]

Cultivated crops:[40]

There are some special cultivation regions:

Animal husbandry

 
A Holstein heifer

The dairy and cattle farming in connection with fodder cultivation is mainly concentrated on the marshland and the bordering Geest areas. In 2020, around 1 million cattle including 360,000 dairy cows were counted in Schleswig-Holstein, rank 4th of German states. Livestock is continuously declining.[41]

Schleswig-Holstein is home of the most productive dairy cattle: Holsteins, which produce an average of 8,125 l (2,146 US gal) per year of milk. It is now the main dairy cow around the world.

Pig breeding is mainly found in the Schleswig-Holstein Uplands. In principle, Schleswig-Holstein is one of the regions with relatively few pigs (a total of around 1.6 million; in comparison Lower Saxony: over 8 million). Poultry and sheep are also of little importance in animal husbandry.[40]

Schleswig-Holstein had Europe's largest snake farm in Uetersen with over 600 venomous reptiles, but it closed in 2019.[42]

Fishing and Aquaculture

 
Shrimp cutter near Südfall

Total production from fishing in North and Baltic Seas was 40 780 tonnes in 2019, ca. 1/3 German production.[43]

In the Baltic Sea total production amounted to 10377 tonnes (2019), of which 5432 tonnes of sprat, 2568 tonnes of flatfish and 1190 tonnes of cod.[43]

In the North Sea the numbers were 19,487 tonnes of mussels, 3560 tonnes of North Sea shrimp, 1166 tonnes of herring and 7062 other fishes.[43]

The one important aquaculture product is mussels, 16864 tonnes.[43]

Inland fishing and aquaculture is not significant with 221 and 250 tonnes in 2019 respectively.[43]

Companies

The largest company headquarters in Schleswig-Holstein with annual sales over 1 billion euros are:

The unemployment rate stood at 5.0% in October 2021.[44]

Year[45] 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Unemployment rate in % 8.5 8.4 8.7 9.7 9.8 11.6 10.0 8.4 7.6 7.8 7.5 7.2 6.9 6.9 6.8 6.5 6.3 6.0 5.5 5.1

Industries

  • Locomotive. Vossloh Locomotives (owned by Chinese CRRC) manufactures three models of diesel-hydraulic (G6, G12, G18) and two models of diesel-electric (DE12, DE18) locomotives. Other manufacturer was Voith Turbo Lokomotivtechnik, but closed in 2014 year.[49] Both firms are in Kiel.
 
Headquarters of Dräger in Lübeck
  • Industrial equipment. Fish and poultry processing machinery from Baader, Lübeck, bottle washers and pasteurizers from Krones, Flensburg, grinding machine tools from Peter Wolters, Rendsburg, machinery to manufacture man-made fibers and non-woven textile from Oerlikon Neumag and Oerlikon Nonwoven, Neumünster.
  • Medical and labor equipment. Drägerwerk, Lübeck manufacture breathing equipment, medical ventilators and monitors, anesthetic machines, neonatal incubators, gas detectors, drug testing equipment, diving equipment, rebreathers, breathalyzer . The company delivery breathing devices for reanimation COVID-19 patients. Euroimmun, Lübeck produces test systems with which antibodies can be determined in the serum of patients and thus autoimmune and infectious diseases (including COVID-19) as well as allergies.
  • Chemical. Almost all chemical industry concentrate around Brunsbüttel. Covestro with 650 employee produced annually 400 000 tonnes methylene diphenyl diisocyanate, which using in synthesis of polyurethane. Yara (214 empl.) produce nitrogen fertilizers, but with special process instead of using natural gas, it use heavy oil, which allow also manufacture as byproduct vanadium oxide and sulphur. Heavy oil is source material to produce bitumen by Total Bitumen (130 empl.). Other plant is Sasol (520 empl.) produce fatty and Guerbet alcohols, paraffin and high-purity aluminum oxide, aluminum hydroxide and triethylaluminium. Other important location of chemical industry is Neumünster with EMS-Griltech which manufacture technical fibers from polyamides and polyesters, adhesives and powder coatings.

Transport

Kiel Canal

The most important transport way in Schleswig-Holstein is Kiel Canal, which connect Brunsbüttel on North Sea with Kiel on Baltic Sea. Total cargo of ships reach peaks in 2007 and 2012, after that it continuous decline with 73.8 million tonnes in 2020.[50]

Ports

The state has a total of 46 public ports and landing stages, four of which fulfill international transit functions: Kiel, Lübeck / Travemünde and Puttgarden on the Baltic Sea, Brunsbüttel on the North Sea. Kiel and Lübeck are also important for freight traffic to Scandinavia and Eastern Europe. Lübeck-Travemünde and Kiel are also important ferry and cruise ports. Puttgarden is the German port of the Vogelfluglinie to Denmark. Brunsbüttel is an important port for bulk goods and also serves as the basis for the offshore wind energy industry.

Port[51] HANDLING OF GOODS, MT FERRY AND RO/RO TRANSPORT, MT NUMBER OF PASSENGERS
Lübeck 16.0 23.0 449 000
Brunsbüttel 10.1 0.0 0
Puttgarden 5.4 14.4 5 482 277
Kiel 4.8 5.9 1 588 467

Education

Compulsory education starts for children who are six years old on 30 June.[52] All children attend a "Grundschule", which is Germany's equivalent to primary school, for the first 4 years and then move on to a secondary school.[52] In Schleswig-Holstein there are "Gemeinschaftsschulen", which is a type of comprehensive school. The regional schools, which go by the German name "Regionalschule" have been done away with as of 1 January 2014.[52] The option of a Gymnasium is still available.[52]

During the schoolyear 2021/2022, there are 393 Grundschulen in Schleswig-Holstein educating 101.675 students.[53] Combined with secondary schools, there are a total of 360.922 Students in Schleswig-Holstein.[53]

In a comparison of the federal states, Schleswig-Holstein has the highest student-to-teacher ratio in Germany at around 16.5:1 (national average: 15.2:1). In addition, Schleswig-Holstein is 14th from 16 federal state in terms of expenditure per pupil at public schools with around 5750 euros (national average: 6500 euros).[54]

There are three universities in Kiel (classical, budget 167.1 M€), Lübeck (medicine, budget 80.8 M€) and Flensburg (pedagogical, 37.4 M€).[55] Six public Universities of Applied Sciences exist in Wedel, Altenholz, Flensburg, Heide, Kiel, and Lübeck.[56] There is the Conservatory in Lübeck and the Muthesius Academy of Fine Arts in Kiel. There are also three private institutions of higher learning.[55]

See also

References

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  6. ^ , Simon Heffer, www.telegraph.co.uk, Retrieved 2010-06-28.
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  8. ^ Flucht und Vertreibung 28 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine at Haus der Geschichte (in German)
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  33. ^ Urban, Martin. "Atomperlen aus Geesthacht. Die "Atombombe in der Aktentasche": Forscher glauben, Ursache der Kinder-Tumore in der Gemeinde Geesthacht entdeckt zu haben. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung. 2. November 2004." (in German).
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  49. ^ "Kiel Voith Verkauf endgueltig gescheitert" (in German). from the original on 25 April 2022. Retrieved 7 April 2021.
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  52. ^ a b c d . State of Schleswig-Holstein. Archived from the original on 4 May 2011. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  53. ^ a b "Schleswig-Holstein - Zahlen zur Bildung". Landesportal Schleswig-Holstein (in German). from the original on 25 April 2022. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
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  56. ^ "Hochschulen in Schleswig-Holstein". Landesportal Schleswig-Holstein (in German). from the original on 25 April 2022. Retrieved 17 April 2022.

External links

  • Official government portal
  •   Geographic data related to Schleswig-Holstein at OpenStreetMap
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Schleswig-Holstein" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

schleswig, holstein, this, article, about, current, german, state, historic, antecedents, prussian, province, 1868, 1945, province, warship, pronounced, ˌʃleːsvɪç, ˈhɔlʃtaɪn, listen, danish, slesvig, holsten, german, sleswig, holsteen, north, frisian, slaswik,. This article is about the current German state and its historic antecedents For the Prussian province 1868 1945 see Province of Schleswig Holstein For the warship see SMS Schleswig Holstein Schleswig Holstein pronounced ˌʃleːsvɪc ˈhɔlʃtaɪn listen Danish Slesvig Holsten Low German Sleswig Holsteen North Frisian Slaswik Holstiinj is the northernmost of the 16 states of Germany comprising most of the historical duchy of Holstein and the southern part of the former Duchy of Schleswig Its capital city is Kiel other notable cities are Lubeck and Flensburg Schleswig Holstein Schleswig Holstein German Slesvig Holsten Danish Sleswig Holsteen Low German Slaswik Holstiinj North Frisian StateFlagCoat of armsCoordinates 54 28 12 N 9 30 50 E 54 47000 N 9 51389 E 54 47000 9 51389CountryGermanyCapitalKielGovernment BodyLandtag of Schleswig Holstein Minister PresidentDaniel Gunther CDU Governing partiesCDU Greens Bundesrat votes4 of 69 Bundestag seats28 of 736 Area Total15 763 17 km2 6 086 19 sq mi Population 04 01 2022 1 Total2 920 850 Density190 km2 480 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST ISO 3166 codeDE SHVehicle registrationformerly S 1945 1947 SH 1947 BS 1948 1956 2 GRP nominal 97 2 billion 2020 3 GRP per capita 33 400 2020 NUTS RegionDEFHDI 2018 0 924 4 very high 13th of 16Websiteschleswig holstein deThe region is called Slesvig Holsten in Danish and pronounced ˌsle ːsvi ˈhʌlˌste ˀn The Low German name is Sleswig Holsteen and the North Frisian name is Slaswik Holstiinj In more dated English it is also known as Sleswick Holsatia Historically the name can also refer to a larger region containing both present day Schleswig Holstein and the former South Jutland County Northern Schleswig now part of the Region of Southern Denmark in Denmark It covers an area of 15 763 km2 6 086 sq mi making it the 5th smallest German federal state by area including the city states Schleswig was under Danish control during the Viking Age but in the 12th century it escaped full control and became a duchy It bordered Holstein which was a part of the Holy Roman Empire Beginning in 1460 both Schleswig and Holstein were ruled together by the Danish king acting as duke of both Schleswig and Holstein with the latter remaining a part of Germany In the 19th century Danes and Germans each believed they had a claim to Schleswig Holstein the population of which was majority ethnic German The resulting long term political and territorial dispute was known as the Schleswig Holstein Question In 1848 Denmark tried to formally annex the area Prussia responded by invading thus beginning the First Schleswig War which ended in a victory for Denmark and the signing of the 1852 London Protocol But the fight broke out again in 1864 the Second Schleswig War and this time Prussia and Austria won and the territory was absorbed into Prussia in 1867 More than 50 years later after the German defeat in World War I the Allies required that the question of sovereignty over the territory be submitted to plebiscites the 1920 Schleswig plebiscites which resulted in the return of some of the territory to Denmark After World War II Schleswig Holstein took in over a million refugees Today Schleswig Holstein s economy is known for its agriculture such as its Holstein cows Its position on the Atlantic Ocean makes it a major trade point and shipbuilding site it is also the location of the Kiel Canal Its offshore oil wells and wind farms produce significant amounts of energy Fishing is a major industry and the basis of its distinctive unique local cuisine It is a popular tourist destination for Germans Contents 1 History 1 1 Duchies in the Danish realm 1 2 Schleswig Holstein Question 1 3 Province of Prussia 1 4 Plebiscite in 1920 1 5 State of Federal Germany 2 Geography 3 Administration 3 1 Administrative Division 3 2 Legislature 3 3 Executive Branch 3 3 1 Recent elections 3 3 2 List of Minister Presidents of Schleswig Holstein 4 Demographics 4 1 Vital statistics 4 2 Religion 4 3 Foreigners 5 Culture 5 1 Symbols 5 2 Food and drink 5 3 Languages 6 Economy 6 1 Energy 6 1 1 Nuclear power 6 2 Tourism 6 3 Agriculture 6 4 Animal husbandry 6 5 Fishing and Aquaculture 6 6 Companies 6 7 Industries 7 Transport 7 1 Kiel Canal 7 2 Ports 8 Education 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Schleswig Holstein The historic settlement areas in present day Schleswig Holstein The Limes Saxoniae border between the Saxons and the Obotrites established about 810 in present day Schleswig HolsteinThe term Holstein derives from Old Saxon Holseta Land Holz means wood in modern Standardized German holt is a now archaic English word for woods Originally the term referred to the central of the three Saxon tribes north of the River Elbe Tedmarsgoi Dithmarschen Holstein and Sturmarii Stormarn The area inhabited by the tribe of the Holsts lay between the Stor River and Hamburg after Christianization their main church was in Schenefeld Saxon Holstein became a part of the Holy Roman Empire after Charlemagne s Saxon campaigns in the late eighth century Beginning in 811 the northern border of Holstein and thus of the Empire was the River Eider The term Schleswig originally referred to the city of Schleswig The city s name derives from Schlei inlet in the east and vik which meant inlet in Old Norse and settlement in Old Saxon and is cognate with the wick and wich elements in place names in Britain The Duchy of Schleswig or Southern Jutland was originally an integral part of Denmark but in medieval times was established as a fief under the control of the Kingdom of Denmark having the same relationship with the Danish Crown as for example Brandenburg or Bavaria had with the Holy Roman Emperor Around 1100 the Duke of Saxony gave Holstein to Count Adolf I of Schauenburg Duchies in the Danish realm Edit Schleswig and Holstein have at different times belonged in part or completely to either Denmark or Germany or have been virtually independent of both nations Schleswig was never part of Germany until after the Second Schleswig War in 1864 But for many centuries the king of Denmark was both a Danish Duke of Schleswig and a German Duke of Holstein Essentially Schleswig was either integrated into Denmark or was a Danish fief and Holstein was a German fief and once long before that a sovereign state Both were ruled for several centuries by the kings of Denmark In 1721 all of Schleswig was united into a single duchy under the king of Denmark and the great powers of Europe confirmed in an international treaty that all future kings of Denmark should automatically become dukes of Schleswig consequently Schleswig would always follow the order of succession that applied in the Kingdom of Denmark Government business in both duchies was conducted in the German language even though for a long time they were governed from Copenhagen Beginning in 1523 however they were governed by the German Chancellery which in 1806 was renamed the Schleswig Holstein Chancellery After the Protestant Reformation church services were conducted in German in the southern part of Schleswig and in Danish in the northern part This difference would later contribute strongly to shaping the inhabitants national sentiments as would the different languages spoken in different schools after 1814 when mandatory schooling was instituted Schleswig Holstein Question Edit Main article Schleswig Holstein QuestionThe German national awakening that followed the Napoleonic Wars gave rise to a strong popular movement in Holstein and Southern Schleswig for unification with a new Prussian dominated Germany This development was paralleled by an equally strong Danish national awakening in Denmark and Northern Schleswig This movement called for the complete reintegration of Schleswig into the Kingdom of Denmark and demanded an end to discrimination against Danes in Schleswig The ensuing conflict is sometimes called the Schleswig Holstein Question In 1848 King Frederick VII of Denmark declared that he would grant Denmark a liberal constitution and the immediate goal for the Danish national movement was to ensure that this constitution would give rights to all Danes i e not only to those in the Kingdom of Denmark but also to Danes and Germans living in Schleswig Furthermore they demanded protection for the Danish language in Schleswig the dominant language in almost a quarter of Schleswig had changed from Danish to German since the beginning of the 19th century A liberal constitution for Holstein was not seriously considered in Copenhagen since it was well known that the political elite of Holstein were more conservative than Copenhagen s Representatives of German minded Schleswig Holsteiners demanded that Schleswig and Holstein be unified and allowed its own constitution and that Schleswig join Holstein as a member of the German Confederation These demands were rejected by the Danish government in 1848 and the Germans of Holstein and southern Schleswig rebelled This began the First Schleswig War 1848 51 which ended in a Danish victory at Idstedt In 1863 conflict broke out again when Frederick VII died without legitimate issue According to the order of succession of Denmark and Schleswig the crowns of both Denmark and Schleswig would pass to Duke Christian of Duchy of Glucksburg who became Christian IX The transmission of the duchy of Holstein to the head of the German oriented branch of the Danish royal family the House of Augustenborg was more controversial The separation of the two duchies was challenged by the Augustenborg heir who claimed as in 1848 to be rightful heir of both Schleswig and Holstein The promulgation of a common constitution for Denmark and Schleswig in November 1863 prompted Otto von Bismarck to intervene and Prussia and Austria declared war on Denmark This was the Second War of Schleswig which ended in Danish defeat British attempts to mediate in the London Conference of 1864 failed and Denmark lost Schleswig Northern and Southern Schleswig Holstein and Lauenburg to Prussia and Austria Province of Prussia Edit Contrary to the hopes of German Schleswig Holsteiners the area did not gain its independence but was annexed as a province of Prussia in 1867 Also following the Austro Prussian War in 1866 section five of the Peace of Prague stipulated that the people of Northern Schleswig would be consulted in a referendum on whether to remain under Prussian rule or return to Danish rule This condition however was never fulfilled by Prussia During the decades of Prussian rule within the German Empire authorities attempted a Germanisation policy in the northern part of Schleswig which remained predominantly Danish The period also meant increased industrialisation of Schleswig Holstein and the use of Kiel and Flensburg as important Imperial German Navy locations The northernmost part and west coast of the province saw a wave of emigration to America while some Danes of North Schleswig emigrated to Denmark Plebiscite in 1920 Edit Following the defeat of Germany in World War I the Allied powers arranged a plebiscite in northern and central Schleswig The plebiscite was conducted under the auspices of an international commission which designated two voting zones to cover the northern and south central parts of Schleswig Steps were taken to also create a third zone covering a southern area but zone III was cancelled again and never voted as the Danish government asked the commission not to expand the plebiscite to this area In zone I covering Northern Schleswig 10 February 1920 75 voted for reunification with Denmark and 25 voted for Germany In zone II covering central Schleswig 14 March 1920 the results were reversed 80 voted for Germany and just 20 for Denmark Only minor areas on the island of Fohr showed a Danish majority and the rest of the Danish vote was primarily in the town of Flensburg 5 Results of the 1920 plebiscites in North and Central Schleswig Electorate German name Danish name For Germany For Denmarkpercent votes percent votesZone I Northern Schleswig 10 February 1920 25 1 25 329 74 9 75 431District of Hadersleben Haderslev 16 0 6 585 84 0 34 653Town of Hadersleben Haderslev 38 6 3 275 61 4 5 209District of Apenrade Aabenraa 32 3 6 030 67 7 12 653Town of Apenrade Aabenraa 55 1 2 725 44 9 2 224District of Sonderburg Sonderborg 22 9 5 083 77 1 17 100Town of Sonderburg Sonderborg 56 2 2 601 43 8 2 029Town of Augustenburg Augustenborg 48 0 236 52 0 256Northern part of District of Tondern Tonder 40 9 7 083 59 1 10 223Town of Tondern Tonder 76 5 2 448 23 5 750Town of Hoyer Hojer 72 6 581 27 4 219Town of Lugumkloster Logumkloster 48 8 516 51 2 542Northern part of District of Flensburg Flensborg 40 6 548 59 4 802Zone II Central Schleswig 14 March 1920 80 2 51 742 19 8 12 800Southern part of District of Tondern Tonder 87 9 17 283 12 1 2 376Southern part of District of Flensburg Flensborg 82 6 6 688 17 4 1 405Town of Flensburg Flensborg 75 2 27 081 24 8 8 944Northern part of District of Husum Husum 90 0 672 10 0 75On 15 June 1920 Northern Schleswig officially returned to Danish rule The Danish German border was the only one of the borders imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles after World War I which was never challenged by Adolf Hitler In 1937 the Nazis passed the so called Greater Hamburg Act Gross Hamburg Gesetz where the nearby Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg was expanded to encompass towns that had formerly belonged to the Prussian province of Schleswig Holstein To compensate Prussia for these losses and partly because Hitler had a personal dislike for Lubeck 6 the 711 year long independence of the Hansestadt Lubeck came to an end and almost all its territory was incorporated into Schleswig Holstein A German postage stamp conmemorating the Bonn Copenhagen Declarations State of Federal Germany Edit After World War II the Prussian province Schleswig Holstein came under British occupation On 23 August 1946 the military government abolished the province and reconstituted it as a separate Land 7 Due to the forced migrations of Germans between 1944 and 1950 Schleswig Holstein took in almost a million refugees after the war increasing its population by 33 8 A pro Danish political movement arose in Schleswig with transfer of the area to Denmark as an ultimate goal This was supported neither by the British occupation administration nor the Danish government In 1955 the German and Danish governments issued the Bonn Copenhagen Declarations confirming the rights of the ethnic minorities on both sides of the border 9 Conditions between the nationalities have since been stable and generally respectful Geography EditSee also List of places in Schleswig Holstein Topographic map of Schleswig Holstein Schleswig Holstein lies on the base of Jutland Peninsula between the North Sea and the Baltic Sea Strictly speaking Schleswig refers to the German Southern Schleswig German Sudschleswig or Landesteil Schleswig Danish Sydslesvig whereas Northern Schleswig is in Denmark South Jutland County Region of Southern Denmark The state of Schleswig Holstein further consists of Holstein as well as Lauenburg and the formerly independent city of Lubeck Schleswig Holstein borders Denmark Southern Denmark to the north the North Sea to the west the Baltic Sea to the east and the German states of Lower Saxony Hamburg and Mecklenburg Vorpommern to the south In the western part of the state the lowlands have virtually no hills The North Frisian Islands as well as almost all of Schleswig Holstein s North Sea coast form the Schleswig Holstein Wadden Sea National Park Nationalpark Schleswig Holsteinisches Wattenmeer which is the largest national park in Central Europe The Baltic Sea coast in the east of Schleswig Holstein is marked by bays fjords and cliff lines Rolling hills the highest elevation is the Bungsberg at 168 metres or 551 feet and many lakes are found especially in the eastern part of Holstein called the Holstein Switzerland and the former Duchy of Lauenburg Herzogtum Lauenburg The longest river besides the Elbe is the Eider Schleswig Holstein has the lowest quota of forest covered area it is only 11 0 national average 32 0 which is even lower than in the city states of Hamburg and Bremen 10 The German Islands of Sylt Fohr Pellworm Amrum Heligoland and Fehmarn are part of Schleswig Holstein with the latter being the largest and the only Island of Schleswig Holstein located on the east coast 11 Heligoland is Germany s only high sea island 11 Geest Island Sylt Seestermuher Marsh Eckernforde Bay Wadden Sea Schleswig Holsteinische Schweiz Kieler FordeAdministration Edit Boundary stone to the District of Ostholstein Districts of Schleswig Holstein Administrative Division Edit Schleswig Holstein is divided into 11 Kreise Districts and four Kreisfreie Stadte Urban Districts Kreise License Plate Area1 Dithmarschen HEI 12 1 428 17 km2 13 2 Herzogtum Lauenburg RZ 12 1 263 07 km2 13 3 Nordfriesland NF 12 2 083 56 km2 13 4 Ostholstein OH 12 1 393 02 km2 13 5 Pinneberg PI 12 664 25 km2 13 6 Plon PLO 12 1 083 56 km2 13 7 Rendsburg Eckernforde RD ECK 12 2 189 79 km2 13 8 Schleswig Flensburg SL 12 2 071 28 km2 13 9 Segeberg SE 12 1 344 47 km2 13 10 Steinburg IZ 12 1 055 70 km2 13 11 Stormarn OD 12 766 22 km2 13 Urban District Kiel KI 12 118 65 km2 13 Urban District Lubeck HL 12 214 19 km2 13 Urban District Neumunster NMS 12 71 66 km2 13 Urban District Flensburg FL 12 56 73 km2 13 Legislature Edit See also Politics of Schleswig HolsteinSchleswig Holstein has its own parliament and government which are located in the state capital Kiel 14 Executive Branch Edit See also Second Gunther cabinet The Minister President of Schleswig Holstein is elected by the Landtag of Schleswig Holstein 14 Portfolio Minister Party Took office Left office State secretariesMinister President Daniel Guntherborn 1973 07 24 24 July 1973 age 49 CDU 29 June 2022 IncumbentDeputy Minister PresidentMinister for Finance Monika Heinoldborn 1958 12 30 30 December 1958 age 64 GRUNE 29 June 2022 Incumbent Silke Torp Oliver RabeMinister for Justice and Health Kerstin von der Deckenborn 1968 11 22 22 November 1968 age 54 CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent Otto Carstens Oliver GrundeiMinister for Education Training Science Research and Culture Karin Prienborn 1965 06 26 26 June 1965 age 57 CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent Dorit Stenke Guido WendtMinister for Interior Communities Housing and Sport Sabine Sutterlin Waackborn 1958 02 15 15 February 1958 age 64 CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent Jorg Sibbel Magdalena FinkeMinister for Energy Transition Climate Protection Environment and Nature Tobias Goldschmidtborn 1981 09 16 16 September 1981 age 41 GRUNE 29 June 2022 Incumbent Katja Gunther Joschka KnuthMinister for Economics Transport Labour Technology and Tourism Claus Ruhe Madsenborn 1972 08 27 27 August 1972 age 50 Ind CDU nomination 29 June 2022 Incumbent Tobias von der Heide Julia CarstensMinister for Social Affairs Youth Family Seniors Integration and Equality Aminata Toureborn 1992 11 15 15 November 1992 age 30 GRUNE 29 June 2022 Incumbent Johannes AlbigMinister for Agriculture Rural Areas Europe and Consumer Protection Werner Schwarzborn 1960 04 10 10 April 1960 age 62 CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent Anne Benett SturiesChief of the State Chancellery Dirk Schrodterborn 1978 10 17 17 October 1978 age 44 CDU 29 June 2022 Incumbent Johannes Callsen Sandra GerkenRecent elections Edit See also 2022 Schleswig Holstein state election State elections were held on 8 May 2022 The current government is a coalition of the Christian Democratic Union CDU and The Greens led by Minister President Daniel Gunther List of Minister Presidents of Schleswig Holstein Edit Main article List of Ministers President of Schleswig HolsteinDemographics EditHistorical populationYearPop p a 19602 309 409 19702 510 608 0 84 19802 611 285 0 39 19902 626 127 0 06 20002 789 761 0 61 20102 834 259 0 16 20182 896 900 0 27 source 15 Schleswig Holstein has an aging population Since 1972 there has been a decrease in the natural rate of population change In 2016 the total fertility rate reached 1 61 highest value in 40 years the average value being 1 4 In 2016 there were 25 420 births and 33 879 deaths resulting in a natural decrease of 8 459 Fluctuations 1970 2015Year Births d Deaths Influx Outflux Balance TFR1970 35 171 32 990 100 586 76 572 24 0141975 24 282 32 993 75 949 69 169 1 9311980 24 545 31 278 80 137 61 123 12 2811985 23 099 31 330 65 537 56 951 3551990 29 046 31 461 153 275 119 339 31 521 1 471995 27 430 31 288 114 799 93 872 17 069 1 332000 26 920 29 821 79 416 64 029 12 486 1 432005 23 027 29 669 74 534 63 786 4 106 1 372010 22 578 31 201 76 032 65 209 2 200 1 452015 23 549 33 663 111 661 74 317 27 230 1 51Vital statistics Edit Births from January September 2016 19 138 16 Births from January September 2017 19 086 Deaths from January September 2016 25 153 Deaths from January September 2017 25 832 Natural growth from January September 2016 6 015 Natural growth from January September 2017 6 746Religion Edit Religion in Schleswig Holstein 2011religion percentEKD Protestants 53 Roman Catholics 6 Muslims 3 Other or none 38 The region has been strongly Protestant since the time of the Protestant Reformation It is proportionally the most Protestant of the sixteen modern states In 2018 members of the Evangelical Church in Germany make up 44 6 of the population while members of the Catholic Church comprise 6 1 49 3 either adhere to other religions or disclaim any practising religious identity 17 Foreigners Edit Largest groups of foreign residents by 31 December 2020 citation needed Syria 34 670 Poland 28 975 Turkey 27 895 Romania 17 255 Afghanistan 15 485 Iraq 11 995 Bulgaria 9 470 Russia 8 240 Denmark 7 065 Italy 5 875Culture EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Schleswig Holstein news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Schleswig Holstein combines Danish Frisian and German aspects of culture The castles and manors in the countryside are the best example for this tradition some dishes like Rodgrod German Rote Grutze literal English red grits or red groats are also shared as well as surnames such as Hansen The most important festivals are the Kiel Week Schleswig Holstein Musik Festival an annual classic music festival all over the state and the Lubeck Nordic Film Days an annual film festival for movies from Scandinavian countries held in Lubeck The Kiel Week is an annual event except for 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID19 Pandemic 18 It took place again in June 2022 18 The annual Wacken Open Air festival is considered to be the largest heavy metal rock festival in the world Kiel Week 2019 Wacken Open Air Festival Kiel Week 2019Symbols Edit The coat of arms shows the symbols of the two duchies united in Schleswig Holstein i e the two lions for Schleswig and the leaf of nettle for Holstein Supposedly Otto von Bismarck decreed that the two lions were to face the nettle because of the discomfort to their bottoms which would have resulted if the lions faced away from it Government agencies of Schleswig Holsteins are using a logo showing a stylized version of the Schleswig Lions and the Holstein nettle combined with the abbreviation of Schleswig Holstein SH Written either below or to the right of the lion and the nettle is Schleswig Holstein below which either the Name of the agency using the logo is shown or the motto Der echte Norden Germany s true North 19 Schleswig Holstein Logo The motto of Schleswig Holstein is Up ewich ungedeelt Middle Low German Forever undivided modern High German Auf ewig ungeteilt It goes back to the Treaty of Ribe Danish Ribe Handfaestning German Handfeste von Ripen in 1460 Ripen Ribe is a historical small town in Northern Schleswig nowadays Denmark 9 The anthem from 1844 is called Wanke nicht mein Vaterland Don t falter my fatherland but it is usually referred to with its first line Schleswig Holstein meerumschlungen i e Schleswig Holstein embraced by the seas or Schleswig Holstein Lied Schleswig Holstein song The old city of Lubeck is a UNESCO World Heritage Site Food and drink Edit Main article Schleswig Holstein cuisine Distinctive point of the cuisine is combination of sweetness with a taste contrast like sour or salty These combinations are also described as broken sweetness is especially present in dishes which are sweet sour Typical dishes are Birnen Bohnen und Speck consist of pears beans savory parsley bacon and potatoes Holsteiner Sauerfleisch is sour aspic Holsteiner Katenschinken is ham with traditional cold smoking method Different using of Nordseekraben in soup porrenpann with toast or scrambled eggs Famous is smoked Kieler Sprotten Other fish also is popular Flatfish or Herring Grunkohl In the Schleswig Holstein there is a real cult around this vegetable In the autumn and winter months groups of friends or colleagues go on a cabbage ride and choose their cabbage king often combined with the typical regional sports of Bosseln and Klootschiessen The most popular dish is Grunkohl with Mettenden but also possible other combination like Grunkohl with Kassler and Schweinebacke The Dithmarsch marshland is particularly suitable for growing cabbage The soils are fertile so that a good yield can still be achieved even in bad years Due to the constant sea wind there are far fewer pests in the area Lubecker Marzipan is a sweet made from ground almonds sugar and added flavorings Lakritz confection flavored with extract of the roots of the liquorice plant sweet salt salmiak and choco Lubecker Rotspon Bordeaux wine which is delivered in oak barrels to Lubeck and there it maturated Flensburger Rum Verschnitt braun mix of oversea rum water and neutral alcohol typical 40 42 Crab toast with dill Holsteiner Sauerfleisch Holsteiner Katenschinken Kieler Sprotten Birnen Bohnen und Speck Grunkohl mit MettendenLanguages Edit The official language of Schleswig Holstein is German 20 In addition Low German Danish and North Frisian are recognized minority languages 21 Historically Low German in Holstein and Southern Schleswig Danish in Schleswig and North Frisian in Western Schleswig were widely spoken in Schleswig Holstein During the language change in the 19th century some Danish and North Frisian dialects in Southern Schleswig were replaced by Standard German 22 23 24 Low German is still used in many parts of the state Missingsch a Low German dialect with heavy High German Standard German influence is commonly spoken informally throughout the state while a mixed language Petuh mixture of High German and Danish is used in and around Flensburg Danish is used by the Danish minority in Southern Schleswig and North Frisian is spoken by the North Frisians of the North Sea Coast and the Northern Frisian Islands in Southern Schleswig The North Frisian dialect called Heligolandic Halunder is spoken on the island of Heligoland As is the case throughout Germany High German introduced in the 16th century has come to steadily replace local dialects for official purposes and is today the predominant language of media law and legislature It is spoken by virtually all inhabitants in formal situations Since the end of World War II and widespread adoption of TV radio and other mass media it has gradually come to supplant local dialects in urban areas as well Economy Edit Schleswig Holstein s islands beaches and cities are popular tourist attractions Shown here is the Isle of Sylt The Gross domestic product GDP of the state was 62 7 billion euros in 2018 accounting for 1 9 of German economic output GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power was 30 400 euros or 101 of the EU27 average in the same year The GDP per employee was 95 of the EU average The GDP per capita was the lowest of all states in West Germany 25 In 2017 Schleswig Holstein had an export surplus for the first time since 1989 export 22 6 billion euros import 20 8 billion euros Energy Edit Schleswig Holstein is a leader in the country s growing renewable energy industry 26 In 2014 Schleswig Holstein became the first German state to cover 100 of its electric power demand with renewable energy sources chiefly wind 70 solar 3 8 and biomass 8 3 27 The largest German oil field Mittelplate is located in the North Sea off the Dithmarsch coast and connected with refinery in Hemmingstedt and chemical plants in Brunsbuttel via pipeline It produce ca 1 4 million tonnes of oil annually Nuclear power Edit There were three nuclear power plants in Schleswig Holstein Krummel Brunsbuttel and Brockdorf The last operating plant in Schleswig Holstein the Brokdorf plant was shut down on new years eve 2021 28 There is also a nuclear research center known Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht rebranded as Hereon with 2 research reactors located right next to the Krummel plant 29 During the 1990s ten more cases of leukemia among children than was expected were identified in Elbmarsch near the Krummel plant Anti nuclear activists believed it was due to the nuclear plant which led to several investigations The reported discovery of small spherical beads of nuclear material in the area led to further concern as well as the presence of minute amounts of plutonium in the Elbe The origins of the nuclear material were disputed with one report determining them to not be that of the Krummel plant Another report claimed that they may have come from an undisclosed fire in 1986 however this theory has been questioned as it would have required a substantial government coverup The Chernobyl disaster has also been suggested as a source though is considered unlikely The probable source of the material especially in the Elbe is nuclear reprocessing plants in France A 2010 report exonerated the nuclear power plants on the Elbe as the cause of contamination Further doubt was cast on the nature of the supposed beads of nuclear material with a Federal commission chastising the original commission that claimed to have discovered the beads The exact cause of the increased leukemia cases remains unknown and could be due to other environmental factors or even by chance 30 31 32 33 34 The nuclear plants have further been questioned as a source of the cases due to comparison to the Savannah River Site in the United States Despite release of radiation at the Savannah River Site there is no increase in cases of leukemia around it Alternative hypotheses for the cause of the cases have included electromagnetic fields parental radiation exposure prior to conception other carcinogens and benzene exposure however none have been supported by the existing evidence Intriguingly a larger case control study in Lower Saxony found a correlation between the untrained immune system as judged as contact with other children vaccinations etc and leukemia risk suggested that an immature immune system that has not been challenged is at greater risk for developing malignancy possibly secondary to an undetermined environment factor 35 36 NPP Krummel View form Elbe Left is NPP Krummel right is the Research Center KKK NPP Krummel GKSS Research Center Brokdorf Nuclear Power PlantTourism Edit Located between the North Sea and the Baltic Sea Schleswig Holstein is also a popular tourist destination in Germany Its islands beaches and cities attract millions of tourists every year It has the second highest tourism intensity per local among the German states after Mecklenburg Vorpommern but in absolute value it is rank 6th and only 1 3 of top destination Bavaria 37 According to a ruling by the Federal Administrative Court everyone has the right to free access to the beach Nevertheless most of the seaside resorts kept cashing in 2 3 day person 38 Haithabu Museum North Sea Coast at Amrum Red Cliff Sylt Lubeck City Hall Historic City Center of Lubeck Baltic Sea Coast at Timmendorfer Strand Island of Heligoland Kappeln Herring DayAgriculture Edit 63 of land in Schleswig Holstein 990 403 ha is used for agriculture national average 47 39 Cultivated crops 40 Wheat 208 000 ha Maize for silage 176 000 ha Winter rapeseed 112 000 ha Sugar beet 7 500 ha Potatoes 5 500 haThere are some special cultivation regions Elbmarschen west of Hamburg for fruits cultivation Ditmarschen for cabbage Between Molln and Lubeck for asparagus Pinnenberg for tree nurseries and flower garden especially roses of Rosen Tantau and W Kordes Sohne 2 931 ha These 2 companies have over 50 of the world cut roses market There is a German Nurseries Museum Deutsches Baumschulmuseum 40 Rosa Iceberg World favorite Rose 1983 from W Kordes Sohne Tree nursery in Pinneberg Rapeseed Greenhouse of Rosen Tantau Rosa Apricola Goldenen Rose 2005 from W Kordes Sohne Cabbage FieldAnimal husbandry Edit A Holstein heifer The dairy and cattle farming in connection with fodder cultivation is mainly concentrated on the marshland and the bordering Geest areas In 2020 around 1 million cattle including 360 000 dairy cows were counted in Schleswig Holstein rank 4th of German states Livestock is continuously declining 41 Schleswig Holstein is home of the most productive dairy cattle Holsteins which produce an average of 8 125 l 2 146 US gal per year of milk It is now the main dairy cow around the world Pig breeding is mainly found in the Schleswig Holstein Uplands In principle Schleswig Holstein is one of the regions with relatively few pigs a total of around 1 6 million in comparison Lower Saxony over 8 million Poultry and sheep are also of little importance in animal husbandry 40 Schleswig Holstein had Europe s largest snake farm in Uetersen with over 600 venomous reptiles but it closed in 2019 42 Fishing and Aquaculture Edit Shrimp cutter near Sudfall Total production from fishing in North and Baltic Seas was 40 780 tonnes in 2019 ca 1 3 German production 43 In the Baltic Sea total production amounted to 10377 tonnes 2019 of which 5432 tonnes of sprat 2568 tonnes of flatfish and 1190 tonnes of cod 43 In the North Sea the numbers were 19 487 tonnes of mussels 3560 tonnes of North Sea shrimp 1166 tonnes of herring and 7062 other fishes 43 The one important aquaculture product is mussels 16864 tonnes 43 Inland fishing and aquaculture is not significant with 221 and 250 tonnes in 2019 respectively 43 Companies Edit The largest company headquarters in Schleswig Holstein with annual sales over 1 billion euros are Wholesaler Bartels Langness Kiel 5 3 billion Conglomerate Possehl Lubeck 3 8 billion Medical equipment manufacturer Dragerwerke Lubeck 3 4 billion Telecommunication service provider Freenet Budelsdorf 2 9 billion Oil refinery Heide Hemmingstedt 2 4 billion Submarine shipyards ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems Kiel 1 8 billion The unemployment rate stood at 5 0 in October 2021 44 Year 45 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019Unemployment rate in 8 5 8 4 8 7 9 7 9 8 11 6 10 0 8 4 7 6 7 8 7 5 7 2 6 9 6 9 6 8 6 5 6 3 6 0 5 5 5 1Industries Edit Shipbuilding Ca 20 of German shipbuilding The biggest ship yard ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems situated in Kiel and build submarines of 212 and 214 types In Flensburg FSG yard build ferries Famous luxury megayachts are built by Lurssen Kroger Werft Schacht Audorf and Nobiskrug Rendsburg 46 Shipyards in Lubeck 47 and Caterpillar MaK marine engine plant were closed 48 Raytheon Anschutz deliveries navigation equipment autopilots radars to shipyards Lurssen Kroger Shipyard Rendsburg Thyssen Krupp Marine Systems Shipyards Kiel Flensburg FSG ShipyardLocomotive Vossloh Locomotives owned by Chinese CRRC manufactures three models of diesel hydraulic G6 G12 G18 and two models of diesel electric DE12 DE18 locomotives Other manufacturer was Voith Turbo Lokomotivtechnik but closed in 2014 year 49 Both firms are in Kiel Vossloh G 12 Vossloh DE 18 Vossloh G 2000 BB Voith Gravita 15L BB Voith Revita Voith Maxima Headquarters of Drager in Lubeck Industrial equipment Fish and poultry processing machinery from Baader Lubeck bottle washers and pasteurizers from Krones Flensburg grinding machine tools from Peter Wolters Rendsburg machinery to manufacture man made fibers and non woven textile from Oerlikon Neumag and Oerlikon Nonwoven Neumunster Medical and labor equipment Dragerwerk Lubeck manufacture breathing equipment medical ventilators and monitors anesthetic machines neonatal incubators gas detectors drug testing equipment diving equipment rebreathers breathalyzer The company delivery breathing devices for reanimation COVID 19 patients Euroimmun Lubeck produces test systems with which antibodies can be determined in the serum of patients and thus autoimmune and infectious diseases including COVID 19 as well as allergies Chemical Almost all chemical industry concentrate around Brunsbuttel Covestro with 650 employee produced annually 400 000 tonnes methylene diphenyl diisocyanate which using in synthesis of polyurethane Yara 214 empl produce nitrogen fertilizers but with special process instead of using natural gas it use heavy oil which allow also manufacture as byproduct vanadium oxide and sulphur Heavy oil is source material to produce bitumen by Total Bitumen 130 empl Other plant is Sasol 520 empl produce fatty and Guerbet alcohols paraffin and high purity aluminum oxide aluminum hydroxide and triethylaluminium Other important location of chemical industry is Neumunster with EMS Griltech which manufacture technical fibers from polyamides and polyesters adhesives and powder coatings Transport EditKiel Canal Edit Main article Kiel Canal The most important transport way in Schleswig Holstein is Kiel Canal which connect Brunsbuttel on North Sea with Kiel on Baltic Sea Total cargo of ships reach peaks in 2007 and 2012 after that it continuous decline with 73 8 million tonnes in 2020 50 Kiel Canal as seen from the North Sea Kiel Canal as seen from the Baltic Sea A freighter in Transit through the Kiel Canal Ferry Hochdonn Pilot Station RusterbergenPorts Edit The state has a total of 46 public ports and landing stages four of which fulfill international transit functions Kiel Lubeck Travemunde and Puttgarden on the Baltic Sea Brunsbuttel on the North Sea Kiel and Lubeck are also important for freight traffic to Scandinavia and Eastern Europe Lubeck Travemunde and Kiel are also important ferry and cruise ports Puttgarden is the German port of the Vogelfluglinie to Denmark Brunsbuttel is an important port for bulk goods and also serves as the basis for the offshore wind energy industry Port 51 HANDLING OF GOODS MT FERRY AND RO RO TRANSPORT MT NUMBER OF PASSENGERSLubeck 16 0 23 0 449 000Brunsbuttel 10 1 0 0 0Puttgarden 5 4 14 4 5 482 277Kiel 4 8 5 9 1 588 467 Port of Lubeck Port of Puttgarden Port of Brunsbuttel Port of KielEducation EditCompulsory education starts for children who are six years old on 30 June 52 All children attend a Grundschule which is Germany s equivalent to primary school for the first 4 years and then move on to a secondary school 52 In Schleswig Holstein there are Gemeinschaftsschulen which is a type of comprehensive school The regional schools which go by the German name Regionalschule have been done away with as of 1 January 2014 52 The option of a Gymnasium is still available 52 During the schoolyear 2021 2022 there are 393 Grundschulen in Schleswig Holstein educating 101 675 students 53 Combined with secondary schools there are a total of 360 922 Students in Schleswig Holstein 53 In a comparison of the federal states Schleswig Holstein has the highest student to teacher ratio in Germany at around 16 5 1 national average 15 2 1 In addition Schleswig Holstein is 14th from 16 federal state in terms of expenditure per pupil at public schools with around 5750 euros national average 6500 euros 54 There are three universities in Kiel classical budget 167 1 M Lubeck medicine budget 80 8 M and Flensburg pedagogical 37 4 M 55 Six public Universities of Applied Sciences exist in Wedel Altenholz Flensburg Heide Kiel and Lubeck 56 There is the Conservatory in Lubeck and the Muthesius Academy of Fine Arts in Kiel There are also three private institutions of higher learning 55 Universitat zu Lubeck Europa University Flensburg Christians Albrechts University of Kiel University of Applied Sciences Lubeck University of Applied Sciences Flensburg University of Applied Sciences KielSee also Edit Geography portal Europe portal European Union portal Germany portalOutline of Germany Schleswig Holstein Gluckstadt Dukes of Holstein Gottorp Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Glucksburg Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Beck Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Augustenburg Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Plon Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Norburg Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Plon Rethwisch Coat of arms of Schleswig Region Sonderjylland Schleswig Schleswig Holstein PoliceReferences Edit Zahlen zur Bevolkerung Schleswig Holstein de in German Archived from the original on 17 April 2022 Retrieved 17 April 2022 By the federal vehicle registration reform of 1 July 1956 distinct prefixes were given for every district Zahlen zur Wirtschaft Schleswig Holstein de in German Landesregierung Schleswig Holstein Archived from the original on 17 April 2022 Retrieved 17 April 2022 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Archived from the original on 23 September 2018 Retrieved 13 September 2018 Schwedler Frank Historischer Atlas Schleswig Holstein 1867 bis 1945 Wachholtz Verlag Neumunster Lubeck The town that said no to Hitler Simon Heffer www telegraph co uk Retrieved 2010 06 28 Ordinance No 46 Abolition of the Provinces in the British Zone of the Former State of Prussia and Reconstitution thereof as Separate Lander PDF Archived PDF from the original on 11 October 2006 Retrieved 23 August 2006 218 KB Flucht und Vertreibung Archived 28 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine at Haus der Geschichte in German a b Schleswig Holstein Urkunde von Ripen Landesportal Schleswig Holstein in German Archived from the original on 25 April 2022 Retrieved 17 April 2022 Bundeswaldinventur in German Archived from the original on 4 February 2021 Retrieved 9 April 2021 a b Zahlen zu Natur amp Umwelt Landesportal Schleswig Holstein in German Archived from the original on 2 March 2022 Retrieved 17 April 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Liste der Kfz Kennzeichen und auslaufenden Kennzeichen in Deutschland PDF kba de in German Archived PDF from the original on 30 March 2022 Retrieved 17 April 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Schleswig Holstein Zahlen zur Bevolkerung Landesportal Schleswig Holstein in German Archived from the original on 17 April 2022 Retrieved 17 April 2022 a b Responsibilities of the Government 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