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Lufthansa

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Lufthansa
IATA
LH
ICAO
DLH
Callsign
Lufthansa
Founded 1926 (as Deutsche Luft Hansa Aktiengesellschaft)
Hubs Frankfurt International Airport
Munich - Franz Josef Strauß Int'l Airport
Focus cities / secondary hubs Düsseldorf International Airport
Hamburg International Airport
Frequent flyer program Miles & More
Member lounge Senator Lounge
Alliance Star Alliance
Fleet size 377
Destinations 177
Parent company Deutsche Lufthansa AG
Headquarters Cologne, Germany
Key people Wolfgang Mayrhuber (CEO), Dr. Karl-Ludwig Kley (CFO)
Website: http://www.lufthansa.com

Lufthansa (Deutsche Lufthansa AG) is the largest German airline company, and one of the biggest in the world. Lufthansa's headquarters is in Cologne while its main base and primary traffic hub is at Frankfurt International Airport in Frankfurt am Main.

The company has developed a second hub at Munich's Franz Josef Strauß International Airport and since its merging with SWISS, Zurich Airport will become Lufthansa's third main hub.

Lufthansa is a founding member of Star Alliance, one of the world's major airline alliances. The Lufthansa Group operates more than 300 aircraft and employs nearly 100,000 people world-wide. In 2005, 51.3 million passengers flew with Lufthansa.

Contents

History

The company was founded in 1926 and headquartered in Berlin, following a merger between "Deutsche Aero Lloyd" (DAL) and "Junkers Luftverkehr" on January 6 of that year. The company's original full name was Deutsche Luft Hansa Aktiengesellschaft. The name Lufthansa derives from Luft (the German word for "air") and Hansa (the Hanseatic trade organization that was mainly active in Northern Europe during the medieval times).

In the 1950s East Germany attempted to establish its own airline using the Lufthansa name, but this resulted in a dispute with West Germany, where the airline had been already re-established after the Second World War. East Germany instead called its national airline Interflug, which ceased operations in 1991. Lufthansa was banned from flying into West Berlin until the demise of the communist regime.

Lufthansa was the launch customer of the Boeing 737 aircraft, and the only buyers of new 737-100s. By doing so, Lufthansa became the first foreign launch customer for a Boeing commercial plane. On 17 May 2004, Lufthansa became the launch customer for the Connexion by Boeing in-flight online connectivity service.

Lufthansa Boeing 747-400
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Lufthansa Boeing 747-400
Lufthansa Boeing 737-300
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Lufthansa Boeing 737-300
Lufthansa Airbus A300-B4
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Lufthansa Airbus A300-B4
Lufthansa Airbus A321-100 Retrojet
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Lufthansa Airbus A321-100 Retrojet
Lufthansa Avro RJ85
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Lufthansa Avro RJ85
Lufthansa A320-200
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Lufthansa A320-200
Lufthansa A321-100
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Lufthansa A321-100
Lufthansa CityLine Canadair CL-600-2B19 regional jet (CRJ-100)
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Lufthansa CityLine Canadair CL-600-2B19 regional jet (CRJ-100)

In June 2003 Lufthansa opened new Terminal 2 at Munich's Franz Josef Strauss International Airport to relieve its main hub, Frankfurt, which is plagued with capacity constraints. It is one of the first terminals in Europe partially owned by an airline.

On 22 March 2005 SWISS merged with Lufthansa Airlines. The deal consists of Lufthansa offering public shareholders the average price over the weeks prior to the announcement. The majority shareholders (the Swiss government and large Swiss companies) will be offered payment if Lufthansa's share price outperforms an airline index during the years following the merger.

Other Businesses

In addition to its mainline operation, Lufthansa has many subsidiaries. The most important are:

Destinations

Further information: Lufthansa destinations, and [[]], and [[]], and [[]], and [[]], and [[]], and [[]], and [[]], and [[]]

Fleet

The Lufthansa fleet consists of the following aircraft (as per December 2005):

Lufthansa number 8 Airbus Airbus A330-300 was 4,000th Airbus aircraft built.

Lufthansa has ordered 15 Airbus A380 aircraft. It has a further 10 on option. The first will be delivered before the end of 2007 and they are likely to be used on services to Asia and the USA (ref: Airliner World, March 2005).

Lufthansa has also expressed interest in the Boeing 747-800 passenger and freighter models. Talks with Boeing on this aircraft are on-going.

Through its Lufthansa Berlin Stiftung, it operates three classic German aircraft as well:

See also

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:


Members of the Star Alliance Logo: Star Alliance
Air CanadaAir New ZealandANAAsiana AirlinesAustrian AirlinesbmiLOT Polish AirlinesLufthansa
SASSingapore AirlinesSpanairTAP PortugalThai AirwaysUnited AirlinesUS AirwaysVarig

Regional Members: Adria AirwaysBlue1Croatia Airlines

Future Members: South African AirwaysSwiss

Former members: Ansett AustraliaMexicana


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