Shop for Mannheim at ml-shopping.com

 
Web www.ml-shopping.com

 
Web www.ml-shopping.com

Mannheim

This article is about the German city. For other uses see Mannheim (disambiguation).
Mannheim
Coat of arms of Mannheim Location of Mannheim in Germany
 
Federal state Baden-Württemberg
Administrative region Karlsruhe
District urban district
Population 307,640 source (2005)
Area 144.96 km²
Population density 2,122/km²
Elevation 95 m
Coordinates 49°29′ N 08°28′ E
Postal code 68001-68309
Area code 0621
Licence plate code MA
Mayor Gerhard Widder (SPD)
Website mannheim.de

Mannheim is a city in Germany. With 307,640 inhabitants it is the second largest city in the state of Baden-Württemberg after the capital Stuttgart.

Mannheim is situated at the confluence of the Rhine and Neckar rivers, in the northwestern corner of Baden-Württemberg. The Rhine separates Mannheim from the adjunct Rhineland-Palatinate city of Ludwigshafen The Hessian border is north of the city. Mannheim is the largest city of the Rhine Neckar Area, a metropolitan area with 2.4 million inhabitants.

Mannheim is unique among German cities in that its downtown area is laid out in a grid pattern (called Quadrate - squares), much like many North American cities. The main route through the squares leads to an enormous 18th century castle that houses the University of Mannheim.

Mannheim is also home of the Nationaltheater Mannheim (National Theatre).

Wasserturm (water tower), Mannheim's landmark
Enlarge
Wasserturm (water tower), Mannheim's landmark

Mannheim's city symbol is the Wasserturm (water tower), located in the east of the downtown area.

Map of Mannheim, 1888, showing the grid layout centered on the castle (now the University)
Enlarge
Map of Mannheim, 1888, showing the grid layout centered on the castle (now the University)

History

Mannheim is first mentioned in a document from 766, the "Codex Laureshamensis" from the Lorsch Cloister. It is listed as "Mannenheim" (Home of Manno). It remained a village until Frederick IV, Elector Palatine initiated building the fortress Friedrichsburg and the adjacent grid-like city core.

The city was destroyed subsequently in the Thirty Years' War in 1622 by Tilly's troops, and in the Nine Years War for the Palatinate succession in 1689 by the French.

Mannheim University in the castle
Enlarge
Mannheim University in the castle

Rebuilt, in 1720, Mannheim replaced Heidelberg as the capital of the Palatinate. It was then that Karl III Philip, Elector Palatine started construction of the Mannheim Castle and the Jesuitenkirche. They were completed in 1760. In the 18th century Mannheim was home to the so-called Mannheim School of classical composers. It was reputed for having one of the best court orchestras in Europe.

Carl Benz invented and drove the world's first car in Mannheim in 1885. Earlier still in 1817, Karl Drais invented and rode the first two-wheeled contraption called Laufmaschine or velocipede - the very start of horseless personal transport. Banker Otto Hermann Kahn was also born there.

During the Second World War, Mannheim (as a key industrial center) was heavily damaged by U.S. and British bombing. The city was occupied by the U.S. Army on March 29, 1945. There has been a large American military presence in the Mannheim area ever since (see Industry below).

Industry

Traditionally, DaimlerChrysler has had a large presence in Mannheim. Today, trucks and buses are assembled there. The Swiss Roche Diagnostic group (formerly known as Boehringer Mannheim) has its division headquarters in Mannheim. Additionally, the city also hosts large factories/offices of ABB, Alstom, BASF, Bombardier, John Deere, Siemens, Südzucker and other companies.

Military installations

A number of United States military installations are present in Mannheim, including the headquarters of the 5th Signal Command, the Army's telecommunications command in the European theater. The following installations make up the U.S. Army Garrison Mannheim:

  • Funari Barracks (Mannheim-Käfertal) (5th Signal Command headquarters)
  • Sullivan Barracks (Mannheim-Käfertal) (7th Signal Brigade headquarters)
  • Benjamin Franklin Village (Mannheim-Käfertal) Also home to the Mannheim American High School, The Bison.
  • Taylor Barracks (Mannheim-Vogelstang) (2nd Signal Brigade headquarters)
  • Spinelli Barracks (Mannheim-Feudenheim)
  • Turley Barracks
  • Coleman Barracks (Mannheim-Schonau) (AFN, U.S. Army Confinement Facility Europe)
  • Friedrichsfeld Quartermaster Depot

The long-term future of the Mannheim military community is in doubt, since it was not included in U.S. Army Europe's 2004 announcement of those military communities that would remain after a long-term restructuring and downsizing of U.S. forces in Germany. However, specific plans concerning the future of the American military community in Mannheim have yet to be announced.

Transportation

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 Nürnberg in the east.

Mannheim's main train station is southern Germany's most important railroad junction and part of the ICE high-speed train system with connections to Frankfurt am Main / Berlin, Karlsruhe / Basel and Stuttgart / Munich. The city is also home to the second largest river port in Germany.

Although Frankfurt International Airport is only 65 km north, since 2004 there are daily domestic passenger flights from Mannheim City Airport (IATA code MHG) to Berlin, Hamburg and Saarbrücken.

Notable Buildings

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:


Flag of Germany
Important cities and touristic sites in Germany:
Area of Heidelberg / Rhine-Neckar
Flag of Germany
Major cities: Heidelberg | Kaiserslautern | Ludwigshafen | Mannheim | Neustadt | Speyer | Worms
Other touristic sites: Bad Dürkheim | Bad Rappenau | Buchen | Eberbach | Edenkoben | Ladenburg | Lorsch | Mosbach | Neckargemünd | Sinsheim | Weinheim | Walldürn
Landscapes: Kurpfalz | Neckar river | Odenwald | Pfalz (Palatinate) | Rhine river
Neighboring areas: Frankfurt | Heidelberg | Karlsruhe | Stuttgart | Trier | Würzburg, see also: Alsace (F) | Lorraine (F) | Wissembourg (F)


Flag of Baden-Württemberg
Cities and rural districts in the
Federal State of Baden-Württemberg in Germany
Flag of Germany

Cities

Baden-Baden | Freiburg | Heidelberg | Heilbronn | Karlsruhe | Mannheim | Pforzheim | Stuttgart | Ulm

Rural
districts

Alb-Donau | Biberach | Bodenseekreis | Böblingen | Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald | Calw | Konstanz (Constance)
Emmendingen | Enzkreis | Esslingen | Freudenstadt | Göppingen | Heidenheim | Heilbronn | Hohenlohekreis
Karlsruhe | Lörrach | Ludwigsburg | Main-Tauber-Kreis | Neckar-Odenwald-Kreis | Ortenaukreis | Ostalbkreis
Rastatt | Ravensburg | Rems-Murr-Kreis | Reutlingen | Rhein-Neckar-Kreis | Rottweil | Schwarzwald-Baar-Kreis
Schwäbisch Hall | Sigmaringen | Tuttlingen | Tübingen | Waldshut | Zollernalbkreis

The content of this page is retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mannheim under GFDL