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Germany
I
INTRODUCTION
Germany, Federal Republic of (German Bundesrepublik Deutschland),
major industrialized nation in central Europe, a federal union of 16
states (Länder). Germany has a long, complex history and rich culture,
but it did not become a unified nation until 1871. Before that time,
Germany had been a confederacy (1815-1867) and, before 1806, a
collection of separate and quite different principalities.
Germany is the seventh largest country in area in Europe, with a
total area of 356,970 sq km (137,827 sq mi). The country has a varied
terrain that ranges from low-lying coastal flats along the North and
Baltic seas, to a central area of rolling hills and river valleys, to
heavily forested mountains and snow-covered Alps in the south. Several
major rivers and canals traverse the country and have helped make it a
transportation center.
The country has a total of 82,398,326 people (2003 estimate).
Germany is overwhelmingly urban, and most people lead a prosperous,
comfortable lifestyle, with adequate leisure time and comprehensive
social welfare benefits. Berlin is the capital and largest city,
although Bonn, which was the provisional capital of West Germany, is
still home to some government offices. The principal language is German,
and two-thirds of the people are either Roman Catholic or Protestant.
Germans have made numerous noteworthy contributions to culture.
Among the many outstanding German authors, artists, architects,
musicians, and philosophers, the composers Johann Sebastian Bach and
Ludwig van Beethoven are probably the best known the world over. German
literary greats include Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Friedrich Nietzsche,
and Thomas Mann.
Germany has a large and modern industrial economy and is a
leading producer of products such as iron and steel, machinery and
machine tools, and automobiles. Germany is an economic powerhouse in the
European Union (EU), and a driving force behind greater economic
integration and cooperation throughout Europe.
Its central location in Europe has made Germany a crossroads
for many peoples, ideas, and armies throughout history. Present-day
Germany originated from the ad 843 division of the Carolingian empire,
which also included France and a middle section stretching from the
North Sea to northern Italy. For centuries, Germany was a collection of
states mostly held together as a loose feudal association. From the 16th
century on, the German states became increasingly involved in European
wars and religious struggles. In the early 19th century, French conquest
of the German states started a movement toward German national
unification, and in 1815, led by the state of Prussia, the German states
formed a confederacy that lasted until 1867.
Once unified under Otto von Bismarck in 1871, Germany
experienced rapid industrialization and economic growth. During the
early 20th century it embarked on a quest for European dominance,
leading it into World War I. Germany’s defeat in 1918 triggered
political and economic chaos. An ultranationalist reaction gave rise to
the National Socialist (Nazi) Party, which gained power in the 1930s and
was led by Adolf Hitler. In 1939 Nazi Germany plunged the world into a
new global conflict, World War II.
In 1945 the Allied Powers of Britain, the United States,
France, and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) defeated
Germany in World War II. The Allies agreed to divide the country into
four zones of occupation: the British, American, French, and Soviet
zones. When the wartime alliance between the Western powers and the
Soviet Union broke up in the late 1940s, the Soviet zone became the
Communist-led German Democratic Republic (GDR), or East Germany. The
three Western zones formed the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG), or
West Germany. Control of Germany s historic capital, Berlin, was also
divided between the two German states, despite its location deep within
East Germany. In 1961 East Germany built the Berlin Wall and elaborate
border fortifications to stop the exodus of millions of East Germans to
the more prosperous and democratic West Germany. In 1989 the collapse of
Communist rule in Eastern Europe was marked by the breaching of the
Berlin Wall and the beginning of German reunification, which was
governed under the West German Basic Law, or constitution. The two
Germanys were reunited on October 3, 1990, as the Federal Republic of
Germany. Despite its joy at unification, Germany faced a variety of
social and economic problems as it tried to absorb millions of new
citizens and to blend disparate cultures and institutions.
A
Natural Regions
Germany has three major natural regions: a lowland plain in the
north, an area of uplands in the center, and a mountainous area in the
south. The northern lowlands, called the North German Plain, lie along
and between the North Sea and the Baltic Sea and extend southward into
eastern Germany. The lowest point in Germany is sea level along the
coast, where there are areas of dunes and marshland. Off the coast are
several islands, including the Frisian Islands, Helgoland, and Rügen.
The flat area was originally formed by glacial action during the Ice Age
and includes an alluvial belt, southwest of Berlin, which is Germany’s
richest farming area. Farther west, this belt supported the development
of the coal and steel industries of the Ruhr Valley in cities such as
Essen and Dortmund. Historically, the north German lowlands have been
wide open to invasions, migrations, and trade with Scandinavia and
Eastern Europe. East of the Elbe River, they also sustained large-scale
agriculture and huge feudal estates once owned by the Prussian
aristocratic elite.
The central uplands feature mountain ranges of modest height,
separated by river valleys. Navigable rivers facilitated economic
development by providing inexpensive transportation before the age of
railroads and trucking. This region is located between the latitude of
the city of Nürnberg and the Main River in the south and the latitude
of Hannover in the north. Much of it is heavily forested and exploited
for its timber. The region is marked by an abundance of waterpower.
Intense cultivation and industrial development has occurred in cities
such as Dresden and Kassel, located in the river valleys.
The mountainous region, or Alpine zone, in the south includes the
Swabian and Franconian mountains, the foothills of the Alps, and two
large forests, the Black Forest in the southwest and the Bavarian and
Bohemian Forest in the east. Germany’s highest point is Zugspitze
(2,962 m/9,718 ft) in the Bavarian Alps. Major cities in this area
include Stuttgart and Munich. The region has traditionally relied on
small-scale agriculture and tourism, but many high-technology industries
began to develop there during the 1970s.
B
Rivers and Lakes
Rivers have played a major role in German development. The
Rhine River flows in a northwesterly direction from Switzerland through
much of western Germany and The Netherlands into the North Sea. It is a
major European waterway and a pillar of economic development. Its main
German tributaries include the Main, Mosel, Neckar, and Ruhr rivers. The
Oder River, along the border between Poland and Germany, runs northward
and empties into the Baltic; it provides another important path for
waterborne freight. The Elbe River originates in the Czech mountains and
traverses eastern and western Germany toward the northwest until it
empties into the North Sea at the large seaport of Hamburg. The Danube
River connects southern Germany with Austria and Eastern Europe. Since
the recent construction of the Rhine-Danube Canal, freight can be
transported by barge from the North Sea to the Black Sea. Smaller rivers
such as the Neisse and Weser also play a significant role as transport
routes. There are several large lakes, including the Lake of Constance
(Bodensee) in extreme southwest Germany and the glacial moraine lakes of
Bavaria, but none of them have rivaled the importance of rivers in
German economic development.
C
Coastline
Germany’s coastline along the North Sea is characterized by
vast stretches of tidal flats and several important seaports, including
Hamburg, Bremerhaven, and Emden. Schleswig-Holstein, Germany’s
northernmost state, is traversed by the vital Kiel Canal, which carries
freight between the Baltic and North seas, eliminating the need for a
shipping route around Denmark. Major seaports of the German Baltic coast
include Kiel and Rostock. The coastline also features recreation areas,
some on small islands off both coasts.
D
Plant and Animal Life
Once a country of deep forests, Germany today includes mostly
areas that have long been cleared. However, forest conservation since
the 18th century has preserved large areas of oak, ash, elm, beech,
birch, pine, fir, and larch. About one-third of the country is woodland.
Of the many animals that once roamed the forests, deer, red foxes,
hares, and weasels are still common, but these animals and wilder game
such as wild boars, wildcats, and badgers depend increasingly on
conservation efforts. Private hunting licenses are extremely expensive,
and even fishing in the streams and lakes where edible species abound is
not encouraged. Instead, there is a good deal of fish farming, including
trout and carp; deer are also commercially produced to satisfy the
demand for venison. Many species of songbirds migrate to Germany every
year, as do storks, geese, and other larger fowl that fly in over the
Mediterranean Sea from Africa. Herring, flounder, cod, and ocean perch
are found in coastal waters.
E
Natural Resources
The presence of coal and iron ore encouraged German industrial
development in the late 19th century. Most of the deposits were found in
close proximity to one another, allowing for the convenient use of coal
as fuel first to process the iron into steel and then to manufacture
products from the steel. The availability of inexpensive transport by
water, and later by land, facilitated the growth of manufacturing and
encouraged exports. The presence of certain minerals in great quantity,
such as potash and salt, permitted the development of a chemical
industry, including the production of fertilizers and pharmaceuticals.
The availability of wood, petroleum, natural gas, brown coal (also known
as lignite), and hydroelectric power further smoothed the path of German
industrial progress.
F
Climate
Germany has a mostly moderate climate, characterized by cool
winters and warm summers. River valleys such as that of the Rhine tend
to be humid and somewhat warmer in both winter and summer, whereas
mountain areas can be much colder. Precipitation on the average is much
heavier in the south, especially along the Alpine slopes, which force
incoming weather fronts to rise and shed their moisture in the form of
rain and snow.
G
Environmental Issues
Germany is located in the middle of other industrial nations
whose air and water pollution come into the country with the wind and
rain, and in the rivers. Also every summer many automobiles, including
those from other European countries, drive across Germany’s autobahn
on their way to vacations in southern Europe. Among Germany’s
homegrown environmental problems, the most important are probably those
connected with industrial overdevelopment and automobile traffic.
A densely settled country, Germany has limited land, air, and
water in which to bury and dissipate all the unhealthful and toxic
wastes produced by its ever more intensive industrial development.
Factory and automobile exhaust pollution is blamed for the widespread
death of the forests from acid rain. Agricultural development has
produced fertilizer and pesticide runoff into lakes and streams,
burdening the groundwater supply. Germany also received some nuclear
fallout at the time of the 1986 Chernobyl’ reactor meltdown in Ukraine
(Chernobyl’ Accident). Public resistance halted the development of
nuclear energy in Germany as people objected to the proposed sites of
nuclear plants.
With unification, West Germany inherited the enormous pollution
problems of East Germany, whose government had not dealt with serious
environmental damage. Among the worst problems were the open remnants
from strip mining and the legacy of the chemical industry, both located
in southern East Germany. The poisoning of soil and groundwater by
uncontrolled industrial and agricultural development required enormous
expenditures for cleanup. The burning of brown coal, the only kind of
coal abundant in East Germany, has led to health problems, including
respiratory ailments and lung and heart disease.
Germany has developed a number of measures to address
environmental problems of various sorts, ranging from controls on
industrial emissions to identification of additives in food to smog
control devices on vehicles. In the 1970s an environmental protest
movement developed, and the Green Partyâ€â€a political party that focuses
on environmental issuesâ€â€was formed. These two events led the major
political parties to devote more attention to the environment because
they felt they had to compete with the Green Party. The most remarkable
result of this increased environmental awareness was the development of
an “eco-industry,†a new manufacturing sector that makes
pollution-control devices and other environmentally useful equipment.
This industry has also produced new jobs, helping counter the fears of
both trade unions and existing industries that environmental controls
would cost jobs and handicap business. In addition, Germany has ratified
various international environmental agreements on air pollution,
biodiversity, climate change, endangered species, oceans, the ozone
layer, wetlands, and whaling.
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