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Hesse
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Hesse[a] or Hessen[b] (German: Hessen [ˈhɛsn̩] ⓘ), officially the State of Hesse (German: Land Hessen), is a state in Germany. Its capital city is Wiesbaden, and the largest urban area is Frankfurt, which is also the country's principal financial centre. Two other major historic cities are Darmstadt and Kassel. With an area of 21,114.73 square kilometers and a population of over six million, it ranks seventh and fifth, respectively, among the sixteen German states. Frankfurt Rhine-Main, Germany's second-largest metropolitan area (after Rhine-Ruhr), is mainly located in Hesse.
Key Information
As a cultural region, Hesse also includes the area known as Rhenish Hesse (Rheinhessen) in the neighboring state of Rhineland-Palatinate.[7]
Etymology
[edit]The German name Hessen, like the names of other German regions (Schwaben "Swabia", Franken "Franconia", Bayern "Bavaria", Sachsen "Saxony"), derives from the dative plural form of the name of the inhabitants or eponymous tribe, the Hessians (Hessen, singular Hesse). The geographical name represents a short equivalent of the older compound name Hessenland ("land of the Hessians"). The Old High German form of the name is recorded as Hessun (dative plural of Hessi); in Middle Latin it appears as Hassonia, Hassia, Hessia. The name of the Hessians ultimately continues the tribal name of the Chatti.[8] The ancient name Chatti by the 7th century is recorded as Chassi, and from the 8th century as Hassi or Hessi.[9]
An inhabitant of Hesse is called a "Hessian" (German: Hesse (masculine), plural Hessen, or Hessin (feminine), plural Hessinnen). The American English term "Hessian" for 18th-century British auxiliary troops originates with Landgrave Frederick II of Hesse-Kassel hiring out regular army units to the government of Great Britain to fight in the American Revolutionary War.
The English form Hesse was in common use by the 18th century, first in the hyphenated names of the states of Hesse-Cassel and Hesse-Darmstadt, but the latinate form Hessia remained in common English usage well into the 19th century.[10][11][12]
The European Commission uses the German form Hessen, even in English-language contexts.[13]
The synthetic element hassium, number 108 on the periodic table, was named after the state of Hesse in 1997, following a proposal of 1992.[14]
History
[edit]The territory of Hesse was delineated only in 1945, as Greater Hesse, under American occupation. It corresponds loosely to the medieval Landgraviate of Hesse. In the 19th century, prior to the unification of Germany, the territory of what is now Hesse comprised the territories of Grand Duchy of Hesse (also known as Hesse-Darmstadt), the Duchy of Nassau, the free city of Frankfurt, the Electorate of Hesse (also known as Hesse-Kassel), the Principality of Waldeck and the Landgraviate of Hesse-Homburg.[15]
Early history
[edit]The Central Hessian region was inhabited in the Upper Paleolithic. Finds of tools in southern Hesse in Rüsselsheim suggest the presence of Pleistocene hunters about 13,000 years ago. A fossil hominid skull that was found in northern Hesse, just outside the village of Rhünda, has been dated at 12,000 years ago. The Züschen tomb (German: Steinkammergrab von Züschen, sometimes also Lohne-Züschen) is a prehistoric burial monument, located between Lohne and Züschen, near Fritzlar, Hesse, Germany. Classified as a gallery grave or a Hessian-Westphalian stone cist (hessisch-westfälische Steinkiste), it is one of the most important megalithic monuments in Central Europe. Dating to c. 3000 BC, it belongs to the Late Neolithic Wartberg culture.[citation needed]
An early Celtic presence in what is now Hesse is indicated by a mid-5th-century BC La Tène-style burial uncovered at Glauberg. The region was later settled by the Germanic Chatti tribe around the 1st century BC, and the name Hesse is a continuation of that tribal name.[citation needed]
The ancient Romans had a military camp in Dorlar, and in Waldgirmes directly on the eastern outskirts of Wetzlar was a civil settlement under construction. Presumably, the provincial government for the occupied territories of the right bank of Germania was planned at this location. The governor of Germania, at least temporarily, likely had resided here. The settlement appears to have been abandoned by the Romans after the devastating Battle of the Teutoburg Forest failed in the year AD 9. The Chatti were also involved in the Revolt of the Batavi in AD 69.[citation needed]
Hessia, from the early 7th century on, served as a buffer between areas dominated by the Saxons (to the north) and the Franks, who brought the area to the south under their control in the early sixth century and occupied Thuringia (to the east) in 531.[16] Hessia occupies the northwestern part of the modern German state of Hesse; its borders were not clearly delineated. Its geographic center is Fritzlar; it extends in the southeast to Hersfeld on the river Fulda, in the north to past Kassel and up to the rivers Diemel and Weser. To the west, it occupies the valleys of the rivers Eder and Lahn (the latter until it turns south). It measured roughly 90 kilometers north–south, and 80 north-west.[17]
The area around Fritzlar shows evidence of significant pagan belief from the 1st century on. Geismar was a particular focus of such activity; it was continuously occupied from the Roman period on, with a settlement from the Roman period, which itself had a predecessor from the 5th century BC. Excavations have produced a horse burial and bronze artifacts. A possible religious cult may have centered on a natural spring in Geismar, called Heilgenbron; the name "Geismar" (possibly "energetic pool") itself may be derived from that spring. The village of Maden, Gudensberg, now a part of Gudensberg near Fritzlar and less than ten miles from Geismar, was likely an ancient religious center; the basaltic outcrop of Gudensberg is named after Wodan, and a two-meter tall quartzite megalith called the Wotanstein is at the center of the village.[18]
By the mid-7th century, the Franks had established themselves as overlords, which is suggested by archeological evidence of burials, and they built fortifications in various places, including Christenberg.[19] By 690, they took direct control over Hessia, apparently to counteract expansion by the Saxons, who built fortifications in Gaulskopf and Eresburg across the river Diemel, the northern boundary of Hessia. The Büraburg (which already had a Frankish settlement in the sixth century[20]) was one of the places the Franks fortified to resist the Saxon pressure, and according to John-Henry Clay, the Büraburg was "probably the largest man-made construction seen in Hessia for at least seven hundred years". Walls and trenches totaling one kilometer in length were made, and they enclosed "8 hectares of a spur that offered a commanding view over Fritzlar and the densely-populated heart of Hessia".[21]
Following Saxon incursions into Chattish territory in the 7th century, two gaue had been established; a Frankish one, comprising an area around Fritzlar and Kassel, and a Saxonian one. In the 9th century, the Saxon Hessengau also came under the rule of the Franconians.[22]
Holy Roman Empire
[edit]
From 962 the land which would become Hesse was part of the Holy Roman Empire. In the 10th and 11th centuries it was mostly encompassed by the Western or Rhenish part of the stem duchy of Franconia.[citation needed]
In the 12th century, Hessengau passed to the Landgraviate of Thuringia. As a result of the War of the Thuringian Succession (1247–1264) the former Thuringian lands were partitioned between the Wettin Margraviate of Meissen, which gained Thuringia proper, and the new Landgraviate of Hesse, which remained with the Ludovingians. From that point on the Ludovingian coat of arms came to represent both Thuringia and Hesse.[citation needed]
It rose to prominence under Landgrave Philip the Magnanimous, who was one of the leaders of German Protestantism. After Philip's death in 1567, the territory was divided among his four sons from his first marriage (Philip was a bigamist) into four lines: Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel), Hesse-Darmstadt, Hesse-Rheinfels, and the also previously existing Hesse-Marburg. As the latter two lines died out quite quickly (1583 and 1605, respectively), Hesse-Kassel and Hesse-Darmstadt were the two core states within the Hessian lands. Several collateral lines split off during the centuries, such as in 1622, when Hesse-Homburg split off from Hesse-Darmstadt, and in 1760 when Hesse-Hanau split off from Hesse-Kassel. In the late 16th century, Kassel adopted Calvinism, while Darmstadt remained Lutheran and consequently the two lines often found themselves on opposing sides of conflicts, most notably in the disputes over Hesse-Marburg and in the Thirty Years' War, when Darmstadt fought on the side of the Emperor, while Kassel sided with Sweden and France.[citation needed]

The Landgrave Frederick II (1720–1785) ruled Hesse-Kassel as a benevolent despot, from 1760 to 1785. He combined Enlightenment ideas with Christian values, cameralist plans for central control of the economy, and a militaristic approach toward diplomacy.[23] He funded the depleted treasury of the poor government by loaning 19,000 soldiers in complete military formations to Great Britain to fight in North America during the American Revolutionary War, 1776–1783. These soldiers, commonly known as Hessians, fought under the British flag. The British used the Hessians in several conflicts, including in the Irish Rebellion of 1798. For further revenue, the soldiers were loaned to other places as well. Most were conscripted, with their pay going to the Landgrave.[citation needed]
Modern history
[edit]
French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars
[edit]In 1789 the French Revolution began and in 1794, during the War of the First Coalition, the French Republic occupied the Left Bank of the Rhine, including part of Lower Katzenelnbogen (Niedergrafschaft Katzenelnbogen, Hesse-Kassel's part of the former County of Katzenelnbogen which was held by the appanage Hesse-Rotenburg). Emperor Francis II formally recognised the annexation of the Left Bank in the 1801 Treaty of Lunéville. This led in 1803 to the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss, a substantial reorganisation (mediatisation) of the states and territories of the Empire. Several exclaves of Mainz were mediatised to Hesse-Kassel and Hesse-Darmstadt, and Hesse-Darmstadt also gained the Duchy of Westphalia from Cologne, the parts of Worms on the right-bank of the Rhine, and the former Free City of Friedberg. Nassau-Weilburg gained the right-bank territories of Trier among other territories. Orange-Nassau gained the Prince-Bishopric of Fulda (as the Principality of Nassau-Orange-Fulda). The Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel was also elevated to the status of Prince-Elector (Kurfürst), with his state thereby becoming the Electorate of Hesse or Electoral Hesse (German: Kurhessen, Kur being the German-language term for the Empire's College of Electors).[citation needed]
In July 1806 Hesse-Darmstadt, Nassau-Weilburg, Nassau-Usingen, and the newly merged Principality of Isenburg became founding members of Napoleon's Confederation of the Rhine. Hesse-Darmstadt expanded further in the resulting mediatisation, absorbing numerous small states (including Hesse-Homburg and much of the territory of the Houses of Solms, Erbach and Sayn-Wittgenstein). It was also elevated by Napoleon to the status of Grand Duchy, becoming the Grand Duchy of Hesse. Orange-Nassau, which refused to join the Confederation, lost Siegen, Dillenburg, Hadamar and Beilstein to Berg and Fulda to the Prince-Primate of the Confederation (and former Elector of Mainz) Karl Theodor von Dalberg; the remainder of its territory was merged with that of Nassau-Usingen and Nassau-Weilburg in August 1806 to form the Duchy of Nassau. Waldeck also joined the Confederation in 1807.[citation needed]
The Holy Roman Empire was dissolved in August 1806, rendering Hesse-Kassel's electoral privilege meaningless. Hesse-Kassel was occupied by the French in October 1806 and the remainder of Lower Katzenelnbogen was annexed to the French Empire as Pays réservé de Catzenellenbogen. The rest of its territory was annexed to the Kingdom of Westphalia in 1807; Hesse-Hanau (a secundogeniture of Hesse-Kassel) was annexed to the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt in 1810 along with the other territories held by the Prince-primate: Frankfurt, Fulda, Aschaffenburg and Wetzlar.[citation needed]
As a result of the German campaign of 1813 the Kingdom of Westphalia and the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt were dissolved and Hesse-Kassel and Hesse-Hanau were restored; Orange-Nassau was also restored in its territories previously lost to Berg.[citation needed]
As a result of the 1815 Congress of Vienna Hesse-Kassel gained Fulda (roughly the western third of the former Prince-Bishopric, the rest of which went to Bavaria and Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach) from Frankfurt and part of Isenburg, while several of its small northern exclaves were absorbed into Hanover, some small eastern areas were ceded to Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach and Lower Katzenelnbogen was ceded to Nassau. Hesse-Darmstadt lost the Duchy of Westphalia and the Sayn-Wittgensteiner lands to the Prussian Province of Westphalia but gained territory on the left bank of the Rhine centred on Mainz, which became known as Rhenish Hesse (Rheinhessen), and the remainder of Isenburg. Orange-Nassau, whose ruler was now also King William I of the Netherlands and Grand Duke of Luxembourg, was ceded to Prussia but most of its territory aside from Siegen was then ceded on to Nassau. Hesse-Homburg and the Free City of Frankfurt were also restored.[citation needed]
While the other former Electors had gained other titles, becoming either Kings or Grand Dukes, the Elector of Hesse-Kassel alone retained the anachronistic title of Prince-Elector; a request to be recognised as "King of the Chatti" (König der Katten) was rejected by the Congress.[citation needed]
Following mediation, the Congress of Vienna had significantly fewer states remained in the region that is now Hesse: the Hessian states, Nassau, Waldeck and Frankfurt. The Kingdoms of Prussia and Bavaria also held some territory in the region. The Congress established the German Confederation, of which they all became members. Hesse-Hanau was (re-)absorbed into Hesse-Kassel in 1821.[citation needed]
German Empire
[edit]In the 1866 Austro-Prussian War the states of the region allied with Austria were defeated during the Campaign of the Main. Following Prussia's victory and dissolution of the German Confederation, Prussia annexed Electoral Hesse, Frankfurt, Hesse-Homburg, Nassau and small parts of Bavaria and the Grand Duchy of Hesse, which were then combined into the Province of Hesse-Nassau. The name Kurhessen survived, denoting the region around Kassel. The Grand Duchy of Hesse retained its autonomy in defeat because a greater part of the country was situated south of the river Main and it was feared that Prussian expansion beyond the Main might provoke France. However, Upper Hesse (German: Oberhessen: the parts of Hesse-Darmstadt north of the Main around the town of Gießen) was incorporated into the North German Confederation (Norddeutscher Bund), a tight federation of German states established by Prussia in 1867, while also remaining part of the Grand Duchy. In 1871, after France's defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, the whole of the Grand Duchy joined the German Empire.[citation needed]
Around the turn of the 20th century, Darmstadt was one of the centres of the Jugendstil. Until 1907, the Grand Duchy of Hesse used the Hessian red and white lion barry as its coat-of-arms.[citation needed]
Weimar and Nazi periods
[edit]The revolution of 1918 following the German defeat in WWI transformed Hesse-Darmstadt from a monarchy to a republic, which officially renamed itself the People's State of Hesse (Volksstaat Hessen). The state parliament, or Landtag consisted of 70 deputies elected on the basis of proportional representation. There were six Landtag elections between 1919 and 1932. Following the Nazi seizure of power in Berlin, the Landtag was formally abolished as a result of the "Law on the Reconstruction of the Reich" of 30 January 1934, which replaced the German federal system with a unitary state.[citation needed]
The parts of Hesse-Darmstadt on the left bank of the Rhine (Rhenish Hesse), as well as those right-bank areas of Hesse-Darmstadt and Hesse-Nassau within 30 km (19 mi) of Koblenz or Mainz were occupied by French troops until 1930 under the terms of the Versailles peace treaty that officially ended World War I in 1919. The Kingdom of Prussia became the Free State of Prussia, of which Hesse-Nassau remained a province.[citation needed]
In 1929 the Free State of Waldeck was dissolved and incorporated into Hesse-Nassau. In 1932 Wetzlar (Landkreis Wetzlar), formerly an exclave of the Prussian Rhine Province situated between Hesse-Nassau and the Grand Duchy's Upper Hesse, was transferred to Hesse-Nassau. The former Hessian exclave of Rinteln (Kreis Rinteln, the Hessian part of the former County of Schaumburg) was also detached and transferred to the Province of Hanover.[citation needed]
On 1 July 1944 the Prussian Province of Hesse-Nassau was formally divided into the provinces of Kurhessen and Nassau. At the same time the former Hessian Schmalkalden exclaves (Landkreis Herrschaft Schmalkalden), together with the Regierungsbezirk Erfurt of the Province of Saxony, were transferred to Thuringia. The territories of the new provinces did not directly correspond with their pre-1866 namesakes but rather with the associated NSDAP Gaue: Gau Electoral Hesse and Gau Hesse-Nassau (excluding the areas which were part of the People's State of Hesse).[citation needed]
Post-World War II
[edit]After World War II, the Hessian territory west of the Rhine was again occupied by France, while the rest of the region was part of the US occupation zone. On 17 September 1945 the Wanfried agreement adjusted the border between American-occupied Kurhessen and Soviet-occupied Thuringia. The United States proclaimed the state of Greater Hesse (Groß-Hessen) on 19 September 1945, out of the People's State of Hesse and most of what had been the Prussian Provinces of Kurhessen and Nassau. The French incorporated their parts of Hesse (Rhenish Hesse) and Nassau (as Regierungsbezirk Montabaur) into the newly founded state of Rhineland-Palatinate (Rheinland-Pfalz) on 30 August 1946.[citation needed]
On 4 December 1946, Greater Hesse was officially renamed Hessen.[24] Hesse in the 1940s received more than a million displaced ethnic Germans.
Due to its proximity to the Inner German border, Hesse became an important location of NATO installations in the 1950s, especially military bases of the US V Corps and United States Army Europe.
The first elected minister president of Hesse was Christian Stock, followed by Georg-August Zinn (both Social Democrats). The German Social Democrats gained an absolute majority in 1962 and pursued progressive policies with the so-called Großer Hessenplan. The CDU gained a relative majority in the 1974 elections, but the Social Democrats continued to govern in a coalition with the FDP. Hesse was first governed by the CDU under Walter Wallmann during 1987–1991, replaced by a SPD-Greens coalition under Hans Eichel during 1991–1999. From 1999, Hesse was governed by the CDU under Roland Koch (retired 2010) and Volker Bouffier (incumbent as of 2020). Frankfurt during the 1960s to 1990s developed into one of the major cities of West Germany. As of 2016, 12% of the total population of Hesse lived in the city of Frankfurt.[citation needed]
Geography
[edit]
The only state to straddle west and central portions of Germany where the eight ordinal directions (compass points) and the centre is considered, Hesse borders six other states. These are, from north, clockwise: Lower Saxony, Thuringia, Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg, Rhineland-Palatinate, and North Rhine-Westphalia.
The most populous towns and cities of Hesse are in the southwest, the Frankfurt Rhein-Main Region namely Frankfurt am Main, Wiesbaden, Darmstadt, Offenbach, Hanau, Giessen, Wetzlar, and Rüsselsheim am Main. Outside, but very near the south-west corner of Hesse are four populous, highly technologised, places: Worms, Ludwigshafen, Mannheim, and Heidelberg.
Other large Hessian towns are Fulda in the east, Kassel and Marburg an der Lahn in the north and Limburg an der Lahn in the west. All of the "on the river" suffixes are locally and, informally far beyond, omitted of these cities. The plain between the rivers Main, Rhine, and lower Neckar, and the Odenwald ridge of low mountains or very high hills is called the Ried which continues to north, across the Main, as the Wetterau. Both plains which are quite densely populated also have a substantial built environment such as the country's largest airport, contrasting with the more forested, hillier middle and northern thirds of Hesse.


The longest rivers in Hesse are the Eder and moreover its distributary the Fulda draining most of the north, the Lahn in the centre-west and, as to those navigable by large vessels, the Main and very broad Rhine in the south. The countryside is hilly and the topographical map, inset, names 14 short, low to medium-height mountain ranges including the Rhön, the Westerwald, the Taunus, the Vogelsberg, the Knüll and the Spessart. The notable range forming the southern taper of Hesse (shared with a narrowing of the Ried, the Rhine's eastern plain) and briefly spanning the middle Neckar valley which begins directly east of Heidelberg (thus also in Baden-Württemberg) is the Odenwald. Forming a mid-eastern tiny projection into mostly Thuringia is the uppermost part of the Ulster, commanding the west valley side of which is the Hessian highest point, Wasserkuppe at 950m above sea level – in the Rhön.
The Rhine forms the long southwest border of Hesse. Two notables oxbow lakes, the Stockstadt-Erfelder Altrhein and Lampertheimer Altrhein are in the south-west fringe.
Hesse, 42% forest, is by that measure the greenest state in Germany.[25]
Administration
[edit]Hesse is a unitary state governed directly by the Hessian government in the capital city Wiesbaden, partially through regional vicarious authorities called Regierungspräsidien. Municipal parliaments are, however, elected independently from the state government by the Hessian people. Local municipalities enjoy a considerable degree of home rule.
Districts
[edit]
The state is divided into three administrative provinces (Regierungsbezirke): Kassel in the north and east, Gießen in the centre, and Darmstadt in the south, the latter being the most populous region with the Frankfurt Rhine-Main agglomeration in its central area. The administrative regions have no legislature of their own, but are executive agencies of the state government.





Hesse is divided into 21 districts (Kreise) and five independent cities, each with their own local governments. They are, shown with abbreviations as used on vehicle number plates:
- Bergstraße (Heppenheim) (HP)
- Darmstadt-Dieburg (Darmstadt) (DA, DI)
- Groß-Gerau (Groß-Gerau) (GG)
- Hochtaunuskreis (Bad Homburg) (HG, USI)
- Main-Kinzig-Kreis (Gelnhausen) (MKK, GN, HU, SLÜ)
- Main-Taunus-Kreis (Hofheim am Taunus) (MTK)
- Odenwaldkreis (Erbach) (ERB)
- Offenbach (Dietzenbach) (OF)
- Rheingau-Taunus-Kreis (Bad Schwalbach) (RÜD, SWA)
- Wetteraukreis (Friedberg) (FB, BÜD)
- Gießen (Gießen) (GI)
- Lahn-Dill-Kreis (Wetzlar) (LDK, DIL, WZ)
- Limburg-Weilburg (Limburg) (LM, WEL)
- Marburg-Biedenkopf (Marburg) (MR, BID)
- Vogelsbergkreis (Lauterbach) (VB)
- Fulda (Fulda) (FD)
- Hersfeld-Rotenburg (Bad Hersfeld) (HEF, ROF)
- Kassel (Kassel) (KS, HOG, WOH)
- Schwalm-Eder-Kreis (Homberg (Efze)) (HR, ZIG, FZ)
- Werra-Meißner-Kreis (Eschwege) (ESW, WIZ)
- Waldeck-Frankenberg (Korbach) (KB, FKB, WA)
Independent cities:
- Darmstadt (DA)
- Frankfurt am Main (F)
- Kassel (KS)
- Offenbach am Main (OF)
- Wiesbaden (WI)
Rhenish Hesse
[edit]The term "Rhenish Hesse" (German: Rheinhessen) refers to the part of the former Grand Duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt located west of the Rhine. It has not been part of the State of Hesse since 1946 due to divisions in the aftermath of World War II. This province is now part of the State of Rhineland-Palatinate. It is a hilly countryside largely devoted to vineyards; therefore, it is also called the "land of the thousand hills". Its larger towns include Mainz, Worms, Bingen, Alzey, Nieder-Olm, and Ingelheim. Many inhabitants commute to work in Mainz, Wiesbaden, or Frankfurt.[citation needed]
State symbols and politics
[edit]Hesse has been a parliamentary republic since 1918, except during Nazi rule (1933–1945). The German federal system has elements of exclusive federal competences, shared competences, and exclusive competences of the states. Hesse is famous for having a rather brisk style in its politics with the ruling parties being either the center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) or the center-left Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). Due to the Hessian electoral laws, the biggest party normally needs a smaller coalition partner.[citation needed]
Head of state
[edit]As Hesse is a partly sovereign federated state, its constitution combines the offices of the head of state and head of government in one office called the Minister-President (German: Ministerpräsident) which is comparable to the office of a prime minister.[citation needed]
2023 election
[edit]After the 2023 election, the coalition government in Hesse changed from a Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Alliance 90/The Greens coalition to an agreement between the CDU and Social Democratic Party.[26]
| Party | Seats | +/- | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Christian Democratic Union | 52 | ||
| Alternative for Germany | 28 | ||
| Social Democratic Party | 23 | ||
| Alliance 90/The Greens | 22 | ||
| Total | 133 | ||
2018 election
[edit]
In the 2018 state elections the two leading parties, CDU and SPD, lost 11.3% (7 seats) and 10.9% (8 seats) of the vote respectively. The Green party, a member of Hesse's previous governing coalition with CDU, gained 8.7% (16 seats). The largest gains during the election were made by Alternative for Germany (AfD) at 13.1%. As AfD had not passed the 5% threshold in the 2013 state election, this marked its first entry into the Hessian parliament (Hessischer Landtag). The two other parties also made gains. The major losses of the two leading parties (whose coalition made up the federal cabinet during the election) closely mirrors the results of the 2018 state elections in Bavaria. In the 2018-2023 parliament, the conservative CDU held 40 seats, the centre-left SPD and the leftist Green party each held 29 seats, the right-wing AfD held 19 seats, the liberal FDP party held 11 seats and the socialist party The Left held 9 seats.[citation needed]
Foreign affairs
[edit]As a member state of the German federation, Hesse does not have a diplomatic service of its own. However, Hesse operates representation offices in such foreign countries as the United States, China, Hungary, Cuba, Russia, Poland, and Iran. These offices are mostly used to represent Hessian interests in cultural and economic affairs. Hesse has also permanent representation offices in Berlin at the federal government of Germany and in Brussels at the institutions of the European Union.[28]
Flag and anthem
[edit]The flag colors of Hesse are red and white, which are printed on a Hessian sack. The civil flag of Hesse resembles that of Monaco's and, particularly, Indonesia's. The Hessian coat of arms shows a lion rampant striped with red and white (silver), on a blue field. The official anthem of Hesse is called "Hessenlied" ("Song of Hesse") and was written by Albrecht Brede (music) and Carl Preser (lyrics).[29]
Demographics
[edit]| Year | Pop. | ±% p.a. |
|---|---|---|
| 1950 | 4,343,720 | — |
| 1955 | 4,577,198 | +1.05% |
| 1960 | 4,783,352 | +0.88% |
| 1965 | 5,170,449 | +1.57% |
| 1970 | 5,424,529 | +0.96% |
| 1975 | 5,549,823 | +0.46% |
| 1980 | 5,601,031 | +0.18% |
| 1985 | 5,529,413 | −0.26% |
| 1990 | 5,763,310 | +0.83% |
| 1995 | 6,009,913 | +0.84% |
| 2001 | 6,077,826 | +0.19% |
| 2011 | 5,971,816 | −0.18% |
| 2022 | 6,207,278 | +0.35% |
| source:[30][31] | ||
| Nationality | Population (31 December 2022) | Population (31 December 2023) |
|---|---|---|
| 160,250 | 166,885 | |
| 88,075 | 95,915 | |
| 82,025 | 83,510 | |
| 83,760 | 79,530 | |
| 76,155 | 73,990 | |
| 60,365 | 62,655 | |
| 49,650 | 62,260 | |
| 58,640 | 56,220 | |
| 53,300 | 55,690 | |
| 40,655 | 36,285 | |
| 32,865 | 33,835 | |
| 29,340 | 29,465 | |
| 24,415 | 27,910 | |
| 25,645 | 26,665 | |
| 20,470 | 22,115 | |
| 21,830 | 21,255 | |
| 18,725 | 19,925 | |
| 19,695 | 18,685 |
Hesse has a population of over 6 million,[33] nearly 4 million of which is concentrated in the Rhein-Main region (German: Rhein-Main Gebiet) in the south of the state, an area that includes the most populous city, Frankfurt am Main, the capital Wiesbaden, and Darmstadt and Offenbach.[30] The population of Hesse is predicted to shrink by 4.3% by 2030, with the biggest falls in the north of the state, especially in the area around the city of Kassel. Frankfurt is the fastest growing city with a predicted rise in population of 4.8% by 2030.[34] Frankfurt's growth is driven by its importance as a financial centre and it receives immigrants from all over the world: in 2015 over half of the city's population had a migration background.[35]
Vital statistics
[edit]Source:[36]
- Births January–March 2017 =
14,537 - Births January–March 2018 =
14,202 - Deaths January–March 2017 =
19,289 - Deaths January–March 2018 =
18,831 - Natural growth January–March 2017 =
−4,752 - Natural growth January–March 2018 =
−4,629
Language
[edit]Three different languages or dialect groups are spoken in Hesse: The Far North is part of the Low Saxon language area, divided into a tiny Eastphalian and a larger Westphalian dialect area. Most of Hesse belongs to the West Middle German dialect zone. There is some disagreement as to whether all Hessian dialects south of the Benrath line may be subsumed under one dialect group: Rhine Franconian, or whether most dialects should be regarded as a dialect group of its own: Hessian, whereas only South Hessian is part of Rhine Franconian. Hessian proper can be split into Lower Hessian in the north, East Hessian in the East around Fulda and Central Hessian, which covers the largest area of all dialects in Hesse. In the extreme Northeast, the Thuringian dialect zone extends into Hesse, whereas in the Southeast, the state border to Bavaria is not fully identical to the dialect border between East Franconian and East Hessian.
Since approximately World War II, a spoken variety of Standard German with dialect substrate has been superseding the traditional dialects mentioned so far. This development knows a north-to-south movement, the north being early to supplant the traditional language, whereas in the south, there is still a considerable part of the population that communicates in South Hessian. In most of the areas, however, the traditional language is close to extinction, whereas until the first half of the 20th century, almost the entire population spoke dialect in almost all situations. The Upper Class started to speak Standard German beginning in the late 19th century, so for decades, the traditional language served as a sociolect.[citation needed]
The prominent written language in Hesse has been Standard German since the 16th century. Before, the Low Saxon part used Middle Low German, the rest of the Land Early Modern German as prominent written languages. These had supplanted Latin in the High Middle Ages.[citation needed]
Religion
[edit]
In 2016 Christianity was the most widespread religion in the state (63%).[37] In 2011, 40% of Hessians belonged to the Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau or Evangelical Church of Hesse Electorate-Waldeck (members of the Protestant Church in Germany), 25% adhered to the Roman Catholic Church, while other Christians constituted some 3%; the next most common religion of the Hessian population was Islam, adhered to by 7%.[38]
In a 2011 study of the region, German sociologist of religion and theologian Michael N. Ebertz and German television presenter and author Meinhard Schmidt-Degenhard concluded that "Six religious orientation types can be distinguished: 'Christians'—'non-Christian theists'—'Cosmotheists'—'Deists, Pandeists and Polytheists'—'Atheists'—'Others'“.[39]
Education and research
[edit]Higher education
[edit]The Hessian government has overall responsibility for the education within the state. Hesse has the following universities:
- Goethe University Frankfurt (43,972 students; Budget: €666,4 Mio.)
- Technical University of Darmstadt (25,355 students; Budget: €482,8 Mio.)
- Justus Liebig University Giessen (28,480 students; Budget: €425,4 Mio.)
- Philipps University of Marburg (24,394 students; Budget: €374,3 Mio.)
- University of Kassel (25,103 students; Budget: €291,5 Mio.)[40]
None of Hesse's universities are included in German Excellence Universities.
-
Goethe University Frankfurt, Campus Westend
-
Technical University of Darmstadt, Main Entrance
-
Justus Liebig University Giessen
-
Philipps University of Marburg, Biomedical Research Center
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University of Kassel, Entrance Holländischer Platz
There are many international schools in Hesse, primarily centred in and around Frankfurt.[41]
Hesse is the only state in Germany where students have to study all three stanzas of the "Das Deutschlandlied".[42]
Research
[edit]Physics and astronomy
[edit]The GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Darmstadt-Wixhausen, with 1,520 employees, is a major research institute in Hesse. The Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research is under construction and is expected to be completed in 2025.
Two major European space organizations, the European Space Operations Center and the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites, are based in Darmstadt.
Health and medicine
[edit]- Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research, Bad Nauheim
- Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt-am-Main
- Max Planck Institute of Biophysics, Frankfurt-am-Main
- Max Planck Research Center for Neurogenetics, Frankfurt-am-Main
- Fraunhofer Institute for Translational Medicine and Pharmacology, Frankfurt-am-Main
- Paul Ehrlich Institute (vaccines), Langen
- Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology, Marburg
- Institute of Virology (Marburg)(research of Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus; Parasitology) with BSL4-Labor, Marburg
- Center for undiagnosed and rare diseases, Marburg
- Marburg Heavy Ion Beam Therapy Center, Marburg
- Sigmund Freud Institute (psychoanalysis), Frankfurt-am-Main
Informatics and software
[edit]- German Research Centre for Artificial Intelligence, Darmstadt
- Hessian Center for Artificial Intelligence (hessian.AI), HQ in Darmstadt, more locations in Hesse
- Athene (research center), Darmstadt
- Center for Advanced Security Research Darmstadt, Darmstadt
- Fraunhofer Institute for Secure Information Technology, Darmstadt
- Fraunhofer Institute for Graphic Data Processing, Darmstadt
Others
[edit]- Fraunhofer Institute for Structural Durability and System Reliability, Darmstadt
- Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology, HQ in Kassel, other location in Rothwesten and Bad Hersfeld
- Fraunhofer Facility for Material Cycles and Resource Strategy, Hanau
- Max-Planck-Institut für europäische Rechtsgeschichte, Frankfurt-am-Main
- Institut für Sozialforschung at Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt-am-Main
- Leibniz-Institut für Bildungsforschung und Bildungsinformation, Frankfurt-am-Main
- Forschungsinstitut für Deutsche Sprache – Deutscher Sprachatlas – at Philipps-Universität Marburg
- Paul-Ehrlich-Institut, * Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum Senckenberg, Frankfurt am Main
- Peace Research Institute Frankfurt, Frankfurt-am-Main
- Institut für sozial-ökologische Forschung, Frankfurt-am-Main
Culture
[edit]Hesse has a rich and varied cultural history, with many important cultural and historical centres and several UNESCO world-heritage sites.
Architecture, art, literature and music
[edit]Darmstadt has a rich cultural heritage as the former seat of the Landgraves and Grand Dukes of Hesse. It is known as centre of the Art Nouveau Jugendstil and modern architecture and there are also several important examples of 19th century architecture influenced by British and Russian imperial architecture due to close family ties of the Grand Duke's family to the reigning dynasties in London and Saint Petersburg in the Grand Duchy period. Darmstadt is an important centre for music, home of the Darmstädter Ferienkurse for contemporary classical music[43] and the Jazz Institute Darmstadt, Europe's largest public jazz archive.[44]
Frankfurt am Main is a major international cultural centre. Over 2 million people visit the city's approximately 60 exhibition centres every year.[45] Amongst its most famous art galleries are the Schirn Kunsthalle, a major centre for international modern art,[46] and the Städel, whose large collections include over 3000 paintings, 4000 photographs, and 100,000 drawings including works by Picasso, Monet, Rembrandt and Dürer.[47] Goethe was born in Frankfurt and there is a museum in his birthplace. Frankfurt has many music venues, including an award-winning opera house, the Alte Oper, and the Jahrhunderthalle. Its several theatres include the English Theatre, the largest English-speaking theatre on the European continent.[48]
Kassel has many palaces and parks, including Bergpark Wilhelmshöhe, a Baroque landscape park and UNESCO World Heritage site.[49] The Brothers Grimm lived and worked in Kassel for 30 years and the recently opened Grimmwelt museum explores their lives, works and influence and features their personal copies of the Children's and Household Tales, which are on the UNESCO World Heritage "Memory of the World" Document register.[50] The Fridericianum, built in 1779, is one of the oldest public museums in Europe.[51] Kassel is also home to the documenta, a large modern art exhibition that has taken place every five years since the 1950s.[52]
The Hessian Ministry of the Arts supports numerous independent cultural initiatives, organisations, and associations as well as artists from many fields including music, literature, theatre and dance, cinema and the new media, graphic art, and exhibitions. International cultural projects aim to further relations with European partners.[53]
From an archaeological point of view, the old watercourses of Hesse provide evidence of the wider history of the landscape and their protection has required cooperation.[54]
UNESCO World Heritage Sites
[edit]Hesse has several UNESCO World Heritage sites.[55] These include:
- Bergpark Wilhelmshöhe in Kassel[56]
- Kellerwald-Edersee National Park in North Hesse[57]
- Lorsch Abbey[58]
- The Messel Fossil Pit.[59] Exhibits from the Messel Pit can be seen in Messel town museum,[60] the Museum of Hessen in Darmstadt,[61] and the Senckenberg Museum in Frankfurt.[62]
- The Saalburg, part of the Roman Limes.[63]
- Darmstadt Artists' Colony[64]
Sports
[edit]

Frankfurt hosts the following professional sports teams or clubs:
- 1. FFC Frankfurt (1998–2020), football (women)
- Eintracht Frankfurt, football (men, women)
- FSV Frankfurt, football (men)
- Rot-Weiss Frankfurt, football
- Frankfurter FC Germania 1894, football
- Skyliners Frankfurt, basketball
- Frankfurt Galaxy (1991–2007), American football
- Frankfurt Universe (2007–present), American football
- Frankfurter Löwen (1979–1984), American football
- Frankfurt Sarsfields GAA, Gaelic football
- Frankfurt Lions (until 2010), ice hockey
- Löwen Frankfurt (since 2010), ice hockey
- SC 1880 Frankfurt, rugby union
Frankfurt is host to the classic cycle race Eschborn-Frankfurt City Loop (known as Rund um den Henninger-Turm from 1961 to 2008). The city hosts also the annual Frankfurt Marathon and the Ironman Germany.
Outside Frankfurt, notable professional sports teams include Kickers Offenbach, SV Darmstadt 98, Marburg Mercenaries, Gießen 46ers, MT Melsungen, VfB Friedberg, and the Kassel Huskies.
TV and radio stations
[edit]The Hessian state broadcasting corporation is called HR (Hessischer Rundfunk). HR is a member of the federal ARD broadcasting association. HR provides a statewide TV channel as well as a range of regional radio stations (HR 1, HR 2, HR 3, HR 4, you fm and HR info). Besides the state run HR, privately run TV stations exist and are an important line of commerce. Among the commercial radio stations that are active in Hesse, Hit Radio FFH, Planet Radio, Harmony FM, Radio BOB and Antenne Frankfurt are the most popular.
Economy
[edit]Financial
[edit]With Hesse's largest city Frankfurt am Main being home of the European Central Bank (ECB), the German Bundesbank and the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, Hesse is home to the financial capital of mainland Europe. Furthermore, Hesse has always been one of the largest and healthiest economies in Germany. Its GDP in 2013 exceeded €236 billion (about US$316 billion).[65] This makes Hesse itself one of the largest economies in Europe and the 38th largest in the world.[66] According to GDP-per-capita figures, Hesse is the wealthiest state (after the city-states Hamburg and Bremen) in Germany with approx. US$52,500.
Frankfurt is crucial as a financial center, with both the European Central Bank and the Deutsche Bundesbank's headquarters located there. Numerous smaller banks and Deutsche Bank, DZ Bank, KfW Bank, Commerzbank are also headquartered in Frankfurt, with the offices of several international banks also being housed there. Frankfurt is also the location of the most important German stock exchange, the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. Insurance companies have settled mostly in Wiesbaden. The city's largest private employer is the R+V Versicherung, with about 3,900 employees, other major employers are DBV-Winterthur, the SV SparkassenVersicherung and the Delta Lloyd Group.
Chemical and pharma
[edit]The Rhine-Main Region has the second largest industrial density in Germany after the Ruhr area. The main economic fields of importance are the chemical and pharmaceutical industries with Sanofi, Merck, Heraeus, Stada, Messer Griesheim, Bayer Crop Science, SGL Carbon, Celanese, Cabot, Clariant, Akzo Nobel, Kuraray, Ineos, LyondellBasell, Allessa and Evonik Industries. But also other consumer goods are produced by Procter & Gamble, Coty and Colgate Palmolive. The Rhine-Main Region is not restricted only to Hesse, smaller part is in Rhineland-Palatinate. There situated 2 important pharma companies: BioNTech(HQ), which found the first mRNA vaccine against COVID-19 in the world (licensed to Pfizer), and Boehringer Ingelheim, close to Hesse's border in Mainz and Ingelheim respectively. It supports from Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research, Max Planck Institute for Brain Research and Paul Ehrlich Institute.
Also in other part of Hesse there is important pharma and medical manufacturers, especially in Marburg where there is industry park based on ex-Behring Werke: BioNTech (mRNA vaccines), CSL Behring, Temmler and Melsungen with B. Braun. Pharma activity in Marburg is also supported from research facilities: Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology, Center for undiagnosed and rare diseases, Institute of Virology (Marburg)(research of Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus; Parasitology) with BSL4-Labor, Marburg Heavy Ion Beam Therapy Center.
Merck controls ca. 60% of world's liquid crystal market.
Heraeus, Umicore and Evonik Industries manufacture different type of catalysts from Platinum metals, Vanadium, Neodymium, Manganese, Copper etc.
In east Fulda there is the tire plant (Fulda Reifen). 2 other tire plants are in Korbach from Continental and Hanau from Goodyear.
-
Industrial Park "Behringwerke"
Metallurgy and nuclear
[edit]Specialised metallurgical industry focused on platinum metals has been represented by Heraeus and Umicore and magnetic materials have been a focus of Vacuumschmelze based in Hanau. Also in Hanau there used to be a plant producing nuclear fuel (classical uranium, but also MOX fuel), but the production has stopped and the facility has been mothballed. Heraeus continues to manufacture irradiation sources from Cobalt and Iridium.
Engineering
[edit]In the mechanical and automotive engineering field Opel in Rüsselsheim is worth mentioning. After acquisition Opel by Stellantis, it is in rapid decline of production and employment. Which has also negative effect on automotive parts supplier, Continental will close a plant in Karben and cut jobs at other location in Hesse. In northern Hesse, in Baunatal, Volkswagen AG has a large factory that manufactures spare parts, not far-away from it there is also a Daimler Truck plant, which produces an axes.
Alstom, after takeover of Bombardier, has a large plant that manufactures Traxx locomotives in Kassel. Industrial printers (Manroland, Gallus Holding), x-ray airport check equipment (Smiths), handling and loading equipment (Dematic), chemical equipment (Air Liquide Global E&C Solutions), vacuum pumps (Pfeiffer Vacuum), vacuum industrial furnace (ALD Vacuum Technologies), textile machines (Karl Mayer), shavers (Braun), medical (Fresenius, Sirona) and industrial (Schenck Process, Samson) apparatuses are produced in Rhine-Main Region.
Manufacturing of heating boilers and heat pumps are typical for Hesse and represented with Bosch Thermotechnik and Viessmann.
Vistec produces electron-beam lithography systems for semiconductor industry in Weilburg, also there is manufacturing of inspection, testing and measurement equipment for semiconductor fabrication process from KLA-Tencor. Leica Microsystems manufactures different types of microscopes, inclusive they with special light microscopic optics, which are used in wafer and photo mask testing. PVA TePla from Wettenberg is specialist for crystal growing process (Si, Ge, GaAs, GaP, InP) with Czochralski Process, Float-Zone Process, High-Temperature Chemical Vapor Deposition, Vertical Gradient Freeze equipment, quality inspection apparatus, plasma and vacuum machine. ABB Robotics is in Friedberg. Satisloh is a machine manufacturer in Wetzlar for the production of lenses and components for the optical industry.
Aerospace
[edit]The company operating Frankfurt Airport is one of the largest employers in Hesse with nearly 22,000 employees.[67] Aerospace cluster contains also Rolls-Royce's aviation engine work in Oberursel and APU manufacturing plant and service center of Honeywell in Raunheim.
Optics and electronics
[edit]Companies with an international reputation are located outside the Rhine-Main region in Wetzlar. There is the center of the optical, electrical and precision engineering industries, Leitz, Leica, Minox, Hensoldt (Zeiss) and Brita with several plants in central Hesse.
Oculus Optikgeräte manufactures Scheimpflug tomographs for examining the anterior segment of the eye, topographers for measuring the anterior surface of the cornea, tonometers for assessing the biomechanical properties of the cornea, a wide-angle observation system for vitreous body surgery, universal trial goggles for subjective refraction, various perimeters for visual field testing and vision testing devices for testing eyesight.
Electrical transformers are produced by Hitachi ABB Power Grids in Hanau and Siemens Energy in Frankfurt-am-Main. SMA Solar Technology manufactures an inverters for photovoltaic systems. Rittal is specialized on electrical enclosure situated in Herborn and Eschenburg. Power semiconductors from IXYS in Lampertheim and UV and infrared lamps from Heraeus.
IT and telecom
[edit]Many IT and telecommunications companies are located in Hesse, many of them in Frankfurt and Darmstadt, like Software AG (Darmstadt), T-Systems (Frankfurt and Darmstadt), Deutsche Telekom (laboratories in Darmstadt), DB Systel (Frankfurt), Lufthansa Systems (Raunheim near Frankfurt) and DE-CIX (Frankfurt).
Food and beverage
[edit]Sweet making is typical, there are 2 big factories: Ferrero, Stadtallendorf and Baronie (Sarotti), Hattersheim am Main. Frankfurter Sausage is famous, but there is also other sorts like Frankfurter Rindswurst, Ahle Wurst.
Beverage industry is well-developed and manufactures sparkling wine (Sekt), white wine (Riesling), mineral waters (Selters), beers (Radeberger) and cider.
-
Green Sauce Monument
In Frankfurt-Oberrad exists growing of wild herbs for green sauce and monument.
Defunct industries
[edit]The leather industry was predominantly based in Offenbach, but is now extinct, existing only in museums. The same happened with Frankfurt's fur industry and Hanau's jewelry industry.
Typical Hesse's products
[edit]-
Braun Shaver
-
Leica Q2
-
Locomotive TRAXX
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Warp knitting machine (Karl Mayer)
-
Printing machine (MAN Roland Colorman)
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Riesling wine
Unemployment
[edit]The Hochtaunuskreis has the lowest unemployment rate at 3.8% while the independent city of Kassel has the highest rate nationally at 12.1%.[68] In October 2018 the unemployment rate stood at 4.4% and was lower than the national average.[69]
| Year[70] | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unemployment rate in % | 7.3 | 6.6 | 7.0 | 7.9 | 8.2 | 9.7 | 9.2 | 7.5 | 6.5 | 6.8 | 6.4 | 5.9 | 5.7 | 5.8 | 5.7 | 5.5 | 5.3 | 5.0 | 4.6 | 3.1 | 4.1 | 3.8 |
Traffic and public transportation
[edit]Road transport
[edit]Hesse has a dense highway network with a total of 24 motorways. The internationally important motorway routes through Hesse are the A3, A5, and A7. Close to Frankfurt Airport is the Frankfurter Kreuz, Germany's busiest and one of Europe's busiest motorway junctions, where the motorways A3 (Arnhem-Cologne-Frankfurt-Nuremberg-Passau) and A5 (Hattenbach-Frankfurt-Karlsruhe-Basel) intersect. The A5 becomes as wide as four lanes in each direction near the city of Frankfurt am Main, and during the rush-hour, it is possible to use the emergency lanes on the A3 and A5 motorway in the Rhine-Main Region, adding additional lanes. Other major leading Hesse highways are the A4, the A44, the A45, the Federal Highway A66 and the A67. There are also a number of smaller motorways and major trunk roads, some of which are dual carriageways.
Railway transport
[edit]Hesse is accessed by many major rail lines, including the high-speed lines Cologne–Frankfurt(op.speed 300 km/h) and Hanover–Würzburg. Other north-south connections traverse major east–west routes from Wiesbaden and Mainz to Frankfurt and from Hanau and Aschaffenburg to Fulda and Kassel. The Frankfurt Central Station is the most important hub for German trains, with over 1,100 trains per day.[71]

The region around Frankfurt has an extensive S-Bahn network, the S-Bahn Rhein-Main, which is complemented by many regional train connections. In the rest of the country, the rail network is less extensive. Since 2007, the region around Kassel has been served by the RegioTram, a tram-train-concept similar to the Karlsruhe model.
Air transport
[edit]Frankfurt Airport is by far the largest airport in Germany with more than 57 million passengers each year, is and among the world's ten largest. Frankfurt Egelsbach Airport lies to the south, and is frequented by general aviation and private planes. Kassel Airport offers a few flights to holiday destinations, but has struggled to compete. There are also a number of sports airfields. Low-cost airlines, especially Ryanair, use Frankfurt-Hahn Airport as a major base, although the airport is actually located about 100 km from Frankfurt in the neighbouring state of Rhineland-Palatinate. The DFS (German air traffic control) has its headquarters in Langen. A Boeing 747 owned by Lufthansa was named after Hesse, on 20 November 1974, the aircraft crashed in Kenya killing 59 of the 157 passengers and crew on board.
Notes
[edit]References
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- ^ "Lorsch – Benedictine Abbey and Altenmünster | Hessen Tourismus". www.languages.hessen-tourismus.de. Archived from the original on 13 May 2018. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
- ^ "Messel Pit Fossil Site | Hessen Tourismus". www.languages.hessen-tourismus.de. Archived from the original on 14 May 2018. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
- ^ "Home". www.grube-messel.de (in German). Archived from the original on 11 May 2018. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
- ^ "Messel Pit – Hessisches Landesmuseum". www.hlmd.de. Archived from the original on 14 May 2018. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
- ^ "SENCKENBERG world of biodiversity | Museums | Museum Frankfurt | The Museum | Exhibitions | World natural heritage "." www.senckenberg.de. Archived from the original on 24 September 2017. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
- ^ "Roman Limes | Hessen Tourismus". www.languages.hessen-tourismus.de. Archived from the original on 13 May 2018. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
- ^ "Mathildenhöhe Darmstadt von UNESCO ausgezeichnet". Deutsche UNESCO-Kommission (in German). 24 July 2021. Archived from the original on 26 July 2021. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
- ^ "Bruttoinlandsprodukt". Volkswirtschaftliche Gesamtrechnungen (in German). Hessisches Statistisches Landesamt. 2012. Archived from the original on 14 September 2012. Retrieved 27 March 2013.
- ^ See the list of countries by GDP (nominal).
- ^ "Annual Report 2018" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 April 2019.
- ^ "EURES – Labour market information – Hessen – European Commission". ec.europa.eu. Archived from the original on 3 February 2018. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
- ^ "Arbeitslosenquote nach Bundesländern in Deutschland 2018 | Statista". Statista (in German). Archived from the original on 27 June 2021. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
- ^ (Destatis), © Statistisches Bundesamt (13 November 2018). "Federal Statistical Office Germany – GENESIS-Online". www-genesis.destatis.de. Archived from the original on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
- ^ "Bahn". Frankfurt am Main. Archived from the original on 5 September 2018. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
Sources
[edit]- Ingrao, Charles W. The Hessian mercenary state: ideas, institutions, and reform under Frederick II, 1760–1785 (Cambridge University Press, 2003).
- Ingrao, Charles. "" Barbarous Strangers": Hessian State and Society during the American Revolution." American Historical Review 87.4 (1982): 954–976. online
- Wegert, Karl H. "Contention with Civility: The State and Social Control in the German Southwest, 1760–1850." Historical Journal 34.2 (1991): 349–369. online
- Wilder, Colin F. "" The rigor of the law of exchange": How People Changed Commercial Law and Commercial Law Changed People (Hesse-Cassel, 1654–1776)." Zeitschrift für Historische Forschung (2015): 629–659. online
- Clay, John-Henry (2010). In the Shadow of Death: Saint Boniface and the Conversion of Hessia, 721-54. Brepols. ISBN 978-2-503-53161-8.
- Rau, Reinhold (1968). Briefe des Bonifatius, Willibalds Leben des Bonifatius; Nebst Einigen Zeitgenössischen Dokumenten. Ausgewählte Quellen zur Deutschen Geschichte des Mittelalters (in German). Vol. IVb. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.
External links
[edit]- Official government portal
- "Hesse". Catholic Encyclopedia.
Geographic data related to Hesse at OpenStreetMap
Hesse
View on GrokipediaEtymology
Name origins and historical usage
The name Hesse derives from the ancient Germanic tribe of the Chatti, who occupied the region north of the Main River during the Roman era, as recorded by the Roman historian Tacitus in his 1st-century AD work Germania.[5] This tribal designation evolved linguistically into the Old High German form Hesso or Hessi by the early medieval period, reflecting the inhabitants of the area known in Medieval Latin as Hassia.[6] The etymological root may trace to Proto-Germanic hatjaną, connoting "to persecute" or "hate," though the tribal ethnonym remains the primary association without direct ties to landscape features like marshlands in verified historical linguistics.[7] The earliest documented usage of a form resembling Hesse appears in a 783 AD letter from Saint Boniface to Pope Adrian I, referring to the region's Christianization efforts among its Germanic populace.[8] By the 11th century, Hassia denoted a distinct territory within the Holy Roman Empire, encompassing areas around present-day Kassel and Marburg, and it served as the basis for the Landgraviate of Hesse established under Louis I in 1264.[6] During the medieval and early modern periods, the name fragmented in administrative usage to distinguish branches of the Hessian house, such as Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel) and Hesse-Darmstadt, which gained prominence as electoral and grand duchies by the 19th century.[5] In English-language contexts, Hesse solidified as the standard form by the 18th century, influenced by diplomatic and military references to Hessian mercenaries during events like the American Revolutionary War, while the German Hessen persisted for the unified state's post-1945 reconstitution.[6] This dual nomenclature highlights the name's continuity from tribal origins to modern federal statehood, with no substantive alterations despite political subdivisions like the Electorate of Hesse (1803–1866) or Grand Duchy of Hesse (1806–1918).[5]History
Pre-Roman and early Germanic periods
The territory of modern Hesse was occupied by Celtic peoples during the Late Hallstatt and Early La Tène periods of the Iron Age, with fortified settlements known as oppida serving as centers of elite power and trade. The Glauberg oppidum, located near the village of Glauberg, exemplifies this era; constructed around 500–400 BC, it included a basalt plateau fortified by stone and timber walls in the murus gallicus style, an associated necropolis, and a prominent princely burial mound containing a life-sized sandstone statue of a chieftain adorned with a torc and mustache, alongside imported luxury goods like bronze vessels and weapons.[9][10] These sites reflect hierarchical societies engaged in metallurgy, agriculture, and long-distance exchange, with the Glauberg's defenses and grave goods indicating control over regional resources in the Wetterau valley.[11] Archaeological evidence points to a gradual transition from Celtic to Germanic dominance in the region by the late 1st century BC, marked by shifts in material culture such as pottery styles, burial practices, and settlement patterns that align with the Jastorf culture associated with early Germanic groups.[12] The Germanic Chatti tribe emerged as the primary inhabitants of central and northern Hesse, occupying territories along the upper Eder, Fulda, and Weser rivers, where they established villages focused on farming, herding, and ironworking.[13][14] Roman sources portray the Chatti as a formidable, disciplined confederation distinct from other Germanic tribes for their infantry emphasis, rejection of cavalry bridles, and customs like allowing men to shave only after their first kill, symbolizing maturity through prolonged hair and beard growth.[15] Tacitus, in his Germania (ca. AD 98), positioned their homeland at the edge of the Hercynian Forest, noting their hardy adaptation to wooded, less fertile lands compared to marshier tribal areas to the west.[15] The Chatti mounted sustained resistance to Roman incursions, allying with Arminius in the AD 9 Battle of the Teutoburg Forest and raiding frontier outposts; earlier, from 12–9 BC, Nero Claudius Drusus subdued parts of their territory through punitive campaigns, while Germanicus's expeditions in AD 14–16 devastated Chatti settlements in retaliation for support of rebel forces.[13][14] Despite these conflicts, the Chatti avoided full subjugation, preserving autonomy into the 1st–3rd centuries AD amid ongoing border skirmishes and trade with Roman provinces.[13] Their tribal name persisted linguistically, evolving into "Hessi" and eventually "Hesse," linking ancient Germanic ethnogenesis to the modern region's identity.[14] Archaeological traces of this early Germanic phase include weapon graves and farmsteads indicating a warrior-farmer society, with limited Roman influence until limes fortifications in the 1st–2nd centuries AD.[16]Holy Roman Empire era
The Landgraviate of Hesse emerged in the 12th century within the Holy Roman Empire, initially as part of the territories held by the Ludowingians. In 1137, Louis I, Landgrave of Thuringia, inherited the County of Hesse through his marriage to Hedwig, sister of the childless Giso V, thereby uniting Hesse with Thuringia under Ludowingian rule.[6] Following the Thuringian War of Succession (1247), Hesse separated from Thuringia and was granted to Henry I, son of Henry II of Brabant and Sophie of Thuringia, establishing the independent Landgraviate of Hesse with Henry as its first landgrave (r. 1247–1308).[6] Under subsequent landgraves, Hesse expanded territorially, incorporating areas such as the counties of Katzenelnbogen and Ziegenhain by the late 15th century, achieving unification by around 1500.[17] Philip I, known as the Magnanimous (r. 1509–1567), marked the zenith of its power; he introduced Protestantism in 1526, co-founded the Schmalkaldic League in 1531 to defend Reformation interests, and faced imprisonment from 1547 to 1552 after defeat in the Schmalkaldic War and amid controversy over his bigamy.[17] Upon Philip's death in 1567, the landgraviate partitioned among his four sons: William IV received northern Hesse-Kassel; Louis IV, Hesse-Marburg; Philip II, Hesse-Rheinfels; and George I, Hesse-Darmstadt.[17] Smaller lines like Marburg and Rheinfels extinguished without heirs by the early 17th century, leaving Hesse-Kassel (Calvinist) and Hesse-Darmstadt (Lutheran) as principal successor states.[17] During the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648), Hesse suffered severe devastation, with population losses estimated at 40–50 percent across territories, exacerbated by Moritz the Learned's (r. 1592–1627) shift of Hesse-Kassel to Calvinism and alignments with Protestant alliances.[17] Hesse-Kassel later gained prominence by leasing mercenary troops to powers like Britain and the Netherlands from the 1680s, bolstering its fiscal position while Hesse-Darmstadt pursued Habsburg ties.[17] Both states retained semi-independent status within the Empire until its dissolution in 1806, navigating imperial diets and ecclesiastical shifts amid ongoing princely rivalries.[17]Napoleonic era and 19th-century developments
During the Napoleonic Wars, the Landgraviate of Hesse-Darmstadt aligned with France, joining the Confederation of the Rhine in 1806, which led to its elevation to the Grand Duchy of Hesse under Landgrave Louis X (later Louis I).[18] This status change occurred alongside the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire on August 6, 1806, granting the grand duchy expanded territories, including parts previously under ecclesiastical rule and minor principalities.[19] In contrast, the Electorate of Hesse-Kassel, elevated from landgraviate status in 1803 under William IX, resisted French demands and maintained neutrality allied with Prussia, resulting in its occupation by Napoleonic forces in 1806.[20] The elector's territories were incorporated into the Kingdom of Westphalia under Jérôme Bonaparte, with William fleeing into exile.[20] Hesse-Darmstadt contributed contingents to Napoleon's armies, fielding regiments such as the Guard, Lifeguards, and Crown Prince, reorganized into brigades post-1807 that later became full regiments.[21] These forces participated in campaigns, including the Peninsular War via the Regiment Groß- und Erbprinz. Following Napoleon's defeat in 1813, the Congress of Vienna in 1814-1815 restored the Electorate of Hesse-Kassel to William I, while confirming the Grand Duchy of Hesse's sovereignty and awarding it additional lands from the former Duchy of Westphalia and adjustments involving the Free City of Frankfurt.[18] Both Hessian states joined the German Confederation established in 1815, comprising 39 sovereign entities under Austrian and Prussian influence.[18] In the mid-19th century, Hessian territories experienced political unrest during the 1848 revolutions, with demands for constitutional reforms and unification echoing across the Confederation; Hesse-Kassel and Hesse-Darmstadt saw uprisings suppressed by federal troops.[22] The Grand Duchy joined the Prussian-led Zollverein customs union in 1834, fostering economic integration amid rising nationalism.[18] During the 1866 Austro-Prussian War, Elector George V of Hesse-Kassel allied with Austria, leading to its swift defeat and annexation by Prussia as the province of Hesse-Nassau, incorporating Nassau territories as well.[20] The Grand Duchy of Hesse remained independent but acceded to the North German Confederation in 1867 and became a founding member of the German Empire proclaimed on January 18, 1871, under King Wilhelm I of Prussia as emperor.[18] This unification marked the end of Hessian sovereignty as distinct entities, integrating them into the imperial framework while retaining internal administrative structures until 1918.[18]German Empire and World War I
The Grand Duchy of Hesse acceded to the German Empire upon its proclamation on January 18, 1871, becoming one of the founding constituent states.[23] This southern Hessian territory, south of the Main River and centered on Darmstadt, retained significant autonomy in domestic governance, including its own constitution and administrative structures, while ceding control over foreign policy, defense, and customs to the imperial government.[24] The ruling House of Hesse-Darmstadt, under Grand Duke Louis IV from 1877 to 1892 and subsequently Ernst Ludwig until 1918, maintained the monarchy's prerogatives within these limits. Meanwhile, northern Hessian lands, encompassing the former Electorate of Hesse-Kassel, had been annexed by Prussia after its victory in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and reorganized into the Province of Hesse-Nassau by 1868, fully integrating them into Prussian administration as part of the Empire.[25] Economically, the Grand Duchy participated in the Empire's rapid industrialization, though its economy remained more agrarian and focused on agriculture, forestry, and emerging chemical industries around Darmstadt compared to heavier manufacturing elsewhere in Germany. Political life featured a bicameral legislature, with the Grand Duke appointing the upper house and elections determining the lower, reflecting conservative monarchical influences tempered by growing liberal and social democratic movements. The Prussian Province of Hesse-Nassau, governed from Kassel and Wiesbaden, aligned more closely with Berlin's policies, contributing to the Empire's federal structure where Prussian dominance shaped overall direction. During World War I, troops from Hessian territories mobilized into the Imperial German Army, serving in infantry regiments such as those recruited from Hesse-Nassau and the Grand Duchy's contingent, fighting on the Western and Eastern Fronts amid Germany's total war effort from 1914 to 1918.[26] The conflict imposed severe hardships, including food shortages and labor conscription, exacerbating social tensions. Germany's defeat and the ensuing November Revolution culminated in the abdication of Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig on November 9, 1918, transforming the Grand Duchy into the People's State of Hesse and marking the end of monarchical rule in the region.[24]Weimar Republic, Nazi period, and World War II
Following the abdication of Grand Duke Ernest Louis on 9 November 1918 amid the German Revolution, the People's State of Hesse (Volksstaat Hessen) was established as a parliamentary republic and constituent state of the Weimar Republic.[27] The state adopted a constitution providing for a unicameral Landtag elected by proportional representation and a minister-president responsible to the legislature, though executive power was frequently unstable due to coalition governments dominated by Social Democrats and center parties.[28] Economic turmoil, including the 1923 hyperinflation and the Great Depression after 1929, exacerbated unemployment—reaching over 20% in urban centers like Frankfurt by 1932—and fueled radicalization, with the Nazi Party (NSDAP) gaining traction through promises of revival. In the November 1931 Landtag election, the NSDAP secured 35.8% of the vote and 32 seats, becoming the largest party and highlighting Hesse's vulnerability to extremist appeals amid national fragmentation.[28] The Nazi ascent to power nationally in January 1933 triggered immediate Gleichschaltung in Hesse, dissolving opposition parties and installing NSDAP loyalists in administrative roles. By March 1933, SA units occupied key sites in Darmstadt and elsewhere, while the state presidency was abolished and authority centralized under Reich Governor Jakob Sprenger, who enforced ideological conformity across the bureaucracy, judiciary, and education.[29] In Frankfurt, the NSDAP's council majority enabled the appointment of Nazi Friedrich Krebs as mayor, prioritizing rearmament industries and anti-Semitic policies.[30] Jewish communities, numbering around 2,700 in Wiesbaden alone in 1933 and integrated in rural areas, encountered systematic exclusion via the April 1933 boycott, Nuremberg Laws of 1935, and escalating violence culminating in Kristallnacht on 9-10 November 1938, which destroyed synagogues and businesses across Hesse without prior local doubts of Jewish Germanness.[31][32] During World War II, Hesse's industrial and transport hubs drew intense Allied air campaigns, inflicting massive civilian losses and infrastructure collapse. Kassel endured repeated RAF raids from 1942, with the 22-23 October 1943 firestorm killing over 10,000 and razing the city center through 500,000 incendiary bombs.[33] Frankfurt, a key rail and aviation target, faced approximately 75 raids by RAF and USAAF bombers starting in 1942, resulting in 5,500 deaths and widespread devastation, including the near-total destruction of the historic core by March 1944 operations dropping thousands of tons of explosives monthly.[34][35] Darmstadt suffered its worst blow on 11 September 1944 from 234 RAF Lancasters deploying 234 tons of bombs and 300,000 incendiaries in 21 minutes, generating a firestorm that killed about 12,300 civilians, displaced 70,000, and demolished 75% of buildings.[36][37] U.S. forces under General George Patton occupied Hesse by late March 1945, dismantling Nazi structures as the war concluded.[35]Post-World War II reconstruction and economic miracle
In September 1945, the United States military government in its occupation zone established Greater Hesse (Groß-Hessen) by consolidating the former Prussian province of Hesse-Nassau, the People's State of Hesse (remaining parts after territorial losses), the city of Frankfurt am Main, and the Heppenheim district from Hesse-Darmstadt.[27] This administrative reconfiguration aimed to streamline governance amid wartime devastation, with Wiesbaden designated as the provisional capital due to its relative intact infrastructure compared to heavily bombed Frankfurt.[38] The region suffered severe infrastructure damage, including the near-total destruction of Frankfurt's city center, where Allied bombings in 1943–1945 reduced over 70% of buildings to rubble and caused around 5,000 civilian deaths.[39] Reconstruction accelerated after the 1948 currency reform, which replaced the Reichsmark with the Deutsche Mark, curbing hyperinflation and incentivizing production by eliminating hoarding and black markets.[40] In Hesse, this facilitated rapid rebuilding, supported by the European Recovery Program (Marshall Plan), which allocated approximately $1.4 billion to the U.S. occupation zone between 1948 and 1952, funding imports of raw materials and machinery.[41] Denazification efforts, enforced by American authorities, purged former Nazi officials from public roles, enabling the formation of democratic institutions; Hesse adopted its constitution in 1946, and held its first Landtag elections in November 1946, won by the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) under Prime Minister August Karl Arnold.[27] Hesse participated in West Germany's Wirtschaftswunder, with real GDP growth averaging 8% annually from 1950 to 1959, driven by export-oriented industries, labor market liberalization, and social market economy policies under Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard.[42] Frankfurt emerged as a pivotal financial hub, hosting the Deutsche Bundesbank from 1957 onward, which solidified its role in monetary policy and banking; the city's securities exchange, rebuilt by 1955, saw trading volumes surge as West German firms expanded internationally.[43] Industrial output in Hesse, including chemicals in Darmstadt and machinery in Kassel, tripled between 1950 and 1960, fueled by a skilled workforce bolstered by Gastarbeiter programs starting in 1955, reducing unemployment from 10% in 1950 to under 1% by 1960.[44] This growth reflected not a supernatural "miracle" but causal factors like suppressed pre-war inefficiencies released post-1948, undervalued currency aiding exports, and Allied leniency toward retaining industrial capacity despite initial reparations demands.[45]Recent history since reunification
Following German reunification on October 3, 1990, Hesse, as a western state, experienced relative political continuity amid national economic strains from integrating the east, including contributions to the Solidarity Pact for infrastructure transfers exceeding €2 trillion nationwide by 2020. The state's economy, anchored by Frankfurt's role as a financial hub, saw GDP per capita rise from approximately €25,000 in 1991 to over €45,000 by 2020, outperforming eastern states due to sectors like banking, aviation, and pharmaceuticals.[46] Unemployment averaged below 5% post-2000, bolstered by the European Central Bank's relocation to Frankfurt in 1998, which enhanced the city's status as eurozone headquarters and attracted international investment.[47] Politically, the 1991 Landtag election marked a shift when Hans Eichel's SPD secured a narrow victory, forming Hesse's first red-green coalition with 52% of seats and governing until 1999; Eichel served as Minister-President from April 5, 1991, to April 7, 1999, focusing on administrative reforms and fiscal prudence before becoming federal Finance Minister. The CDU regained power in the February 7, 1999, election under Roland Koch, who led coalitions with the FDP and later Greens until January 31, 2010, emphasizing law-and-order policies amid rising youth crime concerns.[48] Volker Bouffier succeeded Koch as Minister-President on August 31, 2010, maintaining CDU-led governments—initially with FDP, then Greens from 2014—through 2022, navigating the 2008 financial crisis with bank bailouts and post-2015 migration influx via integration programs.[49] Boris Rhein assumed the role on May 31, 2022, after Bouffier's resignation, leading a CDU-SPD coalition. The October 8, 2023, Landtag election delivered CDU 34.8% of votes (52 seats), SPD 15% (23 seats), AfD 16.9% (24 seats), and Greens 14.8% (22 seats), reflecting voter priorities on migration controls and deportation amid federal policy critiques; Rhein prioritized border security and economic resilience in response.[50][51] Socially, Hesse's population grew from 5.6 million in 1990 to 6.3 million by 2023, driven by net immigration from EU states, Turkey, and post-2022 Ukraine, straining housing but enriching the workforce in tech and services.[52]Geography
Physical features and terrain
Hesse spans 21,115 square kilometers in central Germany, featuring a varied terrain that includes low mountain ranges, plateaus, hills, and river valleys, with elevations ranging from river lowlands near sea level to peaks exceeding 900 meters. The landscape reflects the transition from the Rhine Rift Valley in the west to the Hessian Uplands in the center and east, encompassing volcanic formations, ancient forests, and sedimentary basins.[53] The state's upland regions dominate its physical profile, with the Rhön Mountains in the northeast rising to the Wasserkuppe at 950 meters, the highest elevation in Hesse. The Vogelsberg, a massive volcanic plateau in the central area, represents Europe's largest continuous basalt mass, reaching up to 773 meters at the Taufstein, while the Taunus and Odenwald form hilly extensions to the west and south, respectively. These mid-range elevations, part of the broader Hessian Central Uplands, contribute to a rugged interior interspersed with deep valleys carved by glacial and fluvial erosion.[53][54] Rivers shape the western and southern lowlands, with the Rhine demarcating the border with Rhineland-Palatinate and North Rhine-Westphalia, and the Main traversing the fertile Rhine-Main metropolitan region. Northern tributaries like the Fulda and Eder drain into the Weser system, supporting agriculture in broader valleys. Forests cover about 42% of Hesse's land, primarily on slopes and plateaus, sustaining biodiversity amid the state's mixed relief.[53][55]Climate and natural resources
Hesse experiences a temperate climate influenced by its central European location, transitioning from oceanic conditions in the west to more continental characteristics in the east. The Köppen classification primarily designates it as Cfb (oceanic), with mild summers and cool winters, though eastern areas exhibit warmer summers and colder winters due to distance from Atlantic moderating influences.[56] Annual average temperatures range from 9.3°C to 10°C, with July highs averaging 19°C and January lows around 0°C or below, where precipitation often falls as snow.[57] [58] Precipitation is relatively even throughout the year but peaks in summer months, totaling approximately 991 mm annually, supporting lush vegetation and forestry. Western regions, closer to the Rhine lowlands, receive higher rainfall due to orographic effects from the Taunus and Odenwald hills, while eastern uplands like the Rhön experience drier conditions overall.[58] [59] Climate data from stations such as Frankfurt indicate average annual precipitation around 700-800 mm, with variability increasing due to recent trends in heat extremes and prolonged dry spells observed since the 2000s.[60] Natural resources in Hesse are dominated by extensive forests and arable land rather than extractable minerals. Forests cover more than 40% of the state's land area, primarily mixed deciduous and coniferous stands managed for timber production, biodiversity, and watershed protection, with species like beech, oak, and spruce prevalent.[61] Agricultural land comprises another 40%, utilized for crops such as grains, potatoes, and vegetables, supported by fertile loess soils in the river valleys of the Main and Neckar. Mineral deposits are limited, with historical low-grade iron ores in the Taunus and minor salt extraction, but these hold negligible economic value today, as the state's resource economy emphasizes sustainable forestry over mining. Water resources from rivers like the Rhine, Main, and Fulda provide hydropower and irrigation potential, though groundwater levels have faced pressure from urban expansion.[61]Environmental management and challenges
The Hessian Agency for Nature Conservation, Environment and Geology (HLNUG) oversees environmental monitoring, nature conservation, and geological assessments, providing scientific advice to state authorities on issues including soil protection, water resources, and biodiversity.[62] The Hessian Ministry for the Environment, Climate Change, Agriculture and Consumer Protection coordinates broader policy implementation, emphasizing sustainable practices across sectors.[63] Hesse's sustainability strategy, initiated in 2008 and enshrined in the state constitution, targets climate neutrality by 2045, with interim greenhouse gas reduction goals of 55% by 2030 relative to 1990 levels across all sectors.[64][65] In forestry, which covers approximately 42% of Hesse's land area, management focuses on climate-resilient species selection through decision-support tools for owners, addressing shifts in growth conditions due to warming trends.[66] Agricultural policies promote sustainability, including a statewide organic farming model launched in 2021 to reduce chemical inputs and enhance soil health.[67] Water and waste management integrate federal standards, with HLNUG monitoring river basins like the Rhine and Main for contaminants, while urban areas implement noise abatement and recycling programs.[68] Key challenges include climate-driven forest decline, with 2024 assessments showing widespread poor conditions from prolonged heat and drought effects, exacerbating bark beetle infestations and reduced tree vitality.[69] Biodiversity faces pressure from a 1.8°C regional temperature rise since pre-industrial times, facilitating invasive species establishment and habitat shifts, particularly in sensitive ecosystems like the Hessian uplands.[70] Urban and transport-related issues persist, such as road traffic noise contributing 26,501 disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) in 2015—equivalent to 435 per 100,000 residents—with potential for 23% burden reduction via 3 dB exposure cuts.[71] Soil contamination from quaternary alkylammonium compounds, detected across agricultural and urban sites, highlights emerging pollutant risks from disinfectants.[72] Adaptation strategies target increasing extremes like floods, droughts, and heatwaves, which threaten agriculture and infrastructure, though implementation varies by locality.[73][74]Government and Administration
State executive and legislature
The executive power in Hesse is exercised by the Minister-President, who serves as the head of government and is elected by a majority vote in the Landtag for a five-year term coinciding with the parliamentary term.[75] The Minister-President appoints and leads the cabinet, comprising ministers responsible for specific portfolios such as finance, interior, and economy, with the State Chancellery in Wiesbaden serving as the central administrative office.[76] Boris Rhein of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) has been Minister-President since 31 May 2022, following his election by the Landtag after the 2018 state election; he was re-confirmed after the 2023 election leading a grand coalition with the Social Democratic Party (SPD).[76] The legislative authority resides in the unicameral Landtag of Hesse, which convenes in Wiesbaden and holds the power to enact laws, approve the state budget, elect the Minister-President, and oversee government actions through committees and inquiries.[77] The Landtag consists of at least 120 members, but the number can vary due to overhang and leveling seats; following the 8 October 2023 election, it comprises 133 deputies elected via a mixed-member proportional system. Voters cast a first vote for a candidate in one of 47 single-member constituencies and a second vote for a party list, with seats allocated to achieve proportionality while retaining direct mandates.[78] [79] In the 2023 election, the CDU obtained 52 seats with 34.6% of the second votes, the SPD 41 seats with 27.0%, the Alternative for Germany (AfD) 24 seats with 16.8%, and the Greens 16 seats with 14.1%; the Free Democratic Party (FDP) failed to enter due to falling below the 5% threshold.[79] This composition reflects a right-leaning shift, enabling the CDU-SPD coalition to command a stable majority of 93 seats. The Landtag's term ends no later than autumn 2028, with the president of the assembly, elected from among its members, presiding over sessions and representing the body externally.[77]Administrative divisions and districts
Hesse is subdivided into three administrative regions known as Regierungsbezirke: Darmstadt, Gießen, and Kassel, which coordinate state-level administration and oversight within their territories.[80] These regions encompass 21 rural districts (Landkreise) and five independent cities (kreisfreie Städte) that function as district-level authorities with their own local governments responsible for services such as waste management, education, and public health.[81] The structure stems from post-World War II reforms and the Hessian territorial consolidation of 1970s, aiming to streamline governance while preserving municipal autonomy.[82] The five independent cities are Darmstadt, Frankfurt am Main, Kassel, Offenbach am Main, and Wiesbaden, each serving as its own administrative district without subordination to a rural district.[83] These urban centers house significant portions of Hesse's population and economic activity, with Frankfurt am Main as the largest by far.[84] The 21 rural districts, grouped by Regierungsbezirk, are as follows: Regierungsbezirk Darmstadt:- Bergstraße (seat: Heppenheim)
- Darmstadt-Dieburg (seat: Darmstadt, shared functions)
- Groß-Gerau (seat: Groß-Gerau)
- Main-Kinzig-Kreis (seat: Gelnhausen)
- Main-Taunus-Kreis (seat: Hofheim am Taunus)
- Odenwaldkreis (seat: Erbach)
- Offenbach (seat: Dietzenbach)
- Rheingau-Taunus-Kreis (seat: Bad Schwalbach)
- Wetteraukreis (seat: Friedberg)
- Gießen (seat: Gießen)
- Hochtaunuskreis (seat: Bad Homburg vor der Höhe)
- Lahn-Dill-Kreis (seat: Wetzlar)
- Limburg-Weilburg (seat: Limburg an der Lahn)
- Marburg-Biedenkopf (seat: Marburg)
- Vogelsbergkreis (seat: Alsfeld)
- Fulda (seat: Fulda)
- Hersfeld-Rotenburg (seat: Bad Hersfeld)
- Kassel (seat: Kassel, shared)
- Schwalm-Eder-Kreis (seat: Kassel, shared)
- Waldeck-Frankenberg (seat: Korbach)
- Werra-Meißner-Kreis (seat: Eschwege)
Rhenish Hesse and special statuses
Rhenish Hesse (German: Rheinhessen), the portion of the former Grand Duchy of Hesse located west of the Rhine River, encompassed approximately 1,300 square kilometers and included cities such as Mainz, Worms, and Oppenheim. This region, acquired by Hesse-Darmstadt through Napoleonic rearrangements in 1806, remained integrated into the People's State of Hesse until the administrative reforms following World War II. In late 1945, under the French occupation authority, Rhenish Hesse was separated from Hesse and merged into the newly established state of Rhineland-Palatinate, effective with its founding on August 30, 1946, to consolidate territories in the French zone. Despite this division, the area retains strong historical and cultural connections to Hesse, including shared dialects, traditions, and viticultural heritage, leading some to view it as an extended part of the Hessian cultural landscape. Within the modern state of Hesse, special administrative statuses apply to select municipalities to enhance local governance efficiency based on population size and capacity. The five district-free cities (kreisfreie Städte)—Darmstadt, Frankfurt am Main, Kassel, Offenbach am Main, and Wiesbaden—operate independently of surrounding districts, assuming full district-level responsibilities such as waste management, building regulations, and social services for their populations, which collectively exceed 2.5 million residents as of 2023.[80][81] Complementing these are the seven special status cities (Sonderstatusstädte), which remain affiliated with districts (kreisangehörig) but receive delegated authority for expanded tasks under § 4a of the Hessian Municipal Code (Hessische Gemeindeordnung, HGO), applicable to cities with over 50,000 inhabitants upon state approval. These include Bad Homburg vor der Höhe, Fulda, Gießen, Hanau, Marburg, Rüsselsheim am Main, and Wetzlar, enabling them to manage select district functions like youth welfare and spatial planning while benefiting from district support structures.[86][87] This framework, established to balance autonomy with coordination, has remained stable since the last designations in the early 2000s, fostering tailored administration without full independence.[88]Politics
Political parties and system
Hesse's political system is a parliamentary democracy integrated into Germany's federal structure, with the unicameral Landtag serving as the state legislature responsible for electing the Minister-President and passing legislation.[77] The Landtag's composition reflects a multi-party framework, where governments are typically formed through coalitions due to the absence of consistent single-party majorities.[89] Elections occur every five years using a personalized proportional representation system, granting voters two ballots: the first for a direct candidate in one of 55 single-member constituencies, and the second for a statewide party list that determines overall proportionality.[78] Direct mandates are awarded via simple plurality, while list seats—intended to total 55 for balance—are allocated to parties surpassing a 5% threshold of valid second votes, with adjustments for overhang seats arising from excess direct wins, potentially expanding the assembly beyond its base of 110 members.[78] This mechanism, codified in Hesse's electoral law, aims to combine local representation with proportional outcomes, though it has led to variable seat totals, such as 137 in prior cycles.[90] The dominant parties include the center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), which emphasizes conservative values, economic liberalism, and federal loyalty, often leading coalitions; the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD), focused on social welfare and labor rights; and Alliance 90/The Greens, prioritizing environmental policy and social progressivism.[91] Smaller but influential groups comprise the pro-business Free Democratic Party (FDP), the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD), advocating immigration restrictions and EU skepticism, and The Left (Die Linke), oriented toward socialist economics and anti-militarism.[91] [89] Representation requires meeting the threshold or securing three direct seats, fostering competition among these national parties' state branches, which form parliamentary groups to coordinate legislative activity.[92] Coalitions, such as CDU-SPD or CDU-Greens, have governed since the post-war era, reflecting pragmatic alliances amid fragmented support.[93]Electoral history and outcomes
The Landtag of Hesse is elected every five years through a mixed-member proportional representation system, combining 51 single-member constituencies with party list seats to ensure proportionality, requiring a 5% threshold for list representation. Post-World War II elections initially favored the SPD, which governed from 1946 to 1951 and again from 1962 to 1976, often in coalitions, reflecting Hesse's industrial base and social democratic leanings in urban areas like Frankfurt. The CDU gained prominence from the 1970s onward, leading governments intermittently amid alternating majorities influenced by federal trends and economic issues such as infrastructure and education funding. Voter turnout has typically ranged from 60-70%, with fragmentation increasing since the 2010s due to the entry of the Greens on environmental platforms and the AfD on immigration and EU skepticism.[94][89] In the 2013 election on October 27, the CDU under Volker Bouffier secured 38.3% of the second votes, forming a coalition with the FDP (which barely cleared 5% with 4.7% in prior polls adjusted by overhang seats), while the SPD fell to 30% and Greens to 18.2%, highlighting conservative strength in rural districts. The 2018 snap election, triggered on October 28 by the collapse of the CDU-FDP coalition amid FDP polling below threshold, resulted in the CDU dropping to 27% amid national scandals affecting Chancellor Merkel's party, with SPD at 19.8% and Greens surging to 19.7% on climate and housing appeals; this enabled a CDU-Greens "Kiefergürtel" coalition (47 seats combined out of 137), emphasizing pragmatic environmental policies over ideological divides. The AfD entered with 13.2%, gaining in eastern and migrant-concerned areas, signaling protest against established parties.[95][96] The October 8, 2023, election saw the CDU rebound to 34.6% under Prime Minister Boris Rhein, adding seats to reach 52 in the expanded 133-seat Landtag, attributed to effective campaigning on security and economic stability amid federal coalition fatigue. The AfD advanced to second place with 16.9%, drawing from former SPD and Green voters disillusioned by migration policies and energy costs, while SPD declined to 15.1% and Greens to 14.7%, reflecting losses in urban centers; FDP failed to enter with 4.0%, and Die Linke with 3.0%. Turnout rose slightly to 62.9% from 67.3% in 2018, with the outcome prompting a CDU-SPD grand coalition (75 seats combined), sidelining Greens despite prior partnership and underscoring centrist consolidation against populist gains. This result, paralleling Bavaria's vote, pressured the federal Scholz government on issues like irregular migration and bureaucracy.[97][98][94][93]| Election Year | CDU (%) | SPD (%) | Greens (%) | AfD (%) | Seats (Total) | Governing Coalition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | 38.3 | 30.0 | 18.2 | - | 118 | CDU-FDP |
| 2018 | 27.0 | 19.8 | 19.7 | 13.2 | 137 | CDU-Greens |
| 2023 | 34.6 | 15.1 | 14.7 | 16.9 | 133 | CDU-SPD |
Policy priorities and governance
The CDU-SPD coalition government of Hesse, formed following the October 2023 state election and formalized in a 2024-2029 agreement, prioritizes economic competitiveness, internal security, and regulated migration to address demographic and fiscal challenges. Led by Minister-President Boris Rhein (CDU), the administration emphasizes support for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) through innovation funding like the Hessenfonds and targeted investments in key sectors such as automotive, chemicals, and fintech in the Frankfurt financial hub.[100] Skilled labor migration is promoted via fast-track processes for qualified workers, including IT specialists, while limiting irregular entries and enforcing deportations through expanded detention capacities.[100] These measures aim to sustain Hesse's status as an EU economic leader, with Frankfurt's airport employing over 81,000 and the state hosting the world's largest internet exchange node.[101] Education and housing receive immediate focus through the February 2024 "11+1 für Hessen" program, which allocates €25 million for initiatives like free master craftsman certification to equate vocational and academic paths, an extra German language hour in primary schools, and €10,000 Hessengeld subsidies for first-time homebuyers (plus €5,000 per child).[102] The coalition commits to expanding teacher positions for 105% basic staffing, increasing medical study places with a 10% quota for rural doctors, and accelerating fiber-optic broadband to all households by 2030.[100] Housing policies target affordability by curbing speculation, limiting vacancies to six months, and funding energy-efficient renovations, while inner-city revitalization pilots in 5-8 regions under 150,000 residents aim to bolster local commerce by 2029.[100] On security and environment, governance stresses law enforcement expansion, including more police patrols in crime hotspots and IP address retention for cybercrime probes, alongside cybersecurity resilience centers.[102] Climate goals include state administration neutrality by 2030 and overall by 2045, with renewables exceeding 50% of electricity and investments in green tech for heavy industry, though critics note slowed progress toward 1.5°C targets.[100][101] Healthcare funding rises to €550 million annually for hospitals, and social policies enhance family support, swimming access via SWIMplus, and anti-antisemitism offices.[100][102] Implementation occurs via the unicameral Landtag, where the coalition holds a slim majority, prioritizing bureaucracy reduction for volunteers and digital services rollout.[100]Political controversies and debates
In the 2023 state election held on October 8, migration policy emerged as a central debate, with voters expressing dissatisfaction over rising asylum applications—over 200,000 nationwide in the first eight months of the year—and associated challenges like housing shortages and public safety incidents. The Christian Democratic Union (CDU), led by Minister-President Boris Rhein, secured 34.8% of the vote, forming a grand coalition with the Social Democratic Party (SPD) despite the Alternative for Germany (AfD) achieving 20.8%, its strongest result in Hesse to date. AfD campaigned on stricter border controls and repatriation of rejected asylum seekers, capitalizing on empirical data showing increased irregular entries and integration strains in urban centers like Frankfurt.[50][103] This outcome reflected broader causal links between federal policy failures under the Scholz coalition and state-level voter shifts, though mainstream analyses often downplayed migration's role in favor of generic "populism" narratives. The classification and surveillance of the AfD's Hessian branch by the state Office for the Protection of the Constitution (Verfassungsschutz) has fueled ongoing debates about democratic boundaries versus political expression. In May 2021, the agency designated the party a "suspected right-wing extremist" entity, enabling informant recruitment and data collection; a September 2025 court ruling upheld this, citing AfD statements portraying asylum seekers as "ethnic strangers" undermining human dignity.[104] AfD leaders contested the decision as politically motivated overreach, arguing it targets legitimate critiques of unchecked immigration—supported by statistics on asylum rejection rates exceeding 50% in recent years—rather than genuine extremism. Critics, including some constitutional scholars, question the agency's selective application, noting lower scrutiny of left-wing groups despite comparable radicalism in historical data. This tension highlights institutional biases, as Verfassungsschutz reports have faced accusations of inflating threats to justify surveillance while underemphasizing Islamist extremism's documented impacts.[105] Police infiltration by far-right elements gained prominence through the "NSU 2.0" affair, where unidentified Hessian officers were linked to a neo-Nazi network sending death threats to immigrants, politicians, and journalists starting in 2018. Investigations revealed chat groups sharing extremist content, prompting the July 2020 resignation of Frankfurt police chief Achim Scheske amid allegations of internal cover-ups. A 2022 trial in Frankfurt convicted a key suspect for over 100 threats, but broader inquiries exposed systemic vetting failures, with at least five officers suspended for related racist messaging. This scandal underscores causal vulnerabilities in law enforcement recruitment and oversight, exacerbated by post-2015 migration surges straining resources, though official reports often frame it within isolated "insider threats" rather than addressing disproportionate far-right sympathies in eastern German states spilling into Hesse.[106][107] Empirical reviews, such as those from the Federal Criminal Police Office, indicate persistent right-wing extremism in security forces, with over 400 cases nationwide by 2021, prompting mandatory ideological checks but yielding limited prosecutions.[108]Demographics
Population trends and vital statistics
As of 31 December 2024, the population of Hesse stood at approximately 6.28 million, reflecting a 0.2% increase or net gain of 13,200 individuals compared to the end of 2023.[109] This modest growth contrasts with a persistent negative natural balance, where deaths have exceeded births for years, necessitating positive net migration to sustain expansion.[110][111] Live births in Hesse totaled 53,685 in 2023, marking a 6.4% decline from 57,360 in 2022 and continuing a downward trajectory amid Germany's national fertility rate drop to 1.35 children per woman in 2024.[112] Deaths reached 71,500 in 2024, a 1.1% rise above the 2018–2023 average, yielding crude rates of roughly 8.6 births and 11.6 deaths per 1,000 inhabitants in recent years.[111][113] The resulting natural decrease—approximately -3.0 per 1,000—has been offset by migration inflows, including over 17,800 from Ukraine in 2024, driving overall stability despite demographic pressures like aging.[113]| Year | Population (end of year) | Annual Change (%) | Live Births | Deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 6,291,249 | +0.16 | - | - |
| 2021 | 6,293,100 | +0.03 | - | - |
| 2022 | 6,235,057 | -0.92 | 57,360 | - |
| 2023 | 6,267,546 | +0.52 | 53,685 | - |
| 2024 | ~6,280,746 | +0.20 | - | 71,500 |
Ethnic composition, migration, and integration
As of 31 December 2024, Hesse's total population stood at 6.28 million, with foreign nationals numbering 1.35 million, equivalent to 21.5 percent of the total.[116] [117] Approximately 33 percent of residents had a migration background in recent estimates, defined as individuals born abroad without German citizenship at birth or with at least one parent meeting that criterion.[118] This figure encompasses both first-generation immigrants and their German-born descendants, reflecting post-World War II guest worker programs, EU free movement, family reunification, and asylum inflows since the 2010s.[119] The foreign national population originates from 195 countries, with Turkish citizens forming the largest group at 167,000, followed by Ukrainians exceeding 100,000—driven by the 2022 Russian invasion—and significant cohorts from Poland, Romania, Syria, and Italy. [120] Non-EU nationals, particularly from Turkey, Syria, and Afghanistan, constitute a substantial share, often arriving via asylum or historical labor migration, while EU citizens predominate in recent economic inflows.[121] Net migration remains positive, with 2024 inflows bolstered by Ukrainian refugees and skilled labor from Eastern Europe, though overall German migration declined amid economic pressures.[122] Integration outcomes vary by origin and duration of stay, with EU migrants showing higher labor participation due to fewer barriers, while non-EU groups face persistent gaps in language proficiency and qualifications recognition.[123] The 2022 Hessian integration monitor reported employment rates for those with migrant backgrounds at approximately 70 percent for working-age individuals, compared to 80 percent for natives, with migrants overrepresented in low-skill sectors and facing 8 percent working poverty rates versus 5 percent for non-migrants.[123] [124] Crime statistics for 2023 indicate non-Germans, comprising 21 percent of the population, accounted for a disproportionate share of suspects in violent and property offenses, though aggregate rates correlate more with socioeconomic factors than migrant proportions alone; targeted deportations of 437 security-relevant individuals occurred that year.[125] [126] Cultural and educational disparities, particularly among recent non-Western arrivals, contribute to slower assimilation, as evidenced by lower school performance and higher welfare dependency in affected cohorts.[127]Religion and cultural demographics
In Hesse, church membership data from the 2022 census indicate that Protestants, primarily affiliated with the Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD), numbered 1,871,249, comprising approximately 30% of the state's population of 6.28 million.[128] Roman Catholics totaled 1,219,970, or about 19%.[128] The remaining 3,193,000 residents, roughly 51%, reported no religious affiliation or adherence to other faiths, reflecting widespread secularization driven by factors including church tax burdens and institutional scandals, with annual exits exceeding hundreds of thousands nationally.[128][129] Muslim residents, concentrated in urban areas like Frankfurt due to post-1960s labor migration from Turkey and subsequent family reunifications, are estimated at 8-10% statewide, higher than the national average of 6.6%, though precise figures rely on self-reported surveys rather than mandatory census data.[130][123] Other minorities include Eastern Orthodox Christians from Balkan and Russian migration, Jews (under 0.5%, with historic communities in Frankfurt and smaller towns), and smaller groups such as Hindus and Buddhists tied to South Asian inflows.[130] Culturally, ethnic Germans of longstanding Hessian stock dominate rural and smaller urban areas, preserving traditions like apple wine festivals (Apfelwein in the Rhein-Main region) and Protestant-influenced customs in northern districts. However, one-third of the population has a migrant background, encompassing 1.35 million foreign nationals (21% of total) as of recent counts, with over half holding German citizenship via naturalization or ethnic repatriation (e.g., Spätaussiedler from Eastern Europe).[131][123] Major non-native groups include Turks (largest immigrant community, influencing urban cuisine and mosque architecture), followed by Poles, Romanians, Ukrainians, and Syrians, whose presence has introduced parallel cultural enclaves in cities, evidenced by higher rates of endogamous marriages and distinct neighborhood demographics in Frankfurt, where 51% have migrant roots.[132][123] This composition fosters multicultural events but also strains integration, as surveys show lower intermarriage rates and persistent language barriers among first-generation arrivals.[123]Languages and dialects
Standard German serves as the official and dominant language in Hesse, used in government, education, business, and media throughout the state.[133][134] Hessian dialects, collectively known as Hessisch, form a West Central German group within the broader Middle German linguistic continuum, characterized by partial participation in the High German consonant shift and distinct phonetic traits such as the lenition of plosives and vowel reductions.[134][135] These dialects subdivide regionally into North Hessian (influenced by East Franconian elements in the northeast), Central Hessian (around Frankfurt and the Main valley), and East Hessian (in the Vogelsberg and Odenwald areas), with South Hessian varieties showing Rhine Franconian affinities near the state borders.[136] While urban centers like Frankfurt, Darmstadt, and Wiesbaden feature a leveled regiolect blending Standard German with Hessian accent—marked by softened 'ch' sounds (e.g., /ç/ to /ʃ/ or /x/) and idiomatic expressions such as Gude for "good day" or Apfelwein for local cider—rural communities preserve fuller dialectal forms.[134][137] Dialect use remains culturally prominent in Hessian media, folk theater, and festivals, but surveys indicate declining fluency among those under 40, with dialect speakers increasingly rare outside older rural populations due to urbanization, schooling in Standard German, and media standardization since the mid-20th century.[134][136] No autochthonous minority languages hold official recognition in Hesse under federal frameworks, which limit such status to Danish, Frisian, Lower Sorbian, Upper Sorbian, and Romani communities elsewhere in Germany.[138]Economy
Economic overview and GDP contributions
Hesse possesses one of Germany's most robust regional economies, with a gross domestic product (GDP) of approximately 368 billion euros in 2024, reflecting a real increase of 0.6% over the prior year despite national economic headwinds.[139] [4] This nominal GDP expansion reached 3.9%, driven partly by inflationary pressures and productivity gains.[140] The state's GDP per capita, at 57,290 euros, exceeds the German national average by over 12%, positioning Hesse among the top performers and highlighting its efficiency relative to population size of around 6.3 million.[141] [142] The tertiary sector dominates GDP contributions, accounting for 75.9% of gross value added, fueled by professional services, logistics, and trade linked to central Europe's infrastructure hubs.[143] Secondary industries, including manufacturing, contribute substantially through high-value exports such as chemicals and pharmaceuticals, which totaled over 80 billion euros in goods exports for 2023.[143] Primary sectors like agriculture remain marginal, comprising less than 1% of output, consistent with Hesse's urban-industrial orientation. This sectoral composition underscores resilience, with forecasts indicating outperformance of national growth rates into 2024 due to diversified strengths.[144] Hesse's economic performance is bolstered by its central location and export orientation, with imports exceeding exports at 122 billion euros in 2023, reflecting integration into global supply chains.[143] Recent data show steady employment at around 3 million, supporting consumer-driven growth amid moderate inflation. Official state statistics affirm this stability, though vulnerabilities to energy costs and global demand persist, as evidenced by subdued real growth amid broader European slowdowns.[143] [139]Financial services and Frankfurt's role
Frankfurt serves as Germany's primary financial hub and the leading center in continental Europe, hosting over 200 German and foreign banks alongside approximately 280 financial institutions overall.[145][146] The city accommodates the European Central Bank (ECB), which has maintained its headquarters there since 1998 to oversee Eurozone monetary policy, as well as the Deutsche Bundesbank, responsible for implementing ECB decisions domestically, and the Deutsche Börse, operator of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, which ranks as Europe's largest by trading volume in many derivatives categories.[145][147] This concentration drives substantial economic output for Hesse, where the broader "financing, rental, and business services" sector accounts for nearly one-third of the state's gross value added, with Frankfurt's financial activities forming the core.[142] In 2023, Hesse contributed about 8.5% to Germany's national GDP, bolstered by the region's service-oriented economy, including Frankfurt's role in attracting foreign direct investment totaling €150 billion statewide by late 2022, of which nearly 65% targeted the Frankfurt metropolitan area.[148] The FrankfurtRheinMain region, encompassing much of Hesse's financial activity, generated 8.35% of Germany's GDP in recent data despite occupying only 4.13% of its land area.[149] Employment in Frankfurt's banking sector reflects this dominance, with forecasts projecting around 73,500 bank employees by the end of 2025, up from prior levels amid steady recovery post-pandemic.[142] These institutions not only facilitate national and international transactions but also position Hesse as a resilient economic engine, enabling the state to achieve above-average growth rates compared to the German average in recent years, as evidenced by sustained foreign investment and service sector expansion.[142][150]Industrial sectors: Chemicals, pharma, and manufacturing
The chemical and pharmaceutical industries represent Hesse's most significant industrial export sector, accounting for 28.9% of the state's export volume in recent years, with chemical and pharmaceutical products valued at approximately €23.5 billion in 2023 exports.[143][4] This sector generated a total annual turnover of €32 billion in 2023, employing 58,212 workers across more than 180 companies, and maintains an export rate of 67%.[151][152] Key production hubs include Industriepark Höchst in Frankfurt, the largest such site in Hesse with over 90 companies and nearly 22,000 employees focused on chemical and pharmaceutical manufacturing.[153] Darmstadt serves as a central node for pharmaceuticals, hosting the headquarters of Merck KGaA, a multinational with over 12,000 employees at its Darmstadt site engaged in research, development, and production across healthcare and life sciences.[154] Other major firms in the sector include international players like Abbott, B. Braun Melsungen, Clariant, and CSL Behring, contributing to Hesse's emphasis on life sciences innovation and high-value chemical production.[151] These industries benefit from proximity to research institutions and a skilled workforce, though they face challenges from global supply chain dependencies and regulatory pressures on production costs. Broader manufacturing in Hesse complements these sectors, with mechanical engineering and machinery comprising 11.8% of exports, supporting a diverse industrial base that includes automotive assembly.[4] Facilities like the Opel plant in Rüsselsheim exemplify vehicle manufacturing contributions, integrating with chemical suppliers for components, though the sector's overall GDP share in Hesse is overshadowed by finance and logistics.[143] Manufacturing employment remains robust, with the state's SME-dominated industrial landscape—over 99% of firms qualifying as small or medium-sized—driving resilience through specialized production rather than mass-scale output.[155]Other sectors: Aerospace, IT, and agriculture
Hesse maintains a specialized aerospace cluster encompassing aviation and space technologies, with over 200 companies involved in aircraft construction, components, and supply chains.[156] Major firms such as Lufthansa Technik, MTU Aero Engines, and Nord-Micro, headquartered in Frankfurt, specialize in maintenance, engine production, and cabin systems, contributing to global supply for manufacturers like Airbus.[157][158] The Hessen Aviation network coordinates research institutions and businesses, particularly in the Frankfurt region, supporting innovations in aeronautics and satellite operations; Darmstadt hosts facilities like EUMETSAT for meteorological satellites and Telespazio Germany for engineering services.[159][160] State strategies emphasize space economy growth, leveraging Hesse's infrastructure for downstream applications amid national aerospace employment of around 120,000 as of 2025.[161][162] The information and communication technology (ICT) sector forms a cornerstone of Hesse's diversified economy, featuring approximately 10,000 enterprises that employ 122,000 workers and produce annual revenues exceeding €30 billion based on recent surveys.[163][164] Frankfurt-RheinMain stands out as Germany's hub for industrial software, optics, and specialized applications, attracting firms in software development, data centers, and cybersecurity.[165] While national IT revenues reached €126.4 billion in 2023, Hesse's concentration benefits from proximity to financial services, enabling synergies in fintech and logistics tech.[166] Agriculture occupies 42.6% of Hesse's land area but accounts for a marginal economic share, akin to Germany's national average of under 1% of GDP, with focus shifting toward sustainability over volume production.[167][168] As of 2023, the state hosted 15,300 farms, a decline of about 10% since 2013, emphasizing part-time operations and organic methods; Hesse pioneered a statewide organic support model in 2021, promoting eco-farming amid weak food processing.[67] Livestock trends reflect contraction, with laying hen stocks at 1 million producing 309.8 million eggs in 2024, while arable focus includes grains and fodder on utilized land.[169]Labor market, unemployment, and economic challenges
Hesse's labor market is characterized by high employment levels, with 3.62 million persons employed in the second quarter of 2025, representing a record high and a modest increase of 0.5% from the second quarter of 2024. The employment rate for the working-age population stood at 76.3% in 2024, exceeding the national average and reflecting strong participation driven by sectors such as finance, pharmaceuticals, and logistics centered around Frankfurt.[170][171] The registered unemployment rate in Hesse was 5.8% in September 2025, slightly above the 5.7% average forecast for the year but stable compared to national trends amid economic slowdowns. This equates to approximately 213,000 registered unemployed individuals as of August 2025, with youth unemployment remaining low at around 6.5% in 2024. Structural factors, including seasonal fluctuations and a rise in long-term unemployment, have contributed to minor increases, yet Hesse's rate remains competitive within Germany.[172][173][174] Key economic challenges include persistent skilled labor shortages despite overall low unemployment, indicating a mismatch between available workers and job requirements. Projections estimate a deficit of 178,000 to 240,000 skilled workers by 2028–2030, particularly in healthcare, nursing, IT, engineering, and manufacturing, exacerbated by an aging population and insufficient domestic training outputs. Hesse reports fewer shortages than other regions, with 39% fewer vacancies per unemployed person than the German average, but companies increasingly compromise on qualifications during hiring, with nearly one-third recruiting in the first half of 2025.[175][176] Demographic pressures and integration hurdles for migrants further strain the market, as low-skilled unemployment coexists with high-skilled vacancies, limiting growth in export-dependent industries. National economic headwinds, such as energy costs and global competition, amplify these issues, though Hesse's diversified economy provides relative resilience.[177]Education and Research
Higher education institutions
Hesse hosts 14 state institutions of higher education, including six research universities, five universities of applied sciences, and three academies of art, collectively enrolling approximately 245,000 students as of 2023/2024.[178][179] These institutions emphasize research-intensive programs, interdisciplinary approaches, and strong ties to regional industries, particularly in Frankfurt's financial sector and Darmstadt's engineering hubs. Philipps University Marburg, established in 1527 by Landgrave Philip I of Hesse, is Germany's second-oldest university and the world's oldest Protestant-founded institution, with over 22,000 students focused on humanities, medicine, and natural sciences.[180] Justus Liebig University Giessen, founded in 1607, enrolls around 25,000 students and is noted for advancements in agriculture, veterinary medicine, and chemistry, stemming from Justus von Liebig's 19th-century laboratory innovations.[181] Goethe University Frankfurt, opened in 1914 through private endowment before state integration, serves about 38,000 students across 16 faculties, with strengths in economics, philosophy, and biomedicine; it traces some academic lineages to 1484 via predecessor libraries.[182][183] Technical University Darmstadt, originating as a technical school in 1877 and gaining full university status in 1899, has 24,293 students, pioneering fields like electrical engineering and materials science.[184] University of Kassel, created in 1971 amid educational reforms merging prior colleges, accommodates roughly 25,000 students with emphases on engineering, arts, and sustainable development.[185] Universities of applied sciences, such as Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences and Fulda University of Applied Sciences, provide practice-oriented degrees in business, health, and technology, enrolling tens of thousands more and fostering vocational integration.[179] Art academies like the Staatliche Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule in Frankfurt train in visual arts and design, maintaining smaller cohorts for specialized creative training.[178]Research hubs and funding
Hesse is home to several leading non-university research institutions, including the Max Planck Institutes for Biophysics, Brain Research, and Empirical Aesthetics, all located in Frankfurt, which focus on molecular mechanisms of life, neural circuits, and the cognitive foundations of aesthetics, respectively.[186] The GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Darmstadt conducts fundamental research in nuclear physics and biophysics using particle accelerators, notably contributing to the discovery of elements like darmstadtium.[187] Darmstadt's Science City encompasses the Technical University of Darmstadt and multiple Fraunhofer Institutes specializing in applied research in areas such as microelectronics and materials science.[165] Collaborative research campuses, such as the Research Campus of Central Hesse, integrate efforts from Justus Liebig University Giessen, Philipps University Marburg, and the Technical University of Applied Sciences Central Hesse, emphasizing interdisciplinary projects in fields like life sciences and engineering.[188] The LOEWE (Landes-Offensive zur Entwicklung Wissenschaftlich-ökonomischer Exzellenz) program, a state-funded initiative, supports such consortia by financing excellence clusters that link universities, non-university institutes, and industry; in July 2025, Goethe University Frankfurt received Hesse's sole new LOEWE center award in the current round, involving partners from Marburg, Giessen, and international entities for advanced research.[189][190] Public research funding in Hesse totaled €676 million in the latest comprehensive data from the German Research Foundation (DFG), reflecting investments in basic and third-party funding across institutions.[191] The state launched the Hessen Fund in May 2025, allocating €1 billion over multiple years to foster innovation in future technologies through grants for clusters, R&D, and technology transfer.[192] Additional support includes the HEUREKA program, committing €4 billion for modernizing university infrastructure to enhance research capacity, and European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) allocations under the 2021-2027 period prioritizing R&D for smart growth.[193][194] These mechanisms emphasize causal linkages between funding, institutional collaboration, and economic outputs, with third-party funds at institutions like TU Darmstadt doubling over the past decade to sustain high-level projects in AI, energy, and physics.[195][196]Key research areas: Physics, health, informatics
Hesse is a hub for advanced physics research, particularly in nuclear and heavy ion physics, anchored by the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Darmstadt, which operates a unique accelerator facility for probing atomic nuclei, plasma physics, and biophysics applications such as ion beam cancer therapy.[197] The center collaborates on the international FAIR facility, expanding capabilities for antiproton and ion studies to explore matter under extreme conditions.[198] Complementing this, Goethe University Frankfurt's Department of Physics excels in nuclear and particle physics, quantum optics, astrophysics, and condensed matter, with contributions to detector technologies and high-energy experiments.[199] TU Darmstadt's physics programs integrate with the Helmholtz Research Academy Hesse for FAIR, emphasizing theoretical and experimental hadron physics.[200] In health research, the Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research in Bad Nauheim drives investigations into cardiovascular and respiratory mechanisms, including molecular signaling and organ regeneration.[201] The Universities of Giessen and Marburg host specialized centers, such as the Institute for Lung Health (ILH) in Giessen, which examines biological repair processes and resilience in pulmonary diseases, and the Center for Human Genetics in Marburg, focusing on genetic disease etiologies through diagnostics and counseling.[202][203] State-funded LOEWE initiatives bolster these efforts by linking university labs with clinical partners for translational research in infection control and chronic conditions.[204] Informatics research in Hesse emphasizes applied and theoretical computer science, led by TU Darmstadt's Department of Computer Science, established in 1972 as one of Germany's pioneers, with strengths in artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, privacy engineering, and complex networked systems.[205] The department's initiatives, including the UKP Lab for natural language processing and machine learning applications, support large-scale projects in conversational AI and data security.[206] Goethe University Frankfurt advances quantum informatics, having commissioned Hesse's first quantum computer in 2023 for algorithm development and simulation tasks.[207] Inter-university collaborations, such as the Doctoral Centre for Applied Informatics, foster interdisciplinary work in software engineering and human-computer interaction across Hesse's higher education institutions.[208]Culture
Literature, art, and music traditions
Hesse's literary traditions are prominently associated with the Brothers Grimm, Jacob (1785–1863) and Wilhelm (1786–1859), who were born in Hanau and drew extensively from the region's oral folklore for their seminal collection Grimm's Fairy Tales, first published in 1812.[209] Northern Hesse, particularly areas around Kassel and Marburg, served as a key source for their tales, reflecting local customs, landscapes, and peasant narratives that emphasized moral and supernatural elements rooted in pre-industrial rural life.[210] This work not only preserved Hessian dialect stories but also contributed to the broader 19th-century German nationalist literary movement by compiling over 200 folktales, influencing global perceptions of Germanic cultural heritage.[209] In art, Hesse maintains a vibrant tradition through its institutions rather than dominant indigenous movements, with Frankfurt's Städel Museum, founded in 1815 by merchant Johann Friedrich Städel, holding one of Europe's premier collections of paintings from the 14th to 20th centuries, including works by Rembrandt, Rubens, and Monet.[211] Kassel's Fridericianum, established in 1779 as one of the continent's earliest public museums, hosts the documenta exhibition—a quinquennial contemporary art event launched in 1955 that attracts global artists and emphasizes experimental installations and conceptual works, underscoring Hesse's role in postwar European avant-garde discourse.[211] The Liebieghaus in Frankfurt, opened in 1899, specializes in international sculpture from antiquity to the Baroque, complementing the state's over 300 museums that preserve artifacts tied to regional history and craftsmanship.[212] Musical traditions in Hesse trace to the Baroque era, exemplified by Christoph Graupner (1683–1760), born near Kirchberg and appointed Kapellmeister at the Darmstadt court in 1712, where he composed over 1,300 cantatas, 113 symphonies, and numerous concertos blending Italian influences with German polyphony.[213] Landgraviate courts in Kassel and Darmstadt historically patronized ensembles that fostered instrumental and vocal music, including early opera performances. In the modern period, Frankfurt's Alte Oper, rebuilt in 1981 after World War II destruction, serves as a hub for classical concerts by orchestras like the Frankfurt Radio Symphony, while folk elements persist in regional Heimat music featuring brass bands and dialect songs evoking rural Hessian life.[211] 20th-century contributions include Hans Ulrich Engelmann (1921–2011), a Darmstadt-born composer known for orchestral and choral works influenced by neoclassicism.[214]Architecture and UNESCO sites
Hesse's architectural heritage encompasses Roman fortifications, Carolingian remnants, medieval Gothic structures, Baroque ensembles, Art Nouveau developments, and contemporary high-rises, particularly in Frankfurt, Europe's financial hub with over 30 skyscrapers exceeding 100 meters as of 2023.[215] Traditional half-timbered (Fachwerk) houses prevail in towns like Hanau and Seligenstadt, featuring exposed timber frames filled with brick or plaster dating from the 15th to 18th centuries.[216] Four UNESCO World Heritage sites in Hesse highlight exceptional architectural achievements. The Abbey and Altenmünster of Lorsch, inscribed in 1991, preserves the 8th-century Torhall, a rare Carolingian gatehouse constructed from red sandstone with arcaded facades and figurative sculptures evoking classical antiquity.[217] This structure, measuring approximately 10 meters high, exemplifies early medieval architectural revival under Charlemagne's influence.[217] The Bergpark Wilhelmshöhe in Kassel, designated in 2013, represents Baroque landscape architecture initiated in 1689 by Landgrave Charles of Hesse-Kassel, featuring the 255-meter Hercules statue atop a hill, cascading water features spanning 350 meters, and the neoclassical Schloss Wilhelmshöhe palace completed in 1807.[218] The park's hydraulic system, including aqueducts and tunnels, demonstrates 18th-century engineering integrated with theatrical water games activated seasonally.[218] Mathildenhöhe Darmstadt, inscribed in 2021, comprises the early 20th-century Darmstadt Artists' Colony founded in 1899 by Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig, showcasing Jugendstil (German Art Nouveau) buildings such as the Wedding Tower (1908) by Joseph Maria Olbrich and exhibition halls with symbolic motifs blending organic forms and modern functionality.[219] The site's 15 structures and gardens illustrate the transition from historicism to modernism.[219] The Upper Germanic-Rhaetian Limes, part of the Frontiers of the Roman Empire inscribed in 2005, includes Hessian segments with reconstructed Roman forts like the Saalburg near Bad Homburg, a 2nd-century auxiliary camp rebuilt in the early 20th century to original stone-and-timber specifications, encompassing barracks, gates, and a museum.[220] This 180-kilometer stretch in Hesse underscores Roman military architecture with palisades, watchtowers, and stone fortifications.[221]Sports, media, and public broadcasting
Eintracht Frankfurt, a professional football club founded in 1899 and based in Frankfurt, competes in the Bundesliga and plays home matches at Deutsche Bank Park, which has a capacity of 59,500 spectators.[222] The club achieved international success by winning the UEFA Europa League in 2022, marking its first major European title since the 1960 European Cup.[223] Basketball is represented by the Fraport Skyliners, a first-division team in the German Basketball League established in Frankfurt.[224] Cycling events like the Eschborn–Frankfurt race, part of the UCI World Tour, annually attract professional riders through the region's roads.[225] The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ), established in 1949 and published daily from Frankfurt, serves as a leading national newspaper with a focus on politics, economics, and international affairs, maintaining a circulation of approximately 200,000 copies as of recent audits. The Frankfurter Rundschau (FR), founded in 1945, provides regional and national coverage from Frankfurt with a social-liberal editorial stance and reaches around 87,000 daily readers.[226] Both outlets emphasize in-depth reporting, though FAZ is noted for its conservative-leaning analysis while FR aligns more progressively, reflecting diverse viewpoints in Hesse's media landscape.[227] Hessischer Rundfunk (HR), the public broadcasting corporation for Hesse headquartered in Frankfurt, operates as a member of the ARD network and delivers regional television via hr-fernsehen alongside radio channels including hr1 for information and hr3 for entertainment.[228] Founded in the post-World War II era in 1948, HR funds its operations through a household broadcasting fee and produces content covering news, culture, and sports tailored to the state, reaching audiences from Kassel to Darmstadt.[229] Its programming includes classical music broadcasts and regional journalism, prioritizing public service over commercial interests.[228]Infrastructure and Transport
Road and rail networks
Hesse maintains a dense road network integral to its role as a central European transport corridor, with approximately 1,000 kilometers of autobahns as of early 2023.[230] These highways, part of the federal system under the Bundesministerium für Digitales und Verkehr, include critical segments of the A3 (connecting the Rhine-Main region eastward toward Würzburg), the A5 (linking Frankfurt northward to Kassel and southward to Karlsruhe), and the A7 (traversing northern Hesse from Kassel toward the south). The autobahns facilitate high-volume freight and passenger traffic, with the A5 and A3 handling some of Germany's heaviest loads due to proximity to Frankfurt's logistics hubs. Federal roads (Bundesstraßen) complement this, forming part of the überörtlichen Verkehrs network totaling several thousand kilometers managed at the state level for inter-regional connectivity.[231] The rail network in Hesse, operated predominantly by Deutsche Bahn, spans operational track lengths reported under federal statistics, with a focus on electrified lines supporting both regional and long-distance services.[232] Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof functions as a primary national and international hub, accommodating up to 26 mainline tracks for ICE high-speed trains on routes such as Frankfurt–Cologne (via the high-speed line operational since 2002) and Frankfurt–Mannheim, enabling speeds up to 300 km/h. Northern lines, including those along the A7 corridor to Kassel, integrate with the broader InterCityExpress grid, while the Rhine-Main S-Bahn system provides suburban connectivity across the densely populated Frankfurt metropolitan area. Electrification covers the majority of main lines, aligning with Germany's national push for efficient rail freight diversion from roads, though maintenance backlogs have periodically affected reliability.[233]Air transport and airports
Frankfurt Airport (FRA), located in the Frankfurt Rhine-Main metropolitan region, serves as Hesse's primary international aviation hub and Germany's busiest airport, handling 61.6 million passengers in 2024, a 3.7% increase from 2023 but still below the pre-pandemic peak of 70.6 million in 2019.[234][235] Operated by Fraport AG, it functions as a central European transfer point for Lufthansa Group airlines, supporting extensive long-haul and short-haul routes, with significant cargo operations exceeding 2 million tons annually in recent years.[236] The airport's infrastructure includes four runways, advanced facilities for intercontinental connectivity, and integration with high-speed rail via Lufthansa Express Rail, enhancing multimodal transport efficiency.[237] Regional air transport in Hesse relies on smaller facilities, with Kassel-Calden Airport (KSF) providing limited scheduled services primarily during summer seasons, recording approximately 23,230 total aircraft movements in 2024 but lacking regular winter flights due to economic challenges and low demand.[238][239] Primarily serving northern Hesse, it handles occasional charter and cargo operations but struggles with financial deficits and competition from larger hubs. Frankfurt-Egelsbach Airport (EDFE), situated 10 km southeast of Frankfurt Airport, caters exclusively to general aviation, including flight training, private charters, and business jets, without commercial passenger services; it operates within the busy Frankfurt Terminal Control Area under visual flight rules.[240] Hesse hosts numerous smaller airfields, such as those in Reichelsheim, Breitscheid, and Homberg (Ohm), focused on recreational flying, gliding, and agricultural uses, contributing to a robust general aviation sector supported by the state's aviation industry cluster, Hessen Aviation.[159] These facilities underscore Hesse's role in fostering aviation technology and maintenance, though passenger air transport remains overwhelmingly concentrated at Frankfurt Airport, which accounts for the vast majority of the state's aerial traffic volume.[241]Public transport and digital infrastructure
Public transport in Hesse is coordinated through three primary transport associations: the Rhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund (RMV) covering the central and southern regions including Frankfurt, the Nordhessischer Verkehrsverbund (NVV) serving northern areas around Kassel, and the Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Neckar (VRN) handling the southwestern parts.[242][243] The RMV, one of Germany's largest networks, encompasses regional rail, S-Bahn commuter trains, Frankfurt's U-Bahn subway, trams, and buses across approximately 300 municipalities, transporting over 800 million passengers annually or about 2.5 million on typical workdays.[244][245] The NVV focuses on buses, trams, and regional trains in northern Hesse, integrating services from multiple operators to ensure connectivity in less urbanized zones.[246] These systems emphasize integrated ticketing and timetables, contributing to Hesse's reputation for efficient local and regional mobility.[243] Digital infrastructure in Hesse aligns with the state's Gigabit Strategy, which prioritizes nationwide fiber-optic broadband, public Wi-Fi expansion, 5G deployment, and preparations for 6G to support economic competitiveness.[247] By the end of 2023, approximately 73% of households had access to at least 1 Gbit/s broadband speeds, while direct fiber-optic connections to buildings (FTTB/H) reached 26.06%, reflecting a 61% increase from late 2022 amid accelerated rollout efforts.[248] A 2022 fiber-optic pact between the state government and telecom providers committed to adding 530,000 new connections within 12 months, targeting rural gaps to enable advanced applications like industrial 5G.[249] Frankfurt, as a major hub, hosts Europe's largest internet exchange (DE-CIX) and benefits from dense fiber networks and 5G infrastructure, positioning Hesse for high-capacity data traffic essential to finance, logistics, and tech sectors.[250] Mobile coverage includes ongoing 5G expansions, with operators like Deutsche Telekom enhancing base stations to achieve broad territorial reach.[251]References
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Constitution_of_Hesse
