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1

Wulf, Stefan. "The Revista Médica project: medical journals as instruments of German foreign cultural policy towards Latin America, 1920-1938." História, Ciências, Saúde-Manguinhos 20, no. 1 (2013): 181–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0104-59702013000100010.

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After the First World War, foreign cultural policy became one of the few fields in which Germany could act with relative freedom from the restrictions imposed by the Treaty of Versailles. In this context the Hamburg doctors Ludolph Brauer, Bernhard Nocht and Peter Mühlens created the Revista Médica de Hamburgo (as of 1928 Revista Médica Germano-Ibero-Americana), a monthly medical journal in Spanish (and occasionally in Portuguese), to increase German influence especially in Latin American countries. The focus of this article is on the protagonists of this project, the Hamburg doctors, the Foreign Office in Berlin, the German pharmaceutical industry, and the publishing houses involved.
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Sneeringer, Julia. "“Assembly Line of Joys”: Touring Hamburg's Red Light District, 1949–1966." Central European History 42, no. 1 (2009): 65–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000893890900003x.

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Hamburg, as any tourist guide will tell you, occupies a unique position within Germany. Now, every city can make this claim, so what constitutes Hamburg's uniqueness? Natives would say it is the harbor (Germany's largest) and the water that flows through the metropolis that claims more bridges than Venice. But ask an outsider, German or not, and he or she will likely say the Reeperbahn, Hamburg's notorious red-light district, known also to music fans as the incubator of The Beatles. Historically speaking, the harbor has been this Hanseatic city's source of trade and prosperity, as well as a major transit point for overseas travelers; the nearby Reeperbahn has long been a magnet for those seeking pleasure and distraction from the cares of life. In the 1950s and 1960s—the years of West Germany's “Economic Miracle” (Wirtschaftswunder)—Hamburg saw greater numbers of visitors than ever before. These guests included Germans from west and east (before the Berlin Wall was erected in 1961); international tourists, particularly from neighboring countries; British NATO troops stationed in the northern Federal Republic; and seamen from around the world. Some chose Hamburg specifically as their destination, others passed through on their way to someplace else.
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Hartung, Viktor, Martin Heller, and Martin Husemann. "First record of the invasive true bug (Heteroptera) Halyomorpha halys (Stål, 1855) from Hamburg with other records from Northern Germany and possible implications for its range expansion." Evolutionary Systematics 6, no. 1 (2022): 57–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/evolsyst.6.80744.

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The invasive pentatomid true bug Halyomorpha halys is reported for the first time from the German state of Hamburg, along with records from several other locations in Northern Germany. Specimens collected by scientists were evaluated along with records from citizen science platforms. DNA barcode sequences of several H. halys specimens from Hamburg were evaluated along with 42 sequences of the species from across the world in a haplotype network analysis demonstrating that all specimens studied from Hamburg had the haplotype H3. The present state of distribution of H. halys in Germany, patterns of range extension, invasiveness, and possible economic impacts are discussed.
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Vorberg, Martin. "The Bucerius Law School Ltd Hamburg (Germany)." Legal Information Management 6, no. 3 (2006): 229–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1472669606000764.

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5

Augustine, Dolores L. "The Business Elites of Hamburg and Berlin." Central European History 24, no. 2-3 (1991): 132–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008938900018902.

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In many respects, Hamburg and Berlin represent two societal models at work in Wilhelmian Germany. Hamburg and the other Hanseatic cities, Lübeck and Bremen, have traditionally been thought to represent bourgeois society as it might have been in Germany as a whole: self-assured, liberal, and antiaristocratic. Historians are generally in agreement with Richard J. Evans in his assertion that “neither the economic activity nor the social world nor finally the political beliefs and actions of the Hamburg merchants corresponded to anything that has ever been defined, however remotely, as ‘feudal.’” Berlin, on the other hand, was dominated by the imperial court and the aristocracy, which, it is said, seduced and fatally weakened not only the business elite of the capital, but in fact the most influential segment of the German bourgeoisie as a whole.
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Bale, Jeff. "“Weg Da—Wir Wollen Lernen!” Education Reform in Hamburg, Germany in Neoliberal Times." Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education 115, no. 8 (2013): 1–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/016146811311500801.

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Background/Context This paper is in dialogue with critical policy scholarship that has developed a certain consensus about what neoliberalism is and what its impact has been on recent education policy. A substantial part of the paper comprises a synthesis of recent German scholarship on neoliberal education policies in that country. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study Drawing on critical analysis of neoliberal education policy, this paper examines a recent education reform measure in Hamburg, Germany. A key component of the intended reform measure was defeated by a ballot initiative spearheaded by a coalition of Hamburg residents widely understood to represent the city's wealthy elite. Making sense of the controversy over this reform measure is the central goal of this paper. To do so, I identify five features of neoliberal education policy in Germany and use them as a framework within which to read the specific reform measure in Hamburg and the resistance to it. Research Design This paper reports an interpretive policy analysis and draws on document sources from four interpretive communities: (a) Hamburg's education ministry; (b) two pro-reform coalitions; (c) one anti-reform coalition; and (c) news media sources. A total of 389 documents were collected for this study, to which I applied a grounded theory approach for data analysis. Conclusions/Recommendations By reading this controversy against previous scholarship on neoliberal education policy, I argue that this specific case of education reform in Hamburg does not follow the pattern such analysis would predict. By stressing this divergence, I neither intend to challenge the consensus on neoliberalism within critical policy scholarship, nor to position this reform policy as a panacea to neoliberal ills. Rather, I argue that the anomalous nature of this specific reform effort in Hamburg provides two unique analytical opportunities: (a) to understand more deeply the constraints imposed by neoliberalism on schooling, especially in a context of policy making that bucks the neoliberal trend; and (b) to identify more clearly what educational policy strategies are required to move beyond neoliberal imperatives for schooling and society.
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Thiede, Jörn. "Georg von Neumayer and his traces in Germany." Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 123, no. 1 (2011): 117. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rs11117.

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Georg Balthasar Neumayer (1826–1909) was probably the most important figure in establishing maritime services and ocean research in Germany, after he spent several years in Australia as a young scientist. He succeeded to found the ‘Deutsche Seewarte’ in Hamburg, the predecessor of the modern BSH (Bundesamt für Seeschifffahrt und Hydrographie—Federal Martime and Hydrographic Agency) in Hamburg and Rostock and established a wide range of maritime services by providing sailing instructions for merchant vessels. He took initiatives towards Germany´s first global ocean expedition on Gazelle, the first International Polar Year, the first German Antarctic Expedition on Gauss, and became a widely recognised and respected science manager, on the national as well on the international scene.
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Afram, Alex. "AFRICAN CHRISTIAN COUNCIL, HAMBURG, GERMANY." International Review of Mission 89, no. 354 (2000): 434–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1758-6631.2000.tb00224.x.

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9

Raddatz, Liv, and Jeremy Mennis. "Environmental Justice in Hamburg, Germany." Professional Geographer 65, no. 3 (2013): 495–511. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00330124.2012.700500.

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Kobayashi, Akira. "Preface: ISAPS ’09, Hamburg, Germany." Vacuum 85, no. 5 (2010): 553–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vacuum.2010.08.010.

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11

Püschel, Klaus, and Jan P. Sperhake. "Corona deaths in Hamburg, Germany." International Journal of Legal Medicine 134, no. 4 (2020): 1267–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00414-020-02332-x.

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12

Langenbacher, Eric. "Competing Interpretations of the Past in Contemporary Germany." German Politics and Society 20, no. 1 (2002): 49–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/104503002782385507.

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Micha Brumlik, Hajo Funke and Lars Rensmann, Umkämpftes Vergessen: Walser-Debatte, Holocaust-Mahnmal und neuere deutsche Geschichtspolitik (Berlin: Verlag Das Arabische Buch, 2000)Robert G. Moeller, War Stories: The Search for a Usable Past in the Federal Republic of Germany (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001)Klaus Naumann, Der Krieg als Text: Das Jahr 1945 im kulturellen Gedächtnis der Presse (Hamburg: Hamburger Edition, 1998) Klaus Neumann, Shifting Memories: The Nazi Past in the New Germany (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2000)
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Eisner, Cornelia. "La recepció de l'obra <i>Després de la pluja</i>, de Sergi Belbel, a Alemanya." Zeitschrift für Katalanistik 23 (July 1, 2010): 117–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.46586/zfk.2010.117-131.

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Summary: Sergi Belbel is the Catalan playwright whose plays have had most international success, including in Germany. The play that made him known internationally in the early nineties was Carícies. In Germany, his work came to public attention when his tragicomedy Després de la pluja (Nach dem Regen) premiered at Deutsches Schauspielhaus in Hamburg in 1995. This article takes into account the analyses of critiques of the play’s German premiere as well as six other productions in different cities of Germany and Switzerland and analyzes the reception of Belbel’s plays on the German stage. [Keywords: Catalan theatre, Sergi Belbel, contemporary theatre, German stage, theatre criticism, reception study]
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14

Lindberg, Erik. "The Rise of Hamburg as a Global Marketplace in the Seventeenth Century: A Comparative Political Economy Perspective." Comparative Studies in Society and History 50, no. 3 (2008): 641–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417508000285.

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The rise of Hamburg as a global marketplace and financial centre in the seventeenth century was a significant sign of the bourgeoning integration of European markets. In the early seventeenth century, the urban staple function in northwest Europe was largely concentrated in Amsterdam, while in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries London and Hamburg rose to preeminence. Hamburg served as a hub for international trade, connecting markets in England, Germany, Hungary, Poland, the Baltic, and the Mediterranean. Goods such as raisins, sugar, tobacco, salt, iron, and leather changed hands, with the transactions reflecting the widespread mercantile network in which Hamburg took part. Furthermore, the commercial development of Hamburg and the rise of the Prussian state were important steps in creating a well-ordered and integrated urban network in Germany long before political unification.
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Lüdecke, Cornelia. "Neumayer’s impact on meteorology in Germany." Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 123, no. 1 (2011): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rs11035.

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When Georg von Neumayer (1826–1909) had a practical training with Johann von Lamont (1805-1879) at the observatory at Bogenhausen (today part of Munich), he learnt not only about astronomical observations and the construction of instruments, but also about magnetic and meteorological measurements, as well as the organisation of networks of stations and the importance of publication of measured data and their analysis. When he became first Director of the Deutsche Seewarte (German Maritime Observatory) in Hamburg (1876–1903) he subsequently introduced weather telegraphy and synoptic meteorology and installed a workshop for the development and calibration of meteorological and magnetic instruments and compasses. He also initiated the establishment of a weather service in Bavaria and the aerological (kite) station at Groß Borstel close to Hamburg (1903). Under his guidance the Deutsche Seewarte soon took over a leading role in Germany, which was confirmed in Neumayer’s membership in the International Meteorological Committee (1879–1888). Finally he became the founding President of the Deutsche Meteorologische Gesellschaft (German Meteorological Society) in 1883. This can be regarded as a further important step for the institutionalisation of meteorology as a discipline in Germany.
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Blaszczyk, Izabela Maria. "Język polski w Niemczech. Wpływ języka niemieckiego na polszczyznę Polonii niemieckiej." Adeptus, no. 5 (June 18, 2015): 64–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.11649/a.2015.001.

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Polish in Germany. The influence of German on the speech of Polish heritage speakers (Polonia) illustrated by the example of the use of the conditionalPolish in Germany has hardly been analyzed systematically so far, although a large population with Polish ancestry can be found there. This paper reveals how Polish heritage speakers in Germany characteristically use the conditional. The study’s findings are the result of an initial analysis of the ‘Hamburg Corpus of Bilingualism of Polish in Germany’ (HamCoPoliG). The article concludes by comparing these specific results with current, general research on heritage speakers’ use of conditional forms and shows that not all phenomena can be explained by the influence of German. Język polski w Niemczech. Wpływ języka niemieckiego na polszczyznę Polonii niemieckiejJęzyk polski Polonii niemieckiej stanowi zagadnienie, które do tej pory prawie wcale nie było systematycznie badane, mimo że Polonia jest w Niemczech liczna. Poniższy artykuł przedstawia sposób stosowania trybu przypuszczającego przez osoby drugiej lub trzeciej generacji Polonii (tzw. heritage speakers) w Niemczech. Wyniki badania opierają się na analizie korpusu „Hamburg Corpus of Polish in Germany” (HamCoPoliG). Wyniki tej analizy są porównywane z obecnymi badaniami na temat stosowania form trybu przypuszczającego u osób bilingwalnych. Pierwsze wnioski wskazują na to, że w przypadku stosowania trybu przypuszczającego w porównaniu z polszczyzną standardową zachodzi niewiele zmian, które da się wytłumaczyć wpływem języka niemieckiego.
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Gillmeister, Heiner. "Ein Londoner Möbelfabrikant und das erste Hamburger Tennisturnier." STADION 45, no. 1 (2021): 138–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0172-4029-2021-1-138.

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Tennis and golf, as well as numerous other sports, found their way to Germany in the era of the Wilhelmine Empire. Hoteliers in German health resorts, operators of private sports grounds or commercial playground companies, among others, played a significant role. Uhlenhorst, a district of Hamburg since 1894, was already the venue for major tennis tournaments with international players in the early 1890s. At that time, the London merchant, tennis player and sports official Walter Howard donated a silver cup to the Ice Rink Club on Uhlenhorst (Eisbahnverein auf der Uhlenhorst), which was used as a prize for the “Championship of Hamburg”. This article goes into Walter Howard’s biography and outlines his commitment to Hamburg tennis, which also gave important impulses to women’s tennis.
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18

Kr�ger, A., and K. P�schel. "Haptoglobin subtypes in Northern Germany (Hamburg)." International Journal of Legal Medicine 106, no. 1 (1993): 53–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf01225026.

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Groene, Oana R., Thorben Huelmann, Wolfgang Hampe, and Pedram Emami. "German Physicians and Medical Students Do Not Represent the Population They Serve." Healthcare 11, no. 12 (2023): 1662. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11121662.

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Medical professionals who represent the communities they serve are in a better position to understand patients‘ social circumstances and communicate in a more patient-centered way. International studies show limited diversity and underrepresentation of certain social groups in the population of physicians and medical students. We designed an observational study to investigate the cultural and socio-economic diversity of physicians and medical applicants in comparison to the general population in Germany. We invited 15,195 physicians in Hamburg and 11,287 medical applicants in Germany to participate in an online survey between June and August 2022. The lower three quintiles of objective socio-economic background (SEB) were vastly underrepresented in all subsamples of the study and in particular amongst applicants and students admitted in Hamburg: 57.9% of physicians and 73.8% of medical students in Hamburg originate from the top quintile of SEB. The Turkish and Polish communities were particularly underrepresented in the group of physicians from Hamburg and medical applicants and students in Germany (p = 0.02; p &lt; 0.001). In line with existing evidence, the vast majority of physicians and medical students come from the most affluent households when entering medical school. Widening participation strategies are needed to facilitate fairer access to the study of medicine in Germany.
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Madden, J. S. "Euthanasia in Nazi Germany." Psychiatric Bulletin 24, no. 9 (2000): 347. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.24.9.347.

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The 11th International Congress of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) was held in Hamburg during August 1999. The most memorable feature of the successful event was not the presence of 10 000 psychiatrists from 96 countries, nor their 6000 papers, nor the elegance of the rebuilt city, but a poignant exhibition prepared by the German Society for Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Neurology. The presentation, titled ‘In Memoriam‘, described the wartime extermination within Germany of 180 000 psychiatric patients. The killers were their psychiatrists.
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Kotin, Igor Yu, and Ekaterina D. Aloyants. "Century of Indology at the University of Hamburg." Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Asian and African Studies 13, no. 1 (2021): 91–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/spbu13.2021.106.

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The article is devoted to the development of Indology at the University of Hamburg and analyzes the contribution of Hamburg Indologists to the study of ancient and medieval India and the study of modern languages and literature of India in the discipline’s development in the sister city of St. Petersburg. The authors note that the development of Indology has a long history in Germany and the uniqueness of the Hamburg school is observed. Germany had more than forty Indology departments in the 19th century, much more than Great Britain then had. The teaching of Indian languages in Hamburg began in 1914 in the classrooms of the university’s predecessor, the Hamburg Colonial Institute founded in 1908 and dissolved in 1919, soon after World War I. The University of Hamburg started as new and progressive institution of education in Weimar Germany, and continued for the next hundred years, where the teaching of Sanskrit, studying ancient medieval monuments of Indian literature, philosophy, and religious texts reached a global level thanks to outstanding Indologists, such as Walter Schubring, Ludwig Alsdorf, Albrecht Welzer, and Lambert Schmithausen. The article also considers the contribution to the development of Indology in Hamburg by current Professors Eva Wilden, Michael Zimmermann, Harunaga Isaacson et al. Thanks to the activities of these professors and their colleagues from Russia and India such as Tatiana Iosifovna and Ram Prasad Bhatta, the study and teaching of the languages and cultures of India within the framework of the Center for Culture and History of India and Tibet of the Institute of Asia and Africa now includes the study of Tamil language and literature as well as North Indian languages and literature.
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Manthey, Jakob, Heiko Becher, Jürgen Gallinat, et al. "Analysing Patient Trajectories of Individuals with Alcohol Use Disorders (PRAGMA)." SUCHT 70, no. 3 (2024): 178–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1024/0939-5911/a000877.

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Abstract: Aim: Alcohol use is causing a considerable health burden for individuals and society in Germany. To reduce the burden from alcohol use, ensuring optimal treatment for those who are in need, is key. With this data-linkage study, we aim to provide a comprehensive description of healthcare service use among individuals with alcohol use disorders (AUD) in Hamburg, the second-largest German city. Methods: The study population is defined as adults living in Hamburg, currently insured by one of two statutory health insurance funds and with at least one alcohol-specific ICD-10 code between 2016 and 2021. Additionally, we will obtain data from pension funds and the Hamburg basic data monitoring system of outpatient addiction aid. By using unique identifiers, individual register data from these three sources will be linked. Hypotheses and qualitative analyses are presented in the form of research questions to analyse administrative prevalence rates, patient trajectories and predictors of treatment success as well as to estimate the impact of prototypical care pathways and the COVID-19 pandemic on utilization of alcohol-specific healthcare services. Discussion: The study ‘Patient Routes of People with Alcohol Use Disorders in Germany’ (PRAGMA) will be the first to provide an in-depth understanding of treatment provision for people with AUD in Germany. Following up a heterogeneous sample of people with AUD for six years will provide a unique opportunity to compare current with recommended care pathways as well to identify options for care improvements.
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Cvrys, J., J. Heinrich, and H. E. Wichmann. "INDOOR NO2 IN HAMBURG (WEST GERMANY) AND ERFURT (EAST GERMANY)." Epidemiology 9, Supplement (1998): S128. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00001648-199807001-00428.

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Behr, Hein Dieter, Volker Wulfmeyer, and Imke Wulfmeyer. "The DACH Conference 2007 September 1014, 2007 in Hamburg, Germany." Meteorologische Zeitschrift 17, no. 5 (2008): 531–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/0941-2948/2008/0331.

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Nurislamov, Ruslan Rifovich. "The enlightenment committee Hamburg-Bremen and covert Propaganda of Weimar Germany abroad, 1923-1932." Genesis: исторические исследования, no. 10 (October 2023): 70–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.25136/2409-868x.2023.10.38990.

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The subject of the study is the activity of the enlightenment committee Hamburg-Bremen, an organization created after the outbreak of the Ruhr crisis in 1923 by the Hamburg Chamber of Commerce to conduct export propaganda abroad. The article analyzes documents from the funds of the Russian State Military Archive and the German Federal Archives related to the functioning of this structure in 1923-1932. The purpose of the study is to determine how the Hamburg organization managed to deploy large—scale propaganda activity that spread to almost all countries of the world and acquired national significance in Weimar Germany. Special attention is paid to the characteristics of various areas of work, interaction with official departments and the impact of the world economic crisis of 1929-1933 on the activities of the enlightenment committee Hamburg-Bremen. Based on the study, it was revealed that the organization formed in Hamburg published various printed products, an information service was created abroad, and the key direction was covert penetration into the foreign press. The article shows that the reason for such activity lay in the interest of the economic circles of the region in improving the image of the country abroad in order to normalize foreign trade relations, and the possibility of its implementation — in the presence of the necessary connections for propaganda in foreign countries. One of the results of the study is the conclusion that the activities of the enlightenment committee Hamburg-Bremen affected not only export, but also cultural and political propaganda and was supported by the government interested in carrying out propaganda activities in a hidden form and through private structures. Over the years, the Hamburg-based organization has increasingly come under the influence of the state, whose assistance has become especially urgent after the global economic crisis of 1929-1933.
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Cianci, Michele, Gleb Bourenkov, Stefan Fiedler, and Thomas Schneider. "EMBL macromolecular crystallography beamlines @ PETRA3 - Hamburg Germany." Acta Crystallographica Section A Foundations of Crystallography 65, a1 (2009): s334. http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s0108767309092861.

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Krüger, A., J. Börstler, M. Badusche, R. Lühken, R. Garms, and E. Tannich. "Mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) of metropolitan Hamburg, Germany." Parasitology Research 113, no. 8 (2014): 2907–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00436-014-3952-3.

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Schmidt, Katrin. "EAS Summer School 2008 in Hamburg, Germany." Atherosclerosis 203, no. 2 (2009): 358–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2008.10.001.

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Zhdanov, Sergey S. "Idyll, history, rationality: city images in “Real Journey to Germany in 1835” by Nikolay Gretsch." Slovo.ru: Baltic accent 14, no. 1 (2023): 8–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.5922/2225-5346-2023-1-1.

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The article explores the images of the German cities, Lubeck and Hamburg, presented in Nikolay Gretsch’s travelogue “The real trip to Germany in 1835”. The author determines the link between the images of the two cities and the tradition of describing Germany as an idyllic place. This tradition was widespread in Russian literature at the end of the 18th century — first half of the 19th century. In Gretsch’s text, Lubeck and Hamburg are depicted as idyllic but to different degrees. The locus of Lubeck is a homogeneous, patriarchal and achronous idyll, a static space that seems to have frozen in the Middle Ages. In contrast to Lübeck, the city of Hamburg is depicted as a large, contemporary, and dynamic city — in other words, as a modern type of idyll. Moreover, its orderliness goes beyond the idyll and is defined by the rational organisation of space, which is characterised by heterogeneity. Firstly, the idyllic subloci are distinguished, where the key role belongs to the demi-natural images of the garden, the park and the promenade. Secondly, the utilitarian-rational subloci of the stock exchange, quay, and canals are described. Subloci, which are marked by both idyll and rationality, have been identified (e. g. an orphanage, an almshouse). Finally, the third spatial type identified marginal sublocations of seafarers’ establishments associated with the motives of disorderli­ness — drunkenness, debauchery, etc.
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Hoffmann, Peter, Robert Schoetter, and K. Heinke Schlünzen. "Statistical-dynamical downscaling of the urban heat island in Hamburg, Germany." Meteorologische Zeitschrift 27, no. 2 (2018): 89–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/metz/2016/0773.

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Diec, Joachim. "The Hamburg Circle: A Thoroughly Structured Expression of the German Conservative Revolution in the Weimar Republic." Politeja 18, no. 3(72) (2021): 103–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/politeja.18.2021.72.06.

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The members of the Hamburg Circle: W. Stapel (the leading figure), H. Bogner, A.E. Günther, G. Günther, are usually attributed to the ‘young conservative’ trend of the conservative revolution in the Weimar Republic. The main platform of their expression was the Deutsches Volkstum, a monthly published in Hamburg between 1898 and 1938. The activists of the circle opposed the realities of the Weimar Republic, negating the foundations of a democratic and liberal society as it did not express the ‘national will’ of Germans. Their ideal was not exactly in the revival of monarchy but they proposed a national state which was supposed to promote the traditionally structured society. In the area of religious policy, Stapel and his colleagues aimed at a non-secular state with a form of traditionalistic church life in spite of the religious diversity in Germany. Christianity was not perceived from a purely spiritual perspective, but as a doctrine that should be a strong pillar of the state. The Hamburg Circle claimed that to achieve these goals Germans ought to reject liberalism and pacifism, which appeared to be a dangerous consequence of the ideological pressure from assimilated Jewry.
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Husemann, Martin, Lara-Sophie Dey, and Oliver Hawlitschek. "Vespa velutina nigrithorax Lepeltier, 1836 from Hamburg (Northern Germany) shares the same COI haplotype with other European populations." Journal of Hymenoptera Research 79 (October 30, 2020): 111–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.79.57048.

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The yellow-legged, or Asian hornet, Vespa velutina, has invaded large parts of South-Western Europe and now starts spreading further north. Recently, it has been reported from Hamburg, Northern Germany. Yet, the origin of this new invasion is not clear as the founders may have come either from Southern Europe or from Asia. We here use COI sequences to test these alternatives and find that the specimens from Hamburg share the same haplotype with all Southern European samples. This suggests that the species has been transported long distance from other Europe to Northern Germany and shows further its high invasion potential.
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Schieder, Martin. "»Entartete Genialität« Guernica im geteilten Deutschland." Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 82, no. 2 (2019): 234–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/zkg-2019-2005.

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Abstract When in 1955/1956, for the first time in divided postwar Germany, a major Picasso exhibition took place in Munich, Cologne, and Hamburg, it came to be a cultural event that reached and emotionalized the German audience, media, and sciences to an unprecedented extent. The exhibition Picasso 1900 – 1955 contributed significantly to the popularization of Picasso at all levels of society and gave the German people access to modern art on a much wider scale than the first documenta held concurrently in Kassel. The undisputed eye-catcher of that spectacular exhibit was Guernica, on display in Germany for the first and only time. Its controversial reception reveals that at that time there was no intention to see the work in Germany in a memorial relationship with Germany’s own historical responsibility. Thus it virtually functioned as a symbol for a collective amnesia of the West German postwar society, whereas the socialist East of the Republic stylized the painting into an anti-fascist icon.
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34

Klesser, Robert, Frederik Jessen, Jörgen Ringenberg, Matthias Preuß, Thomas Kaiser, and Martin Husemann. "Return of the walking dead: First verified record of the shrew Crocidura leucodon (Hermann, 1780) in Hamburg, Germany." Evolutionary Systematics 5, no. 1 (2021): 121–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/evolsyst.5.67302.

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The bicolored shrew Crocidura leucodon so far has not been reported in Hamburg with certainty. Some plausible historical records before 1920 are present; in turn, two more recent records are doubtful for different reasons. Hence, the Red List status of the species for Hamburg has to be considered uncertain (either not present, or extinct). A citizen scientist provided a specimen of an unknown shrew, an accidental catch by a snap trap, to the Centrum für Naturkunde. The specimen was caught on the 12th of September 2019 in Tatenberg, Hamburg. It was morphologically and genetically clearly determined as C. leucodon. This find represents the first confirmed record of C. leucodon for the federal state of Hamburg and increases the number of shrew species recorded in Hamburg to five. The Red List status of the species will have to be reevaluated.
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Gogolin, Ingrid, Cristina V. Kleinert, and Dra Francisca Ruiz Garzón. "Niveles de Capacidades en Educación Intercultural." CPU-e, Revista de Investigación Educativa, no. 12 (November 6, 2012): 110–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.25009/cpue.v0i12.52.

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Ofrecemos a continuación la traducción de un breve texto que Ingrid Gogolin, reconocida especialista en educación intercultural de la Universidad de Hamburgo (Alemania), preparó para conceptualizar y distinguir los diferentes niveles de competencias reflexivas que desarrollamos al enfrentarnos a la diversidad cultural, étnica y/o lingüística. Resulta sumamente útil la distinción de estos siete niveles de creciente complejidad y reflexividad, dado que éstos pueden ser operacionalizados para la investigación educativa no sólo en el contexto alemán.AbstractThe following translation is a short text that Ingrid Gogolin, recognized specialist in intercultural education from the University of Hamburg (Germany), prepared to conceptualize and discern the different levels of reflective skills we develop when dealing with cultural, ethnic and/or linguistic diversity. The distinction of these seven levels of increasing complexity and reflexivity is extremely useful, as they may be operated for educational research, not only in the German context.Recibido: 16 de agosto de 2010 Aceptado: 20 de septiembre de 2010
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36

Liebermann, Robert Cooper. "My Research Collaborations with German Scientists and Scientific Institutions over the Past Six Decades." Energy and Earth Science 5, no. 3 (2022): p1. http://dx.doi.org/10.22158/ees.v5n3p1.

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Over the past six decades, I have maintained research connections with German scientists and scientific institutions while pursuing an academic career focusing on scientific discoveries of the physical properties of minerals at high pressures and temperatures. During this period, I have also visited many research laboratories in Germany, including Bayreuth, Berlin, Frankfürt, Giessen, Hamburg, Karlsruhe, Kiel, Mainz, Marbach, Munich, Potsdam, and Stuttgart. The objective of this paper is to relate this history.
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Crandall Hollick, Julian. "W. Berlin: Forty Years After." Worldview 28, no. 6 (1985): 7–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0084255900046957.

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If you want to understand West Berlin's history and present political reality, take the train from Hanover or Hamburg. The border crossing from West to East Germany gives the first clue. Barbed wire and high fences line the track; police line the station platform. The few East German civilians who are waiting for their own trains seem to look right through you as though you were invisible—a ghost train heading for Berlin.
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38

Aaslestad, Katherine. "Paying for War: Experiences of Napoleonic Rule in the Hanseatic Cities." Central European History 39, no. 4 (2006): 641–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008938906000215.

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“The fate of Europe sits on a razor's edge, if war starts now, it will be dreadfully feared. Neutrality will be impossible,” worried Hamburg enlightened merchant and philanthropist Caspar Voght in April 1803. He added, “Should war come, Bremen and Hamburg will be occupied by the French or the Prussians, and the rivers will be blockaded. God give us peace.” His fateful words preceded the French occupation and annexation of northern Germany and the corresponding imperial Continental System, which shattered the north German coastal economy. When he returned to Hamburg in September 1812, Voght shared his impressions in another letter: In what misgivings, with what spirits did I approach the city from Harburg, the once fortunate shores, the towers of the once so prosperous city! I landed. Everything I saw and heard demonstrated the ruin of earlier prosperity, [the city] stripped of its attributes, cloaked in the fog of a threatening future. How my heart bled … The city empty and desolate, benefactors of the poor impoverished, the poor without help, my life's work destroyed.
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Zurhold, Heike, Peter Degkwitz, Uwe Verthein, and Christian Haasen. "Drug Consumption Rooms in Hamburg, Germany: Evaluation of the Effects on Harm Reduction and the Reduction of Public Nuisance." Journal of Drug Issues 33, no. 3 (2003): 663–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002204260303300308.

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In order to evaluate the impact of consumption rooms (CRs) on the promotion of health among drug users and the reduction of the public nuisance of drug use, a study examining CRs in three countries was carried out in 2000. The study, supported by the European Commission, examined CRs in Rotterdam (The Netherlands), Innsbruck (Austria), and Hamburg (Germany). This paper evaluates the findings from the study of Hamburg CRs. In order to get evidence-based information on the effects of CRs, 616 drug users in the Hamburg drug scene or in the vicinity of low-threshold institutions were investigated with a standardized questionnaire. Qualitative problem-centered interviews were also carried out with staff members of the CRs, and representatives from the community, including neighborhood residents, business people, police, and politicians. Research findings show that the Hamburg CRs reached the target group of drug users who practice risky behaviors and engage in public drug use. Findings also show that the Hamburg CRs lead to positive changes in health-related behavior for drug users. In addition, the findings indicate that the Hamburg CRs played an important role in the reduction of public disturbances in the vicinity of open drug scenes.
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Niebuhr, H. J. "Railway Crossing of the Süderelbe River, Hamburg, Germany." Structural Engineering International 1, no. 4 (1991): 24–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/101686691780617364.

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41

Günther, Ursula. "RELIGIOUS SELFCONCEPTIONS AMONG MUSLIM ADOLESCENTS IN HAMBURG, GERMANY." Scriptura 89 (June 12, 2013): 319. http://dx.doi.org/10.7833/89-0-1019.

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42

Lockemann, U., W. Schulz-Schaeffer, F. Wischhusen, R. Laufs, and K. P�schel. "HIV-1-prevalence in fatalities from Hamburg, Germany." International Journal of Legal Medicine 106, no. 1 (1993): 11–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf01225017.

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43

Matamoros-Angles, Andreu, Santra Brenna, Karen Lahme, Fabian Braun, Maura Dandri, and Berta Puig. "New EV nucleus in northern Germany - The Hamburg EV community: A present reality with a promising future." Secretion and Signalling of extracellular vesicles 5, no. 1 (2023): 14–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.47184/tev.2023.01.02.

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On April 13-14th, 2023, more than 50 researchers located in Hamburg, mainly working at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE), met to present research projects focusing on extracellular vesicles (EVs). The meeting was supported by State Research Funding (LFF-FV74: Mechanisms of cell communication in Infection; Speaker Maura Dandri, UKE), which aims to develop existing and promising research areas further. This meeting certainly surpassed all expectations: what was first organized as a tentative get-together between a dozen EV scientists, soon revealed the existence of a much broader and strong EV community with more than 50 basic researchers and clinicians currently active in Hamburg. This first UKE-EV meeting created a platform to share experiences, projects, and protocols and mainly discuss future requirements to create a consolidated structure and network in Hamburg, enabling state-of-the-art EV research.
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44

Chepelevskyy, Yuriy L. "Features of city image formation in the context of European integration." Regional Economy, no. 1(99) (March 2021): 15–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.36818/1562-0905-2021-1-2.

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The article identifies the main aspects of strategic planning of the city image. In Ukraine as a democratic country, where the people are the main source of power, strategic planning, in particular in urban planning should be carried out for the people and together with the people. The stages of strategic planning are identified. They represent the relevant tasks, which should be accomplished on the basis of local public, business, and industrial organizations, thus obtaining comprehensive information about their problems and needs. The mechanisms used in the foreign practice of strategic planning are analyzed (on the example of Barcelona (Spain) and Hamburg (Germany). Community participation in strategic planning of Barcelona (Spain) and Hamburg (Germany) demonstrates its important role in Barcelona’s acquisition of the City of the Future Award (2015) and Hamburg’s high 23rd place in the 2010 World Quality of Life Ranking. The paper establishes that the cooperation of cities and society is the ground for the successful strategy; the community is a full participant in strategic planning. The main thing in the development strategy is to reach a consensus between the government-business-residents on a common vision of such development. In Germany, the planning law provides for community participation in all planning processes, and the entire population of the city can participate in the process of resolving issues using the Internet platform. Ensuring community participation in the form of partnership at all stages - both in the development process and in the implementation and monitoring of results will help optimize the process of regulating urban planning in our country.
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Wilmanns, Matthias, and Dmitri I. Svergun. "The 11th International Conference on Biology and Synchrotron Radiation." Journal of Synchrotron Radiation 21, no. 1 (2013): 280–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s1600577513030609.

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46

Schwarz, Joachim. "Advances in Ice Mechanics in West Germany." Applied Mechanics Reviews 40, no. 9 (1987): 1208–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/1.3149552.

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Ice research in West Germany (Federal Republic of Germany) started after World War II with the first small ice tank built at HSVA in Hamburg in 1958. The discovery of hydrocarbons in the Arctic and the membership in the Scientific Committee for Antarctic Research led to the need for model tests and the advancing ice modelling techniques. In 1984 a new, large ice model basin was built at HSVA. Substantial progress has been made in the experimental research of basic ice mechanics and ice forces for the past 20 years. Computational methods and quantum statistical approach have recently been introduced for the study of ice properties. Predicting methods of ice forces with model and full scale experiments have been investigated. This paper highlights West German contributions for the last 20 years.
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47

Safferling, Christoph J. M. "Terror and Law – Is the German Legal System able to deal with Terrorism? – The Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of Justice) decision in the case against El Motassadeq -." German Law Journal 5, no. 5 (2004): 515–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s2071832200012669.

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Germany was the first country to open trial against a person who has allegedly participated in the 9/11 terror attack in the US. Shortly after September 2001 intelligence services in- and outside Germany concentrated on Hamburg as one of the places where the pilots and their supporters planned the attack. The Maroccan national Mounir El Motassadeq was the first who was arrested and charged by the General Federal Prosecutor with (1) abbeting murder in 3066 cases and (2) with being a member of a terrorist organisation . The trial took place before the Oberlandesgericht (Upper Regional Court – OLG) in Hamburg, where the accused resided at that time. He was sentenced by this Court in first instance to 15 years imprisonment – the first conviction for the 9/11 attack. The accused nevertheless appealed to the Bundesgerichtshof – BGH, Federal Court of Justice, and his conviction was quashed and a re-trial ordered at the Court in Hamburg. In reaction to the BGH's decision Motassadeq was released from detention pending trial on 8 April 2004. The accused now awaits his re-trial on conditional bail.
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48

Baldyga, Natalya. "Corporeal Eloquence and Sensate Cognition: G. E. Lessing, Acting Theory, and Properly Feeling Bodies in Eighteenth-Century Germany." Theatre Survey 58, no. 2 (2017): 162–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040557417000059.

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Most know Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729–81) for his dramatic theory, specifically that which is found in his periodical the Hamburg Dramaturgy (1767–69), a collection of 101 essays that has since earned Lessing the moniker of “the first dramaturg.” Many are also familiar with Lessing's major plays, Miss Sara Sampson (1755), Minna von Barnhelm (1767), Emilia Galotti (1772), and Nathan the Wise (1779). Fewer, however, may be familiar with his acting theory and his long association with actors, an association that began in his college years and which so disturbed Lessing's father that the respectable pastor lured the wayward student home by falsely claiming that Lessing's mother was ill. During his time as a university student in Leipzig, Lessing translated plays for the troupe of Karoline Neuber (1697–1760) and socialized with the company's actors; over time he would continue to accrue significant firsthand knowledge of actors and the art of acting, not only through his frequent theatregoing but also through the coaching of his own plays. Lessing's familiarity with actors and acting informs both his performance and dramatic theory, including that which one finds in the Hamburg Dramaturgy; in Anglophone studies of Lessing's journal, however, one infrequently sees Lessing's dramatic theory placed in conversation with his acting theory, reception theory, or performance reviews. Due to the short and contentious life of the Hamburg National Theatre, the experimental theatre project to which the Hamburg Dramaturgy was ostensibly attached, historical narratives more often focus on Lessing's strained relations with the actors of the Hamburg acting company. If one views Lessing's writing about performance solely in terms of a frustrated critic's attempts to rein in “unruly” actors, however, one loses sight of how Lessing's acting theory supports his wider ideas about the form and function of theatre and about how the Hamburg Dramaturgy and the Hamburg theatre experiment might function as a force for social change.
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Hess, Andreas. "Identical with What? Chartering the Unknown Waters of the Concept of Identity." German Politics and Society 18, no. 3 (2000): 150–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/104503000782486589.

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Andreas Glaeser Divided in Unity—Identity, Germany, and the Berlin Police (Chicago: University Of Chicago Press, 2000)Lutz Niethammer Kollektive Identität—Heimliche Quellen Einer Unheimlichen Kultur (Hamburg: Rowohlts Enzyklopädie, 2000)
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Keller, H. U. "Planetarium Activities in the Federal Republic of Germany." International Astronomical Union Colloquium 105 (1990): 374–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0252921100087273.

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The planetarium was invented by the German engineer Walther Bauersfeld of the Carl Zeiss Company in 1919, and the first projection-planetarium in the world was installed in the Deutsches Museum in München (Munich) 1923. Most of the German planetariums were destroyed during World War II. Today, nine major planetariums with dome diameters greater than 15m are in operation in the following cities in F.R. Germany; the numbers in brackets are the year of opening, the dome size and the seating capacity: West Berlin (1965; 20 m; 320), Bochum (1964; 20 m; 300), Hamburg (1933; 20.6 m; 270), Mannheim (1984; 20 m; 287), München (1925; 15 m; 156), Münster (1981; 20 m; 280), Nürnberg (1961; 18 m; 255), Stuttgart (1977; 20 m; 277), and Wolfsburg (1983; 15 m; 148).
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