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Population Distribution and Urbanization
in Germany
Following unification, the Federal Republic encompassed 356,958 square
kilometers and was one of the largest countries in Europe. With about
81.3 million people in mid-1995, it ranked second behind Russia in population
among the countries of Europe. Unification actually reduced the Federal
Republic's population density, however, because East Germany, which had
a large rural area, was more sparsely populated. With an average of 228
persons per square kilometer in late 1993, unified Germany ranked third
in population density among European countries. It ranked behind the Netherlands
and Belgium, which had 363 and 329 persons per square kilometer, respectively.
Germany's population density varies greatly. The most densely populated
Länder are Berlin, Hamburg, and Bremen, with densities of 3,898,
2,236, and 1,697 persons per square kilometer, respectively, at the end
of 1992. The least densely populated are two new Länder, Mecklenburg-Western
Pomerania and Brandenburg, both mostly rural in character. They had population
densities of eighty and eighty-six persons per square kilometer, respectively,
at the end of 1992. Other Länder are closer to the national average:
the largest Land , Bavaria, with 167 persons per square kilometer, is
mostly rural, but its capital is the large city of Munich; Rhineland-Palatinate,
with 196 persons per square kilometer, is also mostly rural but has numerous
heavily populated areas along the Rhine; and Saxony, with 252 persons
per square kilometer, also has a number of heavily populated areas.
The Land with the most population, one-fifth of the nation's total, is
North Rhine-Westphalia. With a population density of 519 persons per square
kilometer at the end of 1992, it is the most heavily settled of all Länder,
with the exception of the three city Länder of Bremen, Hamburg, and
Berlin. North Rhine-Westphalia's density is caused by its many cities;
several dozen of these cities have populations above 100,000, including
five with populations above 500,000. Many of these cities are located
so close together that they form one of Europe's largest urban agglomerations,
the Ruhrstadt (Ruhr City), with a population of about 5 million.
The Federal Republic has few very large cities and many medium-sized ones,
a reflection of the centuries when the name Germany designated a geographical
area consisting of many small and medium-sized states, each with its own
capital. Berlin, by far the largest city, with a population of 3.5 million
at the end of 1993, is certain to grow in population as more of the government
moves there in the second half of the 1990s and as businesses relocate
their headquarters to the new capital. Some estimates predict that Greater
Berlin will have a population of 8 million by early in the twenty-first
century.
Berlin already dwarfs the only other cities having more than 1 million
inhabitants: Hamburg with 1.7 million and Munich with 1.3 million. Ten
cities have populations between 500,000 and 1 million, seventeen between
250,000 and 500,000, and fifty-four between 100,000 and 250,000. In the
early 1990s, about one-third of the population lived in cities with 100,000
residents or more, one-third in cities and towns with populations between
50,000 and 100,000, and one-third in villages and small towns.
Other densely populated areas are located in the southwest. They are Greater
Stuttgart; the Rhine-Main area with its center of Frankfurt am Main; and
the Rhine-Neckar region with its center in Mannheim. The greater Nuremberg
and Hanover regions are also significant population centers. The new Länder
are thinly settled except for Berlin and the regions of Dresden-Leipzig
and Chemnitz-Zwickau.
Urban areas in the east are more densely populated than those in the west
because the GDR saw little of the suburbanization seen in West Germany.
As a result, there is a greater contrast between urban and rural areas
in the new Länder than in the west. West Germany's suburbanization,
however, is not nearly as extensive as that experienced by the United
States after the end of World War II. Compared with cities in the United
States, German cities are fairly compact, and their inhabitants can quickly
reach small villages and farmlands.
Germany's population growth has been slow since the late 1960s. Many
regions have shown little or no growth, or have even declined in population.
The greatest growth has been in the south, where the populations of Baden-Württemberg
and Bavaria each increased by well over 1 million between 1970 and 1993.
(Each had also grown by over 1 million in the 1960s.) North Rhine-Westphalia,
which had grown by 1 million in the 1960s, added another 750,000 to its
population between 1970 and 1993, a small increase, given a total population
of nearly 18 million at the end of 1993. Bremen, Hamburg, and the Saarland
experienced some population loss between 1970 and 1993. With the exception
of united Berlin, all the new Länder lost population between the
fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of 1993. In general, this development
reflected long-term trends in East Germany, although the rate of decline
has been higher since unification.
- Immigration
- Women In Society
- Marriage
- Social Structure
- Religion
- Urbanization
- Geography (lands and
capitals, climate)
- Society (population, religion,
marriage, urbanization, social structure, immigration)
- Education (elementary,
junior, senior, vocational, higher)
- Economy (the Economic
Miracle, financial system, Bundesbank, business culture)
- Politics (government,
the Chancellor, the President, parties, Bundestag)
- Mass Media (newspapers,
radio and TV)
- Armed Forces (army,
navy, air forces, police)
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