Germany: Interactive Map
Aachen
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Am Knipp [German Cuisine]
- Carolus-Thermen Bad Aachen
- Couven-Museum
- Der Postwagen [German Cuisine]
- Dom (Cathedral)
- Domschatzkammer (The Cathedral Treasury)
- Elisenbrunnen (Elisa Fountain)
- Europamarkt des Kunsthandwerks
- Frühjahrsabend
- Horse-Riding Competitions CHIO
- Internationales Zeitungsmuseum
- La Becasse [French Cuisine]
- Ludwig Forum für Internationale Kunst
- Pfalz
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum
Anklam
Mecklenberg-Vorpommern
Annaberg-Buchholz
Sachsen (Saxony)
Ansbach
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Ansbacher Frülingfest
- Ansbacher Rokokospiele
- Bach-Woche
- Heimatfest
- Hofgarten
- Johann-Sebastian-Bach
- Markgräfliche
- Museum of Faience and Porcelain
- Orangery
Aschaffenberg
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Main River
- Schloss Johannisburg
- Pompejanum
Augsburg
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Augustusbrunnen.
- Brecht Haus (Birthplace of Bertolt Brecht)
- Church of St Anna. Fuggerei
- Die Ecke (Corner) Restaurant
- Dom St Maria
- Fuggerhäuser
- Holbein Haus
- Lech River
- Mariä Heimsuchung
- Maximilian-Museum
- Maximilianstrasse
- Mozart-Haus
- Perlachturm
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Romantic Road Stop
- Rotes Tor (Red Gate)
- St. Annakirche
- Sts. Ulrich and Afra
- Schaezler Palais
- Wertach River
- Zeughaus
Bacharach
Rheinland-Pfalz
Baden-Baden
Baden-Württemberg
- Brahmshaus
- Kloster Lichtental
- Kurhaus
- Schlossberg
- Stadtgeschichtliche
- Stadtmuseum
Bad Bentheim
Niedersachsen
Bad Brambach
Sachsen (Saxony)
Bad Homburg
Hessen
- Bad Homburg Casino
- Freilichtmuseum Hessenpark
- Fugato
- Grosser Feldberg
- Kaiser-Wilhelm-Bad
- Kartoffelküche Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Kurpark (Spa)
- Römerkastell-Saalburg (Roman Fort)
- Schloss Homburg
- Spielbank
Bad Mergentheim
Baden-Württemberg
Bad Reichenhall
Bayern (Bavaria)
Bamberg
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Alte Hofhaltung
- Altes Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- Bamberg Dom
- Bischofsmühle Restaurant
- Bishops Palace
- Diözesanmuseum (Cathedral Museum)
- Domplatz
- Domstrasse
- Grünermarkt
- Karmeliterkloster
- Kirche St Michael
- Klein-Venedig
- Neue Residenz und Staatsgalerie
- Nine Breweries
- Obere Brücke
- Obere Pfarre (Upper Parish)
- Rauchbier
- River Regnitz
- Rottmeisterhaus
- Seven Hills
- St. Cahterine Hospital and Seminary
- St. Martin's Church
- St. Michael
- Staatsbibliothek (State Library)
- UNESCO
- Untere Brücke
- Wasserschloss Concordia
Barth
Mecklenberg-Vorpommern
Bayreuth
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Altes Schloss Eremitage
- Bayreuther Barock
- Brauerai und Büttnerei-Museum (Brewery and Coopers Museum)
- Eremitage
- Festspielhaus (Festival Theater)
- Franz-Liszt Museum
- Fränkische Festwoche
- Markgräfliches Opernhaus
- Musica Bayreuth
- Neues Schloss (New Castle)
- Oskar Restaurant
- Richard Wagner Festspiele
- Richard-Wagner-Museum
- Villa Wahnfried
- Wolffenzacher Restaurant
Beerfelden
Hessen (Hesse)
Berchtesgaden
Bayern (Bavaria)
Bergen
Mecklenberg-Vorpommern
Bergisch Gladbach
Nordrhein Westfalen
/p>
Berlin
Berlin State
- Ägyptisches (Egyptian) Museum
- Alexanderplatz
- Alte Nationalgalerie
- Altes Museum
- Bauhaus-Archiv
- Bebelplatz
- Bendlerblock
- Berliner Dom
- Bodemuseum
- Brandenburger Tor (Brandenburg Gate)
- Brecht-Weigel-Gedenkstätte
- Bröhan-Museum
- Brücke-Museum
- Checkpoint Charlie
- Deutscher Dom
- Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin
- Fernsehturm
- Flughafen Tempelhof
- Forschungsund Gedenkstätte Normannenstrasse
- Französischer Dom
- Friedrichswerdersche Kirche
- Gedenkstätte Berlin-Hohenschönhausen
- Gedenkstätte Plötzensee
- Gemäldegalerie
- Hamburger Bahnhof
- Humboldt Universität (University)
- Jagdschloss Grunewald
- Jüdisches Museum
- Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtnis-Kirche
- Käthe-Kollwitz-Museum
- Klein Glienicke
- Köpenick
- Ku'damm
- Kunstgewerbemuseum
- Kupferstichkabinett und Kunstbibliothek
- Residenz
- Messegelände
- Marienkirche
- Märkisches Museum
- Museum für Naturkunde
- Museumszentrum Dahlem
- Musikinstrumenten-Museum
- Neues Museum
- Neue Nationalgalerie
- Neue Synagogue
- Neue Wache
- Nikolaiviertel
- Nikolskoe
- Olympia-Stadion
- Pergamonmuseum
- Pfaueninsel
- Philharmonie
- Potsdamer Platz
- Prenzlauer Berg
- Rathaus Schöneberg
- Reichstag
- Rotes Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- Sammlung Berggruen
- Schloss Charlottenburg
- Schloss Tegel
- Schlossbrücke
- Schlosspark
- Schlossplatz
- Siegessäule
- Spandau
- St-Hedwigs-Kathedrale
- Straandbad Wannsee
- Tiergarten
- Topographie des Terrors
- Treptower Park
- Unter den Linden
- Viktoriapark
- Zeughaus
- Zoologischer Garten
Bielefeld
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Crüwell-Haus
- Kunsthalle
- Marienkirche
- Nicolaikirche
- Sparrenburg
- St Jodokus-Kirche
Bitterfeld
Sachsen-Anhalt
Bochum
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Altes Brauhaus Rietkötter
- Blankenstein Castle Ruins
- Bochum City Hall
- Christuskirche
- Dahlhauser Heide
- Friedrich Lueg Haus
- Geological Garden
- Haus Kemnade
- Jahrhunderthalle (Hall of the Century)
- Kaufhaus Kortum
- Lake Kemnade
- Lake ümmingen
- Marienkirche
- Mutter Wittig
- New Synagogue
- Pauluskirche
- Propsteikirche St Peter und Paul
- Ruhr-Universität (University)
- Ruhr University Botanical Gardens
- Schlegel Tower
- Sparkasse Bochum (Bochum Savings Bank)
- Stiepeler Dorfkirche
- Weitmarer Holz
- West Park
Boizenburg
Mecklenberg-Vorpommern
Bonn
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Alter Friedhof (Old Cemetery)
- Altes Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- Amadeo Restaurant [Spanish]
- Arithmeum
- Bad Godesberg
- Beethoven-Haus (Beethhoven House)
- Bundeshaus
- Bundesviertel (Federal Government District)
- Em Höttche Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Haus der Geschischte der BR Deutschland
- Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (Art and Exhibition Hall of the German Federal Republic)
- Kunstmuseum Bonn (Art Museum)
- Kurfürstliches Schloss (Prince-Electors' Palace)
- Markt
- Münster St Martin
- Palais Schaumburg
- Poppelsdorf
- Poppelsdorfer Schloss
- Regierungsviertel
- Rheinufer
- Ristorante Sassella [Italian]
- Strandhaus Restaurant [Continental Cuisine]
- Universität (University)
- Villa Hammerschmidt
Bottrop
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Brandenburg
Brandenburg
- Dom St Peter und St Paul
- Dominsel
- Dommuseum
- Gotthardkirche
- Havelfestspiele
- Katharinenkirche
- Stadtmuseum
Braunschweig
Niedersachsen
- Altstadtmarkt
- Braunschweig
- Braunschweig Dom
- Burglöwe
- Festival of Chamber Music
- Gewandhaus (Cloth Hall)
- Herzog-Anton-Ulrich-Museum
- Medieval Fair
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- St Martini
Bremen
Bremen State
- Böttcherstrasse
- Bremen Dom
- Bremer Freimarkt
- Breminale
- Focke-Museum
- Kunsthalle
- Marktplatz
- Osterwiese
- Paula-Moderohn-Becker-Museum
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Roseliushaus
- Schnoorviertel Historic District
- Schütting
- Spielzeugmuseum (Toy Museum)
- Statue of the Bremen Town Musicians, by Gerhard Marcks
- Übersee-Museum (Overseas Museum)
- Vegesack Harbor Festival
- Weser River
- 6 Tage Rennen
Bremerhaven
Bremen State
- Deutsches Schifffahrtsmuseum
Burg bei Magdeburg
Sachsen-Anhalt
Burghausen
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Burg
- Salzach River
- Vorburg
- Wöhrsee Castle
Celle
Niedersachsen
- Hoppner Haus
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Schloss
- Stadtkirche
- Synagogue
Chemnitz
Sachsen (Saxony)
- Altes Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- König-Albert-Kunstsammlungen
- Roter Turm (Red Tower)
- Schlosskirche
- Siegertsches Haus
- Stadthalle
Chorin
Brandenburg
- Choriner Musiksommer
- Kloster
Cologne
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Dom St Peter und Santa Maria
- Gross St Martin
- Gürzenich
- Imhoff-Stollwerck-Museum
- Köhlner Dom
- Minoritenkirche Mariä Empfängnis
- Museum Ludwig
- Overstolzenhaus
- Pfarrkirche St Mariä Himmelfahrt
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Römisch-Germanisches Museum
- Schnütgen-Museum
- Severinsviertel
- St Andreas
- St Apostoln
- St Georeon
- St Georg
- St Kunibert
- St Maria im Kapitol
- St Maria Lyskirchen
- St Pantaleon
- St Peter
- St Ursula
- Wallraf-Richartz-Museum Fondation Corboud
Cottbus
Brandenburg
- Brandenburgisches Apothekenmuseum
- Cottbuser Musik-Herbst
- Fürst-Pückler-Museum
- Karnevalsumzug
- Oberkirche St Nikolai
- Schloss Branitz
- Staatstheater
- Wendenkirche (Sorbian Church)
- Wendisches Museum
Creglingen
Baden-Württemberg
- Fingerhutmuseum (Thimble Museum)
- Herrgottskirche (Church of Our Lord)
- Romantic Road
Dagebüll
Schleswig-Holstein
Darmstadt
Hessen
- Altes Pädagog
- Behrens-Haus
- Frühlingfest
- Grossherzoglich-Hessische Porzellansammlung
- Heinerfest
- Herbstfest
- Hessisches Landesmuseum (Regional Museum of Hesse)
- Hochzeitsturm
- Mathildenhöhe
- Museum Künstlerkolonie
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Residenzschloss
- Schlossgrabenfest
- Schlossmuseum
- St Mary Magdalene
- Stadtkirche
Deggendorf
Bayern (Bavaria)
Demmin
Mecklenberg-Vorpommern
Dessau-Rosslau
Sachsen-Anhalt
- Bauhaus
- Johannbau
- Kornhaus
- Meisterhäuser
- Mosigkauer Konzertsommer
- Schloss Georgium
Dettelbach
Bayern (Bavaria)
Dillingen
Bayern (Bavaria)
Dingolfing
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Dingolfing Castle
- Isar River
- Pfarrkirche St Johannes
Dinkelsbühl
Bayern (Bavaria)
Donauwörth
Bayern (Bavaria)
Dortmund
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Dortmund a la Carte
- Dortmund Aller Art
- Hansetage
- Marienkirche
- Museum am Ostwall
- Museum für Kunst-und Kulturgeschichte
- Petrikirche
- Propsteikirche
- Reinoldkirche
Dresden
Sachsen
- Albertinum
- Blaues Wunder Brühlsche Terrasse
- Frauenkirche
- Fürstenzug
- Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister
- Goldener Reiter
- Grosser Garten
- Hofkirche
- Japanisches Palais
- Karl-May-Museum
- Kraszewski-Museum
- Kreuzkirche
- Museum für Sächsische Volkskunst
- Neues Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- Pfunds Molkerei
- Residenzschloss
- Sächsische Staatsoper
- Schinkelwache
- Schloss Pillnitz
- Verkehrsmuseum
- The Zwinger
Drochtersen
Niedersachsen
Duisburg
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Kulture- und Stadthistorisches Museum
- Museum der Deutschen Binnenschiff-fahrt
- Salvatorkirche
- Wilhelm-Lehmbruck-Museum
Dusseldorf
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Altstadt
- Berens am Kai Restaurant [French]
- Bistro Zicke Restaurant [Frenche]
- Bootsausstellung
- Brauerei Zur Uel Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Burgplatz (Castle Square)
- Grösste Kimes am Rhein
- Heinrich-Heine-Institut
- Hetjens-Museum
- Hofgarten Park
- Im Schiffen Restaurant [French]
- Kaiserswerth
- Königsallee
- Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen (Art Collection of North Rhine-Westphalia)
- MedienHafen
- Museum Kunst Palast
- Neanderthal Museum
- Rhine Promenade
- Rosenmontagsumzug
- Schloss Benrath
- Schloss Jägerhof
- Schlossturm (Palace Tower)
- St. Lambertus
- St Martinsfest
- Weinhaus Tante Anna Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Zum Uerige Restaurant [German Cuisine]
Eichstatt
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Altmühl
- Domplatz
- Mirror Room
- Willibald Castle
Eisenach
Thuringen (Thuringia)
- Automobilbaumuseum
- Bachhaus
- Bergfried
- Elisabethkemenate
- Landgrafenzimmer
- Lutherstube
- Neue Kemenate
- Predigerkirche
- Sängersaal
- Vogtei
Eisenhüttenstadt
Brandenburg
Eltville
Hesse
- Biedermeier- und Sektfest
- Burg
- Gutsausschank im Baiken Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Kronenschlösschen Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Kurfürstliche Burg (Electors' Castle)
- Pfarrkirche St Peter und St Paul (Parish Church of Sts Peter and Paul)
- Schloss Reinhartshausen Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Steinberg
- Zum Krug Restaurant [German Cuisine]
Emmendingen
Baden-Württemberg
Emmerich
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Erfurt
Thuringen (Thuringia)
- Anger
- Angermuseum
- Augustinerkloster-Augustinerkirche
- Barfüsserkirche
- Dacherödensches Haus
- Dom St Marien
- Domberg
- Dom St Marien
- EGA Gartenbaumuseum
- Fischmarkt
- Kaufmannskirche
- Krämerbrücke
- Maria Gloriosa
- Petersberg
- Reglerkirche
- St Severi-Kirche
- Stadtmuseum
- Zum Breiten Herd (To the Wide Hearth)
- Zum Roten Ochsen (To the Red Ox)
Erlangen
Bayern (Bavaria)
Essen
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Essen Original
- Grugapark
- Margarethenhöhe
- Münster
- Museum Folkwang
- St Engelbert
- Synagogue
- Villa Hügel
- Werden
Flensburg
Schleswig-Holstein
- Heilig-Geist-Kirche
- Nikolaikirche
- Nordertor
- Rum-Regatta in Flensburger Förde (Flensburg Fjord)
Frankfurt
Hessen
- Adolph Wagner Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Alte Nikolaikirche
- Alte Oper (Old Opera House)
- Alter Jüdischer Friedhof (Old Jewish Cemetery)
- Altes Zollhaus Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Archaeologisches Museum
- Arche Nova Restaurant [Vegetarian]
- Bockenheimer Depot
- Börse (Stock Exchange)
- Café Laumer
- Café Siesmayer Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Deutsches Architekturmuseum (German Architecture Museum)
- Deutsches Filmmuseum
- Die Schmiere
- Eastdrinkmanwoman Restaurant [Asian Cuisine]
- Eisener Steg (Iron Bridge)
- El Pacifico Restaurant [Mexican Cuisine]
- Embassy Restaurant [Varied Cuisine]
- English Theatre
- Erno's Bistro [French Cuisine]
- Eschenheimer Turm
- Exenberger Restaurant [Fast Food]
- Festhalle
- Frankfurt Opera
- Frankfurter Botschaft Restaurant [Varied Cuisine]
- Fressgass
- Galeria Kaufhof
- Gargantua Restaurant [French Cuisine]
- Gerbermühle Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Goethehaus und Goethemuseum
- Goethestrasse
- Grosse Bockenheimer Strasse
- Grössenwahn Restaurant [Varied Cuisine]
- Grünebergpark
- Hauptwache
- Historische Eisenbahn Frankfurt Vintage Steam Train
- Historisches Museum
- Höchster Porzellan Manufaktur
- Holbeins Restaurant [Varied Cuisine]
- Ikonen-Museum (Christian Orthodox Art)
- Internationales Theater Frankfurt
- Jüdisches Museum
- Kaiserdom
- Kammermusiksall
- Karstadt
- Karmeliterkloster (Carmelite Monastery)
- Kunsthalle Schirn
- Künstlerhaus Mousonturm
- L'Emir Restaurant [Middle Eastern Cuisine]
- La Boveda Restaurant [Spanish Cuisine]
- Liebieghaus
- Lobster Restaurant [Seafood]
- Long Island City Lounge Restaurant [Varied Cuisine]
- M Steakhouse
- Main River
- Maingau Stuben Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Maintower Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Metropol Café
- Museum für Angewandte Kunst (Museum of Applied Arts)
- Museum für Moderne Kunst (Museum of Modern Art)
- Museum Giersch
- Museum Judengasse
- Museumufer
- Naturkundemuseum Senckenberg (Natural History Museum)
- Naturmuseum Senckenberg
- Neues Café Schneider
- Osteria Enoteca Restaurant [Italian Cuisine]
- Omonia Restaurant [Greek Cuisine]
- Palmengarten und Botanischer Garden (Tropical Garden and Botanical Gardens)
- Paulskirche (St. Paul's Church)
- Pizza Pasta Factory Restaurant [Italian Cuisine]
- Römer
- Römerberg
- Rotschild Park
- Sachsenhausen Weekend Fleamarket
- St Leonhardkirche
- Schauspielhaus
- Schillerpassage
- Schirn Kunsthalle (Schirn Art Gallery)
- Souper Restaurant [Fast Food]
- Städelsches Kunstinstitut und Städtische Galerie (Städel Art Institute and Municipal Gallery)
- Städtische Galerie Liebieghaus (Liebieg Municipal Museum of Sculpture)
- Steinernes Haus Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Surf'n Turf Restaurant [Steakhouse]
- Weidemann Restaurant [Continental Cuisine]
- Weisse Lilie Restaurant [Spanish Cuisine]
- Zeil
- Zeilgallerie
- Zenzakan Restaurant [Japanese Cuisine]
- Zoologischer Garten (Zoo)
- Zum Gemalten Haus Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Zum Rad Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Zwölf Apostel Restaurant [German Cuisine]
Frankfurt-Oder
Brandenburg
- C.P.E. Bach Konzerthalle
- Frankfurter Musikfesttage
- Hansefest
- Kleist-Tage
- Marienkirche
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- St Gertraud
- Viadrin University
Freiburg
Baden-Wurttemburg
- Augustinermuseum
- Bächle
- Bertholdsbrunnen
- Cocktailbar Hemingway
- Der Goldene Engel (The Golden Angel) Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Fasnet
- Fischerau
- Freiburg University
- Frühlingsnesse
- Haus zum Walfisch
- Herbstmesse
- Internationales Zeltmusikfest
- Jazzhaus
- Kagan (Night Club)
- Kaufhaus
- Kühler Krug Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Markgräfler Hof
- Martinstor
- Münster unserer Lieben Frau (Cathedral of Our Dear Lady)
- Münsterplatz
- Museum für Stadtgeschichte (Museum of City History)
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Rathausplatz
- Stühlinger
- Umwelt-Film-Festival
- Weinkost
- Weintage
Friedrichshafen
Baden-Wurttemburg
- Bodensee (Lake Constance)
- Cafebar Belushi
- Deutsche Zeppelin Reederei GmbH
- Ebe Gift Shop
- Ferry to Switzerland
- Graf-Zeppelin-Haus
- Lukullum Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Weber & Weiss
- Zeppelin Museum
- Zeppelin-Museumrestaurant [German Cuisine]
Freilassing
Bayern (Bavaria)
Furth
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Altstadtweihnacht (Old Town Christmas)
- Berolzheimerianum
- Burgfarrnbach Fair
- Church of Our Lady
- Fürth Radio Museum
- Gauklerbrunnen
- Grafflmarkt
- Grüner Markt
- Hardhöhe Festival
- Hornschuch Promenade
- Hotel-Pyramide
- Jakob-Henle-Haus
- Kunst Galerie Fürth
- Liershof
- Lochnersche Gartenhaus
- Michaeliskirchweih Fair
- Fürth Festival
- Fürth Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- St Michael Kirche
- Stadtmuseum
- Stadtpark
- Stadttheater Fürth
- Südstadtpark
- Waagplatz
- Weihnachtsmarkt (Christmas Market)
Füssen
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Hohes Schloss (High Castle)
- Markthalle Restaurant
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Reichenstrasse
Gardelegen
Sachsen-Anhalt
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Alte Pfarrkirche St Martin
- Hornschlitten-Rennen
- Loisach River
- Neujahrs-Springen
- Richard Strauss Tage
- Ski World Cup Races
- Werdenfelser Museum
Gelsenkirchen
Nordrhein Westfalen
Gemünden am Rhein
Bayern (Bavaria)
Gera
Thuringen (Thuringia)
Kunstsammlung
Otto-Dix-Haus
Rathaus (Town Hall)
Salvatorkirche
Schloss Osterstein
Görlitz
- Dreiklangfestival
- Hauptstadtpfarrkirche St Peter und St Paul
- Heiliges Grab (Holy Tomb)
- Kaisertrutz
- Kultursommer
- Oberkirche
- Obermarkt
- Strassentheaterfestival
- Untermarkt
Sachsen
Göttingen
Niedersachsen
- Aula
- Gänselieselbrunnen (Goose Girl Fountain)
- Händelfest
- Jazzfestival
- Literaturherbst
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Stiftungsfest
Greifswald
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
- Dom St Nikolai
- Greifswalder Bachwochen
- Jazz Evenings in Eldena
- Marienkirche
Hagen
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Haus Como
- Haus Goedeke
- Hohenhof
- Karl-Ernst-Osthaus-Museum
- Marktschreiertage
Hagenow
Mecklenberg-Vorpommern
Halberstadt
Sachsen-Anhalt
- Domschatz
- Liebfrauenkirche
- Marktkirche St Martini
- St Stephans Dom
Haldensleben
Sachsen-Anhalt
Halle
Sachsen-Anhalt
- Burg Giebichenstein
- Halle Dom
- Hallesche Musiktage
- Händel-Festspiele
- Händel-Haus
- Marktplatz
- Moritzburg
- Moritzkirche
- Roter Turm
- Staatliche Galerie
- Unser Lieben Frauen (Our Dear Lady)
Hamburg
Hamburg State
- Alster
- Alter Elbtunnel
- Altstadt (Old Town)
- Cap San Diego
- Chilehaus
- Deichstrasse
- Deichtorhallen
- Deutsches Zollmuseum (German Customs Museum)
- Fischmarkt (Fish Market)
- Hafengeburtstag
- Jakobikirche
- Katherinenkirche (St Catherine's Church)
- Kontorhausviertel
- Krameramtswohnungen
- Kunsthalle
- Girls on the Pier, by Edvard Munch
- High Altar of St Peter in Hamburg, by Master Mertram of Minden
- Morning, by Phillip Otto Runge
- Nana, by Édouard Manet
- Offering in the Temple, by Rembrandt
- The Polar Sea, by Caspar David Friedrich
- Self-Portrait with Model, by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
- Landungsbrücken
- Michaeliskirche (St Michaelis Church)
- Nikolaikirche
- The Port
- Rathausmarkt
- Reeperbahn
- Rickmer Rickmers
- Speicherstadt
- St Pauli Red Light District
- St Petrikirche
Hamelin
Niedersachsen
- Dempterhaus
- Hochzeitshaus (Wedding House)
- Münster
- Rattenfängerhaus (Rat Catcher's House)
Hamm
Nordrhein-Westfalen
-
- Pauluskirche
- Schloss Heessen
- Sri Kamadchi Ampal Temple Hamm
Hannover
Niedersachsen
- Herrenhäuser Gärten
- Leineschloss
- Marktplatz
- Niederächsisches Landesmuseum
- Neues Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- Opernhaus
- Schützenfest
- Sprengel-Museum
Heidelberg
Baden-Wurttemberg
- Alte Brücke (Old Bridge)
- Alte Universität (Old University)
- Aurum & Argentum
- Brunnenhalle
- Café Knösel
- Deutsches Apotheken-Museum
- Deutsches Verpackungs-Museum (Packaging Museum)
- Englischer Bau
- Farmers' Markets
- Friedrich-Ebert-Gedenkstätte (Memorial)
- Friedrichsbau
- Hauptstrasse
- Haus zum Ritter
- Heidelberg Herbst
- Heidelberger Zuckerladen
- Heiliggeistkirche (Church of the Holy Ghost)
- Hexenturm (Witches' Tower)
- Hotel zum Ritter
- Ingrimstrasse
- Jesuitenkirche
- Königstuhl (King's Throne)
- Königstuhl Bergbahn (Funicular)
- Kornmakt (Grain Market)
- Kulturhaus Karlstorbahnhof
- Kurpfälzisches (Palatinate) Museum
- Mannheim-Heidelberger Filmfestival
- Marktplatz (Market Square)
- Molkenkur
- Neue Universität
- Ottheinrichsbau
- Peterskirche
- Philosophenweg (Philosopher's Path)
- Plöck
- Pulverturm
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Ruprechtsbau
- Schlangenweg (Snake Path)
- Schloss Heidelberg
- Schlossbeleuchtung
- Schlossfestspiele
- Schlossweinstube Restaurant
- Schnitzelbank Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Schnookeloch Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Schwarz Das Restaurant [Varied Cuisine]
- Simplicissimus Restaurant [Mediterranean Cuisine]
- Studentenkarzer
- Trattoria Toscana Restaurant [Italian Cuisine]
- Universitätsbibliothek (University)
- Untere Strasse
- Weindorf
- Zimmertheater
- Zum Roten Ochsen (Red Ox) Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Zur Herrenmühle Restaurant [Continental Cuisine]
Heilbronn
Baden-Wurttemberg
- Deutschhof (Former Church of Teutonic Order)
- Heilbronner Herbst
- Heilbronn Symphony Orchestra
- Neckar River
- Neckarfest
- Pferdemarkt
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Ratskeller Restaurant
- St Kilian Kirche
- Stadtfest
- Weindorf Wine Festival
- Württemberg Chamber Orchestra
Helgoland
Niedersachsen
- Hummerbuden
- Lange Anna
- Nikolaikirche
Herbholzheim
Baden-Württemberg
Herne
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Hildesheim
Niedersachsen
- Andreaskirche
- Bauernmarkt
- Dom St Maria
- Drachenflugtag
- Frühlingsfest
- Godehardkirche
- Jazz Time
- Marktplatz
- Mauritiuskirche
- Michaeliskirche
- Roemer-Pelizaeusmuseum
- Weinfest
Hohenschwangau
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Schloss Hohenschwangau
- Schloss Neuschwanstein
- Courtyard
- Dining Room
- Gatehouse
- Main Entrance
- Sängersaal (Singing Room)
- Throne Room
- Vestibule
Homburg
Saarland
- Hohenburg Castle Ruins
- Schlossberg Caves
Ingolstadt
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Bayerisches Armeemuseum
- Church of St Maria Victoria
- Church of the Virgin Mary
- Danube River
- Deutsches Medizinhistorisches Museum
- Neues Schloss
Jena
Thuringen (Thuringia)
- Collegium Jenense
- Goethe-Gedenkstätte
- Optisches Museum
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Romantikerhaus
- St Michael
- Stadmuseum Alte Göhre
- Zeiss-Planetarium
Jüterbog
Brandenburg
- Kloster Zinna
- Nikolaikirche
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
Kampen
Schleswig-Holstein
Karlsruhe
Baden-Wurttemberg
- Badisches Landesmuseum (Regional Museum of Baden)
- Badisches Staatstheater
- Buchmanns Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Internationales Trachten-und-Folklorefest
- Museum für Neue Kunst (Museum for Modern Art)
- Schloss
- Stadtmuseum im Prinz-Max-Palais
- Staatliche Kunsthalle (State Art Gallery)
- Tomb of Karl Wilhelm von Baden-Durlach
- Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie (Center for Art and Media Technology)
Kassel
Hessen
- Brüder-Grimm-Museum (Brothers Grimm Museum)
- Documenta
- Hessisches Landesmuseum (Regional Museum of Hesse)
- Kasseler Musiktage
- Kunsthalle Fridericianum
- Museumfest
- Neue Galerie (New Gallery)
- Orangerie
- Ottoneum
- Tapetenmuseum
- Wilhelmshöhe
- Zissel
Kempten
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Archäologischer Park
- Augeuerfest (in August)
- Iller River
- Londoner Hof
- Rathausplatz
- Römisches Museum
- St Lorenz
- St Mang
Kiel
Schleswig-Holstein
- Kiel Canal
- Kieler Woche (Kiel Week)
- Nikolaikirche
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Schleswig-Holsteinisches Freilichtmuseum
Kleve
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Klingenthal
Sachsen (Saxony)
Koblenz
Rheinland-Pfalz
- Alte Burg
- Basilika St Castor
- Deutsches Eck (German Corner)
- Festung Ehrenbreitstein
- Florinsmarkt
- Kurfürstliches Schloss
- Landesmuseum Koblenz (Regional Museum of Koblenz)
- Liebfrauenkirche
- Rhein-Museum
Königsee
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Königsee Lake (Germany's Highest Lake)
Konstanz
Baden-Wittenburg
- Altes Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- Bodensee
- Bodensee Segelschule Konstanz/Wallhausen
- Brauhaus Joh. Albrecht Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Casino
- Cathedral
- Hafenhalle Restaurant [Varied Cuisine]
- Imperia (Nazi Germany Lives on in this Bigotted, Anti-Catholic Work of "Art"
- Kommunales Kunst-und Kulturzentrum k9
- Konzilgebäude (Council Hall)
- Kulturladen
- Markstätte
- Modehaus Fischer
- Münster (Kirche Zu Unserer Lieben Frau)
- Niederburg
- Pulverturm (Powder Tower) (Former Arsenal of Konstanz)
- Rheintorturm (Rhine Tower)
- Rock am See (Rock on the Lake)(Rock Music Festival)
- Rostgartenmuseum (Rose Garden Museum)
- Sealife
- Seekuh
- Seenachtfest
- Seestrasse
- Stadttheater (Germany's Oldest Active Theater)
- Yachtcharter Konstanz
Krefeld
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Kulmbach
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Bayerisches Brauereimuseum Kulmbach (Bavarian Brewery Museum)
- Kulmacher Brewery
- Plassenburg Fortress
Landshut
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Altstadt
- Bartlmädult
- Burg Trasunitz
- Alessandro Scalzi Frescos
- Frühjahrsdult
- Fürstenhochzeit
- Haferlmarkt
- Hofmusiktage
- Landshuter Fürstenhochzeit (Reenactment of Wedding of Duke Georg and Polish Princess Jadwiga
- Neustadt
- St. Martin
- Stadtresidenz/"The Italian House"
Leipzig
Sachsen
- Alte Handelsbörse
- Alte Waage (Old Weigh-House)
- Altes Rathaus (Old Cityhall)
- Auerbachs Keller
- Bacharchive und Bachmuseum
- Bosehaus
- Commerzbank
- Deutsches Buch- und Schriftmuseum
- Grassimuseum
- Hauptbahnhof
- Mädlerpassage
- Museum der Bildenden Künste
- Neues Gewandhaus
- Nikolaikirche
- Opernhaus
- Riquet Café
- Russische Kirche (Russian Church)
- Specks Hof
- Thomaskirche
- Völkerschlachtdenkmal
Leverkusen
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Limburg an der Lahn
Hessen
- Alte Lahnbrücke
- Altstadt (Old Town)
- Haus der Sieben Laster (Seven Vices)
- Haus Kleine Rütsche 4
- Römer 2-4-6
- Werner-Senger-Haus
- Burg
- Burgmannenhaus
- Collegiate Cathedral Church of St George
- Diözesanmuseum
- Fischmarkt
- Huttig
- Katzenturm
- Kohlmaier-Halle
- Lahn River
- Limburg Navy Museum
- Limburger Dom
- Limburger Schloss
- Pallottine Mission Museum
- Limburg Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- St Anna-Kirche
- St Hildegard Kirche
- Staurothek
- Zum Goldenen Hirsch
Lindau
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Altstadt
- Barfüsserkirche (Church of the Barefoot Pilgrim)
- Biedermann en Vogue
- Böhm
- Bregenzer Festspiele (Bregenz Music Festival)
- Bodensee (Lake Constance)
- Bodensee Yachtschule
- Der Bayerische Löwe (The Bavarian Lion)
- Gasthaus zum Sünfzen Restaurant [German Cuisine]
- Haus zum Cavazzen
- Internationale Bodensee-Kunstauktion
- Lindau Altes Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- Lindauer Marionettenoper
- Mangenturm
- Marktplatz
- Maximilianstrasse
- Münster Unserer Lieben Frau
- Neuer Lindauer Leuchtturm (New Lighthouse)
- Peterskirche (St. Peter's Church)
- Restaurant Hoyerberg Schlössle [Continental Cuisine]
- Spielbank Lindau Casino
- Stadtgarten (City Park)
- Stephanskirche (St. Stephan's Church)
- Windsurfschule Kreitmeir
Lörrach
Baden-Württemberg
Lübeck
Schleswig-Holstein
- Buddenbrook-Haus
- Burgtor
- Füchtingshof
- Haus der Schiffergesellschaft
- Heiliger-Geist-Hospital
- Historischer Hansemarkt
- Holstentor
- Jakobikirche
- Katharinenkirche
- Kunsthalle St-Annen
- Kunsthandwerker-Weihnachtsmarkt
- Lübeck Dom
- Marienkirche
- Marzipan
- Mengstrasse
- Petrikirche
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Schabbelhaus
- Theatre Museum
- Volkfest
Ludwigshafen
Rheinland-Pfalz
Ludwigslust
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
Lüneburg
Niedersachsen
- Altes Kaufhaus
- Johanniskirche
- Michaeliskirche
- Museum im Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
Lutherstadt-Wittenberg
Sachsen-Anhalt
- Cranachhaus
- Elbe River
- Lutherhalle
- Marienkirche
- Melanchthonhaus
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Schloss Wittenberg
- Schlosskirche
- Wittenberger Stadfest & Luthers Hochzeit
Magdeburg
Sachsen-Anhalt
- Ballettfestival
- Ballonfahrertreffen
- Dom St Mauritius und St Katharina
- Elbe River
- Halle an der Buttergasse
- Kloster Unser Lieben Frauen
- Kulturhistorisches Museum
- Pfarrkirche St Johannis
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
Mainz
Rheinland-Pfalz
- Dom und Diözesanmuseum
- Guttenberg-Museum
- Guttenbergplatz
- Johannisnacht
- Kaiserdom
- Kirche St Stephan
- Kirschgarten
- Kupferberg Sektkellerei (Sparkling Wine Cellars)
- Kurfürstliches Schloss
- Landesmuseum
- Mainzer Dom
- Mainzer Fastnacht
- Mainzer Zeltfestival
- Marktplatz
- Museum für Antike Schiffahrt (Ancient Navigation)
- OpenOhr Festival
- Römersteine
- Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum
- St Stephanskirche
- Schillerplatz
- Weinforum Rheinhessen
Mannheim
Baden-Wurttemberg
- Church of St Ignatius and St Francis Xavier
- Friedrichsplatz
- Mannheim-Heidelberger Filmfestival
- Landesmuseum für Technik und Arbeit
- Neckar River
- Reiss-Engelhorn-Museen
- Rhine River
- Städtische Kunsthalle
- Wasserturm
Merseburg
Sachsen-Anhalt
- Domburg
- Merseburg Bible
- Schloss
Miltenberg
Bayern (Bavaria)
Moers
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Monchengladbach
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Mülheim
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Munich
Bayern (Bavaria)
- Alte Pinakothek
- Altes Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- Archäologische Staatssammlung
- Asamkirche
- Augustinerbäu
- Bavaria-Filmstadt
- Bayerische Staatsbibliothek
- Bayerisches Nationalmuseum
- Bürgersaal
- Cuvilliés-Theater
- Deutsches Jagd- und Fischereimuseum
- Deutsches Museum
- Dreifaltigkeitskirche
- Englischer Garten
- Feldherrnhalle
- Frauenkirche
- Haus der Kunst
- Hofbräuhaus
- Glyptothek
- Grottenhof
- Hofkapelle
- Karlstor
- Lenbachhaus
- Ludwigskirche
- Marienplatz
- Michaelskirche
- Neue Pinakothek
- Neues Rathaus (Old Town Hall)
- Nibelungensäle
- Olympiapark
- Pinakothek der Moderne
- Propyläen
- Reiche Kapelle
- Residenz
- Schack-Galerie
- Schatzkammer
- Schloss Nymphenburg
- Amalienburg
- Botanical Garden
- Festaal
- Gallery of Beauties
- Lackkabinett
- Magdalenenklause
- Marstallmuseum
- Museum Mensch und Natur
- Porcelain Factory
- Staatliche Antikensammlungen
- Stadtmuseum
- Theatinerkirche
- Theresienwiese
- Viktualienmarkt
- Villa Stuck
- Völkerkundemuseum
Münster
Nordrhein-Westfalen
- Aasee
- Dom St Paulus
- Drostenhof
- Erbdrostenhof
- Euro-City-Fest
- Jahrmarkt Send
- Lambertikirche
- Mühlenhof
- Museum für Lackkunst
- Pfälzer Weinfest & Weinfest im Schlossgarten
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Residenzschloss
- Rosenmontagsfestumzug
- Westfälisches Landesmuseum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte
- Überwasserkirche
Naumburg
Sachsen-Anhalt
- Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul
- Hussiten-Kirsch-Fest
- Marientor
- Rathaus (Town Hall)
- Stadtkirche St Wenzel (Church of St Wenceslas)
Neu Ulm
Baden-Württemberg
Neubrandenberg
Mecklenberg-Vorpommern
Neumunster
Schleswig-Holstein
Neuss
Nordrhein-Westfalen
The 300 Largest Cities in Germany (Ranked by Population)
- Berlin -- Berlin State -- 3,275,000
- Hamburg -- Hamburg -- 1,686,100
- München -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 1,185,400
- Köln -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 965,300
- Frankfurt -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 648,000
- Essen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 588,800
- Dortmund -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 587,600
- Stuttgart -- Baden-Württemberg -- 581,100
- Düsseldorf -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 568,900
- Bremen -- Bremen (Freie Hansestadt Bremen) -- 527,900
- Hannover -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 516,300
- Duisburg -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 513,400
- Nürnberg -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 486,700
- Leipzig -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 486,100
- Dresden -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 473,300
- Bochum -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 388,100
- Wuppertal -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 365,400
- Bielefeld -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 320,900
- Bonn -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 307,500
- Mannheim -- Baden-Württemberg -- 306,100
- Karlsruhe -- Baden-Württemberg -- 279,600
- Gelsenkirchen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 276,200
- Wiesbaden -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 269,200
- Münster -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 265,900
- Mönchengladbach -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 264,400
- Chemnitz -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 255,600
- Augsburg -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 253,800
- Braunschweig -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 243,700
- Aachen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 241,300
- Krefeld -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 238,000
- Halle -- Saxony-Anhalt (Sachsen-Anhalt) -- 237,400
- Kiel -- Schleswig-Holstein -- 229,900
- Magdeburg -- Saxony-Anhalt (Sachsen-Anhalt) -- 224,100
- Oberhausen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 221,700
- Lübeck -- Schleswig-Holstein -- 213,400
- Freiburg -- Baden-Württemberg -- 206,300
- Hagen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 201,700
- Erfurt -- Thuringia (Thüringen) -- 195,000
- Kassel -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 193,500
- Rostock -- Mecklenburg-Vorpommern -- 192,100
- Mainz -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 186,700
- Hamm -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 180,300
- Saarbrücken -- Saarland -- 180,000
- Herne -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 174,200
- Mülheim -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 173,000
- Solingen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 164,500
- Osnabrück -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 164,000
- Ludwigshafen -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 162,000
- Leverkusen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 161,700
- Oldenburg -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 157,600
- Neuss -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 150,400
- Paderborn -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 141,200
- Heidelberg -- Baden-Württemberg -- 139,700
- Darmstadt -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 137,800
- Potsdam -- Brandenburg -- 128,700
- Würzburg -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 127,200
- Göttingen -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 127,100
- Regensburg -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 125,400
- Recklinghausen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 124,500
- Bottrop -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 122,100
- Wolfsburg -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 119,300
- Heilbronn -- Baden-Württemberg -- 118,500
- Ingolstadt -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 118,000
- Ulm -- Baden-Württemberg -- 117,700
- Remscheid -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 117,700
- Pforzheim -- Baden-Württemberg -- 117,100
- Bremerhaven -- Bremen -- 116,800
- Offenbach -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 115,500
- Fürth -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 111,900
- Reutlingen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 111,400
- Salzgitter -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 111,400
- Siegen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 108,900
- Gera -- Thuringia (Thüringen) -- 108,800
- Koblenz -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 108,800
- Moers -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 106,600
- Bergisch Gladbach -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 106,100
- Cottbus -- Brandenburg -- 105,000
- Hildesheim -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 103,700
- Witten -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 103,400
- Zwickau -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 100,900
- Erlangen -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 100,100
- Iserlohn -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 99,800
- Trier -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 99,100
- Kaiserslautern -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 98,800
- Jena -- Thuringia (Thüringen) -- 97,500
- Schwerin -- Mecklenburg-Vorpommern -- 97,400
- Gütersloh -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 97,100
- Marl -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 94,500
- Lünen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 91,700
- Esslingen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 91,000
- Velbert -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 90,500
- Ratingen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 89,800
- Düren -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 89,600
- Ludwigsburg -- Baden-Württemberg -- 88,000
- Wilhelmshaven -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 87,800
- Hanau -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 86,400
- Minden -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 84,400
- Flensburg -- Schleswig-Holstein -- 83,800
- Dessau -- Saxony-Anhalt (Sachsen-Anhalt) -- 81,800
- Villingen-Schwenningen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 81,500
- Dorsten -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 81,500
- Worms -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 81,400
- Lüdenscheid -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 81,300
- Tübingen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 80,500
- Neumünster -- Schleswig-Holstein -- 80,400
- Marburg -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 78,900
- Castrop-Rauxel -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 78,500
- Arnsberg -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 78,300
- Delmenhorst -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 78,200
- Konstanz -- Baden-Württemberg -- 78,100
- Gladbeck -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 77,900
- Viersen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 77,000
- Rheine -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 76,800
- Brandenburg -- Brandenburg -- 76,200
- Bayreuth -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 75,400
- Detmold -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 74,400
- Troisdorf -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 73,400
- Celle -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 72,300
- Frankfurt -- Brandenburg -- 72,200
- Bocholt -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 71,800
- Norderstedt -- Schleswig-Holstein -- 71,700
- Dinslaken -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 71,000
- Gießen -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 70,900
- Neubrandenburg -- Mecklenburg-Vorpommern -- 70,400
- Bamberg -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 68,700
- Unna -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 68,700
- Aschaffenburg -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 68,300
- Herten -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 68,200
- Neuwied -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 67,900
- Lüneburg -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 67,500
- Lippstadt -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 66,600
- Aalen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 66,000
- Herford -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 65,700
- Grevenbroich -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 64,900
- Plauen -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 64,100
- Garbsen -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 64,000
- Dormagen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 63,800
- Kerpen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 63,000
- Schwäbisch Gmünd -- Baden-Württemberg -- 62,700
- Fulda -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 62,600
- Bergheim -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 62,600
- Sindelfingen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 62,500
- Wesel -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 62,500
- Weimar -- Thuringia (Thüringen) -- 62,200
- Kempten -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 61,200
- Görlitz -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 59,800
- Hameln -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 59,500
- Menden -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 59,500
- Rüsselsheim -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 59,300
- Langenfeld -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 59,100
- Stolberg -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 58,800
- Rosenheim -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 58,800
- Hattingen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 58,300
- Offenburg -- Baden-Württemberg -- 58,000
- Landshut -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 57,700
- Göppingen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 57,700
- Stralsund -- Mecklenburg-Vorpommern -- 57,100
- Friedrichshafen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 56,900
- Meerbusch -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 55,800
- Bergkamen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 55,800
- Hilden -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 55,800
- Ahlen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 55,700
- Sankt Augustin -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 55,400
- Eschweiler -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 55,400
- Schweinfurt -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 55,200
- Bad Salzuflen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 54,600
- Wolfenbüttel -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 54,200
- Neustadt -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 53,900
- Hürth -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 53,700
- Cuxhaven -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 53,600
- Euskirchen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 53,000
- Bad Homburg -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 53,000
- Gummersbach -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 52,900
- Pulheim -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 52,600
- Lingen -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 52,600
- Baden-Baden -- Baden-Württemberg -- 52,400
- Nordhorn -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 52,100
- Emden -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 52,000
- Schwerte -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 51,800
- Waiblingen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 51,600
- Heidenheim -- Baden-Württemberg -- 51,100
- Greifswald -- Mecklenburg-Vorpommern -- 51,000
- Langenhagen -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 51,000
- Wetzlar -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 51,000
- Hoyerswerda -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 50,900
- Bad Oeynhausen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 50,800
- Neunkirchen -- Saarland -- 50,700
- Hof -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 50,600
- Erftstadt -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 50,300
- Peine -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 50,200
- Passau -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 49,900
- Erkrath -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 49,800
- Speyer -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 49,700
- Ibbenbüren -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 49,500
- Frankenthal -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 49,300
- Willich -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 49,200
- Soest -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 49,100
- Kleve -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 49,100
- Neu-Ulm -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 48,900
- Wittenberg -- Saxony-Anhalt (Sachsen-Anhalt) -- 48,700
- Ravensburg -- Baden-Württemberg -- 48,600
- Elmshorn -- Schleswig-Holstein -- 47,600
- Albstadt -- Baden-Württemberg -- 47,600
- Gotha -- Thuringia (Thüringen) -- 47,500
- Herzogenrath -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 47,300
- Kamen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 47,100
- Dülmen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 47,000
- Frechen -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 46,900
- Suhl -- Thuringia (Thüringen) -- 46,600
- Homburg -- Saarland -- 46,300
- Rastatt -- Baden-Württemberg -- 46,100
- Pirmasens -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 46,100
- Lörrach -- Baden-Württemberg -- 46,000
- Freiberg -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 45,900
- Melle -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 45,900
- Alsdorf -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 45,700
- Böblingen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 45,400
- Nordhausen -- Thuringia (Thüringen) -- 45,400
- Stade -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 45,400
- Gronau -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 45,300
- Neustadt -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 45,200
- Wismar -- Mecklenburg-Vorpommern -- 45,100
- Goslar -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 45,100
- Straubing -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 44,800
- Bünde -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 44,700
- Gifhorn -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 44,500
- Singen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 44,500
- Bad Kreuznach -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 44,200
- Leonberg -- Baden-Württemberg -- 43,900
- Lehrte -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 43,900
- Bornheim -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 43,800
- Eberswalde -- Brandenburg -- 43,700
- Weiden -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 43,700
- Brühl -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 43,500
- Erkelenz -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 43,400
- Rodgau -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 43,200
- Kaarst -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 43,100
- Amberg -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 43,100
- Coburg -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 43,100
- Fellbach -- Baden-Württemberg -- 42,800
- Rheda-Wiedenbrück -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 42,800
- Eisenach -- Thuringia (Thüringen) -- 42,700
- Lahr -- Baden-Württemberg -- 42,700
- Völklingen -- Saarland -- 42,700
- Weinheim -- Baden-Württemberg -- 42,700
- Oberursel -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 42,700
- Monheim -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 42,400
- Filderstadt -- Baden-Württemberg -- 42,300
- Altenburg -- Thuringia (Thüringen) -- 42,200
- Lemgo -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 42,000
- Hennef -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 41,900
- Freising -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 41,700
- Aurich -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 41,600
- Eisenhüttenstadt -- Brandenburg -- 41,600
- Memmingen -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 41,600
- Wunstorf -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 41,600
- Bruchsal -- Baden-Württemberg -- 41,600
- Löhne -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 41,600
- Halberstadt -- Saxony-Anhalt (Sachsen-Anhalt) -- 41,400
- Heinsberg -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 41,400
- Rottenburg -- Baden-Württemberg -- 41,300
- Nettetal -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 41,100
- Kaufbeuren -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 41,100
- Bautzen -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 40,600
- Landau -- Rhineland-Palatinate -- 40,500
- Borken -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 40,400
- Seevetal -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 40,200
- Dreieich -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 40,100
- Schwedt -- Brandenburg -- 40,000
- Kamp-Lintfort -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 40,000
- Bietigheim-Bissingen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 40,000
- Sankt Ingbert -- Saarland -- 39,800
- Ansbach -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 39,700
- Neumarkt -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 39,600
- Pinneberg -- Schleswig-Holstein -- 39,500
- Dachau -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 39,200
- Nürtingen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 39,100
- Stendal -- Saxony-Anhalt (Sachsen-Anhalt) -- 39,100
- Kirchheim -- Baden-Württemberg -- 39,100
- Bensheim -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 39,000
- Schorndorf -- Baden-Württemberg -- 38,900
- Voerde -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 38,900
- Schwabach -- Bavaria (Bayern) -- 38,800
- Hückelhoven -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 38,700
- Warendorf -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 38,700
- Ahaus -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 38,700
- Laatzen -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 38,400
- Ettlingen -- Baden-Württemberg -- 38,400
- Beckum -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 38,300
- Königswinter -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 38,200
- Mettmann -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 38,000
- Hemer -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 38,000
- Buxtehude -- Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) -- 37,800
- Riesa -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 37,800
- Mühlhausen -- Thuringia (Thüringen) -- 37,800
- Pirna -- Saxony (Sachsen) -- 37,700
- Saarlouis -- Saarland -- 37,700
- Hofheim -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 37,600
- Maintal -- Hesse (Hessen) -- 37,500
- Datteln -- Northrhine-Westfalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen) -- 37,500
Famous German Film Celebrities
- Inga Abel (1946–2000), actress
- Mario Adorf (born 1930), actor, writer
- Hans Albers (1891–1960), actor
- Mark Bellinghaus (born 1963), activist, actor, poet, writer
- Moritz Bleibtreu (born 1971), actor
- Grit Boettcher (born 1938), actress
- Eric Braeden (born Hans Gudegast, 1941), actor
- Daniel Brühl (born 1978), actor
- Horst Buchholz (1933–2003), actor
- Vicco von Bülow, aka Loriot, actor and comedian
- Hans Clarin (1930–2005), actor
- George Dzundza (born 1945), actor
- Marlene Dietrich (1901–1992), actress
- August Diehl (born 1976), actor
- Heinz Erhardt (1909–1979), actor and comedian
- Gert Fröbe (1913–1988), actor
- Martina Gedeck (born 1961), actress
- Götz George (born 1938), actor
- Heinrich George (1893–1946), actor
- Gustaf Gründgens (1899–1963), actor
- Eva Habermann (born 1976), actress and model
- Brigitte Helm (1908–1996), actress
- Emil Jannings (1884–1950), actor
- Klaus Kinski (1926–1991), actor, Polish-German father, German mother
- Nastassja Kinski (born 1959), actress
- Heidi Klum (born 1973), model and actress
- Hildegard Knef (1925–2002), actress, singer, writer
- Thomas Kretschmann (born 1962), actor, model
- Diane Kruger (born 1976), model and actress
- Sebastian Koch (born 1962) actor
- Alexandra Maria Lara (born 1978), actress
- Heike Makatsch (born 1971), actress
- Hanna Maron (born 1923), Israeli actress
- Willy Millowitsch (1909–1999), actor
- Armin Mueller-Stahl (born 1930), actor
- Luise Neumann (1818–1905)
- Uwe Ochsenknecht (born 1956), actor
- Christian Oliver, actor
- Franka Potente (born 1974), actress
- Jürgen Prochnow (born 1941), actor
- Heinz Rühmann (1902–1994), actor
- Otto Sander (born 1941), actor
- Romy Schneider, actress
- Hanna Schygulla (born 1943), actress
- Kristina Söderbaum (1912–2001), actress and photographer
- Claudia Schiffer (born 1970), actress and supermodel
- Til Schweiger (born 1963), actor
- Matthias Schweighöfer (born 1981), actor
- Xenia Seeberg (born 1972), actress and model
- Barbara Sukowa (born 1950), actress
- Nora Tschirner (born 1981), actress
- Nadja Uhl (born 1972), actress
- Christoph Waltz (born 1956) actor
Famous German Artists
- Hans von Aachen (1552–1615), mannerist painter
- Albrecht Altdorfer (1480–1538), painter
- Ernst Barlach (1870–1938), sculptor (and writer)
- Günther Behnisch (born 1922) architect
- Peter Behrens (1868–1940) architect
- Sibylle Bergemann (1941–2010) photographer
- Joseph Beuys (1921–1986), artist
- Gottfried Böhm (born 1920) architect
- Arno Breker (1900–1991), sculptor
- Lovis Corinth (1858–1925), painter
- Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472–1553), painter
- Lucas Cranach the Younger (1515–1586), painter
- Yitzhak Danziger (1916-77), Berlin-born Israeli sculptor
- Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528), painter
- Egon Eiermann (1904–1970), architect and designer
- Max Ernst (1891–1976), surrealist painter
- Carl Eytel (1862-1925), painter of desert landscapes in the American Southwest
- Caspar David Friedrich (1774–1840), painter
- Walter Gropius (1883–1969), architect
- George Grosz (1893–1959), artist
- Johann Gottlieb Hantzsch, (1794-1848), painter (genre works)
- Hannah Höch – artist
- Hans Holbein the Elder (c. 1465–1524), painter
- Hans Holbein the Younger (c. 1497–1543), illustrator, painter
- Harro Magnussen (1861–1908), sculptor
- Jörg Immendorff, painter
- Helmut Jahn (born 1940) architect and designer
- Anselm Kiefer (born 1945), painter
- Martin Kippenberger (1953–1997), painter
- Leo von Klenze (1784–1864) architect
- Hans Kollhoff (born 1946) architect
- Käthe Kollwitz (1867–1945), painter
- Max Liebermann, painter
- Markus Lüpertz (born 1941), painter and sculptor
- Franz Marc (1880–1916), painter
- Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886–1969) architect, designer
- Frei Otto (born 1925) architect and research scientist
- Sigmar Polke (1941-2010), painter
- Gerhard Richter (born 1932), painter
- Karl Friedrich Schinkel, architect, painter
- Oskar Schlemmer (1888–1943), choreographer, painter, sculptor, stage & costume designer
- Eberhard Schlotter (born 1921), painter
- Kurt Schwitters, painter, poet
- Fritz Schumacher (1869–1947) architect and urban designer
- Max Slevogt, painter
- Carl Spitzweg (1808–1885), painter
- Birgit Stauch (born 1961) sculptor
- Franz Stuck, painter
- Yigal Tumarkin (born 1933), Israeli painter and sculptor
Famous German Musicians
- Carl Friedrich Abel (1725–1787), composer
- Martin Agricola (1466–1506), composer
- Siegfried Alkan (1858–1941), composer
- Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714–1788), composer, son of J. S. Bach
- Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750), composer
- Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827), composer
- Martin Boettcher (born 1927), film-composer (Karl May movies)
- Johannes Brahms (1833–1897), composer
- Max Bruch (1838–1920), composer
- Hanns Eisler (1898–1962), composer
- Friedrich von Flotow (1812–1883), composer
- Georg Friedrich Händel (1685–1759), composer, opera composer
- Fanny Hensel, composer
- Paul Hindemith (1895–1963), composer
- Engelbert Humperdinck (1854–1921), composer
- Albert Lortzing (1801–1851), composer
- Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791–1864), composer
- Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy (1809–1847), composer
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791), composer and musician
- Jacques Offenbach (1819–1880), composer
- Carl Orff (1895–1982), composer
- Johann Pachelbel (1653–1706), composer
- Hans Pfitzner (1869–1949), composer
- Max Reger (1873–1916), composer
- Wolfgang Rihm (born 1952), composer
- Leopold Schefer (1784–1862), writer and composer
- Heinrich Schütz (1585–1672), composer
- Clara Schumann (1819–1896), composer
- Robert Schumann (1810–1856), composer, songwriter
- Karlheinz Stockhausen (1928–2007), modern composer
- Richard Strauss (1864–1949), composer, opera composer
- Georg Philipp Telemann (1681–1767), composer
- Richard Wagner (1813–1883), composer
- Carl Maria von Weber (1786–1826), composer
- Kurt Weill (1900–1950), composer (Threepenny Opera, "September Song")
- Hans Zimmer (born 1957), film-composer
- Klaus Badelt (born 1967). film composer
Famous German Film Stars
- Andreas Deja, animator
- Uwe Boll, film director
- Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, film director, academy award winner
- Doris Dörrie, female film director
- Bernd Eichinger (1949–2011) film director
- Roland Emmerich, film director
- Rainer Werner Fassbinder (1945–1982), film director
- Werner Herzog (born 1942), film director
- Oliver Hirschbiegel, film director
- Carl Koch (1892–1963), film director and writer
- Fritz Lang (1890–1976), film director
- Ernst Lubitsch (1892–1947), film director
- F.W. Murnau (1888–1931), film director
- Wolfgang Petersen (born 1941), film director
- Leni Riefenstahl (1902–2003), female film director
- Volker Schlöndorff (born 1939), film director
- Andreas Schnaas (born 1968), film director
- Tom Tykwer (born 1965), film director
- Robert Wiene, film director
- Wim Wenders (born 1945), film director
Famous German Royalty
- Alix of Hesse and Rhine (1872–1918), was a German princess by birth before marrying Tsar Nicholas II to become a Russian tsarina.
- Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (1819–1861), Queen Victoria's husband & consort
- Albert (1828–1902), King of Saxony(1873–1902)
- Anton (1755–1836), King of Saxony (1827–1836)
- Carol I of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen (1839–1914), Prince(1867–1881) and King (1881–1914) of Romania
- Charles IV (1316–1378), King of Germany 1346, Holy Roman Emperor 1355–1378
- Charles V (1500–1558), King of Spain 1516, King of Germany 1519, Holy Roman Emperor 1530–1556
- Charles (1823–1891), King of Württemberg (1823–1891)
- Claus von Amsberg (1926–2002), diplomat and husband of Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands
- Ferdinand of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen (1865–1927), King of Romania (1924–1927)
- Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (1861–1948), Prince of Bulgaria (1887–1908), King (or Tsar) of the Bulgarians (1908–1918)
- Frederick I Barbarossa (1122–1190), King of Germany 1152, Holy Roman Emperor 1155–1190
- Frederick I of Prussia (1657–1713), Elector of Brandenburg (1688–1713), King in Prussia (1701–1713)
- Frederick I of Württemberg (1754–1816), Duke (1797–1803), Elector (1803–1806), and King (1806–1816) of Württemberg
- Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor (1194–1250), Holy Roman Emperor and King of Jerusalem
- Frederick II of Prussia (1712–1786), King of Prussia (1740–1786)
- Friedrich III (1831–1888), German Emperor and King of Prussia (1888)
- Frederick Augustus I (1750–1827), Elector (1763–1806) and King (1806–1827) of Saxony
- Frederick Augustus II (1797–1854), King of Saxony (1836–1854)
- Frederick Augustus III (1865–1932), King of Saxony (1904–1918)
- Frederick William I (1688–1740), King of Prussia (1713–1740)
- Frederick William II (1744–1797), King of Prussia (1786–1797)
- Frederick William III (1770–1840), King of Prussia (1797–1840)
- Frederick William IV (1795–1861), King of Prussia (1840–1861)
- George (1832–1904), King of Saxony (1902–1904)
- George V (1819–1878), King of Hanover (1851–1866)
- Henry I the Fowler (876–936), King of Germany 919
- Henry II (972–1024), King of Germany 1002, Holy Roman Emperor 1014–1024
- Henry III (1017–1056), King of Germany 1039, Holy Roman Emperor 1046–1056
- Henry IV (1050–1106), King of Germany 1056, Holy Roman Emperor 1084–1106
- Henry V (1081–1125), King of Germany 1106, Holy Roman Emperor 1111–1125
- Henry VI (1165–1197), King of Germany 1190, Holy Roman Emperor 1191–1197
- John (1801–1873), King of Saxony (1854–1873)
- Louis IV (1281–1347), King of Germany 1314, Holy Roman Emperor 1328–1347
- Ludwig I (1786–1868), King of Bavaria (1825–1848)
- Ludwig II (1845–1886), King of Bavaria (1864–1886)
- Ludwig III (1845–1921), King of Bavaria (1913–1918)
- Maximilian I (1459–1519), King of Germany 1486, Holy Roman Emperor 1508–1519
- Maximilian I (1756–1825), Elector (1799–1805)< and King (1805–1825) of Bavaria
- Maximilian II (1811–1864), King of Bavaria (1848–1864)
- Otto I the Great (912–973), King of Germany 936, Holy Roman Emperor 962–973
- Otto II (955–983), Holy Roman Emperor 973–983
- Otto III (980–1002), King of Germany 983, Holy Roman Emperor 996–1002
- Otto of Greece King of Bavaria (1815–1867), King of the Hellenes (1833–1862)
- Otto of Bavaria (1848–1916), King of Bavaria (1886–1913)
- Wilhelm I (1797–1888), German Emperor (1871–1888) and King of Prussia (1861–1888)
- Wilhelm II (1859–1941), German Emperor and King of Prussia (1888–1918)
- William I (1781–1864), King of Württemberg (1816–1864)
- William II (1848–1921), King of Württemberg (1891–1918)
Famous German Fashion Models
- Nadja Auermann (born 1971), supermodel
- Eugen Bauder (born 1986)
- Charlott Cordes (born 1988)
- Toni Garrn (born 1992)
- Lena Gercke (born 1988), winner of Germany's Next Topmodel 2006
- Jennifer Hof (born 1991), winner of Germany's Next Topmodel 2008
- Alexandra Kamp (born 1966)
- Heidi Klum (born 1973), model and host of Project Runway and Germany's Next Topmodel
- Diane Kruger (born 1976) model turned actress
- Barbara Meier (born 1986), winner of Germany's Next Topmodel 2007
- Sara Nuru (born 1989), winner of Germany's Next Topmodel 2009
- Uschi Obermaier (born 1946), model and actress
- Eva Padberg (born 1980)
- Nico (1938–1988), model, singer and actress
- Tatjana Patitz (born 1966), supermodel
- Claudia Schiffer (born 1970), supermodel
- Nico Schwanz (born 1978)
- Julia Stegner (born 1984)
- Manon von Gerkan (born 1972)
- Bill Kaulitz (born 1989)
Famous German Musicians
- Lena Meyer-Landrut
- ATB
- Fancy (singer)
- Gadjo
- Mike Kogel, lead singer of Los Bravos
- Despina Vandi
- Alexander Klaws
- Cassandra Steen
- Gershon Kingsley
- Hans Albers
- Thomas Anders
- Wolf Biermann (born 1936), singer-songwriter and East German dissident
- Bushido
- Rolf Köhler
- Fritz Busch (1890–1951), conductor
- Sarah Connor, pop/soul singer
- Michael and Sandra Cretu, founder-performers of Enigma (musical project) and Sandra(group)
- Diana Damrau, coloratura soprano
- DJ Tomekk
- Martin Rich (born 1905) conductor and pianist
- Frank Farian
- Wilhelm Furtwängler (1886–1954), conductor and composer
- Herbert Grönemeyer (born 1956)
- Heino, popular singer
- Bill Kaulitz, lead singer of Tokio Hotel
- Tom Kaulitz, guitarist of Tokio Hotel
- Michail Lifits, concert pianist (born 1982)
- Georg Listing, bassist of Tokio Hotel
- Gustav Schäfer, drummer of Tokio Hotel
- LaFee (born 1990)
- Reinhard Mey (born 1942)
- Marius Müller-Westernhagen
- Anne-Sophie Mutter (born 1963), violinist
- Karl Münchinger, conductor
- Xavier Naidoo (born 1971)
- Nena (born 1960)
- Meshell Ndegeocello (born 1969), born of American parents in Germany
- Klaus Nomi (1944–1983)
- Lisa Otto, opera singer
- Michael Schenker (born 1955), guitar player of UFO and solo career
- Sandra
- Rammstein
- Paffendorf
- Sido (rapper)
- Hannes Wader
- Bruno Walter (1876–1962), conductor and composer
- Konstantin Wecker
- Paul Van Dyk
- Willy Hess, violinist
- Yvonne Catterfeld (born 1979)
- Dieter Bohlen (born 1954), music-producer
- Klaus Meine vocalist scorpions (band)
- Rudolf Schenker guitarist scorpions (band) brother of Michael Schenker
- Matthias Jabs guitarist Scorpions (band)
Famous German Philosophers
- Theodor Adorno (1903–1969), philosopher, sociologist and composer
- Albertus Magnus (c. 1193–1280), medieval philosopher and theologian
- Hannah Arendt (1906–1975), political theorist
- Bruno Bauer (1809–1882), political theorist and philosopher
- Walter Benjamin (1892–1940)
- Ernst Bloch (1885–1977)
- Jakob Böhme (1575–1624), mystic philosopher
- Rudolf Carnap (1891–1970), philosopher
- Ernst Cassirer (1874–1945)
- Friedrich Engels (1820–1895), philosopher, political economist
- Ludwig Feuerbach (1804–1872), philosopher
- Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762–1814), philosopher
- Gottlob Frege (1848–1925), mathematician, logician and philosopher
- Erich Fromm (1900–1980)
- Hans-Georg Gadamer (1900–2002), philosopher
- Jürgen Habermas (born 1929), philosopher, social theorist
- Eduard von Hartmann (1842–1906), philosopher
- Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831), philosopher
- Martin Heidegger (1889–1976), philosopher
- Max Horkheimer (1895–1973)
- Karl Jaspers (1883–1969), philosopher
- Immanuel Kant (1724–1804), philosopher
- Ludwig Klages (1872–1956), philosopher
- Gottfried Leibniz (1646–1716), physicist, philosopher
- Leo Löwenthal (1900–1993)
- Karl Löwith (1897–1973)
- Herbert Marcuse (1898–1979)
- Karl Marx (1818–1883), philosopher and sociologist
- Nikolaus Cusanus (1401–1462), philosopher, theologian, mathematician
- Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900), early existentialist philosopher
- Bernhard Philberth (born 1927), physicist, engineer, philosopher, theologian
- Johann Karl Friedrich Rosenkranz (1805–1879)
- Franz Rosenzweig (1886–1929)
- Max Scheler (1874–1928), philosopher
- Friedrich Schelling (1775–1854), philosopher
- Moritz Schlick (1882–1936), philosopher
- Carl Schmitt (1888–1985), political theorist
- Arthur Schopenhauer (1788–1860), philosopher
- Georg Simmel (1859–1918) philosopher and sociologist
- Ferdinand Tönnies (1855–1936), philosopher, founder of German sociology
- Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker (1912–2007), philosopher and physicist
Famous German Politicians
- Arminius (Herman the German) (18 or 17 BC – AD 21)
- August Bebel (1840–1913), co-founder of the SPD
- Rudolf von Bennigsen (1824–1902), founder of the National Liberal Party.
- Eduard Bernstein (1850–1932), Social Democratic leader
- Julius Curtius (1877–1948), Foreign Minister (DVP)
- Matthias Erzberger (1875–1921), Catholic Center party leader
- Joschka Fischer (born 1948), Foreign Minister and vice chancellor 1998–2005 (Bündnis 90/Die Grünen)
- Hans-Dietrich Genscher (born 1927), former minister for foreign affairs (FDP)
- Jakob Grimm (1785–1863), parliamentarian
- Wilhelm Grimm (1786–1859), parliamentarian
- Gregor Gysi (born 1948), former leader of the Party of Democratic Socialism (Germany)
- Alfred Hugenberg (1865–1951), leader of the DNVp
- Johann Jacoby (1805–1877), radical democrat in Prussia
- Luise Kähler (1869–1955), trade union leader, founding member of Socialist Unity Party of Germany(SED)
- Karl Kautsky (1854–1938), Social Democratic leader and theoretician
- Petra Kelly (1947–1992), cofounder of the German Green Party
- Roland Koch (born 1958), Minister-President of Hesse
- Ferdinand Lassalle (1825–1864), democrat and socialist
- Karl Liebknecht (1871–1919), Socialist
- Wilhelm Liebknecht (1826–1900), co-founder of the SPD
- Rosa Luxemburg (1870–1919), left wing Social Democratic leader
- Jakob Maria Mierscheid (born 1933), virtual parliamentarian (SPD)
- Hermann Müller (1876–1931), Chancellor of the Weimar Republic (SPD)
- Hans Modrow (born 1928), former leader of GDR, honorary chairman of PDs
- Walther Rathenau (1867–1922), foreign minister (DDP)
- Eugen Richter (1838–1906), liberal politician
- Carlo Schmid (1896–1979), politician, who had vast influence on the content of the German Basic Law after WW2.
- Kurt Schumacher (1895–1952), leader of the Social Democratic Party of Germany in the early years of the FRg
- Baron Heinrich vom Stein (1757–1831)
- Edmund Stoiber – party leader of the CSU and former minister president of Bavaria
- Franz Josef Strauß (1915–1988), Bavarian Politician (CSU)
- Ernst Thälmann (1886–1944), leader of the Communist Party of Germany during the Weimar period
- Guido Westerwelle – party leader of the liberal party (FDP)
- Clara Zetkin (1857–1933), socialist and fighter for "women's rights"
Chancellors of Germany
- Gustav Bauer (1870–1944), chancellor of the Weimar Republic (SPD)
- Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg (1856–1921), Imperial Chancellor
- Otto von Bismarck (1815–1898), Imperial Chancellor
- Heinrich Brüning (1885–1970), Chancellor of the Weimar Republic (Centre Party)
- Bernhard von Bülow (1849–1929), Imperial Chancellor
- Leo von Caprivi (1831–1899), Imperial Chancellor
- Wilhelm Cuno (1876–1933), Chancellor of the Weimar Republic
- Konstantin Fehrenbach (1852–1926), Chancellor of the Weimar Republic (Centre)
- Georg von Hertling (1843–1919), Imperial Chancellor
- Adolf Hitler (1889–1945), combining legally both offices, President and Chancellor ("Führer und Reichskanzler") 1934–1945
- Prince Chlodwig zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst (1819–1901), Imperial Chancellor
- Hans Luther (1885–1962), Chancellor of the Weimar Republic
- Wilhelm Marx (1863–1946), Chancellor of the Weimar Republic (Centre)
- Prince Maximilian of Baden (1867–1929), Last Imperial Chancellor
- Georg Michaelis (1857–1936), Imperial Chancellor
- Franz von Papen (1879–1969), Chancellor of the Weimar Republic
- Philipp Scheidemann (1865–1939), Chancellor of Weimar Republic (SPD)
- Kurt von Schleicher (1882–1934), last Chancellor of the Weimar Republic
- Gustav Stresemann (1878–1929), Chancellor of the Weimar Republic (DVP)
- Joseph Wirth (1879–1956), Chancellor of the Weimar Republic (Centre)
- Konrad Adenauer (1876–1967), first democratically elected Federal Chancellor in Western Germany (after the second world war) from 1949 to 1963 (Christian-Democratic Union, CDU)
- Ludwig Erhard (1897–1977), Federal Chancellor from 1963 to 1966 (CDU)
- Kurt Georg Kiesinger (1904–1988), Federal Chancellor from 1966 to 1969 (CDU)
- Willy Brandt (1913–1992), Federal Chancellor from 1969 to 1974 (Social Democratic Party, SPD)
- Helmut Schmidt (born 1918), Federal Chancellor from 1974 to 1982 (SPD)
- Helmut Kohl (born 1930), Federal Chancellor from 1982 to 1998 (CDU)
- Gerhard Schröder (born 1944), Federal Chancellor from 1998 to 2005 (SPD)
- Angela Merkel (born 1954), Federal Chancellor since 2005 (CDU)
Famous German Communists
- Otto Grotewohl (1894–1964), minister president of the GDr
- Erich Honecker (1912–1994), leader of the GDR until 1989
- Egon Krenz (born 1937), leader of the GDR after Honecker
- Erich Mielke (1907–2000), head of the Stasi
- Wilhelm Pieck (1876–1960), first president of the GDr
- Heinrich Rau (1899–1961), chairman of the German Economic Commission (predecessor of the East German government)
- Günter Schabowski (born 1929), member of politburo
- Willy Stoph (1914–1999), Premier of the GDr
- Walter Ulbricht (1893–1973), leader of the GDr
Presidents of Germany
- Friedrich Ebert (1871–1925), First President of the Weimar Republic (SPD) 1919–1925
- Paul von Hindenburg (1847–1934), Field Marshal, President 1925–1934
- Adolf Hitler (1889–1945), combining legally both offices, President and Chancellor ("Führer und Reichskanzler") 1934–1945
- Karl Dönitz (1891–1980), Admiral of the Fleet, after Hitler's death, President for 22 days, 1945
- Theodor Heuss (1884–1963), Federal President 1949–1959 (Liberal-Democratic Party, FDP)
- Heinrich Lübke (1894–1972), Federal President 1959–1969 (CDU)
- Gustav Heinemann (1899–1976), Federal President 1969–1974 (SPD)
- Walter Scheel (born 1919), Federal President 1974–1979 (FDP)
- Karl Carstens (1914–1992), Federal President 1979–1984 (CDU)
- Richard von Weizsäcker (born 1920), Federal President 1984–1994 (CDU)
- Roman Herzog (born 1934), Federal President 1994–1999 (CDU)
- Johannes Rau (1931–2006), Federal President 1999–2004 (SPD)
- Horst Köhler (born 1943), Federal President 2004–2010 (CDU)
- Jens Böhrnsen (born 1949), acting President since resignation of Köhler in 2010 (SPD)
- Christian Wulff (born 1959), Federal President 2010 – present (CDU)
Famous German National Socialists
- Klaus Barbie (1913–1991), the "Butcher of Lyon"
- Martin Bormann (1900–1945), National Socialist leader
- Eva Braun (1912–1945), Hitler's mistress and finally his wife
- Karl Brandt (1904–1948)
- Karl Dönitz (1891–1980), Admiral of the Fleet, briefly Hitler's successor as President
- Anton Drexler (1884–1942), founder of German Workers Party, which became the NSDAp
- Hans Frank (1900–1946), Governor-General of Poland
- Roland Freisler (1893–1945), infamous National Socialist-judge
- Wilhelm Frick (1877–1946), Minister of the Interior
- Walter Funk (1890–1960), Minister of Economics
- Joseph Goebbels (1897–1945), Chancellor of Germany, propaganda chief for the National Socialists
- Hermann Göring (1893–1946), National Socialist, Reich Marshal and chief of Luftwaffe
- Rudolf Hess (1894–1987), Hitler's private secretary, later Deputy Führer
- Reinhard Heydrich (1904–1942), National Socialist officer, head of the Sicherheitsdienst and Gestapo
- Heinrich Himmler (1900–1945), National Socialist head of the Ss
- Adolf Hitler (1889–1945), Reichskanzler and National Socialist leader
- Rudolf Höss (1900–1947), commandant of Auschwitz.
- Ernst Kaltenbrunner (1903–1946), Heydrich's successor at the SD
- Hans Kammler (1901–1945?), author and organiser of first Death Camps
- Wilhelm Keitel (1882–1946), Field Marshal, head of the OKW (1939–45)
- Karl Otto Koch (1897–1945), German first commandant of the Buchenwald concentration camp
- Robert Ley (1890–1945), head of the German Labour Front
- Erich von Manstein (1885–1973), Field Marshal and commander of the Eleventh Army (1941–42), Army Group Don (1942–43), and Army Group South (1943–44)
- Erhard Milch (1892–1972), Göring's second-in-command, Air Inspector General
- Heinrich Müller (1900–1945 {?}), head of the Gestapo
- Konstantin von Neurath (1873–1956), Foreign Minister in the early years of the regime
- Franz von Papen (1879–1969), Deputy Chancellor in Hitler's first cabinet.
- Erich Raeder (1876–1960), Admiral of the Fleet
- Joachim von Ribbentrop (1893–1946), National Socialist foreign minister
- Ernst Röhm (1887–1934), head of the SA
- Alfred Rosenberg (1893–1946), National Socialist ideologist
- Gerd von Rundstedt (1875–1953), Field Marshal, Commander-in-Chief East (1939–40), commander of Army Group South (1939–41), Commander-in-Chief West (1942–45)
- Hjalmar Schacht, Minister of Finance
- Baldur von Schirach (1907–1974), Hitler Youth leader
- Arthur Seyss-Inquart (1892–1946), Austrian National Socialist leader
- Albert Speer (1905–1981), "Hitler's architect", Minister of Armaments
- Gregor Strasser (1892–1934), National Socialist leader
- Julius Streicher (1885–1946), National Socialist Party leader in Franconia
Famous German Scientists
- Otto Wilhelm Hermann von Abich (1806–1886), mineralogist, geologist
- Peter Apian (1495–1552), mathematician, astronomer and cartographer
- Manfred von Ardenne (1907–1997), physicist
- Anton de Bary (1831–1888), surgeon, botanist, microbiologist
- Johann Bayer (1572–1625), astronomer
- Karl Benz (1844–1929), inventor of the gasoline-powered automobile
- Friedrich Bessel (1784–1846), mathematician
- Hans Bethe (1906–2005), physicist
- Max Born (1882–1970), physicist
- Robert Bosch (1861–1942), industrialist
- Karl Ferdinand Braun (1850-1918), physicist
- Wernher von Braun (1912–1977), space engineer, rocket scientist
- Robert Wilhelm Bunsen (1811–1899), chemist
- Georg Cantor (1845–1918), mathematician
- Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543), astronomer
- Hans Gerhard Creutzfeldt, neuropathologist
- Gottlieb Daimler (1834–1900), inventor and engineer
- Carl Duisberg (1861–1935), chemist and industrialist
- Rudolf Diesel (1858–1913), inventor of the Diesel engine
- Albert Einstein (1879–1955), physicist
- Hans Jürgen Eysenck (1916–1997), psychologist
- Joseph von Fraunhofer (1787–1826), physicist
- Gottlob Frege (1848–1925), mathematician and logicist
- Wilhelm Siegmund Frei (1885–1943), dermatologist
- Erich Fromm (1900–1980), psychologist
- Klaus Fuchs (1911–1988), physicist and spy
- Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777–1855), mathematician
- Johannes Gutenberg (1398–1468), inventor of modern bookprinting
- Fritz Haber (1868–1934), chemist
- Ernst Haeckel (1834–1919), physician
- Otto Hahn (1879–1968), chemist
- Bernhard Hantzsch (1875–1911), ornithologist
- Georg Hartmann (geographer) (1865–1946), geographer
- Felix Hausdorff (1868–1942), mathematician
- Robert Havemann (1910–1982), chemist
- Ernst Heinkel (1888–1958), Aircraft engineer
- Werner Karl Heisenberg (1901–1976), physicist
- Hermann Helmholtz, physicist
- Heinrich Rudolf Hertz (1857–1894), physicist
- Johannes Hevelius (1611–1687), astronomer
- David Hilbert (1862–1943), mathematician
- Johann Homann (1664–1724), geographer
- Erich Hueckel (1896–1980), physicist
- Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859), explorer
- Carl Gustav Jakob Jacobi (1804–1851), mathematician
- Alfons Maria Jakob (1884–1931), neurologist
- Hugo Junkers (1859–1935), Aircraft engineer
- Theodor Kaluza (1885–1954), mathematician, theoretical physicist
- Friedrich August Kekulé von Stradonitz (1829–1896), chemist
- Johannes Kepler (1571–1630), astronomer
- Gustav Robert Kirchhoff (1824–1887), physicist
- Felix Klein (1849–1925), mathematician
- Wolfgang Franz von Kobell (1803–1882), mineralogist
- Robert Koch (1843–1910), physician
- Walter Karl Koch (1880–1962), surgeon
- Adolph Wilhelm Hermann Kolbe (1818–1884), chemist
- Leopold Kronecker (1823–1891), mathematician
- Ernst Eduard Kummer (1810–1893), mathematician
- Edmund Landau (1877–1938), mathematician
- Hermann Lattemann (1852–1894), balloon pilot and parachutist
- Max von Laue (1879–1960), physicist
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646–1716), mathematician
- Philipp Eduard Anton von Lenard (1862–1947), physicist
- August Leskien (1840–1916), linguist
- Justus von Liebig (1803–1873), chemist
- Otto Lilienthal (1848–1896), the aviation pioneer
- Ferdinand von Lindemann (1852–1939), mathematician
- Alexander Lippisch (1894–1976), aerodynamicist
- Johann Josef Loschmidt (1821–1895), physicist, chemist
- Reimar Lüst (born 1923), astrophysicist
- Ludwig Immanuel Magnus, mathematician
- Siegfried Marcus (1831–1898), automobile pioneer
- Wilhelm Maybach (1846–1929), car-engine and automobile constructor
- Wilhelm Messerschmitt (1898–1978), Aircraft engineer
- Lothar Meyer (1830–1895), chemist
- Franz Mertens (1840–1927), mathematician
- August Ferdinand Möbius (1790–1868), mathematician, theoretical astronomer
- Johannes Müller (1801–1858), physiologist
- Walther Nernst (1864–1941), physicist
- Franz Ernst Neumann (1798–1895), mathematician
- Carl Gottfried Neumann (1832–1925), mathematician
- Claus Noé (1938–2008), economist
- Emmy Noether (1882–1935), mathematician
- Georg Ohm (1789–1854), physicist
- Wilhelm Ostwald, Nobel prize winning chemist, philosopher
- Nikolaus Otto (1832–1891), coinventor of the Otto cycle
- Bernhard Philberth (1927–2010), physicist, engineer, philosopher, theologian
- Jesco von Puttkamer (born 1933), space-scientist (NASA-Manager), engineer and author
- Max Planck (1858–1947), physicist
- Bernhard Riemann (1826–1866) mathematician
- Adam Riese (1492–1559), mathematician
- Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (1845–1923), physicist
- Carl Wilhelm Scheele (1742–1786), chemist
- Matthias Jakob Schleiden (1804–1881), botanist
- Heinrich Schliemann (1822–1890), archaeologist
- Christian Friedrich Schonbein (1799–1868), chemist
- Friedrich Hermann Schottky (1851–1935), mathematician
- Theodor Schwann (1810–1882), physiologist
- Hermann Amandus Schwarz (1843–1921), mathematician
- Karl Schwarzschild (1873–1916), physicist
- Carl Semper (1832–1893), ecologist
- Rolf Singer (1906–1994), mycologist
- Arnold Sommerfeld (1868–1951), physicist
- Eduard Adolf Strasburger (1844–1912), German-Polish professor, one of the most famous botanists of the 19th century
- Georg Steller (1709–1746), naturalist
- William Stern (1871–1938), psychologist, philosopher
- Alfred Stock (1876–1946), chemist
- Levi Strauss (1829–1902), jeans
- Werner von Siemens (1816–1892), inventor, industrialist
- Max Vasmer (1886–1962), linguist
- Rudolf Virchow (1821–1902), pioneer of medicine
- Otto Wallach, physicist
- Hellmuth Walter (1900–1980), propulsion
- Felix Wankel (1902–1988), inventor of the Wankel engine
- Alfred Wegener (1880–1930), geologist, meteorologist
- Karl Weierstrass (1815–1897), mathematician
- August Weismann (1834–1914), biologist
- Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker (born 1912), physicist
- Hermann Weyl (1885–1955), mathematician
- Maximilian zu Wied-Neuwied (1782–1867), zoologist
- Wilhelm Wien (1864–1928), physicist
- Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920), physiologist, psychologist
- Christian Zeller (1822–1899, Rektor; mathematician
- Ferdinand von Zeppelin (1838–1917), inventor of the Zeppelin
- Ernst Zermelo (1871–1953), mathematician
- Konrad Zuse (1910–1995), computer pioneer
Famous German Athletes
- Adolf Anderssen (1818–1879), chess grandmaster
- Rudi Ball (1911–75), ice hockey player, Olympic bronze 1932, World runner-up 1930, bronze 1934
- Michael Ballack (born 1976), football player
- Karin Balzer (born 1938), hurdler
- Dieter Baumann (born 1965), athlete
- Franz Beckenbauer (born 1945), football player
- Boris Becker (born 1967), tennis player
- Elly Beinhorn (born 1907), aviatrix
- Stefan Bellof (1957–1985), race car driver
- Frank Biela (born 1964), race car driver
- Oliver Bierhoff (born 1968), football player
- Heike Drechsler (born 1964), athlete
- Timo Boll, table tennis player
- Paul Breitner (born 1951), football player
- Bettina Bunge (born 1963), tennis player
- Rudolf Caracciola (1901–1959), race car driver
- Ursula "Uschi" Disl (born 1970), biathlete
- Christian Ehrhoff, German Olympian and NHL hockey player currently playing for the Buffalo Sabres.
- Erich Gottlieb Eliskases (1913–1997) leading chess player of the 1930s–40s, represented Austria, Germany and Argentina in international competition
- Harald Ertl (1948–1982), race car driver
- Jürgen Fanghänel (born 1951), boxer
- Rudi Fink (born 1958), boxer
- Birgit Fischer (born 1962), kayaker
- Sven Fischer (born 1971), biathlete
- Alfred Flatow (1869–1942), gymnast, 3-time Olympic champion (parallel bars, team parallel bars, team horizontal bar), silver (horizontal bar)
- Gustav Felix Flatow (1875–1945), 2-time Olympic champion (team parallel bars, team horizontal bar)
- Torsten Frings (born 1976), football player
- Gottfried Fuchs (1889–1972)), football player
- Marcel Goc, German Olympian and NHL hockey player currently playing for the Nashville Predators.
- Steffi Graf (born 1969), tennis player
- Michael Greis (born 1976), biathlete
- Michael Groß (born 1964), swimmer
- Ricco Groß (born 1970), biathlete
- Ludwig Guttmann (1899–1980), founder of the Paralympics
- Georg Hackl (born 1966), luger
- Sven Hannawald (born 1974), ski jumper
- Armin Hary (born 1937), athlete
- Nick Heidfeld (born 1977), racing driver
- Lilli Henoch (1899–1942), world records in discus, shot put, and 4x100-m relay
- Peter Hussing (born 1948), boxer
- Robert Hübner (born 1948), chess grandmaster
- Reinhold Joest (born 1937), race car driver and racing team owner
- Klaus Junge (1924–1945), one of the youngest German chess grandmasters
- Oliver Kahn (born 1969), football player
- Andy Kapp (born 1967), curler
- Herbert Klein (1923–2001), Olympic bronze (200-m breaststroke); 3 world records
- Ralph Klein (1931-2008), Berlin-born Israeli basketball player and coach
- Jutta Kleinschmidt, rally driver
- Jürgen Klinsmann (born 1964), football player and coach
- Miroslav Klose (born 1978), football player
- Georg Koch (born 1972), football player
- Andreas Köpke (born 1962), football player (goalkeeper)
- Olaf Kölzig (born 1970), German Olympian and NHL goalie currently playing for the Tampa Bay Lightning
- Louis Krages (1949–2001), racing driver who raced under the pseudonym of "John Winter"
- Philipp Lahm (born 1983), football player
- André Lange Bobsledding champion
- Hermann Lang (1909–1987), Champion race car driver
- Bernhard Langer (born 1957), golfer
- Henry Laskau racewalker, won 42 national titles; Pan American Games champion; 4-time Maccabiah champion
- Emanuel Lasker (1868–1941), the second World Chess Champion (1894–1921)
- Jens Lehmann (born 1969), football player (goalkeeper)
- Ellen Lohr racing driver
- Klaus Ludwig, racing driver
- Marion Lüttge (born 1941), javelin thrower
- Sepp Maier (born 1944), football player
- Henry Maske (born 1964), boxer
- Jochen Mass racing driver
- Lothar Matthäus (born 1961), football player
- Helene Mayer (1910–1953), foil fencer, Olympic champion
- Georg Meier (1910–1999) Motor-Cycle Racer
- Christoph Metzelder (born 1980), football player
- Ulrike Meyfarth (born 1956), high jumper
- Rosi Mittermaier (born 1950), alpine ski champion
- Gerd Müller (born 1945), football player
- Jörg Müller race car driver
- Petra Müller (born 1965), athlete
- Patricia Neske (born 1966), figure skater
- Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann (born 1966), speed skater
- Dirk Nowitzki (born 1978), NBA star
- Aron Nimzowitsch (1886–1935) Latvian-Danish German chess master and chess writer
- Sylke Otto (born 1969), luger
- Claudia Pechstein (born 1972), speed skater
- Uta Pippig (born 1965), athlete
- Sarah Poewe (born 1983), swimmer, Olympic bronze (4x100 medley relay)
- Daniel Prenn (1904–1991), tennis player, highest world ranking # 6
- Birgit Prinz (born 1977), football player
- Lina Radke (1903–1983), athlete
- Teodor Regedziński (aka Theodor Reger) (1894–1954) Polish chess master of German origin, fathers name was Reger
- Annegret Richter (born 1950), athlete
- Lars Riedel (born 1967), athlete
- Walter Röhrl, rally and racing driver (2-times Rally World Champion)
- Bernd Rosemeyer (1909–1938), racing driver
- Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, football player
- Max Schmeling (1905–2005), World Heavyweight Boxing Champion
- Martin Schmitt (born 1978), ski jumper
- Paul Felix Schmidt (1916–1984), an Estonian–German chess master.
- Bernd Schneider, racing driver
- Bernd Schneider,football player
- Detlef Schrempf (born 1963), former NBA star
- Rainer Schüttler, tennis player
- Michael Schumacher (born 1969), racing driver (7-times Formula One World Champion)
- Ralf Schumacher (born 1975), racing driver, brother of Michael
- Harald Schumacher (born 1954), football player
- Ralf Schumann (born 1962), pistol shooter
- Bastian Schweinsteiger (born 1984),football player
- Uwe Seeler (born 1936),football player
- Werner Seelenbinder (1904–1944), wrestler
- Katja Seizinger, alpine ski champion
- Renate Stecher (born 1950), athlete
- Michael Stich (born 1968), tennis player
- Rolf Stommelen (died 1983), racing driver
- Hans Stuck (died 1978), racing driver
- Hans Joachim Stuck, racing driver and son of Hans
- Siegbert Tarrasch (1862–1934), chess grandmaster
- Axel Teichmann (born 1979), cross-country skier
- Richard Teichmann (1868–1925), leading German chess player, easily of grandmaster strength
- Toni Turek (1919–1984), football player
- Jan Ullrich (born 1973), cyclist
- Wolfgang Unzicker (1925–2006), chess grandmaster
- Franziska van Almsick (born 1978), swimmer
- Sebastian Vettel, Formula One driver
- Berti Vogts, football player and coach
- Rudi Völler (born 1960), football player
- Ralf Waldmann, motorcycle racer
- Fritz Walter (1920–2002), football player
- Fritz Walter (born 1960), football player
- Jens Weißflog (born 1964), ski jumper
- Kati Wilhelm (born 1976), biathlete
- Joachim Winkelhoc, racing driver
- Manfred Winkelhock (1951–1985), racing driver, brother of Joachim
- Katarina Witt (born 1965), figure skater
- Sigrun Wodars (born 1965), athlete
- Jenny Wolf (born 1979), speed skater
- Erik Zabel (born 1970), cyclist
- Johannes Hermann Zukertort (1842–1888), German Polish-Jewish chessmaster
Famous German Religous Figures
- Heinrich Abeken (1809–1872), theologian
- Johannes Agricola (1494–1566), Protestant reformer
- Albertus Magnus, medieval philosopher and theologian
- Eusebius Amort (1692–1775)
- Pope Benedict XVI, a.k.a. Joseph Ratzinger (born 1927)
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906–1945), Theologian
- Johannes Bugenhagen (1485–1558) Protestand Reformer of Pomerania and Denmark, Theologian
- Rudolf Bultmann
- Alfred Delp
- Johann Eck (1486–1543)
- Matthias Faber (1586–1653)
- Adolf Harnack (1851–1930)
- Hedwig of Andech (1174–1243)
- Johann Gottfried Herder, poet, translator, philosopher and theologian
- Dietrich von Hildebrand (1889–1977)
- Clemens August Graf von Galen, beatified, cardinal
- Adolph Kolping (1813–1865), beatified, priest
- Hans Küng
- Karl Lehmann
- Martin Luther (1483–1546), of the Protestant Reformation
- Philipp Melanchthon (1497–1560), Protestant Reformation
- Moses Mendelssohn
- Jürgen Moltmann (born 1926), theologian
- Bernhard Philberth (born 1927), physicist, engineer, philosopher, theologian
- Karl Rahner, theologian
- Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768–1834), theologian, philosopher
- Albert Schweitzer (1875–1965), musician, physician, pastor, philosopher and theologian
- Dorothee Sölle (1929–2003)
- Edith Stein (1891–1942), saint, nun, victim of Holocaust
- Carsten Peter Thiede (1952–2004), theologian, New Testament historian, chaplain
- Helmut Thielicke, theologian
- Paul Tillich, theologian, philosopher
Famous German Writers
- Yehuda Amichai (born Ludwig Pfeuffer; 1924–2000), German-born Israeli poet
- Ernst Moritz Arndt – poet, songwriter, and patriot
- Achim von Arnim (1781–1831), poet
- Bettina von Arnim (1785–1859), writer and novelist
- Heinrich Böll (1917–1985), author
- Bertolt Brecht (1898–1956), playwright, poet
- Clemens Brentano (1778–1842), poet and novelist
- Georg Büchner, dramatist and author
- Wilhelm Busch (1832–1908), poet and satirist
- Azriel Carlebach (1909–56), Israeli journalist and editorial writer
- Matthias Claudius (1740–1815), poet and writer
- Annette von Droste-Hülshoff (1797–1848), poet
- Michael Ende (1929–1995), author of fantasy novels and children's books
- Joseph von Eichendorff (1788–1857), poet
- Hans Magnus Enzensberger (born 1929), essayist and poet
- Theodor Fontane (1819–1898), novelist and poet
- Paul Gerhardt (c. 1606–1676), hymn writer
- Johann Wolfgang Goethe (1749–1832), author, poet
- Leah Goldberg (1911–1970), Israeli poet
- Joseph Görres (1776–1848), essayist
- Günter Grass (born 1927), author, Nobel Prize in Literature 1999
- Brothers Grimm, famous collectors of fairy tales
- Peter Härtling, (born 1933), author
- Wilhelm Hauff (1802–1827), writer
- Heinrich Heine (1797–1856), poet
- Johann Gottfried Herder (1744–1803), essayist and poet
- Hermann Hesse (1877–1962), author
- Rolf Hochhuth (born 1931), playwright
- E.T.A. Hoffmann (1776–1822), author
- Friedrich Hölderlin (1770–1843), poet
- Ernst Jünger (1895–1998), writer, novelist
- Wladimir Kaminer (born 1967), short story writer
- Erich Kästner (1899–1974), novelist
- Daniel Kehlmann (born 1975), novelist
- Friedrich Kellner (1885–1970, diarist My Opposition
- Heinrich von Kleist (1777–1811), poet, dramatist, novelist
- Siegfried Lenz (born 1926), author
- Gotthold Lessing (1729–1781), writer
- Golo Mann (1909–1994), author, historian (second-oldest of Thomas Mann)
- Heinrich Mann (1871–1950), author (brother of Thomas Mann)
- Klaus Mann (1906–1949), author (oldest son of Thomas Mann)
- Thomas Mann (1875–1955), author (brother of Heinrich Mann)
- Karl May (1842–1912), author
- Christian Morgenstern (1871–1914), poet
- Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué (1777–1843), writer
- Novalis (1772–1801), poet and novelist
- Prince Hermann von Pückler-Muskau (1785–1871), writer and landscape gardener
- Wilhelm Raabe (1831–1910), novelist
- Erich Maria Remarque (1898–1970), novelist
- Rainer Maria Rilke (1875–1926), poet
- Peter Rühmkorf (1929–2008), poet
- Leopold Schefer (1784–1861), writer, poet, and composer
- Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805), poet, playwright
- August Wilhelm Schlegel (1767–1845), poet, translator
- Bernhard Schlink (born 1944), author, professor of law
- Arno Schmidt (1914–1979), writer
- Theodor Storm (1817–1888), author
- Patrick Süskind (born 1949), author, screenwriter
- Ludwig Tieck (1773–1853), poet, editor, novelist
- Kurt Tucholsky (1890–1935), writer, satirist
- Ludwig Uhland (1787–1862), poet, writer, playwright
- Martin Walser (born 1927), playwright and novelist
- Walter von der Vogelweide (c. 1170 – c. 1230), poet
- Gero von Wilpert (born 1933), essayist
- Christa Wolf (1929–2011), novelist and essayist
- Wolfram von Eschenbach (died 1220), poet
Famous Military Germans
- Carl von Clausewitz (1780–1831), Prussian professional soldier, military historian, and influential military theorist
- Erich von Falkenhayn (1861–1922), General, Prussian Minister of War (1913–15) and Chief of General Staff (1914–16)
- August von Gneisenau (1760–1831), Prussian field marshal and chief of the Prussian General Staff (1813–14)
- Heinz Guderian (1888–1954), Military theorist and innovative General (1907–1945)
- Erich Hartmann (1922–1993), fighter pilot and air ace (1941–1970)
- Alfred Jodl (1890–1946), general, operations chief of the OKw
- Günther von Kluge (1882–1944), field marshal and commander of the Fourth Army (1939–41) and Army Group Center (1941–43)
- Erich Ludendorff (1865–1937), General and Quartermaster General (1916–18)
- Erich von Manstein (1887–1973), Field Marshal and professional soldier (1906–1944)
- Friedrich Paulus (1890–1957), General and commander of the German Sixth Army, later promoted to Field Marshal (1910–1943)
- Manfred von Richthofen, also known as the Red Baron, (1892–1918), fighter pilot and air ace
- Erwin Rommel (1891–1944), field marshal and commander of Afrika Korps (1942–43) and Army Group B (1944)
- Hans-Ulrich Rudel (1916–1982), Stuka dive-bomber pilot and air ace (1936–1945)
- Gerd von Rundstedt (1875–1953), Field Marshal and famed commander (1892–1945)
- Alfred von Schlieffen (1833–1913), Field Marshal, Strategist and Chief of General Staff (1891–1905)
- Gerhard von Scharnhorst (1755–1813), General and Prussian Minister of War (1808–10)
- Michael Wittmann (1914–1944), SS-Captain and celebrated tank ace (1934–1944)
Other Famous Germans
- Rodolphus Agricola (1443–1485)
- Franz Borkenau (1900–1957), social scientist
- Hugo Boss, fashion designer
- Dieter Claessens (1921–1997), sociologist
- Gudrun Ensslin (1940–1977), terrorist
- Adolf Eugen Fick, inventor of contact lenses
- Anne Frank (1929–1945), diarist and victim of the Holocaust
- Reinhard Furrer (1940–1995), astronaut
- Herschel Grynszpan
- Johann Gutenberg (c. 1390s – 1468), printer
- Hildegard von Bingen (1098–1179), abbess, mystic
- August Horch (1868–1951), car designer and manufacturer
- Karen Horney, psychoanalyst
- Heribert Illig (born 1947), historian
- Sigmund Jähn (born 1937), the first German in space
- René König (1906–1992), sociologist
- Siegfried Kracauer
- Christian Frederick Martin (1796–1867), Inventor of the steel-string guitar
- Ulrike Meinhof (1934–1976), journalist and terrorist
- Ulf Merbold (born 1941), astronaut
- Heinrich Meyerfreund, founder of Garoto, a chocolate company in Brazil
- Michael Mittermeier (born 1966), comedian
- Carl von Ossietzky (1889–1938), journalist and pacifist
- Ferdinand Porsche (1875–1951), designer and founder of Porsche
- Ferry Porsche (1909–1998), automobile designer and son of Ferdinand Porsche
- Ferdinand Alexander Porsche (born 1935), designer and member of the Porsche family
- Ferdinand Oliver Porsche (born 1961), lawyer, executive and family member of Porsche
- Ludwig Quidde (1858–1941), historian and pacifist
- Leopold von Ranke (1795–1886), historian
- Mathias Rust (born 1968), aviator who landed on Moscow's Red Square in 1987
- Helmut Schelsky (1912–1984), sociologist
- Hannelore Schmatz, mountaineer
- Sophie Scholl (1921–1943), member of the German resistance in WW2
- Heffa Schücking, environmentalist
- Albert Schweitzer (1875–1965), physician, humanitarian
- Henry Shultz (1776–1851), emigrant to USA, entrepreneur
- Edith Stein (1891–1942), nun, victim of Holocaust
- Johann Tetzel (1465–1519), monk
- Ulrich Walter (born 1954), astronaut
- Alfred Weber, sociologist
- Max Weber, sociologist
- Diedrich Hermann Westermann (1875–1956), linguist
- Adi Dassler (1900–1978), founder of Adidas
Famous German Churches
- Cathedral of Our Lady in Aachen
- Cathedral of Our Lady Visitation and the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus in Augsburg
- Imperial Cathedral of Sts. Peter and Paul and St. George in Bamberg
- Cathedral Basilica of St. Hedwig in Berlin
- Cathedral of Mary's Protection and St. Andrew in München (Ukrainian Rite)
- Cathedral of the Holy Trinity in Dresden
- Cathedral of Our Lady of Assumption in Eichstätt
- Cathedral of St. Mary in Erfurt
- Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, Sts. Mary, Cosmas and Damian in Essen
- Cathedral of Our Lady in Freiburg
- Cathedral of Sts. Saviour and Boniface in Fulda
- Cathedral of St. James in Görlitz
- St. Mary's Cathedral in Hamburg
- New St. Mary's Cathedral in Hamburg
- Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary in Hildesheim
- Basilica of St. John the Baptist Patron of Breslavia in Berlin
- Cathedral of Sts. Peter and Mary in Cologne
- Cathedral of St. George and St. Nicholas in Limburg an der Lahn
- Cathedral of St. Sebastian in Magdeburg
- Cathedral of St. Martin of Tours and St. Stephen in Mainz
- Cathedral of Our Lady in Munich
- Cathedral of St. Paul in Münster
- Cathedral of St. Peter in Osnabrück
- Cathedral of Sts. Mary, Liborius and Kilian in Paderborn
- St. Stephen's Cathedral in Passau
- Cathedral of St. Peter in Regensburg
- Cathedral of St. Martin in Rottenburg
- Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of the Assumption and St. Stephen in Speyer
- Cathedral of St. Peter in Trier
- Cathedral of Sts. Kilian, Colonat and Totnan in Würzburg
- Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul in Dillingen
- Cathedral of St. Peter in Bautzen
- Co-Cathedral of Our Lady's Nativity, Sts. Corbinian, Lantpert, Nonnosus and Sigismund in Freising
- Cathedral Church of St. Eberhard in Stuttgart
- Cathedral of St. Peter in Worms
Types of German Beer
- Altbier
- Berliner Weisse
- Bock
- Doppelbock
- Dunkler Bock
- Dunkles
- Eisbock
- Export
- Hefeweizen
- Helles
- Kellerbier
- Klöster Bier
- Kölsch
- Kristallweizen
- Leipziger Gose
- Maibock
- Märzen
- Rauchbier
- Pilsener
- Roggenbier
- Schwarzbier
- Spezial
- Weissbier
- Weizenbier
- Weizenbock
- Zoiglbier
- Zwickelbier
Famous German Companies
- A. Lange & Söhne
- Adidas
- Allianz
- Altana
- Aldi
- Arburg
- Arcor
- Armedangels
- Audi
- BASF
- Bauhaus
- Bayer
- C. Bechstein Pianofortefabrik
- Beck's Brewery
- Behringer
- Bavaria Film Studios
- Bechtle
- BEO GmbH
- Bertelsmann
- Bitburger Brewery
- Boehringer Ingelheim
- Birkenstock
- Beiersdorf
- Bericap
- Beyerdynamic
- Biesterfeld
- Bilfinger Berger
- Bosch
- BMW
- Hubert Burda Media
- Carl-Zeiss-Stiftung
- Celesio
- Circus Krone
- Coelan
- Commerzbank
- Concert Software and Business Services
- Continental
- Daimler AG
- Dba
- Degussa
- Delton
- Deutsche Bahn
- Deutsche Bank
- Deutsche Börse
- Deutsche Post
- Deutsche Telekom
- Deutsche Vermögensberatung
- Deutz AG
- Diezel
- Dräger
- Dresdner Bank
- Dresdner Porzellan
- Douglas Holding
- DOVO Solingen
- Djshop
- E-Plus, owned by KPN
- EADS (part German)
- E.ON
- EnBW
- Epcos
- EnOcean
- edding AG
- ebmpapst
- Facton
- Filmstudio Babelsberg
- Fischerwerke
- Fissler
- Fraport
- Freenet.de
- Fresenius
- Festo
- Ford of Europe
- Gardena AG
- GEA Group
- Gebrüder Thonet
- Gerling
- Gerolsteiner Brunnen
- Getrag
- GfK AG
- GPC Biotech
- Grundig
- Grunenthal Gmbh
- Hama GmbH & Co KG
- Hannover Re
- Hapag-Lloyd
- Haribo
- Hauni Maschinenbau AG
- Heckler & Koch
- Heidelberger Druckmaschinen
- Heidelberg Cement
- Hella (company)
- Henckels
- Henkel
- Heraeus
- Hochtief
- Howaldtswerke
- Hugo Boss
- HypoVereinsbank
- HBS-Henkenjohann
- Infineon Technologies
- InnoTek
- Intershop
- J. Schmalz GmbH
- Jenoptik
- Jil Sander
- JOMO GmbH & Co. KG
- Kali+Salz
- Karstadt Quelle
- Kärcher
- Kärheim
- Keimfarben
- Kellerandwest partners inc
- KfW
- Klein and Hummel
- Klöckner
- Koenig & Bauer
- Körber
- Krauss-Maffei
- Krones
- KTB mechatronics
- KUKA
- Lamy
- Leica Camera
- Leidolf
- Leifheit
- Lidl
- Lidl & Schwarz
- The Liebherr Group
- Lindauer DORNIER GmbH
- Linde AG
- Linhof
- LTU International
- Lufthansa
- Loewe
- Löwenbräu
- MAN
- MAGIX
- Meindl
- Meinl Percussion
- Meinl-Weston
- Meissen porcelain
- Mennekes Elektrotechnik
- Merck
- METRO
- Meyer Werft
- Miele
- Montblanc
- Munich Re (Münchener Rück)
- Mercedes-Benz
- Nero AG
- Neveling.net
- Oetker-Gruppe
- Opel
- Orenstein and Koppel GmbH
- Otto GmbH
- Porsche
- Preussag
- PUMA
- Putzmeister
- Radeberger
- Rawie
- Recaro
- REHOLZ
- Reply S.p.A.
- REWE Group
- Rohde & Schwarz
- Rosenthal AG
- Roth Industries
- RRI Rhein Ruhr International GmbH
- RUF Automobile
- RWE
- Salzgitter AG
- SAP
- Schaller Guitarenparts
- Schering
- Schwarz Pharma
- SCHWING Stetter
- Sebamed
- Seca
- SEMIDI
- Sennheiser
- Severin
- SGL Carbon
- Siemens
- Siempelkamp
- SkySails
- Soehnle
- Software AG
- SolarWorld
- Solimpeks
- Sortimo
- Spaten Bräu
- Axel Springer AG
- Stabilo
- Staedtler
- Steinway & Sons
- Stiefel Labs
- Stinnes AG
- Storck
- STRATO Medien
- Südzucker
- Talkline
- Tchibo
- Telefunken
- Tente International
- TETRA
- ThyssenKrupp
- TUI AG
- TÜV Rheinland
- Ultrasone
- Underberg
- United Internet
- Vaude
- Vector Informatik
- Villeroy & Boch
- Volkswagen Group
- Wacker Chemie
- Walther
- Warsteiner Brewery
- Wayss & Freytag
- Weber Technologies Biocyte
- Weckerle
- Wella
- Wintershall
- Wolff & Müller
- Wusthof Dreizack
- Würth
- Wilkhahn (Wilkening+Hahne GmbH+Co.KG)
- Web Design
- Züblin
- ZF Friedrichshafen AG
German Universities
University of Augsburg
University of Bamberg
University of Bayreuth
Free University of Berlin
Humboldt University of Berlin
University of Bielefeld
Ruhr University Bochum
University of Bonn
University of Bremen
Jacobs University Bremen
University of Cologne
University of Duisburg-Essen
University of Düsseldorf
Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
University of Erfurt
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
University of Duisburg-Essen (Campus Essen)
University of Flensburg
University of Frankfurt am Main
Viadrina University (Frankfurt an der Oder)
Zeppelin University (Friedrichshafen)
University of Freiburg
University of Giessen
University of Göttingen
University of Greifswald
Fernuniversität Hagen (distance learning; open university)
University of Halle-Wittenberg (also in Wittenberg)
University of Hamburg
Helmut Schmidt University (University of the Bundeswehr, Hamburg)
University of Hannover
University of Heidelberg
University of Hildesheim
University of Hohenheim
Technical University of Ilmenau
University of Jena
University of Karlsruhe
University of Kassel
University of Kiel
University of Koblenz-Landau
University of Konstanz
University of Leipzig
University of Lübeck
Leuphana
University of Magdeburg
University of Mainz
University of Mannheim
University of Marburg
Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich
Bundeswehr University Munich
University of Münster
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
University of Oldenburg
University of Osnabrück
University of Passau
University of Paderborn
University of Potsdam
University of Regensburg
University of Rostock
Saarland University
University of Siegen
German University of Administrative Sciences Speyer
University of Stuttgart
University of Trier
University of Tübingen
University of Ulm
University of Halle-Wittenberg (also in Halle)
University of Vechta
University of Wuppertal
University of Würzburg
List of German Lakes
Ammersee
Arendsee
Außenalster (Outer Alster Lake)
Baalensee
Baldeneysee
Bederkesaer See
Beetzsee
Biggesee
Binnenalster (Inner Alster Lake)
Brahmsee
Breitlingsee
Brombachsee
Bullensee
Chiemsee
Lake Constance (Bodensee)
Dümmersee
Edersee
Eibsee
Ellbogensee
Eschbach Reservoir
Fleesensee
Gothensee
Gottleuba Reservoir
Großer Labussee
Großer Priepertsee
Halterner See
Hengsteysee
Kellersee
Maschsee
Mechower See
Möhne Reservoir (Möhnesee)
Möserscher See
Müggelsee
Müritz
Norderteich
Oder Reservoir
Oker Reservoir
Pfaffenteich
Plauer See (Brandenburg)
Plauer See (Mecklenburg-Vorpommern)
Plöner See
Plötzensee
Quenzsee
Röblinsee
Scharmützelsee
Schluchsee
Schweriner See
Schmollensee
Schwedtsee
Seilersee
Sorpe Reservoir
Söse Reservoir
Stolpsee
Lake Starnberg (Starnberger See)
Steinhuder Meer
Lake Tegel (Tegeler See)
Useriner See
Wangnitzsee
Wannsee
Wendsee
Woblitzsee
Wolgastsee
Ziernsee
Zwischenahner Meer
Largest German Rivers
- 2.857 km – Donau – mit Quellfluss Breg – (Schwarzes Meer)
- 1.236 km – Rhein – mit Quellfluss Rein da Maighels – (Nordsee)
- 1.091 km – Elbe – mit Moldau 1.252 km – (Nordsee)
- 866 km – Oder – mit Warthe 1.045 km – (Ostsee)
- 744 km – Weser – mit Quellfluss Werra, größter Fluss, der gänzlich in Deutschland verläuft – (Nordsee)
- 544 km – Mosel (Rhein)
- 524 km – Main – mit Regnitz, Rednitz und Fränkischer Rezat 545 km – (Rhein)
- 517 km – Inn (Donau)
- 413 km – Saale (Elbe)
- 400 km – Spree (Havel)
- 371 km – Ems (Nordsee)
- 367 km – Neckar – mit Württembergischer Eschach 384 km – (Rhein)
- 325 km – Havel – mit Spree 542 km – (Elbe)
- 316 km – Eger (Elbe)
- 300 km – Werra (rechter, längerer Quellfluss der Weser)
- 295 km – Isar (Donau)
- 290 km – Mulde – mit Quellfluss Zwickauer Mulde – (Elbe)
- 281 km – Leine (Aller)
- 264 km – Lech (Donau)
- 260 km – Aller – mit Leine 346 km – (Weser)
- 257 km – Weiße Elster (Saale)
- 256 km – Lausitzer Neiße (Oder)
- 246 km – Saar (Mosel)
- 245 km – Lahn (Rhein)
- 225 km – Salzach (Inn)
- 222 km – Lippe – mit Alme 255 km – (Rhein)
- 220 km – Altmühl (Donau)
- 220 km – Fulda (linker, wasserreicherer Quellfluss der Weser)
- 219 km – Ruhr – mit Renau und Neger 221 km – (Rhein)
- 208 km – Elde (Elbe)
- 192 km – Unstrut (Saale)
- 189 km – Hunte (Weser)
- 189 km – Jagst (Neckar)
- 188 km – Eider (Nordsee)
- 188 km – Schwarze Elster (Elbe)
- 185 km – Amper – mit Ammersee und Ammer – (Isar)
- 182 km – Vechte (Rhein)
- 176 km – Eder (Fulda)
- 173 km – Sauer (Mosel)
- 170 km – Rur (Maas)
- 169 km – Bode – mit Quellfluss Warme Bode – (Saale)
- 169 km – Hase (Else/Ems)
- 168 km – Kocher – mit Lein 201 km – (Neckar)
- 167 km – Vechte (Zwarte Water)
- 166 km – Zwickauer Mulde (linker Quellfluss der Mulde)
- 165 km – Naab – mit Quellfluss Waldnaab – (Donau)
- 177 km – Regen – mit Quellflüssen Großer Regen, Schwarzer Regen – (Donau)
- 173 km – Sauer (Ardennen) – (Mosel)
- 153 km – Oste (Nordsee)
- 153 km – Sieg – mit Ferndorfbach 155 km – (Rhein)
- 151 km – Wertach (Lech)
- 150 km – Alz – mit Chiemsee, Tiroler (Kössener) und Kitzbühler Achen – (Inn)
- 147 km – Iller (Donau)
- 143 km – Warnow – nur Fluss-Strecke, ohne das Küstengewässer Unterwarnow – (Ostsee)
- 142 km – Fränkische Saale (Main)
- 142 km – Kyll (Mosel)
- 142 km – Peene (Ostsee)
- 134 km – Paar (Donau)
- 132 km – Wörnitz (Donau)
- 130 km – Tauber (Main)
- 129 km – Ilm (Saale)
- 129 km – Lenne (Ruhr)
- 131 km – Lesum – mit Quellfluss Wümme einschl. Haverbeeke – (Weser)
- 128 km – Zschopau (Freiberger Mulde)
- 125 km – Nahe (Rhein)
- 125 km – Rhin (Havel)
- 124 km – Freiberger Mulde (mit Zschopau 151 km; rechter Quellfluss der Mulde)
- 124 km – Trave (Ostsee)
- 118 km – Wümme (– mit Haverbeeke 120 km – linker Quellfluss der Lesum)
- 117 km – Niers (Maas)
- 117 km – Wupper – (im Oberlauf: Wipper) – (Rhein)
- 114 km – Berkel (IJssel)
- 114 km – Loisach (Isar)
- 114 km – Nied – mit Französischer Nied – (Saar)
- 110 km – Diemel (Weser)
- 110 km – Vils – mit Quellfluss Große Vils – (Donau)
- 109 km – Rott (Inn)
- 107 km – Ilmenau – mit Quellfluss Stederau – (Elbe)
- 105 km – Enz – mit Quellfluss Große Enz; 149 km mit Nagold – (Neckar)
- 105 km – Oker (Aller)
- 103 km – Erft – mit Kuhbach – (Rhein)
- 103 km – Mies (Berounka)
- 103 km – Ohre (Elbe)
- 103 km – Saalach (Salzach)
- 103 km – Uecker – (in BB: Ucker) – (Ostsee)
- 102 km – Wied (Rhein)
- 101 km – Pegnitz – mit Oberlauf Fichtenohe – rechter Quellfluss der Regnitz
- 99 km – Blies (Saar)
- 98 km – Fuhse (Aller)
- 97 km – Milde-Biese-Aland (Elbe)
- 97 km – Schwalm (Eder)
- 95 km – Dahme (Spree)
- 95 km – Innerste (Leine)
- 95 km – Wipper (TH) (Unstrut)
- 94 km – Dosse (Havel)
- 93 km – Kinzig (BW) – mit Kleiner Kinzig 96 km – (Rhein)
- 92 km – Friedberger Ach (Donau)
- 92 km – Nagold (Enz)
- 90 km – Elz – Schwarzwald – (Rhein)
- 90 km – Große Röder (Schwarze Elster)
- 90 km – Nidda (Main)
- 90 km – Pleiße (Weiße Elster)
- 90 km – Wutach (Rhein)
- 89 km – Dinkel (Vechte)
- 87 km – Stör (Elbe)
- 87 km – Vils (Naab)
- 86 km – Ahr (Rhein)
- 85 km – Gera (Unstrut)
- 85 km – Große Aue (Weser)
- 85 km – Große Laber (Donau)
- 85 km – Wipper (ST) (Saale)
- 84 km – Emscher (Rhein)
- 84 km – Prüm (Sauer)
- 84 km – Stepenitz (BB) (Elbe)
- 83 km – Wesenitz (Elbe)
- 82 km – Ilm (BY) (Abens)
- 82 km – Kinzig (HE) (Main)
- 80 km – Itz (Main)
- 80 km – Rems (Neckar)
- 80 km – Waldnaab (Naab)
- 79 km – Murg (Rhein)
- 79 km – Tiroler Achen (Chiemsee)
- 78 km – Flöha (Zschopau)
- 78 km – Our (Sauer)
- 78 km – Vils (Naab) (Naab)
- 78 km – Wiesent (Regnitz)
- 76 km – Abens (Donau)
- 76 km – Isen (Inn)
- 76 km – Schmutter (Donau)
- 76 km – Schwarze Laber (Donau)
- 75 km – Aisch (Regnitz)
- 75 km – Mindel (Donau)
- 74 km – Trebel (Peene)
- 74 km – Lieser (Mosel)
- 73 km – Jeetze–Jeetzel (Elbe)
- 73 km – Treene (Eider)
- 72 km – Argen–Untere Argen mit Quellfluss Weitnauer Bach (Rhein)
- 72 km – Recknitz (Saaler Bodden / Ostsee)
- 72 km – Sude (Elbe)
- 72 km – Werre (Weser)
- 71 km – Alte und Neue Jäglitz (Havel und Dosse)
- 70 km – Issel mit Oude Ijsselli>
- 70 km – Sauer (Elsass) (Rhein)
- 68 km – Agger (Sieg)
- 68 km – Böhme (Aller)
- 68 km – Glan (Nahe)
- 68 km – Randow (Uecker)
- 68 km – Tollense (Peene)
- 68 km – Wetter (Nidda)
- 67 km – Chemnitz (Zwickauer Mulde)
- 67 km – Selke (Bode)
- 67 km – Werse (Ems)
- 66 km – Löcknitz (Elbe)
- 65 km – Bille (Elbe)
- 65 km – Fränkische Rezat (Rednitz)
- 65 km – Gennach (Wertach)
- 65 km – Helme (Unstrut)
- 65 km – Ilz (Donau)
- 65 km – Nuthe (BB) (Havel)
- 67 km – Haune (Fulda)
- 64 km – Inde (Rur)
- 64 km – Nister (Sieg)
- 63 km – Fils (Neckar)
- 63 km – Nidder (Nidda)
- 63 km – Salm (Mosel)
- 63 km – Weida (Weiße Elster)
- 63 km – Wern (Main)
- 62 km – Emmer (Weser)
- 62 km – Schussen (Rhein)
- 62 km – Schwentine (Kieler Förde / Ostsee)
- 62 km – Weser (Ourthe)
- 61 km – Selz (Rhein)
- 61 km – Weißeritz mit Wilder Weißeritz (Elbe)
- 60 km – Haidenaab (Naab)
- 60 km – Nebel (Warnow)
- 60 km – Ohm (Lahn)
- 60 km – Parthe (Weiße Elster)
- 60 km – Pfinz (Rhein)
- 60 km – Pulsnitz (Schwarze Elster)
- 60 km – Schwarzach (Naab)
- 60 km – Schwarzach (Rednitz)
- 60 km – Sempt (Isar)
- 60 km – Speyerbach (Rhein)
- 60 km – Weschnitz (Rhein)
- 60 km – Zusam (Donau)
- 59 km – Alme (Lippe)
- 59 km – Elzbach (Mosel)
- 59 km – Mildenitz (Warnow)
- 59 km – Nette (Rhein)
- 59 km – Nims (Prüm)
- 59 km – Rench (Rhein)
- 59 km – Roter Main (linker Quellfluss des Mains)
- 58 km – Löbauer Wasser (Spree)
- 58 km – Luhe (Ilmenau)
- 58 km – Mangfall (Inn)
- 58 km – Regnitz (Main)
- 58 km – Wondreb (Eger)
- 57 km – Alsenz (Nahe)
- 57 km – Helbe (Unstrut)
- 57 km – Kammel (Mindel)
- 57 km – Plane (Havel)
- 57 km – Schunter (Oker)
- 57 km – Steinach (Rodach)
- 57 km – Weida (Weiße Elster)
- 56 km – Lauchert (Donau)
- 56 km – Oder (Rhume)
- 56 km – Stecknitz (Trave)
- 56 km – Ulster (Werra)
- 55 km – Hörsel mit "Kleine Leina" (Werra)
- 55 km – Brenz (Donau)
- 55 km – Dill (Lahn)
- 55 km – Günz (Donau)
- 55 km – Lauter (Rhein)
- 55 km – Örtze (Aller)
- 55 km – Roth (Donau)
- 55 km – Pfreimd (Naab)
- 55 km – Wiese (Rhein)
- 55 km – Wisenta (Saale)
- 54 km – Nesse (Hörsel)
- 54 km – Baunach (Main)
- 54 km – Eyach (Neckar)
- 54 km – Rot (Donau)
- 54 km – Stever (Lippe)
- 53 km – Alf (Mosel)
- 53 km – Alster (Elbe)
- 53 km – Elsenz (Neckar)
- 53 km – Schwarza (Saale)
- 53 km – Wurm (Rur)
- 52 km – Linzer Aach (Rhein)
- 52 km – Queich (Rhein)
- 52 km – Rodach (Main)
- 52 km – Rögnitz (Sude)
- 52 km – Stepenitz (Mecklenburg) (Trave)
- 52 km – Welse (Oder)
- 51 km – Bocholter Aa (Oude Ijssel)
- 51 km – Bühler (Kocher)
- 51 km – Chamb (Regen)
- 51 km – Murr (Neckar)
- 51 km – Prims (Saar)
- 50 km – Ise (Aller)
- 50 km – Kraichbach (Rhein)
- 50 km – Möhne (Ruhr)
- 50 km – Mümling – mit Marbach 60 km – (Main)
- 50 km – Riß (Donau)
- 50 km – Schwarzbach (Blies)
- 50 km – Simmerbach (Nahe)
- 50 km – Sinn (Fränkische Saale)
- 50 km – Urft (Rur)
- 50 km – Volme (Ruhr)
- 50 km – Weil (Lahn)
- 50 km – Würm (Nagold)
- 49 km – Üßbach (Alf)
- 49 km – Breg – (rechter Quellfluss der Donau)
- 49 km – Erse/Aue (Fuhse)
- 49 km – Glonn (Amper)
- 49 km – Hörsel (Werra)
- 49 km – Müglitz (Elbe)
- 49 km – Uchte (Biese)
- 49 km – Wilde Weißeritz – (rechter Quellfluss der Weißeritz)
- 48 km – Dreisam – mit Quellfluss Rotbach – (Elz)
- 48 km – Karthane (Elbe)
- 48 km – Kleine Laber (Große Laber)
- 48 km – Nethe (Weser)
- 48 km – Nieplitz (Nuthe)
- 48 km – Rhume (Leine)
- 48 km – Große Striegis (rechter Quellfluss der Striegis)
- 47 km – Gersprenz (Main)
- 47 km – Holtemme (Bode)
- 47 km – Hoyerswerdaer Schwarzwasser (Schwarze Elster)
- 46 km – Düssel (Rhein)
- 46 km – Rednitz (Regnitz)
- 46 km – Ruwer (Mosel)
- 46 km – Schwalm (Maas)
- 45 km – Alb (Rhein)
- 45 km – Bigge (Lenne)
- 45 km – Bröl (Sieg)
- 45 km – Delme (Ochtum)
- 45 km – Emsbach (Lahn)
- 45 km – Glane (Ems)
- 45 km – Glems (Enz)
- 45 km – Hamme (rechter Quellfluss der Lesum)
- 45 km – Horloff (Nidda)
- 45 km – Kirnitzsch (Elbe)
- 45 km – Malxe (Neiße/Spree)
- 45 km – Nette (Rhein)
- 45 km – Pinnau (Elbe)
- 45 km – Singold (Wertach)
- 45 km – Steinfurter Aa (Vechte)
- 45 km – Sülz (Agger)
- 44 km – Este (Elbe)
- 44 km – Glenne (Lippe)
- 44 km – Lossa (Unstrut)
- 44 km – Sur (Salzach)
- 44 km – Weiße Laber (Altmühl)
- 43 km – Bega (Werre)
- 43 km – Brigach (linker Quellfluss der Donau)
- 43 km – Eckbach (Rhein)
- 43 km – Lune (Weser)
- 43 km – Nette (Innerste)
- 43 km – Pfrimm (Rhein)
- 43 km – Schwarzbach (Rhein)
- 43 km – Zenn (Regnitz)
- 42 km – Fichtelnaab (Waldnaab)
- 42 km – Isenach (Rhein)
- 42 km – Ennepe (Volme]
- 42 km – Modau (Rhein)
- 41 km – Alb (Rhein)
- 41 km – Bega (Werre)
- 41 km – Elbbach (Lahn)
- 41 km – Lossa (Unstrut)
- 41 km – Meiße (Aller)
- 41 km – Starzel (Neckar)
- 41 km – Sulzach (Wörnitz)
- 41 km – Weißer Main (rechter Quellfluss des Mains)
- 40 km – Appelbach (Nahe)
- 40 km – Augraben (Tollense)
- 40 km – Bibert (Rednitz)
- 40 km – Dhünn (Wupper)
- 40 km – Ehle (Elbe)
- 40 km – Eisbach (Rhein)
- 40 km – Erfa (Main)
- 40 km – Felda (Werra)
- 40 km – Glotter (Dreisam)
- 40 km – Hengstbach (Rhein)
- 40 km – Hessel (Ems)
- 40 km – Lüder (Fulda)
- 40 km – Motel (Schilde)
- 40 km – Reiche Ebrach (Regnitz)
- 40 km – Schaale (Sude)
- 40 km – Schilde (Schaale)
- 40 km – Seeve (Elbe)
- 40 km – Streu (Fränkische Saale)
- 40 km – Twiste (Diemel)
- 40 km – Wipfra (Gera)
- 40 km – Zorge (Helme)
- 39 km – Aue (Weser)
- 39 km – Barthe (Barther Bodden)
- 39 km – Dhron (Mosel)
- 39 km – Lauter (Glan)
- 39 km – Milde Abschnitt von "Milde–Biese–Aland" (Elbe)
- 39 km – Nuthe (ST) (Elbe)
- 39 km – Rotbach (Erft)
- 39 km – Schwartau (Trave)
- 38 km – Bobritzsch (Freiberger Mulde)
- 38 km – Efze (Schwalm)
- 38 km – Glatt (Rhein)
- 38 km – Großer Dieckfluss (Große Aue)
- 38 km – Klosterbach (Ochtum)
- 38 km – Lachte (Aller)
- 38 km – Maisach (Amper)
- 38 km – Orke (Eder)
- 38 km – Rauhe Ebrach (Regnitz)
- 38 km – Rossel (Saar)
- 38 km – Söse (Rhume)
- 37 km – Krückau (Elbe)
- 37 km – Arlau (Nordsee)
- 37 km – Berste (Spree)
- 37 km – Biber (Donau)
- 37 km – Eger (Wörnitz)
- 37 km – Eschach (Neckar)
- 37 km – Lone (Hürbe)
- 37 km – Nuhne (Eder)
- 37 km – Selbitz (Sächsische Saale)
- 37 km – Seemenbach (Nidder)
- 37 km – Triebisch (Elbe)
- 36 km – Ablach (Donau)
- 36 km – Ahse (Lippe)
- 36 km – Aiterach (Donau)
- 36 km – Angerbach (Rhein)
- 36 km – Düssel (Rhein)
- 36 km – Rot (Kocher)
- 36 km – Steina (Wutach)
- 36 km – Wehre (Werra)
- 35 km – Buckau (Havel)
- 35 km – Düte (Hase)
- 35 km – Else (Werre)
- 35 km – Glatt (Neckar)
- 35 km – Haßlach (Rodach)
- 35 km – Hornbach (Schwarzbach)
- 35 km – Lauter – Große Lauter – (Donau)
- 35 km – Linde (Tollense)
- 35 km – Lethe (Hunte)
- 35 km – Luhe (Naab)
- 35 km – Marka (Sagter Ems)
- 35 km – Mittelradde (Hase)
- 35 km – Nordradde (Ems)
- 35 km – Orla (Saale)
- 35 km – Ostpeene (Peene)
- 35 km – Stederau (Ilmenau)
- 35 km – Rote Weißeritz (linker Quellfluss der Weißeritz)
- 35 km – Wipperau (Ilmenau)
- 35 km – Würm (Amper und Isar)
- 35 km – Zwönitz (Chemnitz)
- 35 km – Sieber (Oder (Harz)
- 34 km – Apfelstädt (Gera)
- 34 km – Auma (Weida)
- 34 km – Axtbach (Ems)
- 34 km – Elz – Odenwald – (Neckar)
- 34 km – Gottleuba (Elbe)
- 34 km – Hoppecke (Diemel)
- 34 km – Roda (Saale)
- 34 km – Schleuse (Werra)
- 34 km – Wohra (Ohm)
- 33 km – Alte Oder (Oder)
- 33 km – Elbe (Eder)
- 33 km – Ellebach (Rur)
- 33 km – Fredersdorfer Mühlenfließ (Spree)
- 33 km – Guldenbach (Nahe)
- 33 km – Hönne (Ruhr)
- 33 km – Kessel (Donau)
- 33 km – Leitzach (Mangfall)
- 33 km – Loquitz (Saale)
- 33 km – Milz (Fränkische Saale)
- 33 km – Ostrach (Donau)
- 33 km – Schwartau (Trave)
- 33 km – Wiehl (Agger)
- 39 km – Antrift (Schwalm)
- 32 km – Dörsbach (Lahn)
- 32 km – Jossa (Sinn)
- 32 km – Kahl (Main)
- 32 km – Möhlin (Rhein)
- 32 km – Radolfzeller Aach (Rhein)
- 32 km – Schwarzbach (Falkensteinerbach)
- 33 km – Tanger (Elbe)
- 32 km – Weißach (Bregenzer Ach)
- 31 km – Biesef – Abschnitt von "Milde–Biese–Aland" – (Elbe)
- 31 km – Bracht (Kinzig (HE)
- 31 km – Ems (Eder)
- 31 km – Erms (Neckar)
- 31 km – Eschach (Aitrach)
- 31 km – Schondra (Fränkische Saale)
- 31 km – Schwarzbach (Main)
- 31 km – Seseke (Lippe)
- 31 km – Sulz (Altmühl)
- 31 km – Thulba (Fränkische Saale)
- 30 km – Altefeld (auch Altfell genannt) (Schlitz)
- 30 km – Andelsbach (Ablach)
- 30 km – Datze (Tollense)
- 30 km – Erlenbach (Nidda)
- 30 km – Eschbach (Nidda)
- 30 km – Felda (Ohm)
- 30 km – Gerdau (Ilmenau)
- 30 km – Gramme (Unstrut)
- 30 km – Gründau (Kinzig (HE)
- 30 km – Heller (Sieg)
- 30 km – Holzbach (Wied)
- 30 km – Hönne (Ruhr)
- 30 km – Ihle (Elbe-Havel-Kanal)
- 30 km – Ketzerbach (Elbe)
- 30 km – Kleine Paar (Donau)
- 30 km – Lauterach (Fluss) (Vils Naab)
- 30 km – Lein (Kocher)
- 30 km – Lumda (Lahn)
- 30 km – Münstersche Aa (Ems)
- 30 km – Rodau (Main)
- 30 km – Salz (Kinzig (HE)
- 30 km – Schlichem (Neckar)
- 30 km – Sebnitz (Fluss) (Lachsbach)
- 30 km – Usa (Wetter)
- 30 km – Vils (Lech)
- 30 km – Warme (Twiste)
- 30 km – Weihung (Iller)
- 30 km – Wenne (Ruhr)
- 30 km – Wietze (Aller)
- 30 km – Wolf (Kinzig (BW)
- 30 km – Dürnach (Westernach)
- 29 km – Leda (Ems)
- 29 km – Steinhuder Meerbach (Weser)
- 29 km – Murach (Schwarzach)
- 29 km – Schwülme (Weser)
- 29 km – Sormitz (Loquitz)
- 29 km – Wetschaft (Lahn)
- 29 km – Wietze (Örtze)
- 29 km – Wisper (Rhein)
- 28 km – Alpe (Aller)
- 28 km – Götzinger Achen (Salzach)
- 28 km – Kerkerbach (Lahn)
- 28 km – Losse (Fulda)
- 28 km – Merzbach (Rur)
- 28 km – Nette (Niers)
- 28 km – Rodenberger Aue (Deister Sünteltal)
- 28 km – Ryck (Ostsee)
- 28 km – Salzböde (Lahn)
- 28 km – Salzwedeler Dumme (Jeetze)
- 28 km – Schlücht (Rhein)
- 28 km – Schwinge (Elbe)
- 28 km – Traun (Alz)
- 28 km – Olef (Urft)
- 28 km – Wilde Gutach – mit Quellfluss Heubach – (Elz)
- 27 km – Lauter (Schlitz)
- 27 km – Aland Abschnitt von "Milde–Biese–Aland" (Elbe)
- 27 km – Esse (Diemel)
- 27 km – Federbach ((Nordschwarzwälder) Alb)
- 27 km – Gehle (Weser)
- 27 km – Lauter (Neckar)
- 27 km – Lein (Neckar)
- 27 km – Panke (Spree)
- 27 km – Schwäbische Rezat (Rednitz)
- 27 km – Schwarzbach (Rhein; im Bergischen Land)
- 27 km – Schwarzbach (Elsenz)
- 27 km – Sprotte (Pleiße)
- 27 km – Tegeler Fließ (Havel)
- 27 km – Wilde Aa (Orke)
- 26 km – Hasel (Werra)
- 26 km – Blinde Rot (Kocher)
- 26 km – Aa (Werre)
- 26 km – Brend (Fränkische Saale)
- 26 km – Ecker (Oker)
- 26 km – Elsava (Main)
- 26 km – Erpe (Twiste)
- 26 km – Exter (Weser)
- 26 km – Glonn (Mangfall)
- 26 km – Kall (Rur)
- 26 km – Körsch (Neckar)
- 26 km – Niese (Emmer)
- 26 km – Scherkonde (Unstrut)
- 26 km – Wehra – mit Rüttebach 28 km – (Rhein)
- 26 km – Wilde Rodach (Rodach)
- 26 km – Wustrower Dumme (Jeetze)
- 25 km – Aich (Neckar)
- 25 km – Altenau (Oker)
- 25 km – Aschaff (Main)
- 25 km – Brettach (Jagst)
- 25 km – Brettach (Kocher)
- 25 km – Brettenbach (Elz)
- 25 km – Ellerbach (Altenau)
- 25 km – Ellerbach (Nahe)
- 25 km – Gelbach (Lahn)
- 25 km – Gimmlitz (Freiberger Mulde)
- 25 km – Hasel (Werra)
- 25 km – Hühnerbach (Gennach)
- 25 km – Ilme (Leine)
- 25 km – Kotitzer Wasser (Löbauer Wasser)
- 25 km – Lutter (Ems)
- 25 km – Mittlere Ebrach (Rauhe Ebrach)
- 25 km – Oos (Landgraben)
- 25 km – Ochtum (Weser)
- 25 km – Purnitz (Jeetze)
- 25 km – Röthen (Itz)
- 25 km – Rossel (Elbe)
- 25 km – Schmalkalde (Werra)
- 25 km – Schmiech (Donau)
- 25 km – Schozach (Neckar)
- 25 km – Seidewitz (Gottleuba)
- 25 km – Sprotte (Pleiße)
- 25 km – Stockacher Aach (Rhein)
- 25 km – Veerse (Wümme)
- 25 km – Wahnbach (Sieg)
- 25 km – Wieste (Wümme)
- 24 km – Bära mit Oberer Bära (Donau)
- 24 km – Bastau (Weser)
- 24 km – Bever (Ems)
- 24 km – Bever (Oste)
- 24 km – Dietzhölze (Dill)
- 24 km – Ferndorfbach (Sieg)
- 24 km – Garte (Leine)
- 24 km – Heimbach (Glatt)
- 24 km – Lenne (Weser)
- 24 km – Metter (Enz)
- 24 km – Mud (Mudau; Main)
- 24 km – Prießnitz (Elbe)
- 24 km – Rottum (Westernach)
- 24 km – Radegast (Stepenitz)
- 24 km – Sagter Ems (Ems)
- 24 km – Verse (Lenne)
- 24 km – Wesebach (Eder)
- 24 km – Wickerbach (Main)
- 24 km – Wieseck (Lahn)
- 23 km – Ebrach (Attel)
- 23 km – Echaz (Neckar)
- 23 km – Elte (Werra)
- 23 km – Gerstenbach (Pleiße)
- 23 km – Jachen (Isar)
- 23 km – Maurine (Stepenitz)
- 23 km – Nüst (Haune)
- 23 km – Odenbach (Glan)
- 23 km – Sauer (Altenau)
- 23 km – Stillach (Iller)
- 23 km – Kleine Striegis (linker Quellfluss der Striegis)
- 23 km – Suhl (Werra)
- 23 km – Waldach (Nagold)
- 23 km – Warme Bode (Saale)
- 23 km – Wiedau (Wümme)
- 22 km – Altenau (Alme)
- 22 km – Attel (Inn)
- 22 km – Bomlitz (Böhme)
- 22 km – Dickelsbach (Rhein)
- 22 km – Elbbach (Sieg)
- 22 km – Endert (Mosel)
- 22 km – Geisbach bzw. Geis (Fulda)
- 22 km – Grenff (Schwalm)
- 22 km – Holzape (Diemel)
- 22 km – Idarbach (Nahe)
- 22 km – Jade (Jadebusen bzw. Nordsee)
- 22 km – Jossa (Fulda)
- 22 km – Kander (Rhein)
- 22 km – Kossau (Ostsee)
- 22 km – Leibi (Donau)
- 22 km – Münzbach (Freiberger Mulde)
- 22 km – Notter (Unstrut)
- 22 km – Odeborn (Eder)
- 22 km – Ostenau (Arlau)
- 22 km – Pfieffe (Fulda)
- 22 km – Siede (Große Aue)
- 22 km – Steinlach (Neckar)
- 22 km – Wieda (Zorge)
- 22 km – Zaber (Neckar)
- 22 km – Lehrde (Aller)
- 22 km – Nahe (Schleuse)
- 21 km – Aa (Nethe)
- 21 km – Ahne (Fulda)
- 21 km – Aar (Dill)
- 21 km – Beise (Fulda)
- 21 km – Bibers (Kocher)
- 21 km – Bode (Wipper)
- 21 km – Breitach (Iller)
- 21 km – Deilbach (Ruhr)
- 21 km – Gilsa (Schwalm)
- 21 km – Lamme (Innerste)
- 21 km – Laugna (Zusam)
- 21 km – Malefinkbach (Rur)
- 21 km – Nau (Donau)
- 21 km – Nieste (Fulda)
- 21 km – Radau (Oker)
- 21 km – Rauda (Weiße Elster)
- 21 km – Roth (Rednitz)
- 21 km – Solz (Fulda)
- 21 km – Steinach (Neckar)
- 21 km – Watter (Twiste)
- 20 km – Aalbach (Main)
- 20 km – Aitrach (Donau)
- 20 km – Ammer (Neckar)
- 20 km – Asdorf (Sieg)
- 20 km – Barnitz (Beste)
- 20 km – Bottwar (Murr)
- 20 km – Dalke (Ems)
- 20 km – Hahnenbach (Nahe)
- 20 km – Halblech (Lech)
- 20 km – Hamel (Weser)
- 20 km – Henne (Ruhr)
- 20 km – Itter (Neckar)
- 20 km – Itter (Rhein)
- 20 km – Jeckenbach (Glan)
- 20 km – Kleine Kinzig (Kinzig (BW)
- 20 km – Lahe (Soeste)
- 20 km – Memminger Ach (Iller)
- 20 km – Murg (Rhein)
- 20 km – Oese (Menden)
- 20 km – Ohra (Apfelstädt)
- 20 km – Ostrach (Bayern) (Iller)
- 20 km – Perf (Lahn)
- 20 km – Rotbach (Dreisam)
- 20 km – Sontra (Wehre)
- 20 km – Sulm (Neckar)
- 20 km – Sülze (Elbe)
- 20 km – Tarpenbek (Alster)
- 20 km – Umlach (Riß)
- 20 km – Ziese (Peenestrom)
- 19 km – Nette (Hase)
- 19 km – Allna (Lahn)
- 19 km – Angel (Werse)
- 19 km – Lauter (Baunach)
- 19 km – Humme (Weser)
- 19 km – Illach (Lech)
- 19 km – Orpe (Diemel)
- 19 km – Sorpe (Röhr)
- 19 km – Warme Steinach (Roter Main)
- 18 km – Ahle (Schwülme)
- 18 km – Aufseß (Wiesent)
- 18 km – Baarbach (Ruhr)
- 18 km – Biela (Elbe)
- 18 km – Fliede (Fulda)
- 18 km – Fretterbach (Lenne)
- 18 km – Gelster (Werra)
- 18 km – Itter (Diemel)
- 18 km – Kleine Triebisch (Triebisch)
- 18 km – Liese (Glenne)
- 18 km – Medem (Elbe)
- 18 km – Mehe (Oste)
- 18 km – Mettma (Schlücht)
- 18 km – Muglbach (Wondreb (Odrava)
- 18 km – Rinne (Schwarza)
- 18 km – Rohrbach (Fulda)
- 18 km – Schwarzbach (Wutach)
- 18 km – Weiß (Sieg)
- 18 km – Weißach (Mangfall)
- 18 km – Wilster Au (Stör)
- 18 km – Wohlrose (Ilm)
- 17 km – Augraben (Nebel)
- 17 km – Bieber (Kinzig (HE)
- 17 km – Bieber (Rodau)
- 17 km – Effelder (Itz)
- 17 km – Fintau (Wümme)
- 17 km – Kalte Bode (Saale)
- 17 km – Lauter (Itz)
- 17 km – Lichte (Schwarza)
- 17 km – Ohmbach (Glan)
- 17 km – Prim (Neckar)
- 17 km – Ramme (Oste)
- 17 km – Rodau (Wümme)
- 17 km – Südradde (Hase)
- 17 km – Wagensteigbach (Dreisam)
- 17 km – Warnau (Böhme)
- 17 km – Wohlrose (Ilm)
- 17 km – Wilde (Eder)
- 16 km – Bahre (Seidewitz)
- 16 km – Beke (Lippe)
- 16 km – Bieber (Haune)
- 16 km – Daade (Heller)
- 16 km – Ihme (Leine)
- 16 km – Jossa (Lüder)
- 16 km – Lempe (Esse)
- 16 km – Lütter (Fulda)
- 16 km – Partnach (Loisach)
- 16 km – Pfefferfließ (Nieplitz)
- 16 km – Reichenbach (Glan)
- 16 km – Schwale (Stör)
- 16 km – Twiste (Oste)
- 16 km – Vesser (Nahe)
- 16 km – Wahlebach (Fulda)
- 16 km – Wuhle (Spree)
- 16 km – Zarow (Stettiner Haff / Ostsee)
- 15 km – Beste (Trave)
- 15 km – Elta (Donau)
- 15 km – Emmelke (Medem)
- 15 km – Frieda (Werra)
- 15 km – Goldbach (Selz)
- 15 km – Grümpen (Itz)
- 15 km – Heder (Lippe)
- 15 km – Kehlbach (Andelsbach)
- 15 km – Kleine Aller (Aller)
- 15 km – Kotitzer Wasser (Löbauer Wasser)
- 15 km – Mohrbach (Glan)
- 15 km – Morsbach (Wupper)
- 15 km – Pleisbach (Sieg)
- 15 km – Rhene (Diemel)
- 15 km – Rohrbach (Saar)
- 15 km – Salzbach (Rhein)
- 15 km – Schönach (Lech)
- 15 km – Strudelbach (Enz)
- 15 km – Teinach (Nagold)
- 15 km – Waldangelbach (Leimbach)
- 14 km – Wierau (Hase)
- 14 km – Aabach (Afte)
- 14 km – Aitrach (Iller)
- 14 km – Untere Bära (Bära)
- 14 km – Blau (Donau)
- 14 km – Erle (Nahe)
- 14 km – Große Bockau (Zwickauer Mulde)
- 14 km – Hundem (Lenne)
- 14 km – Kieferbach / Thierseeer Ache (Inn)
- 14 km – Lauter (Murr)
- 14 km – Neerdar (Aar)
- 14 km – Ösper (Weser)
- 14 km – Rottach (Iller)
- 14 km – Talbach (Glan)
- 14 km – Trettach (Iller)
- 14 km – Wakenitz (Trave)
- 14 km – Weismain (Main)
- 13 km – Beber (Ohre)
- 13 km – Boye (Emscher)
- 13 km – Felderbach (Ruhr)
- 13 km – Hanfbach (Sieg)
- 13 km – Hardenberger Bach (Ruhr)
- 13 km – Horne (Lippe)
- 13 km – Kanzelbach (Neckar)
- 13 km – Mülmisch (Fulda)
- 13 km – Öse (Nethe)
- 13 km – Roth (Zusam)
- 13 km – Schlierach (Mangfall)
- 13 km – Schwarzbach (Emscher)
- 13 km – Steinalp (Glan)
- 13 km – Ulfe (Sontra)
- 13 km – Walluf (Rhein)
- 13 km – Wedeler Au (Elbe)
- 13 km – Werbe (Eder)
- 13 km – Wilde Sau (Elbe)
- 12 km – Biber (Schleuse)
- 12 km – Brunnisach (Rhein)
- 12 km – Eschbach (Wupper)
- 12 km – Eselsbach (Lauter)
- 12 km – Halsbach (Alz)
- 12 km – Hachinger Bach (Hüllgraben)
- 12 km – Itter (Eder)
- 12 km – Kämpfelbach (Pfinz)
- 12 km – Kerspe (Wupper)
- 12 km – Knochenbach (Werre)
- 12 km – Kuhbach (Itter)
- 12 km – Nesenbach (Neckar)
- 12 km – Rott (Amper)
- 12 km – Schlitz (Fulda)
- 12 km – Schwarzenbach (Waldnaab)
- 12 km – Weißeritz (Elbe)
- 12 km – Wetzbach (Lahn)
- 12 km – Wildebach (Heller)
- 11 km – Drusel (Fulda)
- 11 km – Gauchsbach (Schwarzach (Rednitz)
- 11 km – Maade (Innenjade)
- 11 km – Mühlenwasser (Erpe)
- 11 km – Nebelbeeke (Warme)
- 11 km – Rohrbach (Dürnach)
- 11 km – Sorbitz (Schwarza)
- 11 km – Striegis (Freiberger Mulde)
- 11 km – Ulfe (Fulda)
- 11 km – Zimmerbach (Starzel)
- 11 km – Zschampert (Luppe)
- 10 km – Banfe (Lahn)
- 10 km – Bever (Weser)
- 10 km – Bever (Wupper)
- 10 km – Dusebach (Mühlenwasser)
- 10 km – Mooslauter (Lauter)
- 10 km – Oelze (Schwarza)
- 10 km – Olpe (Bigge)
- 10 km – Reichenbach (Zahme Gera)
- 10 km – Schobse (Wohlrose)
- 10 km – Sorpe (Lenne)
- 10 km – Tonna (Unstrut)
- 10 km – Waldbach (Landgraben)
- 10 km – Mühlbach (Selz)
- 10 km – Belmer Bach (Hase)
German Ski Resorts
Allgäu Alps
- Balderschwang, Balderschwang
- Bolsterlang, Bolsterlang
- Breitenberg, Pfronten
- Buchenberg, Buchenberg
- Fellhorn/Kanzelwand, Oberstdorf
- Grünten, Rettenberg
- Halblech, Buching
- Hindelang-Oberjoch, Oberjoch
- Hochgrat, Lanzenbach
- Immenstadt, Immenstadt
- Isny, Isny
- Nebelhorn, Oberstdorf
- Nesselwang, Nesselwang
- Obermaiselstein/Grasgehren, Obermaiselstein
- Oberstaufen, Oberstaufen
- Ofterschwang , Ofterschwang
- Oy-Mittelberg, Oy-Mittelberg
- Scheidegg, Scheidegg
- Simmerberg, Weiler
- Steibis, Steibis
- Söllereck/Höllwiesv Oberstdorf
- Tegelberg, Schwangau
- Wertach, Wertach
Bavarian Alps
- Blomberg, Bad Tölz
- Brauneck, Lenggries
- Eckbauer, Garmisch-P.
- Garmisch Classic, Garmisch-P.
- Gutshof Obersalzberg, Berchtesgaden
- Götschen, Berchtesgaden
- Hirschberg (Bavaria), Kreuth
- Hocheck, Oberaudorf
- Hochfelln, Bergen
- Hochschwarzeck, Ramsau bei Berchtesgaden
- Jenner, Berchtesgaden
- Kampenwand, Aschau
- Kohlgruber Hörnle, Bad Kohlgrub
- Kolben (Oberammergau), Oberammergau
- Kranzberg, Mittenwald
- Roßfeld, Berchtesgaden-Oberau
- Stümpfling, Spitzingsee
- Sudelfeld, Bayrischzell
- Sutten, Tegernsee
- Taubenstein, Spitzingsee
- Unterammergau, Unterammergau
- Unternberg, Ruhpolding
- Wallberg, Tegernsee
- Wank, Garmisch-P.
- Wendelstein, Bayrischzell
- Winklmoos-Steinplatte, Winklmoos-Alm
- Zugspitze, Garmisch-P., Eibsee
Central Uplands
- Achertal, Achertal
- Seebach, Black Forest
- Alpin-Center Wittgenstein, Hesselbach
- Baiersbronn, Baiersbronn
- Belchenland, Schönau im Schwarzwald
- Bleaml Alm, Fichtelberg
- Bocksberg, Hahnenklee
- Erbeskopf, Thalfang
- Feldberg im Schwarzwald
- Liftverbund Feldberg, Menzenschwand
- St. Blasien, Black Forest
- Ferienland, Triberg
- Furtwangen, St. Georgen
- Feuerberg Skiwelt, Sandberg
- Fichtelberg, Oberwiesenthal
- Gehrenlift Bischofsgrün, Bischofsgrün
- Geiersberg- & Hempelsberglift, Oberwarmensteinach
- Geißkopf, Unterbreitenau
- Gersbach, Gersbach
- Großer Arber, Bodenmais
- Bayerisch Eisenstein, Bavarian Forest
- Großer Inselsberg, Tabarz
- Großer Kornberg, Kirchenlamitz
- Harz, Clausthal-Zellerfeld
- Hohegeiß
- Osterode-Lerbach, Harz
- Hinterzarten-Breitnau, Hinterzarten
- Breitnau, Black Forest
- Hohenbogen, Neukirchen b.Hl.Blut
- Hoherodskopf, Schotten
- Hotzenwald, Herrischried
- Idarkopf, Stipshausen
- Kegelberg, Erlbach
- Klausenlifte Mehlmeisel, Mehlmeisel
- Lahn-Dill-Bergland, Hartenrod
- Eiershäuser, Hang
- Sackpfeife, Gladenbacher Bergland
- Lausche, Waltersdorf
- Löhrbach/Schnorrenbach, Birkenau
- Matthias-Schmidt-Berg, Sankt Andreasberg
- Neunkircher Höhe, Modautal
- Oberhof, Oberhof
- Oberried, Oberried
- Ochsenkopf, Bischofsgrün
- Fleckl, Fichtelgebirge
- Ostalb-Skilifte, Aalen
- Postwiesen-Skigebiet, Neuastenberg
- Predigtstuhl (Lower Bavaria), Sankt Englmar
- Markbuchen, Bavarian Forest
- Pröller, Sankt Englmar
- Ravensberg, Bad Sachsa
- Rost's Wiesen, Augustusburg
- Sasbachwalden, Black Forest
- Schwarzer Mann, Schnee Eifel
- Silberberg, Bodenmais
- Ski Eck, Arrach
- Ski- und Rodelarena Wasserkuppe, Poppenhausen
- Ski-Alpinum Schulenberg, Schulenberg
- Ski-Ranch Driedorf-Roth, Driedorf
- Skianlage Schloppach, Waldsassen
- Skiarena Eibenstock, Eibenstock
- Skiarena Silbersattel, Steinach
- Skigebiet Holzhau, Holzhau
- Skigebiet Kreuzberg, Bischofsheim a.d.Rhön
- Skilift am Butzberg, Wunsiedel
- Skilift am Eichberg, Gröden
- Skilift am Knüllfeld, Steinbach-Hallenberg
- Skilift am Schießberg, Crottendorf
- Skilift am Schloßberg, Albstadt-Tailfingen
- Skilift Arzberg, Arzberg
- Skilift Burgbernheim, Burgbernheim
- Skilift Carlsfeld, Carlsfeld
- Skilift Dollberg, Hermeskeil
- Skilift Donnstetten, Römerstein
- Skilift Genkingen, Genkingen
- Skilift Höllkopf, Driedorf
- Skilift Peterberg, Nonnweiler
- Skilift Rugiswalde, Rugiswalde
- Skilift Spies, Betzenstein
- Skilift Zuckerfeld, Gersfeld
- Skilifte Altenberg & Geising, Altenberg
- Geising, Ore Mountains
- Skilifte am Arnsberg, Bischofsheim a.d.Rhön
- SkiLifte Beerfelden, Beerfelden
- Skilifte Bergwiese, Schwarzenbach am Wald
- Skilifte Gehlberg, Gehlberg
- Skilifte Halde, Westerheim
- Skilifte Sebnitz, Sebnitz
- Skilifte Tettau, Steinbach am Wald
- Skilifte Wiesensteig, Wiesensteig
- Skiliftkarussell Winterberg, Winterberg
- Skiwelt Schöneck, Schöneck/Vogtl.
- Skizentrum Fahrenberg, Vohenstrauß
- Skizentrum Mitterdorf, Mitterfirmiansreut
- Skizentrum Simmelsberg, Gersfeld
- Snow World Züschen, Züschen
- Sonnenberg, Sankt Andreasberg
- Todtmoos, Todtmoos
- Todtnauer Ferienland, Todtnau
- Torfhaus, Altenau
- Tromm, Grasellenbach
- Voithenberg Gibacht
- Wildewiese, Wildewiese
- Winterpark Willingen, Willingen
- Wolfsschlucht, Schnee Eifel
- Wurmberg, Braunlage
Famous German Automobile Companies
Current German Automobile Companies
- Alpina (1965-present)
- Apal (1999-present)
- Artega (2006-present)
- Audi
- BMW (Bayerische Motoren Werke AG)
- CityEl (1987-present)
- Gumpert (2004-present)
- Isdera (1983-present)
- Jetcar (2000-present)
- Keinath (1996-present)
- Lotec (1981-present)
- Maybach (1921-1940; 2002-2013)
- Melkus (1969-1980; 2006-present)
- Mercedez-Benz
- Opel
- Pegasus (1995-present)
- Porsche
- Ruf Automobile (1982-present)
- Smart (1997-present)
- Volkswagen
- Wiesmann (1985-present)
- Yes! (1999-present)
Past German Automobile Companies
- AAA (1919-1922)
- Aachener (1902)
- AAG (1900-1901)
- Adler (1900-1939)
- Alan (1923-1925)
- AFM (1949-1953)
- AGA (1919-1929)
- Alfi (1921-1924)
- Alliance (1904-1905)
- Allright (1908-1913)
- Altmann (1905-1907)
- Amor (1924-1925)
- Amphicar (1961-1968)
- Ansbach (1910-1913)
- Anker (1919-1920)
- Apollo (1910-1927)
- Argus (1902-1910)
- Arimofa (1921-1922)
- Atlantic (1921-1923)
- Auto Union (1958-1962)
- AWS (1971-1974)
- Baer (1921-1924)
- Beaufort (1901-1906)
- Beckmann (1900-1926)
- BEF (1907-1913)
- Benz (1883-1926)
- Benz Söhne (1906-1926)
- Bitter (1973-c.1992)
- Boes (1903-1906)
- Borgward (1939-1961)
- Brennabor (1908-1934)
- Brütsch (1952-1958)
- Butz (1934)
- Certus (1928-1929)
- Champion (1948-1954)
- Cito (1905-1909)
- Club (1922-1924)
- Colibri (1908-1911)
- Cudell (1899-1908)
- Cyklon (1902-1929)
- Daimler (1885-1889)
- Deutz (1907-1911)
- Diabolo (1922-1927)
- Diana (1922-1923)
- Dixi (1904-1928)
- DKW (1928-1966)
- DMG (1890-1902)
- Dehn (1924)
- Dürkopp (1898-1927)
- Dux (1905-1926)
- EAM (1990)
- Ego (1921-1926)
- Ehrhardt (1905-1924)
- Ehrhardt-Szawe (1924-1925)
- Eisenach (1898-1903)
- EMW (1945-1956)
- Erdmann (1904-1908)
- Excelsior-Mascot (1911-1922)
- Exor (1923)
- Express (1901-1910)
- Fadag (1921-1925)
- Fafag (1921-1923)
- Fafnir (1908-1926)
- Falcon (1921-1926)
- Falke (1899-1908)
- Faun (1921-1928)
- Favorit (1908-1909)
- Feldmann (1905-1912)
- Flitzer (1948-1953)
- Ferbedo (1923-1925)
- Fiat-Neckar (1957-1971)
- Framo (1932-1937)
- Freia (1922-1927)
- Fuldamobil (1950-1960)
- Fulmina (1913-1926)
- Gaggenau (1905-1911)
- Gasi (1921)
- Geha (1910-1923)
- Glas (1955-1969)
- Goggomobil (1255-1969)
- Goliath (1931-1963)
- Grade (1921-1926)
- Gridi (1923-1924)
- Gutbrod (1904-2005)
- HAG (1922-19257
- HAG-Gastell (1925-1927)
- Hanomag (1925-1952)
- Hansa (1906-1939)
- Hataz (1921-1925)
- Hawa (1923-1925)
- Heim (1921-1926)
- Heinkel (1955-1958)
- Henschel (1899-1906)
- Hexe (1905-1907)
- Hildebrand (1922-1924)
- Hoffmann (1954-1955)
- Horch (1900-1939)
- IFA (1948-1956)
- Induhag (1922)
- Joswin (1920-1924)
- Juho (1922)
- Kenter (1923-1925)
- Kleinschnittger (1950-1957)
- Koco (1921-1926)
- Komet (1922-1924)
- Komnick (1907-1927)
- Kondor (1902-1904)
- Körting (1922-1924)
- Kroboth (1954-1955)
- Kühlstein (1898-1902)
- Leichtauto (1924)
- Lindcar (1922-1925)
- Lipsia (1922-1924)
- Lloyd (1906-1914; 1950-1963)
- Loreley (1906-1928)
- Lux (1897-1902)
- Mada (1947-1949)
- MAF (1908-1921)
- Maico (1955-1958)
- Maja (1923-1924)
- Mannesmann (1923-1929)
- Mars (1906-1908)
- Maurer-Union (1923-1929)
- Mauser (1923-1929)
- MCA (1962-1964)
- Mercedes (1901-1926)
- Merkur (1985-1989)
- Meyra (1948-1956)
- Minimus (1921-1924)
- Mock (1924)
- Mölkamp (1923-1926)
- Morgan (1924-1925)
- MWD (1911-1912)
- Nacke (1901-1913)
- NAG (1901-1934)
- Neckar (1957-1971)
- NSU (1905-1929; 1958-1977)
- NSU-Fiat (1929-1957)
- Nug (1921-1925)
- Omikron (1922-1925)
- Orient Express (1895-1903)
- Oryx (1907-1922)
- Pawi (1921)
- Phänomen (1907-1927)
- Piccolo (1904-1912)
- Pilot (1923-1925)
- Pinguin (1953-1955)
- Pluto (1924-1927)
- Podeus (1911-1914)
- Presto (1901-1927)
- Priamus (1901-1923)
- Primus (1899-1903)
- Protos (1899-1926)
- Rabag/Rabag-Bugatti (1922-1926)
- Röhr (1927-1935)
- Rollfix (1933-1936)
- Rumpler (1921-1926)
- Sablatnig-Beuchelt (1925-1926)
- Sachsenring (1956-1959)
- SB/Slaby-Beringer (1920-1924)
- Scheibler (1900-1907)
- Securus (1906)
- Seidel-Arop (1925-1926)
- Selve (1919-1929)
- S.H.W. (1924-1925)
- Simson/Simson Supra (1911-1933)
- Solidor (1905-1907)
- Solomobil (1921-1923)
- Sperber (1911-1919)
- Sphinx (1920-1925)
- Staiger (1923-1924)
- Standard Superior (1933-1935)
- Staunau (1950-1951)
- Steiger (1914-1926)
- Steudel (1904-1909)
- Stoewer (1899-1940)
- Stolle (1924-1927)
- Szawe (1920-1924)
- Taunus (1907-1909)
- Tempo (1933-1956)
- Thurner (1970-1973)
- Titan
- Tornax (1934-1937)
- Tourist (1907-1920)
- Trabant (1957-1991)
- Trippel (1934-1944)
- Turbo (1923-1924)
- Utilitas (1920-1921)
- Victoria (1900-1909; 1957-1958)
- Voran (1926-1928)
- Veritas (1947-1953)
- Vogtland (1910-1912)
- Wanderer (1911-1942)
- Wartburg (1898-1904)
- Wartburg (1956-1990)
- Wendax (1950-1951)
- Wenkelmobil (1904-1907)
- Wesnigk (1920-1925)
- Westfalia (1906-1914)
- Windhoff (1908-1914)
- Wittekind (1922-1925)
- Zender (1985-c.1990)
- Zündapp (1956-1958)
- Zwickau (1956-1959)
Famous German Bridges
- Bietigheim Enz Valley Bridge
- Blue Wonder, Dresden
- Cologne Hohenzollern Bridge
- Cologne Mülheim Bridge
- Cologne Rodenkirchen Bridge
- Deutzer Hängebrücke, Cologne
- Elster Viaduct
- Emmerich Rhine Bridge
- Fehmarn Belt bridge, proposed
- Fehmarn Sound bridge
- Gedser-Rostock bridge, proposed
- Glienicke Bridge, Berlin/Potsdam
- Göltzsch Viaduct, Saxony, historic railway brick bridge
- Hedemünden Werra valley bridge
- Hörn Bridge
- Kaiser-Wilhelm-Brücke, Wilhelmshaven
- Kochertalbrücke
- Koersch Valley Bridge
- Köhlbrandbrücke, Hamburg
- Ludendorff Bridge, Remagen, destroyed 1945
- Magdeburg Water Bridge, canal crossing Elbe river
- Müngsten Bridge
- Neckar Valley Bridge Weitingen
- Oberbaumbrücke, Berlin
- Osten Transporter Bridge
- Pierre Pflimlin bridge
- Rügendamm, Stralsund
- Theodor Heuss Bridge (Düsseldorf)
- Theodor Heuss Bridge (Frankenthal)
- Theodor Heuss Bridge (Mainz-Wiesbaden)
- Waldschlößchenbrücke, Dresden
- Weihe Valley Bridge
- Wommen Valley Bridge
Soccer: Bundesliga Champions with 2nd Place & 3rd Place
- 1963–64 --- FC Köln --- Meidericher SV --- Eintracht Frankfurt
- 1964–65 --- Werder Bremen --- FC Köln --- Borussia Dortmund
- 1965–66 --- TSV 1860 München --- Borussia Dortmund --- Bayern Munich
- 1966–67 --- Eintracht Braunschweig --- TSV 1860 München --- Borussia Dortmund
- 1967–68 --- FC Nuremberg --- Werder Bremen --- Borussia Mönchengladbach
- 1968–69 --- Bayern Munich --- Alemannia Aachen --- Eintracht Braunschweig
- 1969–70 --- Borussia Mönchengladbach --- Bayern Munich --- Hertha BSC
- 1970–71 --- Borussia Mönchengladbach --- Bayern Munich --- Hertha BSC
- 1971–72 --- Bayern Munich --- Schalke 04 --- Borussia Mönchengladbach
- 1972–73 --- Bayern Munich --- FC Köln --- Fortuna Düsseldorf
- 1973–74 --- Bayern Munich --- Borussia Mönchengladbach --- Fortuna Düsseldorf
- 1974–75 --- Borussia Mönchengladbach --- Hertha BSC --- Hamburger SV
- 1975–76 --- Borussia Mönchengladbach --- Hamburger SV --- Bayern Munich
- 1976–77 --- Borussia Mönchengladbach --- Schalke 04 --- Eintracht Braunschweig
- 1977–78 --- FC Köln --- Borussia Mönchengladbach --- Hertha BSC --- Dieter Müller
- 1978–79 --- Hamburger SV --- VfB Stuttgart --- Kaiserslautern
- 1979–80 --- Bayern Munich --- Hamburger SV --- Stuttgart / Kaiserslautern
- 1980–81 --- Bayern Munich --- Hamburger SV --- VfB Stuttgart
- 1981–82 --- Hamburger SV --- FC Köln --- Bayern Munich
- 1982–83 --- Hamburger SV --- Werder Bremen --- VfB Stuttgart
- 1983–84 --- VfB Stuttgart --- Hamburger SV --- Borussia Mönchengladbach
- 1984–85 --- Bayern Munich --- Werder Bremen --- FC Köln
- 1985–86 --- Bayern Munich --- Werder Bremen --- Bayer Uerdingen
- 1986–87 --- Bayern Munich --- Hamburger SV --- Borussia Mönchengladbach
- 1987–88 --- Werder Bremen --- Bayern Munich --- FC Köln
- 1988–89 --- Bayern Munich --- FC Köln --- Werder Bremen
- 1989–90 --- Bayern Munich --- FC Köln --- Eintracht Frankfurt
- 1990–91 --- Kaiserslautern --- Bayern Munich --- Werder Bremen
- 1991–92 --- VfB Stuttgart --- Borussia Dortmund --- Eintracht Frankfurt
- 1992–93 --- Werder Bremen --- Bayern Munich --- Eintracht Frankfurt
- 1993–94 --- Bayern Munich --- Kaiserslautern --- Bayer Leverkusen
- 1994–95 --- Borussia Dortmund --- Werder Bremen --- Freiburg
- 1995–96 --- Borussia Dortmund --- Bayern Munich --- Schalke 04
- 1996–97 --- Bayern Munich --- Bayer Leverkusen --- Borussia Dortmund
- 1997–98 --- Kaiserslautern --- Bayern Munich --- Bayer Leverkusen
- 1998–99 --- Bayern Munich --- Bayer Leverkusen --- Hertha BSC
- 1999–00 --- Bayern Munich --- Bayer Leverkusen --- Hamburger SV
- 2000–01 --- Bayern Munich --- Schalke 04 --- Borussia Dortmund
- 2001–02 --- Borussia Dortmund --- Bayer Leverkusen --- Bayern Munich
- 2002–03 --- Bayern Munich --- VfB Stuttgart --- Borussia Dortmund
- 2003–04 --- Werder Bremen --- Bayern Munich --- Bayer Leverkusen
- 2004–05 --- Bayern Munich --- Schalke 04 --- Werder Bremen
- 2005–06 --- Bayern Munich --- Werder Bremen --- Hamburger SV
- 2006–07 --- VfB Stuttgart --- Schalke 04 --- Werder Bremen
- 2007–08 --- Bayern Munich --- Werder Bremen --- Schalke 04
- 2008–09 --- VfL Wolfsburg --- Bayern Munich --- VfB Stuttgart
- 2009–10 --- Bayern Munich --- Schalke 04 --- Werder Bremen
- 2010–11 --- Borussia Dortmund --- Bayer Leverkusen --- Bayern Munich
German Food
World Famous German Food
- Aachener Printen --- Aachen --- Lebkuchen typical for the city of Aachen.
- Bratkartoffeln --- Throughout Germany --- Fried potatoes, often with diced bacon and/or onions
- Bratwurst --- Throughout Germany --- Sausage that is usually composed of veal, pork or beef.
- Currywurst --- Berlin, Rhine-Ruhr --- A large-format fried or grilled sausage cut into thick slices and seasoned with spicy ketchup and generous amounts of curry powder, usually served with french fries — a popular snack originating in early 1950s Berlin. Both "Bockwurst"-style (i.e. intended to be boiled) and "Bratwurst"-style (i.e. intended to be grilled or fried) sausages are used depending on region and the use of one or the other is a matter for much debate among "Currywurst"-Gourmets. Currywurst remains one of most popular fast foods in Germany, especially in Berlin and the Rhine-Ruhr area, but the Döner kebab is gaining rapidly in popularity.
- Hendl --- Throughout Germany --- Whole grilled chicken marinated with pepper and other spices. Known as Brathühnchen, Brathähnchen and in eastern Germany also as Broiler.
- Hasenpfeffer --- A stew made from marinated rabbit.
- Kartoffelsalat --- Northern Germany and Southwest Germany --- Potato salad, which comes in many varieties, for example in a cream or mayonnaise dressing (Northern Germany) or even in meat broth (Southwest Germany). Often served as a side dish to bratwurst or boiled sausages).
- Königsberger Klopse --- East-Prussian: city of Königsberg --- Cooked meatballs that are served in a white sauce with capers.
- Kohlroulade --- Throughout Germany --- German-style cabbage rolls.
- Marzipan --- Throughout Germany --- E.g. Lübeck style, widely used in Christmas specialities.
- Mettbrötchen --- A kind of sandwich made with raw Mett on bread rolls (Brötchen), frequently with a garnish of raw onion rings or dice.
- Pellkartoffeln --- Throughout Germany --- Potatoes boiled or steamed before peeling (young potatoes may be eaten unpeeled), served with Quark and linseed oil, butter, or as a side dish with e.g. herring).
- Pfefferpotthast --- Westfalia --- Peppered beef stew.
- Rouladen --- Throughout Germany --- A roulade of bacon and onions wrapped in thinly sliced beef.
- Sauerbraten --- Rhineland --- A beef pot roast marinated in vinegar, water, spices and seasonings.
- Sauerkraut --- Throughout Germany --- Pickled shredded cabbage
- Schweinshaxe --- Pork hock served grilled and crispy with Sauerkraut or boiled as "Eisbein".
- Spanferkel --- Throughout Germany --- A grilled whole young pig. Usually eaten in a large company of friends or guests.
- Speckpfannkuchen --- Large, thin pancakes with diced, fried bacon.
- Spätzle --- Southern Germany --- Hand-made noodles that are very popular and are an important ingredient of several dishes, such as Linsen mit Spätzle or Käsespätzle.
- Stollen --- Dresden --- A bread-like cake with dried citrus peel, dried fruit, nuts, and spices such as cardamom and cinnamon, usually eaten during the Christmas season as Weihnachtsstollen or Christstollen. The best-known Stollen is from Dresden and is sold at the Striezelmarkt Christmas market, which derives its name from the cake.
- Weihnachtsgans --- Throughout Germany --- A roasted goose that is traditionally consumed on December 24th Christmas Day. Knödel (also known as Kloß, depending on region) --- Throughout Germany --- German dumplings; many different variations, e.g. Semmelknödel (dumplings made with bread crumbs, Rohe Kartoffelknödel (dumplings made from potatoes that aren't cooked prior to foming and boiling the Knödel),. Some of the Gekochte Kartoffelknödel: dumplings made from potatoes that are cooked prior to forming and boiling the Knödel. Halb-und-halb Kartoffelknödel: half the potatoes are cooked first, the other half are not. Halbseidene
Baden-Württemberg
- Maultaschen --- Main course --- Pasta filled with various ingredients such as meat, spinach, onions, spices. Maultaschen are either served with broth or cut into slices and fried with eggs.
- Sauerbraten --- Main course --- A vinegar-marinated roast traditionally made of horse meat although nowadays the majority is made of beef.
- Sauerkraut --- Side dish --- Sauerkraut in Baden-Württemberg is made with the special Filderkraut (pointed cabbage is considered the most delicious variety
- Spätzle, Knöpfle --- Pasta --- Two varieties of soft, thick noodles.
- Linsen mit Spätzle --- Main course --- Hearty dish that combines Spätzle with cooked lentils and a Vienna sausages.
- Schupfnudel --- Pasta --- Pasta made from potatoes and flour, often served with Sauerkraut.
- Flädlesuppe --- Entree --- A broth with thin strips of German-style pancakes.
- Springerle --- Snack --- Cookies made by pressing dough into intricate molds. Commonly used for dunking into a drink, as they are quite hard.
- Zwiebelkuchen --- Main course --- An onion cake, a seasonal dish served around October, usually eaten while still warm and accompanied by slightly fermented red or white grape juice called Süser or (more commonly in other regions) Federweißer.
- Gaisburger Marsch --- Main course --- A famous stew made of meat, potatoes and several kinds of vegetables.
- Käsespätzle --- Main course --- Dish of Spätzle and fried onions gratinated with cheese.
- Wibele --- Snack --- Small, sweet biscuits.
Bavaria
- Weißwürste --- Snack --- Lt. 'White sausages'; a speciality from Munich, traditionally eaten for second breakfast. Always accompanied by sweet mustard, pretzels, and wheat beer. Traditionally not served after 12 noon because in earlier days, before fridges, the sausages had to be consumed before 12 noon so that they didn't decay. But nowadays people also eat it for dinner or lunch.
- Weizenbier/Weißbier (wheat beer) --- Beverage --- Wheat beer
- Radler --- Beverage --- A beer mixed with citrus lemonade
- Russ --- Wheat beer mixed with lemonade. The name Russen (Russian) comes from the fact that after WWI the left wing party Genossen mixed their beer with lemonade because they did not want to get drunk so quickly. In Munich, these members of left wing parties were called Russians (based on their political beliefs) and also their beer was named after this fact. Often also consumed in a one-liter mug, called the Maß (Russen Maß).
- Schweinsbraten --- Main course --- Sliced pork roast with a crunchy crust that was boiled in a pot.
- Schweinshaxe --- Main course --- Braised pork leg with a crunchy brown crust on the outside and a moist and juicy inside. Served with gravy and Klöße.
- Leberkäse --- Snack --- A type of sausage baked in a mould and cut into slices. When eaten as a main course, it is sliced and served with an egg (must be sunny side up style) and mashed potatoes. For a quick lunch, it is usually eaten in a bread-roll with mustard, a bit like a hotdog. Some people eat the Leberkäse with hot mustard, others with sweet mustard.
- Schlachtschüssel --- Snack --- Lt.: Butchers plate; a ombination of Blutwurst and Leberwurst (blood sausage and liver sausage) served hot on sauerkraut.
- Saures Lüngerl --- Main course --- A ragout from lung and sometimes heart from the veal.
- Kartoffelsalat --- Side dish --- Bavarian potato salad is usually made with broth, bacon bits and onions and may be served hot or chilled.
- Radi --- Side dish --- Raphanus that is heavily salted so the water is extruded.
- Pichelsteiner --- Main course --- A stew made from various kinds of meat and vegetables.
- Bayrisch Creme --- Dessert --- A very light, fluffy and not too sweet dessert made from gelatin, milk, cream, egg yolk and sugar.
- Prinzregententorte --- Cake --- A cake that consists of six thin cake layers with chocolate buttercream inbetween.
- Topfenstrudel (or Milliramstrudel) --- Cake --- Similar to Apfelstrudel but filled with topfen instead and served with vanilla sauce.
- Dampfnudel --- Main course --- Lt.:'steam noodle'; a sort of white bread made of yeast dough, steamed in a pan and then served with various toppings, e.g. sugar, cinnamon, poppy seeds, jam, butter and vanilla sauce.
- Buchteln --- Main course --- Sweet dumplings made of yeast dough, filled with jam, poppy seed paste or curd and baked in a large pan so that they stick together. The traditional Buchtel is filled with plum powidl jam. Buchteln are topped with vanilla sauce, powdered sugar or eaten plain and warm.
Berlin
- Beamtenstippe --- Sauce --- A either white or brown sauce that is eaten with potatoes.
- Buletten --- Main course or snack --- Kind of meatballs in Berlin
- Currywurst --- Snack --- Hot pork sausage served either with curry ketchup or a tomato paste with curry powder.
- Eierkuchen --- Main course --- Pancake
- Eisbein --- Main course --- Ham hock usually served with Sauerkraut.
- Hackepeter --- Snack --- Raw ground pork that is spiced with salt and pepper, garlic and caraway.
- Kartoffelpuffer --- Main course --- Grated potatoes that are mixed with eggs, spices and other ingredients, portioned and fried in a pan. Usually served with some kind of meat or fish.
- Königsberger Klopse --- Main course --- Cooked meatballs served in a white sauce with capers and usually eaten with potatoes.
- Berliner Ballen --- Pastry --- Sweet dough dumplings, fried in fat or oil, filled with jam and glazed with confectioner's sugar. Also known as Pfandkuchen.
Bremen and Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen)
- Birnen, Bohnen und Speck --- Main course --- A dish of pears, beans and bacon, invariably accompanied by potatoes.
- Bratwurst --- Snack --- A grey sausage with veal content that has a mild flavor, is pan-fried and then eaten with a hard roll.
- Braunkohl --- Side dish --- see Grünkohl below
- Braunschweiger --- Snack --- An internationally known sausage that is spread on toast or used in sandwiches.
- Bremer Kükenragout --- Main course --- A ragout made from different kinds of meat and seafood as well as vegetables; may contain no chicken and if it does it's meat from very young chicken.
- Brunswick Mum --- Beverage --- An ancient beer from Brunswick.
- Butterkuchen --- Cake --- A sheet cake made from yeast dough topped with blops of butter and sugar.
- Calenberger Pfannenschlag --- Snack --- Groats that are broiled and eaten with potatoes or on bread with various other side dishes, e.g. pickles or red beet; special kind of Knipp.
- Pinkel mit Grünkohl --- Main course --- A dish made from slowly kale that is served with Pinkel, a rather salty sausage.
- Kassler --- Main course --- A slowly cooked salted pork dish that is usually served with Knödel and Sauerkraut or potato salad.
- Kluntjes --- Candy --- Sugar crystals that are used as sweetener for tea.
- Knipp --- Snack or Main course --- Broiled groat sausage.
- Labskaus --- Snack or Main course --- A dish made from corned beef, herring, mashed potatoes, and beetroot, served with a fried egg and a pickled cucumber.
- Nordseekrabben/Nordseegarnelen --- Snack or Main course --- Prawns from the North sea.
- Pottwurst --- Snack --- Another kind of Knipp.
- Räucheraal --- Main course or snack --- Smoked eel that is used as ingredient in various dishes.
- Sauerkraut --- Side dish --- Shredded cabbage that is marinated in vinegar.
- Schlachteplatte --- Snack --- A dish with a variety of meats usually eaten as second breakfast.
- Spargel --- Side dish --- Asparagus that is eaten as a delicacy, commonly with potatoes and Sauce hollandaise.
- Steckrübeneintopf --- Main course --- A hearty stew made from rutabaga, carrot and potato.
- Welf pudding --- Dessert --- A sweet two-layer pudding invented by a royal chef with one layer of vanilla-based and one of wine-based pudding.
East Prussia
- Bärenjäger --- Beverage --- A honey-flavored liqueur.
- Beetenbartsch --- Soup --- A beetroot-based soup served with sour cream (Schmand) and beef (originally from Russia).
- Königsberger Fleck --- Soup --- A type of Kuttelsuppe, or tripe soup.
- Königsberger Klopse --- Main course --- Meatballs served in a white sauce with capers and eaten with potatoes.
- Königsberger Marzipan --- Candy --- Special kind of marzipan made in Königsberg.
- Pillkaller Machandel --- Beverage --- A clear liqueur that is served in a drink with liver sausage and mustard.
- Schwarzsauer --- Soup --- A type of blood soup with various spices cooked in vinegar-water.
- Spirgel --- Snack --- A variation of bacon.
- Tilsit cheese --- Cheese --- A kind of cheese.
Franconia
- Fränkische Bratwurst --- Snack --- Fränkische Bratwurst is composed of beef, pork or veal and is traditionally served with sauerkraut or potato salad or simply in a breadroll. They vary greatly in size and seasoning from region to region but are often considerably thinner than the equivalents elsewhere in Germany. They are traditionally served as three sausages in a roll ("Drei in 'a Weckla") or six sausages on sauerkraut ("Sechs auf Kraut").
- Saure Zipfel --- Snack --- Bratwurst and sliced onion cooked in vinegar and usually eaten with Bavarian pretzels.
- Kartoffelklöße --- Main course --- Large dumplings made from a dough consisting of raw or a combination of raw and cooked potatoes. The exact recipe is a matter of regional differences and personal belief. The best friend of pot-roasted meats or mushroom ragout.
- Schäufele --- Main course --- An entire pork (or, in some cases, Lamb) shoulder roasted in a fairly cool oven over long period so that the meat is extremely tender with a crunchy crust.
Seasoning is usually simple using salt, pepper and caraway and traditionally it is served in a dark sauce, made from the roast stock, meat broth, and often dark beer and Lebkuchen spices.
Accompanied by a side salad, dumplings and red cabbage or less commonly Sauerkraut.
- Hochzeitssuppe ("wedding soup") --- Soup --- A spicy meat broth with bread dumplings, liver dumplings and finely sliced pancakes.
- Lebkuchen --- Pastry/Cookie --- German kind of gingerbread of which the most famous originates in Nuremberg and is traditionally only available at Christmas, although tourist demand means that Lebkuchen are available in some form practically all year round.
- Karpfen --- Main course --- Fried carp that is traditionally served during carp season, which consists of all months of the year that contain an R in their German spelling.
Frankfurt am Main and Hesse
- Green Sauce --- Dip --- A bright sauce made from minced and an abundant amount of seven fresh herbs namely borage, sorrel, cress, chervil, chives, parsley, and burnet. Served with boiled potatoes and hardboiled eggs. Called "Grüne Soße" in German or "Griee Sooß" in the Hessian dialect.
- Frankfurter sausage --- Snack --- A smoked sausage made from pure pork, which is eaten hot and usually accompanied by bread and mustard. Not to be confused with the American hot dog "Frankfurter".
- Apfelwein --- Beverage --- A wine made of apples, somewhat comparable to Cider and French Cidre though dryer and more sour-tasting. Best enjoyed in traditional "Äbbelwoi-Lokalen". Served in a special mug (the "Bembel"), drunk with a special glass (the "Gerippte").
- Sauer Gespritzer --- Beverage --- A very refreshing drink that combines Apfelwein with sparkling water. Usually served during summer it's also available as Süß Gespritzer which is Apfelwein mixed with lemonade.
- Handkäse mit Musik --- Snack --- Lt.: hand-cheese with music: A strong cheese made from curdled milk served in a dressing from vegetable oil, vinegar, caraway, salt and pepper and sliced onions. Usually served with rye bread and butter. Although people love to make jokes of dubious quality about the meaning of the "music", several traditional Kneipe sport a choice of Handkäs with and without "music" (the seasoning), thereby ruling out any reference to post-digestive side effects.
Hamburg
- Labskaus --- Main course or snack --- A dish made from corned beef, herring, mashed potatoes, and beetroot, served with a fried egg and a pickled cucumber. See also under Bremen and Lower Saxony.
- Birnen, Bohnen und Speck --- Birnen, Bohnen und Speck.JPG --- Main course --- A dish composed of pears, beans and bacon, invariably accompanied by potatoes.
- Aalsuppe --- Soup --- A soup of eel, meat broth, vegetables, and herbs.
- Hamburger Aalsuppe --- A sweet and sour soup of eel, meat broth, dried fruits, vegetables, and herbs
- Franzbrötchen ("frenchmans roll") --- Pastry --- A pastry made from Phyllo dough, covered with sugar and powdered cinnamon that is usually eaten for breakfast. Franzbrötchen is only rarely found outside of Hamburg.
- Frikadelle --- Main course or snack --- A type of flat meatball composed of pork, beef and onions commonly eaten with pasta salad, potatoes or simply in a bread roll with mustard or other condiments.
- Rote Grütze --- Dessert --- A jelly/jam-like dessert or summer dish made from berries especially currants that can be eaten pure, but is often accompanied by milk or vanilla sauce.
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
- Mecklenburger Rippenbraten --- Main course --- Rib roast, made from belly of pork including meat of the upper rib, stuffed with Boskoop apples, prunes, cinnamon, rum and zwieback, usually served with Klöße or red cabbage.
- Tüffel un Plum --- Main course --- is a potato stew made with smoked ham, prunes, potatoes and spiced with clove and bay leaves.
- Grööner Hein --- Main dish --- Stew made from string beans, pear and ham
- Fliederbeersuppe --- Dessert --- Dessert soup made from elderberry, served with semolina dumplings
- Hering in Sahnesoße --- Main course --- Young herring marinated in cream, onions and apples. Served with Pellkartoffeln.
Palatinate
- Saumagen (Pork stomach) --- Main course --- Pig stomach that serves as casing for a filling of pork, sausage meat and potatoes. Sometimes the filling also contains eggs and carots. The dish is usually served with mashed potatoes and sauerkraut, bread or Bratkartoffeln.
- Gequellde mit weißem Kees --- Main course --- A dish of cooked potatoes with curd cheese.
- Gequellde mit Lewwerworscht --- Main course --- A dish of cooked potatoes with liver sausage.
- Gedadschde --- Side dish --- In a pan fried dumplings made of mashed potatoes with flour.
- Weck, Worschd un Woi --- Snack --- Lt. :Bread roll, sausage and wine
- Grumbeersupp un Quetschekuche --- Main course --- Potato soup and plum tart
- Kerscheblotzer (cherry cake) --- Dessert --- Kind of bread pudding made with cherries and usually served hot with vanilla sauce.
- Zwiebelkuchen --- Main course --- An onion pie usually served with Federweisser.
- Federweisser --- Beverage --- Young white wine.
- Chestnuts --- Side dish --- Cooked chestnuts served with meat or other things.
Rhineland
- Rheinischer Sauerbraten --- Main course --- Large pieces of beef or more traditionally horse meat, marinated in a spicy water-vinegar mixture for a long time before baking.
- Reibekuchen --- Side dish --- Potato fritter with black bread, apple syrup, sugar beet syrup or stewed apples.
- Blutwurst --- Snack --- Blood sausage either crude or fried.
- Himmel und Ääd --- Main course --- Lt. : Heaven and Earth: Mashed potatoes with stewed apples and fried blood pudding (Cologne).
- Halve Hahn --- Snack --- Lt. :Half Rooster: A dish that doesn't actually contain rooster at all but is a cheese sandwich with onions, the name is based on a wordplay (Köln).
- Muscheln rheinische Art --- Main course --- Mussels cooked in wine with vegetables and served with whole wheat bread and some butter.
- Grünkohl --- Side dish --- Dish of cooked kale often served with potatoes and Kassler.
- Aachener Printen --- Pastry --- Popular kind of cookie that originates in the city Aachen.
Saarland
- Dibbelabbes --- Main course --- A potato hash prepared from raw grated potatoes, bacon and leeks, and baked in a Dibbe, or pot, usually eaten with apple sauce.
- Hoorische/Verheiratete --- Main course --- Lt. : Married ones: Potatoes and dumplings made of flour served with a creamy bacon sauce.
- Schwenker or Schwenkbraten --- Main course --- Pork steaks, marinated in spices and onions and broiled on a grill that hangs on a chain over a wood fire).
Saxony
- Pfefferkuchen --- Pastry/Cookie --- Famous kind of German gingerbread. Some believe that the best German gingerbread is from Pulsnitz in Saxony.
- Eierschecke --- Cake --- A cake consisting of three layers: The bottom one is either a yeast dough (Hefeteig) or one made with baking soda (Rührteig), the middle layer is a cream made of quark, vanilla and some butter, egg, sugar and milk, and the top layer is mainly made from eggs (Eier), which are beaten with butter, sugar and "Vanillepudding"-powder (starchy substance normally used to cook a dessert similar to semolina pudding).
- Quarkkäulchen --- Main course or dessert --- A sweet main dish made from quark, mashed boiled potatoes, a little flour, an egg and some grated lemon peel. The ensuing dough is baked as small, less than palm-sized pancakes and eaten hot with sugar and cinnamon, or with fruit, whipped cream, vanilla ice cream etc.
- Leipziger Allerlei --- Side dish --- A vegetable dish consisting of peas, baby carrots, white asparagus and morels. It may also, but not necessarily, contain broccoli, cauliflower, green beans or corn, even small prawns.
- Stollen --- Cake --- German Christmas cake of which there are two important centers in Saxony: Dresden and the Ore Mountains. Note: The cuisine of the Saxon part of the Ore Mountains is more a relative of the cuisine of Franconia than a relative of the other parts of Saxony. The cuisine of Upper Lusatia also differs from central Saxony and is more related to the (former) cuisines of Lower Silesia and Northern Bohemia. Typical Upper Lusatian dishes are: Stopperle: small dumpling with fried bacon or sausage and sauerkraut. Schälklöße: soup consisting of filled pasta and various vegetables. Teichelmauke: mashed potatoes with bouillon and cooked beef.
Saxony-Anhalt
- Typical for very traditional dishes from Saxony-Anhalt is the combination of bitter or hearty meat dish with sweet.
Seet pancakes in Green bean soup for example are the cause of many jokes.
- Baumkuchen --- Cake --- A cake typical for Christmas that is very difficult to prepare.
- Magdeburger Schmalzkuchen --- Pastry --- Fried pastry made from yeast dough, topped with confectioner's sugar and usually consumed for carneval.
- Bötel (Magdeburg) --- Main course --- Ham hock that is usually served with mashed potatoes or bread and sauerkraut.
- Schierker Feuerstein --- Beverage --- A herb liqueur.
- Rotkäppchen Sekt --- Beverage --- A brand of sparkling wine.
Schleswig-Holstein
- Birnen, Bohnen und Speck --- Main course --- A dish composed of pears, beans and bacon, invariably accompanied by potatoes .
- Buttermilchsuppe --- Soup --- Buttermilk soup with flour dumplings
- Kohl --- Side dish --- Cooked kale usually served with potatoes and Kasseler or other foods.
- Kieler Sprotten --- Main course --- Smoked Baltic sprats.
- Labskaus --- Main course or snack --- A dish made from corned beef, herring, mashed potatoes, and beetroot, served with a fried egg and a pickled cucumber.
- Mehlbüdel --- Main course --- A large flour dumpling served with bacon and a sweet sauce.
- Rote Grütze --- Dessert --- A jelly/jam-like dessert or summer dish made from berries especially currants that can be eaten pure, but is often accompanied by milk or vanilla sauce.
- Schnüsch --- Main course --- A stew made of ham, potatoes and vegetables cooked in roux.
- Schwarzsauer --- Soup --- A sort of black pudding made with vinegar.
- Snuten un Poten --- Main course --- Cured pig snouts and paws that are cooked in vinegar together with several spices. Traditionally served with sauerkraut, erbspüree and hot mustard.
Silesia (Former German province).
- When Silesia was German, the influence of neighboring countries was clear in Silesian cooking; Polish carp and cheeses, Bohemian goulash, Austrian sausage and Pfefferkuchen (pepper cakes).
Schnapps was very commonly drunk with beer in Silesia. There was an old saying that went "Silesia has two principal rivers, Schnapps and the river Oder".
- Schlesisches Himmelreich --- Main course --- Lt. Silesian Heaven: a dish of pork belly with dried fruits and cinnamon.
- Kartoffelsuppe --- Soup or stew --- A stew made with raw potatoes and other ingredients such as vegetables and sausage.
- Gänsebraten (Roast goose) --- Main course --- Roasted goosed traditionally served with potatoes and/or Klöße with gravy and vegetables.
- Schlesische Kartoffelklöße --- Main course --- Silesian potatoes dumplings.
- Breslauer Leckerbissen --- Cookies --- Lt.: Breslau 'sweet bites'
- Schlesischer Striezel --- Cake --- Silesian Christmas cake made from yeast dough.
- Schlesischer Mohnstollen (Silesian poppy cake) --- Cake --- Silesian Christmas cake made from yeast dough and filled with poppy seeds.
- Liegnitzer Bomben --- Pastry/Cookie --- Honey cakes from Liegnitz honey cakes.
Thuringia
- Thüringer sausage --- Snack --- Red to grey, stuffed in a natural casing of pig intestine, unlike the white Franconian variety.
- Thüringer Rostbrätel --- Main course --- A pork neck steak marinated together with onions in beer and mustard.
- Thüringer Klöße --- Main course --- Dumplings made of raw and/or cooked potatoes with pan-fried toast-bread inside.
- Mutzbraten --- Main course or snack --- A pound of pork, roasted on open birchwood fire, served with sauerkraut.
- Rinderroulade --- Main course --- Beef roulades: Spread with mustard and filled with bacon, onions and pickled cucumber.
- Mohnkuchen --- Cake --- Poppy seed cake
- Quarkkuchen --- Cake --- Cheesecake made from quark (cheese) either with or without pie crust (usually shortcrust pastry).
- Eichsfelder Schmandkuchen --- Cake --- A sheet cake made from yeast dough, topped with fruit or quark cheese and covered with a layer of Schmand.
- Weimarer Zwiebelkuchen --- Cake (savoury) --- A sheet cake made from yeast dough with onions, sour cream, bacon bits and eggs.
- Altenburger "Aufläufer" (Prophetenkuchen) --- Cake --- A speciality cake from Thuringia that consists of eggs, sugar, oil, flour and alcohol (usually rum).
Westphalia
- Pickert --- Main course --- Potato pancakes
- Grünkohl und Kohlwurst (curly kale and cabbage sausage) --- Main course --- A sausage made from lung and served with Grünkohl.
- Westfälischer Schinken (smoked ham) --- Snack --- A hearty ham from Westfalen that is very aromatic.
- Möpkenbrot --- Snack --- Kind of blood sausage that contains rye bread, pig-blood, milk, eggs, fat, salt and pepper.
- Rumpsteak --- Main course --- Roast beef served with various sides such as potato wedges and vegetables.
- Reibekuchen --- Side dish --- Fried dumpling made of mashed potatoes and other ingredients such as onions, eggs, quark and spices.
- Pumpernickel --- Bread --- A hearty bread; it goes black because the sugar in the bread goes to caramel.
- Herrencreme --- Dessert --- Lt. Gentleman's creme: Vanilla jelly with cream and rum.
- Stippgrütze --- Snack --- Barley groats cooked in sausage juices (Wurstbrühe), which are enriched with pieces of meat, offal, such as heart, kidney or liver and seasoned with spices and salt. The cooked ingredients are minced after the juices have been poured off and a crumbly cake is left which is held together with fat and which sets on cooling.