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States of Germany

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States of Germany.gifi
The 16 states of Germany
Country Germany
German term Bundesland (sing.)
Bundesländer (pl.)
Total number 16
Categories 13 area states
3 city-states
Largest (area) Bavaria
70,542 km²
Largest (population) North Rhine-Westphalia
~17.9 million
Smallest (area) Bremen
419 km²
Smallest (population) Bremen
~684,000
Federal body Bundesrat
Established 1949 (West) · 1990 (current 16)

The states of Germany (German: Bundesländer, singular Bundesland) are the 16 federated entities that together form the Federal Republic of Germany. Each state has its own constitution, its own elected parliament, and its own government, and each shares power with the federal government in Berlin.

Thirteen of the 16 states are called area states (Flächenländer) and contain a mix of cities, towns, and rural regions. The other three — Berlin, Hamburg, and Bremen — are called city-states (Stadtstaaten) because each one is a single city (or, in Bremen's case, two neighboring cities) that also functions as a state.

Five of the area states — Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, and Thuringia — are sometimes called the "new states" (neue Länder). They were formed when East Germany joined the Federal Republic during German reunification in 1990.

The states play a major role in German government. They make their own laws on areas like education, policing, and culture, and they send representatives to the Bundesrat (Federal Council), the upper house of the federal parliament, where they help shape national legislation.

1 Navigation

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2 History

2.1 Origins after World War II

Modern Germany's federal structure was created after World War II. When the Federal Republic was founded in West Germany in 1949, it was made up of 11 states (including West Berlin as a special case). East Germany, also founded in 1949, originally had 5 states but reorganized into 14 districts (Bezirke) in 1952, doing away with the state system there. Two early changes reshaped the West German map. In 1952, the southwestern states of Baden, Württemberg-Baden, and Württemberg-Hohenzollern merged to form Baden-Württemberg. In 1957, the Saarland — which had been a French-administered territory after the war — joined the Federal Republic as the 10th state.

2.2 Reunification in 1990

When German reunification took place on October 3, 1990, East Germany's districts were reorganized back into 5 states: Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, and Thuringia. These joined the Federal Republic alongside a now-reunified Berlin, bringing the total to 16 states. The structure has been stable since then. The most notable proposed change involved Berlin and Brandenburg, whose voters rejected combining the two states in a 1996 referendum.

3 Types of states

3.1 Area states

The 13 area states (Flächenländer) are the largest type and cover most of Germany's land. Each contains many cities, towns, and rural districts, and is divided internally into smaller administrative units called counties (Landkreise) and county-free cities (kreisfreie Städte). The largest by area is Bavaria, which alone makes up about a fifth of Germany.

3.2 City-states

Three states are city-states (Stadtstaaten): Berlin, Hamburg, and Bremen. In each case, a single city (or, for Bremen, the two cities of Bremen and Bremerhaven) functions both as a city and as a full state. This means the city government and the state government are essentially the same body, which makes the city-states unusual within the German system. City-states have the same rights and responsibilities as area states, including representation in the Bundesrat. Their unique status reflects historical traditions: Hamburg and Bremen were free Hanseatic cities for centuries, and Berlin was given special status during the Cold War.

4 List of states

State Capital Type Population (approx.) Area (km²)
Baden-Württemberg Stuttgart Area state 11.3 million 35,748
Bavaria Munich Area state 13.4 million 70,542
Berlin Berlin City-state 3.8 million 891
Brandenburg Potsdam Area state 2.6 million 29,654
Bremen Bremen City-state 684,000 419
Hamburg Hamburg City-state 1.9 million 755
Hesse Wiesbaden Area state 6.4 million 21,115
Lower Saxony Hanover Area state 8.1 million 47,710
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Schwerin Area state 1.6 million 23,295
North Rhine-Westphalia Düsseldorf Area state 17.9 million 34,113
Rhineland-Palatinate Mainz Area state 4.1 million 19,858
Saarland Saarbrücken Area state 990,000 2,571
Saxony Dresden Area state 4.1 million 18,450
Saxony-Anhalt Magdeburg Area state 2.2 million 20,452
Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Area state 2.9 million 15,804
Thuringia Erfurt Area state 2.1 million 16,202

5 Government

5.1 State governments

Every state has its own constitution, its own elected parliament, and its own government headed by a minister-president (Ministerpräsident). In the city-states the head of government has a different historical title: Berlin has a Governing Mayor (Regierender Bürgermeister), while Hamburg and Bremen each have a First Mayor (Erster Bürgermeister). State parliaments are called Landtag in most states. The city-states use older names: Berlin has the Abgeordnetenhaus ("House of Representatives"), and both Hamburg and Bremen have a Bürgerschaft ("Citizens' Assembly"). States have authority over major areas including education (school systems differ noticeably between states), police, broadcasting, and culture. They also share authority with the federal government in many other areas under the Basic Law (Grundgesetz).

5.2 Bundesrat

The states are represented at the federal level through the Bundesrat (Federal Council), the upper house of the German parliament. Each state's government appoints members directly — usually members of the state cabinet — and each state has between 3 and 6 votes depending on its population, for a total of 69 votes. Within the Bundesrat, a state's votes must be cast as a single bloc, not split between members. The Bundesrat must approve federal laws that affect state powers or finances, which gives the states a strong voice in national policy.

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