10 Things You Didn't Know About Germany

10 Things You Didn't Know About Germany

Germany has certainly been in the news in recent years. From the bundling politics of Angela Merkel to the famed beer festival in Munich, known as the Oktoberfest, Germany has repeatedly been in the spotlight, and, far and away, the country most requested
So now, by popular demand, we bring you the top 10 things you didn't know about Germany.



Germany is the largest economy in Europe. It has the fourth largest nominal GDP in the world. It might seem exaggerated to say, but everything that has to do with the European Union and Euro is highly dependent on Germany.
In fact, without Germany's economic participation and continued support the Eurozone would be a thing of the past. Germany's support has allowed for the continual participation of substantially weaker economies, such as Spain, Italy, and Greece, and has kept their economies afloat in the midst of horrible debt and economic mismanagement. So theoretically, if Germany cut the purse strings, it could send all of southern Europe into a downward spiral, but that's probably not going to happen. And here is why.

Germany is a country haunted by its past and the possibility of being portrayed in a negative light is something that Germans just can't afford. You see, if Germany left the EU and cut off southern Europe, you can only imagine the names it would be called, and that's putting it mildly. Because of this, Germany will be stuck between a rock and a hard place for a long time to come.


Unfortunately, it hasn't been all beer and glory as Germany has a pretty checkered past. If you've never been to Germany before, you probably have never heard of the stolperstein, or literally a stumbling stone.

Conceived in the eary 1990s, by the German artist Gunter Demnig, the stolperstein is a tile, usually made of bronze, commemorating the victims of the National Socialist regime in Germany. Their names and place of residence are etched into the tile, as is the approximate date of death and sometimes time of deportation to the concentration camps of the Nazis. By now, stolpersteine have spread across Europe to countries outside of Germany, marking the popularity of the idea behind them.

According to the Cambridge historian Joseph Pearson, it is not the information on the tiles that gives passer-bys pause, but the lack thereof. "It is not what is written on them which intrigues, "because the inscription is insufficient "to conjure a person. It is the emptiness, void, lack of information, "the maw of the forgotten, "which gives the monuments their power "lifts them from the banality of a statistic."

Image result for As a part of Germany's unfortunate past there are some things you literally just cannot say in Germany
As a part of Germany's unfortunate past there're some things you literally just cannot say in Germany. That is, if you don't want to go to jail, called Volksverhetzung in German, or incitement to hatred, saying certain things about certain groups of people, or denying the Holocaust and the legacy of National Socialism can actually land you in jail. Some of the statute reads as follows:
"Whosoever publicly or in a meeting approves of,
"denies or downplays an act committed
"under the rule of National Socialism
"in manner capable of disturbing the public peace
"shall be liable to imprisonment
"not exceeding five years or a fine."
Such legal measures have been debated back and forth on their merits by freedom of speech scholars for several decades now. But the German government seems intent on upholding the measures for the foreseeable future.


From dark pumpernickel to light rye to everything inbetween in over 300 types of bread, Germany has more bread variety than any other country in the world. Bread forms a major part of just about every German meal and with over 300 types it's not hard to see why. In fact, one German word for dinner, Abendbrot, literally means evening bread and indicates the importance of one's daily bread in Germany.
Another popular sort of bread, rarely seen outside of Germany, is the Broetchen, which literally means little bread. Which, in fact, is lesser type of bread, there is a particular size and shape of bread.
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Broetchen are typically small and can be held in one hand, as opposed to full loaves of bread,
and are possibly the most popular type of food in Germany. While most people think of beer when they think of Germany, they're really missing out on all that bread.
Unlike the United States where piss water, otherwise known as Coors Light and Budweiser, counts as beer, Germany is rightly regarded as the fatherland of beer. Going as far back as Roman times, when Germanic tribes were cited by Roman historians for their beer brewing skills, the tradition has continued throughout the Middle Ages to the present, giving us a tremendous variety of trully unique beer.
As a testament to German dedication to a pure and tasteful beer, in the Middle Ages there was legislation introduced called the Reinheitsgebot, 

 or purity decree, proclaiming that only the purest of ingredients, namely water, barley and hops, could go into beer.
Today, there're dozens and dozens of beers in Germany, many of them regional, such as the Cologne-based Koelsch, which is actually illegal to brew outside of the Cologne region. But rest assured, every type of German beer bears the stamp of umparalleled German quality.


Germany was the birthplace of one of the greatest and most long-standing religious and political onflictsin the world.
Martin Luther, theologian and religious radical, infamously posted his 95 Theses on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences on the door of a church in Wittenberg, as a critique of the Catholic Church's corruption, and shortly thereafter Europe exploded in conflict.
This action on the part of Martin Luther is widely regarded as the beginning of the splintering and fracturing of Christianity in Europe as protestantism was born.


This led to centuries of political and religious conflict accompanied by mass bloodshed and loss of human life in such conflicts as the Thirty Years' War, which is widely regarded as one of the most destructive conflicts in European history, and the infamous St. Bartholomew's Day massacre in France where Catholics engaged in mass murder of thousands of French protestant calvinists, known as Huguenots. Without the German theologian Martin Luther modern Europe as we know it today and indeed Christianity would be very, very different.


You may not know it, but Germany is a comparatively young country. Prior to the 19th century and throughout the Middle Ages much of what was modern Germany had simply been known as the Holy Roman Empire. But in the 19th century, under the visionary authority of the Prussian statesmen Otto von Bismarck, the modern concept of the nation-state of Germany was born.


Germany is often referred to as the Bundesrepublik, and this is because modern Germany is composed of 16 federal states, which all differ from each other often in subtle ways. They are: Buden- uerttemberg, Bavaria, Hesse, Saarland, Rhineland-Palatinate, Thuringia, North Rhine-Westphalia, Lower Saxony, Hamburg, Bremen, Saxony-Anhalt, Saxony, Brandenburg, Berlin, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, and finally, Schleswig-Holstein.
Image may contain: sky, tree and outdoorThe modern German consolation of 16 federated states is relatively new in German history. But each one retains a fiercely independent character dating back to before the time of German unification. For example, the state of Bavaria refers to itself as Freistaat Bayern, which means the free state of Bavaria.
The Bundeslander, as they are called in German, all have different customs, histories, foods, and even cultures, often going back many centuries, giving them each a unique flavour despite falling under the banner of greater Germany.


Just as modern Germany evolved from many separate states that were fused together under the iron fist of Otto von Bismarck, so too is modern standard German, called Hochdeutsch in German, an album of many different elements fused into one. The dialects of Germany are even older than the regions they seem to come from, harking back to the earliest Germanic tribes, mentioned by the Romans.
Image result for germanyFrom that period onwards the Germanic tribesmen settled in many different places and their languages evolved on their own. Fast forward to the present and you have a country with literally hundreds of different dialects, some of which are so different from each other so as to be considered different languages. For example, the High German word for squirrel is Eichhoernchenschwanz, but in Bavarian it's Orchkatezlschworf. Even if you don't know German, you can certainly hear the difference. A Bavarian speaking his native dialect to a person from Hamburg will not be understood at all. So to communicate across the many states and indeed countries, such as Switzerland and Austria, German speak High German, a standardized German with a fixed grammar and set of rules, albeit each with their own regional accents.


For some four decades Germany was a divided land. There was West Germany and East Germany, also known as the DDR, or Deutsche Demokratische Republik. A legacy of the Cold War that ensued after World War II, it all ended when East Germany was united as one country with the West after the fall of the Berlin Wall on November, 9th, 1989.
Image may contain: one or more people, shoes and outdoorThere were great hopes at the time with many people long separated from each other reconnected, but many of these hopes have been dashed in the ensuing decades. Close to three decades after the fall of the wall, eastern Germany still lags behind its western counterpart economically by as much as one third.
Greater unemployment and fewer life opportunities have also given rise to a comparatively disproportionate number of so-called anti-establishment groups, such as neo-Nazis, fascists, and the far-right, compared to western Germany.
It's sad to admit, but it just might be the case that eastern Germany may never catch up with western Germany, something that, given Germany's troubled history, might bring with it potentially dire political and social consequences not just for Germany, but for the world at large. For more top lists like this, be sure to leave a like and subscribe, if you haven't already. And don't forget to check out our other videos. And we'll see you all next time.
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