Stuttgart ( ) is the capital
of the state of Baden-Württemberg
in southern Germany
. The
sixth-largest city in
Germany, Stuttgart has a population of 600,038 (December 2008)
while the metropolitan area has a population of 5.3 million
(2008).
The city lies at the centre of a heavily populated area, circled by
a ring of smaller towns.
This inner urban area called Stuttgart Region has a population of 2.7
million making 'greater Stuttgart' the third biggest agglomeration
in Germany after the Ruhr Area and
Berlin
. The larger Stuttgart
Metropolitan Region
with over 5 million inhabitants is the
fourth-biggest in Germany after the Rhine-Ruhr area, Berlin/Brandenburg and Frankfurt/Rhine-Main
(source: see "Germany" in the German
Wikipedia).
Stuttgart is spread across a variety of hills (some of them
vineyards), valleys and parks - unusual
for a German city and often a source of surprise to visitors who
primarily associate the city with its industrial reputation as the
'
cradle of the
automobile'.
Stuttgart has the status of
Stadtkreis, a type of
self-administrating urban county. It is also the seat of the state
legislature, the regional parliament, local council and the
Protestant State Church in Württemberg as well as one of the two
co-seats of the bishop of the
Roman Catholic diocese of
Rottenburg-Stuttgart.
The city's
motto is "Stuttgart is more" (to
tourists; to business it describes itself as " ", translated by
town hall marketing as "Where business meets the future"). In 2007
the
Bürgermeister marketed
Stuttgart to foreign investors as "The creative power of Germany".
Under current plans to improve transport links to the international
infrastructure (as part of the
Stuttgart
21 project), in March 2008 the city unveiled a new logo and
slogan, describing itself as " " ("The new heart of Europe").
Stuttgart is nicknamed the
Schwabenmetropole (
Swabian metropolis), a reference to the
Swabian dialect spoken by the locals. In that
dialect, the city's name is pronounced
Schtuagerd.
Name and coat of arms
Stuttgart's coat of arms shows a black horse on its hind legs on a
yellow background. It was first used in its current format in 1938;
prior to this various designs and colours had been used, often with
two horses. The
canting seal pictured
here reflects the origin of the name 'Stuttgart'. The name in
Old High German was 'stuotgarten',
with 'stuot' meaning mare, later cognate with the
Old English term 'stod' (Modern English: 'stud',
relating to the breeding of horses). The Old High German term
'garten' referred to the compound on the site of the original
settlement. The logo of the
Porsche
automobile company features a modified version of Stuttgart's coat
of arms at its centre.
Geography
Stuttgart
lies about an hour from the Black Forest
and a similar distance from the Swabian Jura
. The city centre lies in a lush valley,
nestling between vineyards and thick woodland close to the River
Neckar
. Thus, the city is often described as lying
"zwischen Wald und Reben", between forest and vines.
In the hot
summer months local residents refer to this area as the
Stuttgarter Kessel, or Stuttgart cauldron, for its hot and humid climate which is
frequently warmer than the surrounding countryside of Württemberg
.
Stuttgart covers an area of .
The elevation ranges from above sea level by the Neckar
river to on
Bernhartshöhe hill. As a
result there are more than 400 flights of stairs around the city
(called "Stäffele" in local dialect), equivalent to approximately
of steps. Many originate from the time when vineyards lined the
entire valley.
Even today there are vineyards less than from
the Main
Station
.
City districts
The city of Stuttgart is subdivided into a total of 23 city
districts, 5 inner districts and 18 outer districts.
The inner districts are: Central Stuttgart, Stuttgart Stuttgart
North, Stuttgart East, Stuttgart South, and Stuttgart West.
The outer districts are:
- Bad
Cannstatt: home to Western Europe's largest mineral spas, the
Wilhelma
zoo, the Cannstatter
Wasen (site of the Stuttgart Spring Festival and the
Cannstatter Volksfest (each
September/October)), the Schleyer-Halle
, the Porsche Arena
, the Mercedes-Benz Museum
, the VfB Stuttgart
Bundesliga football team and
their home ground, the Neckarstadion
(adjacent to it the Robert Schlienz Stadion), where
VfB II ("VfB Reserves") play
their games).
- Degerloch: the world's first television tower,
Stuttgarter Kickers football
team and their home ground, the Waldaustadion
.
- Möhringen: musical theatres, U.S. Army's Kelley
Barracks
, seat of the
United States Africa
Command.
- Plieningen: campus of University
of Hohenheim
, Schloß Hohenheim
(castle).
- Stammheim: location of high-security
Stammheim
Prison
and court (see Red Army
Faction terrorists).
- Untertürkheim: Daimler
AG headquarters and original Mercedes-Benz plant, the Württemberg mountain, eponymous
to the historic territory of Württemberg
, site of the Württemberg Mausoleum
- Vaihingen: not to be confused with nearby
Vaihingen
, home to one of two University
of Stuttgart
campuses and Patch Barracks
, the headquarters of U.S. armed forces in Europe
(USEUCOM)
- Zuffenhausen: Porsche
headquarters and museum

- Feuerbach
: home of the original Bosch plant and Behr.
- as
well as Birkach, Botnang
, Hedelfingen, Mühlhausen, Münster, Obertürkheim,
Sillenbuch, Wangen, and Weilimdorf
.

The city centre in winter
Stuttgart agglomeration and metropolitan region
Stuttgart's agglomeration (the political
entity 'Stuttgart Region') consists
of the nearby towns of Ludwigsburg
with its enormous baroque palace
, Böblingen
, the old Free
Imperial City of Esslingen
, Waiblingen
, Göppingen
and their respective homonymous rural districts
(Landkreise, the exception being the Waiblingen district,
called Rems-Murr-Kreis
).
The
Stuttgart
Metropolitan Region
is a wider regional concept, that, in addition to
the districts of the Stuttgart Region, encompasses most of
North, Central, and East Württemberg, consisting of the cities of
Heilbronn
/Schwäbisch Hall
, Reutlingen
/Tübingen
as well as Aalen
/Schwäbisch
Gmünd
and their respective districts and regions,
i.e. Heilbronn-Franken,
Neckar-Alb and
Ostwürttemberg.
Climate
Stuttgart experiences an
oceanic
climate (
Köppen
climate classification Cfb).
In the summer months,
the nearby Black
Forest
and Swabian
Alb
hills act as a shield from severe weather but the
city can also be subject to thunderstorms in the summer months and
periods of snow lasting several days in the winter. The
centre of the city, referred to by locals as the "Kessel"
(cauldron) experiences more severe heat in the summer and less snow
in the winter than the suburbs. Lying as it does at the centre of
the European continent, the temperature range between day and night
or summer and winter can be extreme. On average Stuttgart enjoys
1693 hours of sunshine per year.
Winters last from December to March. The coldest month is January
with an average temperature of . Snow cover tends to last no longer
than a few days although it has been known to last several weeks at
a time as recently as 2008. The summers are warm with an average
temperature of in the hottest months of July and August. The
summers last from May until September.
History
Pre 19th century
The first
known settlement of Stuttgart was around the end of the 1st century
AD with the establishment of a Roman
fort in the modern district of Cannstatt on the banks of the river
Neckar
. Early in the third century the Romans were
pushed by the Alamanni back past the
Rhine
and the Danube.
Although
nothing is known about Cannstatt during the period of Barbarian Invasion it is believed that
the area remained inhabited as it is mentioned in Abbey of St.
Gall
archives dating back to 700 AD.
Stuttgart itself was probably founded around 950 AD shortly before
the
Battle of Lechfeld by Duke
Liudolf of
Swabia, one of the sons of Holy Roman Emperor
Otto I the Great. The
town was used for breeding cavalry horses in fertile meadows at the
very centre of today's city, although recent archaeological
excavations indicate that this area was already home to
Merovingian farmers.
A gift
registry from Hirsau
Abbey
dated around 1160 mentioned 'Hugo de Stuokarten',
confirmation of the existence of the Stuttgart of
today.
Between
this time and the 14th century, the settlement was owned by the
Margraves of Baden and the
Württemberg
towns of Backnang
and Besigheim
.
Around
1300, Stuttgart became the residence of the Counts of Württemberg
, who expanded the growing settlement into the
capital of their territory (Territorialstaat).
Stuttgart was elevated to the status of city in 1321 when it became
the official royal residence. The territory around Stuttgart was
known as the
County of Württemberg before the
counts were elevated to dukes by the
Holy Roman Emperor in 1495, when
Stuttgart became the
Duchy capital and Ducal
residence.
The name
Württemberg
originates from a steep hill in Stuttgart, formerly
known as Wirtemberg.
In the
18th century, Stuttgart temporarily surrendered its residence
status after Eberhard Ludwig
founded Ludwigsburg
to the north of the city. In 1775, Karl Eugen requested a
return to Stuttgart, ordering the construction of the New
Castle
.
19th and 20th century
In 1803, Stuttgart was proclaimed
capital of Württemberg
Kurfürstentum (ruled by a
Prince-elector) until
Napoleon Bonaparte's breakup of the
Holy Roman Empire in 1805 when
Stuttgart became capital of the
Kingdom of
Württemberg.
The royal
residence was expanded under Frederick I of Württemberg
although many of Stuttgart's most important buildings, including
the Wilhelm Palace, Katharina
Hospital, the State Gallery
, the Villa Berg and the Königsbau were built under the reign of
King Wilhelm
I.
's development as a city was impeded in the 19th century by its
location.
It was not until the opening of the Main
Station
in 1846 that the city underwent an economic
revival. The population at the time was around 50,000.
During
the revolution
of 1848/1849, a democratic pan-German national parliament
(Frankfurt Parliament) was
formed in Frankfurt
to overcome the division of Germany. After
long discussions, the parliament decided to offer the title of the
German emperor to King
Frederick William IV of
Prussia. As the democratic movement became weaker, the German
princes regained control of their independent states. Finally, the
Prussian king declined the revolutionaries' offer. The members of
parliament were driven out of Frankfurt and the most radical
members (who wanted to establish a republic) fled to Stuttgart. A
short while later, this
rump
parliament was dissolved by the Württemberg military.
By 1871 Stuttgart boasted 91,000 inhabitants, and by the time
Gottlieb Daimler invented the
automobile in a small workshop in Cannstatt, the population had
risen rapidly to 176,000.
In 1871,
as an autonomous kingdom, Württemberg joined the German Empire
created by Otto von
Bismarck, Prime
Minister of Prussia, during the unification of Germany.
At the end of the
First World War the
Württemberg monarchy broke down:
William II of Württemberg
refused the crown - but also refused to abdicate - under pressure
from revolutionaries who stormed the
Wilhelm Palace.
The Free State of Württemberg was
established, as a part of the Weimar Republic
. Stuttgart was proclaimed the capital.
In 1920
Stuttgart became the seat of the German National Government (after
the administration fled from Berlin
, see
Kapp Putsch).
Under the
Nazi regime, Stuttgart began
deportation of its
Jewish inhabitants in 1939.
Around
sixty percent of the German Jewish population had fled by the time
restrictions on their movement were imposed on 1 October 1941, at
which point Jews living in Württemberg were forced to live in
'Jewish apartments' before being 'concentrated' on the former Trade
Fair grounds in Killesberg
. On 1 December 1941 the first deportation
trains were organised to Riga
.
Only 180 Jews from Württemberg held in
concentration camps survived.
During the period of Nazi rule, Stuttgart held the "honorary title"
Stadt der Auslandsdeutschen (City of the
the Germans living outside of the
Reich).
During World War II, the centre of Stuttgart was nearly completely
destroyed in
Allied
air raids. Some of the most severe bombing took place in 1944
at the hands of Anglo-American bombers. The heaviest raid took
place on 12 September 1944 when the
Royal Air Force bombed the old town of
Stuttgart dropping over 184,000 bombs including 75
blockbusters. More than 1000 people
perished in the resulting
firestorm. In
total Stuttgart was subjected to 53 bombing raids, resulting in the
destruction of 68% of all buildings and the death of 4477
people.
In 1945 the Allied Forces took control of Germany, spearheaded by
the French army which occupied Stuttgart until the city fell into
the American military occupation zone. An early concept of the
Marshall Plan aimed at supporting
reconstruction and economic/political recovery across Europe was
presented during a speech given by US Secretary of State
James F. Byrnes at the
Stuttgart Opera
House
. His speech led directly to the
unification of the British and American occupation zones, resulting
in the 'bi-zone' (later the 'tri-zone' including the French).
When the
Federal
Republic of Germany
was
founded on 23 May 1949,
Stuttgart, like Frankfurt
, was a serious contender to become the federal
capital, but finally Bonn
succeeded.
Parts of
the former German States of Baden and Württemberg
were merged in 1952 leading to the founding of the
new state of Baden-Württemberg
, now Germany's third largest state.
Recent
During
the Cold War, Stuttgart became home to the
joint command centre of all United States
military forces in Europe, Africa and the Atlantic
(US European Command, EUCOM). EUCOM is still headquartered
there today. U.S.
Army bases in and around Stuttgart include
or included the following: Patch Barracks
(HQ EUCOM), Robinson Barracks, Panzer Kaserne,
Kelley
Barracks
(HQ AFRICOM)

First Stuttgart coat of arms in
1286
the late 1970s, the district of
Stammheim
was centre stage of one of the most controversial periods of German
post-war history during the trial of
Red Army Faction members at Stammheim
high-security court. After the trial,
Ulrike Meinhof,
Andreas Baader, Gudrun Ensslin and Jan-Carl
Raspe committed suicide in Stammheim. Several attempts were made to
free the terrorists by force or blackmail during the '
German Autumn' of 1977, culminating in the
abduction and murder of the German industrialist and President of
the German Employers' Association
Hanns Martin Schleyer as well as the
hijacking of
Lufthansa flight
LH181.
In 1978 Stuttgart's
suburban
railway came into operation.
Landmarks, sights and culture
The inner city

The
Stiftskirche, seen from
the west (Stiftstraße)
At the
centre of Stuttgart lies its main square, Schlossplatz
. As well as being the largest square in
Stuttgart, it stands at the crossover point between the city's
shopping area, Schlossgarten park which runs down to the
river Neckar
, Stuttgart's
two central castles and major museums and residential areas to the
south west. Königstraße, Stuttgart's most important shopping
street which runs along the northwestern edge of Schlossplatz,
claims to be the longest pedestrianised street in Germany.
Although the city centre was heavily damaged during
World War II, many historic buildings have been
reconstructed and the city boasts some fine pieces of modern
post-war architecture. Buildings and squares of note in the inner
city include:

- The Stiftskirche (the
Collegiate Church), dates back to the 12th century, but was changed
to the Late Gothic style in the 15th century and is a Protestant
church since 1534. Exterior: Romanesque/Gothic; interior:
Romanesque/Gothic/Modern. Reconstructed with simplified interior
after WWII.
- Altes Schloss (the Old
Castle
), mostly dating from the late 15th century,
some parts date back to 1320. Renaissance style;
reconstructed
- Alte Kanzlei (the Old Chancellery)
on Schillerplatz
square which backs onto the 1598 Mercury
Pillar
- Neues Schloss (the New
Castle
), completed in 1807. Baroque/Classicism);
reconstructed with modern interior, currently houses government
offices. The cellars with a collection of stone fragments from the
Roman times are open to visitors
- Wilhelmpalais (the King Wilhelm Palais), 1840
- Königsbau (the King's Building), 1850. Classicism;
reconstructed
- The
Großes Haus of Stuttgart National Theatre
, 1909–1912
- Markthalle Market Hall, 1910. (Art Nouveau)
- The
Hauptbahnhof
(Main Railway Station) was designed in 1920;
its stark, functional lines are typical of the artistic trend 'Neue
Sachlichkeit' (New
Objectivity)
- The
Württembergische
Landesbibliothek
state library, rebuilt in 1970.
- Friedrichsbau Varieté (Friedrich Building), rebuilt in
1994 on the site of the former art nouveau building

The
Haus der Wirtschaft
(House of Commerce)
Architecture in other districts
A number of significant castles stand in Stuttgart's suburbs and
beyond as reminders of the city's royal past. These include:
Other landmarks in and around Stuttgart include (
see also
museums below):
Parks, lakes, cemeteries and other places of interest
At the centre of Stuttgart lies a series of gardens which are
popular with families and cyclists and the locals refer to as the
Green U. The Green U starts with the old
Schlossgarten, castle gardens
first mentioned in records in 1350.
The modern park stretches down to the
river Neckar
and is
divided into the upper garden (bordering the Old
Castle
, the Main Station
, the State Theater
and the State Parliament building), and the
middle and lower gardens - a total of 61 hectares. The park
also houses Stuttgart planetarium.
At the
far end of Schlossgarten lies the second Green U park, the
larger Rosensteinpark which borders
Stuttgart's Wilhelma
zoo and botanical gardens. Planted by King
William I of
Württemberg, it contains many old trees and open areas and
counts as the largest English-style garden in southern Germany. In
the grounds of the park stands the former Rosenstein castle, now
the Rosenstein museum.
Beyond
bridges over an adjacent main road lies the final Green U
park, Killesbergpark
or 'Höhenpark' which is a former quarry that was
converted for the Third Reich garden
show of 1939 (and was used as a collection point for Jews awaiting transportation to concentration camps). The park has been
used to stage many gardening shows since the 1950s, including the
Bundesgartenschau and 1993
International Gardening Show, and runs miniatures trains all around
the park in the summer months for children and adults. The viewing
tower (Killesbergturm) offers unique views across to the north east
of Stuttgart.
the northern edge of the
Rosensteinpark is the famous '
Wilhelma
', Germany's only combined zoological and botanical
garden.
The whole compound, with its ornate
pavilions, greenhouses, walls and gardens was built around 1850 as
a summer palace in moorish style for King Wilhelm I of Württemberg
. It currently houses around 8000 animals and
some 5000 plant species and contains the biggest
magnolia grove in Europe.
Other
parks in Stuttgart include the historic Botanischer
Garten der Universität Hohenheim and Landesarboretum
Baden-Württemberg
at Castle Hohenheim (which
date back to 1776 and are still used to catalogue and research
plant species), Uhlandshöhe hill (between the city centre, Bad
Cannstatt and Frauenkopf, and home to Stuttgart observatory), the
Weißenburgpark (a five hectare park in the Bopser area of Stuttgart South which dates back to 1834 and
is now home to a 'tea house' and the 'marble room' and offers a
relaxing view across the city centre), the Birkenkopf
(at the highest point in central Stuttgart, where
many ruins were laid to commemorate the Second World War), the Eichenhain park in
Sillenbuch (declared a nature reserve in
1958 and home to 200 oak trees, many 300–400
years old).
There are a number of natural and artificial lakes and ponds in
Stuttgart. The largest is the Max-Eyth-See which was created in
1935 by reclaiming a former quarry and is now an official nature
reserve.
It is surrounded by an expansive open area
overlooked by vineyards on the banks of the river Neckar
near
Mühlhausen
.

Feuersee, in the area of the same name
in Stuttgart West.
are expansive areas of woodland to the west and south west of
Stuttgart which are popular with walkers, families, cyclists and
ramblers. The most frequented lakes form a trio made up of the
Bärensee, Neuer See and Pfaffensee. The lakes are also used for
local water supplies.
In the Feuersee area in the
west of
Stuttgart lies one of two 'Feuersee's (literally fire lakes),
striking for its views of the church across the lake, surrounded by
nearby houses and offices. The other Feuersee can be found in
Vaihingen.
Cemeteries in Stuttgart include:
- The Hoppenlaufriedhof in Central
Stuttgart, the oldest remaining cemetery which dates back to
1626, an infirmary graveyard last used in
1951
- The
Waldfriedhof, the 1913 forest cemetery that is connected to
Südheimer Platz by funicular railway

- The Uff-Kirchhof cemetery in Bad Cannstatt which stands at the
crossroads of two ancient Roman roads
and Cannstatter Hauptfriedhof, the largest graveyard in Stuttgart
which has been used as a Muslim burial ground since 1985.
The city
boasts the largest mineral water deposits in Europe after Budapest
, with over 250 springs within the urban
area.
Culture and events
Stuttgart
is known for its rich cultural heritage, in particular its State
Theatre
and State Gallery
. The Staatstheater
is home to the State opera
and three smaller theatres and it regularly stages
opera, ballet and theatre productions as well as concerts.
The
Staatstheater
was named Germany/Austria/Switzerland 'Theatre
of the year' in 2006; the Stuttgart Opera has won the 'Opera of the
year' award six times. Stuttgart
Ballet is connected to names like
John
Cranko and
Marcia
Haydée.
The city also offers two broadway-style musical theatres, the
Apollo and the Palladium Theater (each approx. 1800 seats).
Ludwigsburg
Palace
in the nearby town of Ludwigsburg
is also used throughout the year as a venue for
concerts and cultural events.
The
Schleyerhalle
sports arena is regularly used to stage rock and
pop concerts with major international stars on European
tour.
Stuttgart's Swabian cuisine, beer and wine have been produced in
the area since the 1600s and are now famous throughout Germany and
beyond. For example,
Gaisburger
Marsch is a stew that was invented in Stuttgart's
Gaisburg area of
Stuttgart South.
1993 Stuttgart hosted the International Garden Show in the suburb
of
Killesberg
. In 2006 it was also one of the host cities of the
Football World Cup. In 2007,
Stuttgart hosted the
2007 World Artistic
Gymnastics Championships. In 2008 it was host to the
World
Individual Debating and Public Speaking Championships.
Regular events that take place in Stuttgart:
- The
world-famous annual 'Volksfest',
originally a traditional agricultural fair which now also hosts
beer tents and a French village and is second in size only to the
Oktoberfest
in Munich
.
Unlike Munich, however, there is also a Spring festival on the same
grounds in April of each year.
- With more than 3.6 million visitors in 2007 and more than 200
stands, Stuttgart's Christmas Market is the largest
and one of the oldest and most beautiful traditional Christmas markets in Europe. It is especially
renowned for its abundant decorations and takes place in the four
weeks leading up to Christmas.
- The
Fish Market (Hamburger Fischmarkt, late July) with fresh
fish, other food and beer from Hamburg

- The
Summer Festival (Stuttgart Sommerfest, usually in early
August) with shows, music, children's entertainment and local
cuisine in Schlossplatz, Stuttgart
and adjacent parks
- The
Lantern Festival (Lichterfest, early July) in Killesberg
park with its famous firework display and
fairground attractions
- The Wine Village (Weindorf, late August/early
September) - vintages are sold at this event held at Schlossplatz
and Upper Palace Garden
Museums
Stuttgart
is home to five of the eleven state museums in Baden-Württemberg
. The foremost of these is the old State
Gallery
(opened in 1843, extended in 1984) which holds art
dating from the 14th to 19th century including works by Rubens, Rembrandt, Monet,
Renoir, Cézanne and Beuys. Next door to the Old State Gallery is the
New State
Gallery
(1980) with its controversial modern
architecture. Among others, this gallery houses works from
Max Beckmann,
Dalí,
Matisse,
Miró,
Picasso,
Klee,
Chagall and
Kandinsky.
The
Old
Castle
is also home to the State Museum of Württemberg
which was founded in 1862 by William I of
Württemberg. The museum traces the rich
history of Württemberg with many
artefacts from the its dukes, counts and kings, as well as earlier
remants dating back to the
stone age. On
the
Karlsplatz side of the Old
Castle is a museum dedicated to the memory of
Claus Schenk Graf von
Stauffenberg, former resident of Stuttgart who attempted to
assassinate
Adolf Hitler on
20 July 1944.
Other leading museums in Stuttgart include:
- The History Museum (Haus der Geschichte, 1987),
examining local history, finds, the conflict between modern society
and its cultural history
- Stuttgart State
Museum of the Natural Sciences (SMNS) in Park Rosenstein housed in Castle
Rosenstein
(with an emphasis on biology and natural history)
and Löwentor Museum (paleontology and geology, home of the Steinheim Skull
and many unique fossils from the triassic , jurassic and
tertiary periods
- The
Mercedes-Benz Museum
(1923, moved in 2006), now the most visited museum
in Stuttgart (440,000 visits per year. The museum traces the
120 year history of the automobile from the legendary silver arrow
to the Mercedes-Benz brand of
today
- Stuttgart Art Museum
(Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, 2005), the number
two museum in Stuttgart in terms of visitors with a strong leaning
towards modern art (the foremost exhibition of Otto Dix works. The museum stands on
the corner of Schlossplatz, Stuttgart
in a huge glass cube, in strong contrast to the
surrounding traditional architecture.
- The
Porsche
Museum
(1976, reopened in 2008 on new
premises).
- Hegel House (Hegelhaus),
birthplace of the philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
which documents his life works
- Stuttgart Tram
Museum in Zuffenhausen, a display of historical vehicles dating
back to 1868
- Theodor Heuss House (Theodor-Heuss-Haus, 2002) in Killesbergpark
, a tribute to the life and times of the former
German president
- The North Station Memorial (Gedenkstätte am Nordbahnhof
Stuttgart) in memory of the 2000 or so Jewish holocaust victims
deported by the Nazis from the now disused
North Station

Churches
Stuttgart is the seat of a
Protestant
bishop (Protestant State Church in
Württemberg) and one of the two co-seats of the bishop of the
Roman Catholic diocese of
Rottenburg-Stuttgart. The Stuttgart-based
Pentecostal Biblische
Glaubens-Gemeinde is the largest place of worship (
megachurch) in Germany.
Demographics
The population of Stuttgart declined steadily between 1960
(637,539) and 2000 (586,978). Then low levels of unemployment and
attractive secondary education opportunities led to renewed
population growth, fuelled especially by young adults from the
former East Germany. For the
first time in decades, in 2006 there were also more births in the
city than deaths. In April 2008 there were 590,720 inhabitants in
the city.
In 2000, 22.8% of the population did not hold
German citizenship, in 2006 this had
reduced to 21.7%. The largest groups of foreign nationals were
Turks (22,025),
Greeks (14,341),
Italians
(13,978),
Croats (12,985),
Serbs (11,547) followed by immigrants from
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Portugal, Poland, Austria and France. 39% of
foreign nationals come from the
European
Union.
Religion
The religious landscape in Stuttgart changed in 1534 as a direct
result of the
Reformation.
Since
this time Baden-Württemberg
has been predominantly Protestant. However since 1975 the
number of Protestants in Stuttgart has dropped from around 300,000
to 200,000. In 2000, 33.7% of inhabitants were
Protestant and 27.4% were
Roman Catholic. 39% of the population
fall into 'other' categories: Muslims, Jews and those who either
follow no religion or follow a religion not accounted for in
official statistics.

Stuttgart Town Hall (Rathaus)
Unemployment
Unemployment in the
Stuttgart
Region is low compared to other metropolitan areas in Germany.
In
November 2008, before the annual winter rise, unemployment in the
Stuttgart Region stood at 3.8%, 0.1% lower than the rate for
Baden-Württemberg
, in February 2009 it was 4.7%. Unemployment
in the actual city of Stuttgart during the same periods stood at
5.2% and 6.0% (Nov 08 and Feb 09 respectively). By comparison:
unemployment for the whole of Germany stood at 7.1% (Nov 08) and
8.5% (Feb 09).
Crime rates
Stuttgart ranks as one of the safest cities in Germany. In 2003,
8535 crimes were committed in Stuttgart for every 100,000
inhabitants (versus the average for all German cities of 12,751).
Figures
for 2006 indicate that Stuttgart ranked second behind Munich
.
60% of
Stuttgart crimes were solved in 2003, ranking second behind
Nuremberg
.
Politics
Stuttgart's current
Bürgermeister
(mayor) is
Wolfgang Schuster of
the conservative
CDU party (Christian
Democratic Union of Germany).
City government past and present
When Stuttgart was run as a county (or within the
Duchy of Württemberg), it was governed by a type of
protectorate called a
Vogt appointed by the
Duke. After 1811 this role was fulfilled by a
City Director or 'Stadtdirektor'. After 1819 the community elected
its own community mayor or 'Schultheiß'. Since 1930 the title of
Oberbürgermeister (the nearest equivalent of which would be an
executive form of
Lord Mayor in English)
has applied to Stuttgart and all other Württemberg towns of more
than 20,000 inhabitants.
At the end of the
Second World War,
French administrators appointed the independent politician
Arnulf Klett as
Burgomaster, a role he fulfilled without
interruption until his death in 1974. Since this time Stuttgart has
been governed by the
CDU. The previous mayor
was
Manfred Rommel (son of perhaps
the most famous German
field marshal
of World War II,
Erwin Rommel).
As the
capital of Baden-Württemberg
, Stuttgart is an important political centre in
Germany and the seat of the State Parliament, or Landtag as well as all Baden-Württemberg
state departments.
In June 2009, for the first time the
Greens gained the most seats in a German city
with more than 500,000 inhabitants, effectively changing the
balance of power in the city council. For the first time since 1972
the
CDU no
longer held the most seats, toppling its absolute majority shared
with the
Independent Party and the
FDP. According to
the German newspaper
Die Welt, the main
reason for the Greens' victory was disgruntlement with the
controversial
Stuttgart 21 rail
project.
Recent election results
Party
Year |
Regional
1999 |
European
1999 |
State
2001 |
National
German parliament
2002 |
Regional
2004 |
European
2004 |
City Council
2009 (seats) |
National
German parliament
2005 |
European
2009 |
| CDU |
42.5 % |
42.9 % |
37.1 % |
35.1 % |
35.6 % |
37.4 % |
24.2 % (15) |
32.7 % |
29,1% |
| SPD |
24.5 % |
27.6 % |
36.3 % |
35.7 % |
24.4 % |
21.2 % |
17.0 % (10) |
32.0 % |
18,0% |
| FDP |
5.5 % |
6.2 % |
9.2 % |
8.5 % |
5.3 % |
7.7 % |
10.9 % (7) |
12.8 % |
14,5% |
| Green Party |
14.1 % |
14.3 % |
11.5 % |
16.2 % |
17.2 % |
22.1 % |
25.3 % (16) |
15.0 % |
25,0% |
| Independent |
5.6 % |
- |
- |
- |
8.5 % |
- |
10.3 % (6) |
- |
1,2% |
| Republicans |
3.6 % |
3.6 % |
4.7 % |
1.0 % |
4.0 % |
3.3 % |
2.5 % (1) |
0.8 % |
2,0% |
| PDS |
- |
- |
- |
1.4 % |
1.7 % |
1.9 % |
4.5 % (2) |
4.4 % |
4,5% |
| SÖS |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
4.6 % (3) |
- |
- |
| Others |
1.5 % |
5.4 % |
1.2% |
2.1 % |
3.4 % |
6.5 % |
0.7 % (0) |
2.3 % |
6,7 % |
| Election turnout |
59.1 % |
46.6 % |
65.5 % |
81.0 % |
54.0 % |
51.9 % |
48.7 % |
79.1 % |
52,3% |
Source =Stuttgart election results
Economy
The Stuttgart area is known for its high-tech industry. Some of its
most prominent companies include
Daimler
AG,
Porsche,
Bosch,
Celesio,
Hewlett-Packard and
IBM -- all of whom have their world or German
headquarters here.
Stuttgart
is home to Germany's ninth biggest exhibition centre, Stuttgart
Trade Fair
which lies on the city outskirts next to Stuttgart
Airport
. Hundreds of
SMEs are still based in
Stuttgart (the so-called '
Mittelstand'),
many still in family ownership with strong ties to the automotive,
electronics, engineering and high-tech industry.
Stuttgart has the highest general standard of prosperity of any
city in Germany.
Contact Air, a
regional airline and Lufthansa
subsidiary, is headquartered in
Stuttgart.
Its nominal GDP per capita is €57,100 and GDP purchasing power
parity (PPP) per capita is €55,400. Total GDP of Stuttgart is €33.9
billion, of which service sector contributes around 65.3%, industry
34.5%, and agriculture 0.2%.
The cradle of the automobile
The motorbike and four-wheel automobile were invented in Stuttgart
(by
Gottlieb Daimler and
Karl Benz and subsequently industrialised in 1887
by Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach at the
Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft).
As a result it is considered by many to be the starting point of
the worldwide automotive industry and is sometimes referred to as
"The cradle of the automobile".
Mercedes-Benz,
Porsche
and
Maybach are all produced in Stuttgart
and nearby towns. The very first prototypes of the
VW Beetle were manufactured in Stuttgart
based on a design by
Ferdinand
Porsche. Also automotive parts giants
Bosch and
Mahle
are based in the city. A number of auto-enthusiast magazines are
published in Stuttgart.
Science and R&D
The region currently has Germany's highest density of scientific,
academic and research organisations. No other region in Germany
registers so many patents and designs as Stuttgart.
Almost 45% of
Baden-Württemberg
scientists involved in R&D are based directly
in the Swabian capital. More than 11% of all German R&D
costs are invested in the Stuttgart Region (approximately 4.3
billion euros per year). In addition to several universities and
colleges (e.g.
University of Stuttgart
, University of Hohenheim
, Stuttgart
Institute of Management and Technology and several Stuttgart
Universities of Applied
Sciences
), the area is home to six Fraunhofer institutes, four institutes of
collaborative industrial research at local universities, two
Max-Planck institutes and a major
establishment of the German
Aerospace Centre .
Financial services
The Stuttgart Stock Exchange is the second largest in Germany
(after
Frankfurt). Many
leading companies in the financial services sector are
headquartered in Stuttgart with around 100 credit institutes in
total (e.g.
LBBW Bank, Wüstenrot &
Württembergische, Allianz
Life Assurance).
A history of wine and beer
Wine-growing in the area dates back to 1108
when, according to State archives, Blaubeuren Abbey
was given vineyards in Stuttgart as a gift from
'Monk Ulrich'. In the 17th century the city was the third
largest German wine-growing community in the
Holy Roman Empire. Wine remained
Stuttgart's leading source of income well into the 19th
century.
Stuttgart is still one of Germany's largest wine-growing cities
with more than 400 hectares of vine area, thanks in main to its
location at the centre of Germany's fourth largest wine region, the
Württemberg wine growing area
which covers and is one of only 13 official areas captured under
German
Wine law. The continuing importance
of wine to the local economy is marked every year at the annual
wine festival ('Weindorf').
Stuttgart also has several famous breweries such as
Stuttgarter Hofbräu,
Dinkelacker, and
Schwaben Bräu.
Education and research
Stuttgart and its region have been home to some significant figures
of German thought and literature, the most important ones being
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegel,
Friedrich Schiller and
Friedrich Hölderlin.
The city, in its engineering tradition as the cradle of the
automobile, has also always been a fruitful place of research and
innovation.
Stuttgart has Germany's second-highest
number of institutions (six) of applied research of the Fraunhofer Society (after Dresden
).
The city is not considered a traditional university city, but
nevertheless has a variety of institutions of higher education. The
most significant of them are:
- the
University
of Stuttgart
, it is the fourth biggest university in
Baden-Württemberg after Heidelberg
, Tübingen
and Freiburg. Founded in 1829, it
was a Technische Hochschule ("Technical University") until
1967, when it was renamed to "university". Its campus for
social sciences and architecture is located in the city centre,
near the main
train station
, while the natural science campus is in the
southwestern city district of Vaihingen. Historically, its
been especially renowned for its faculty of architecture (Stuttgarter Schule).
Today, its main focus is on engineering and other technical
subjects.
- the
University
of Hohenheim
, founded in 1818 as an academy for agricultural science and forestry. While these subjects are still
taught there today, its other focus today is on business
administration. It is located in Hohenheim quarter of the southern
city district of Plieningen.
- the
State University of Music and Performing
Arts Stuttgart
, founded in 1857, located in the city centre,
next to the Neue
Staatsgalerie
.
- the State
Academy of Visual Arts Stuttgart, one of the biggest art
colleges in Germany, founded in 1761, located in the Killesberg
quarter of the northern city district Stuttgart-Nord.
- the College of Media, founded
in 2001, a merger of the former College of Printing and
Publishing and the College of Librarianship, located
in Vaihingen.
- the University of Applied
Science Stuttgart, founded in 1832 as a college for
craftsmanship, university of applied science since 1971, located in
the city centre, near the University of Stuttgart's city-centre
campus.
- the University
of Cooperative Education Baden-Württemberg, founded in 1974,
with a focus on practical experience, subjects are business,
technology and social work.
Media and publishing
One of
the headquarters of the public Südwestrundfunk (SWR; Southwest
Broadcasting) channels (several radio and one TV channel;
regional focus on the southwestern German States of
Baden-Württemberg and Rhineland-Palatinate
) is located in Stuttgart (the other ones being
Baden-Baden
and Mainz
).
It also has a
Landesmedienzentrum, a State media
centre.
Furthermore, the city is a significant centre of
publishing and
specialist printing, with renowned
houses such as
Klett Verlag
(schoolbooks),
Kohlhammer Verlag,
Metzler Verlag and
Motor Presse having their head offices there.
The
Reclam Verlag is located in nearby Ditzingen
.
The newspapers
Stuttgarter
Zeitung (StZ; regional, with significant supra-regional,
national and international sections) and
Stuttgarter Nachrichten (StN;
regional) are published here as well as a number of smaller, local
papers such as
Cannstatter Zeitung.
Transport
Following the suit of other German cities
such as Berlin
, Cologne and Hanover
, on 1 March 2008 a Low Emission Zone (LEZ) came into effect
in Stuttgart with the aim of improving air quality. This
affects all vehicles entering the Stuttgart 'Environmental zone'
(
Umweltzone), including vehicles from abroad.
Local transport
Stuttgart has a
light rail system known
as the
Stuttgart Stadtbahn. In
the city centre and densely built-up areas, the Stadtbahn runs
underground. Stations are signposted with a 'U' symbol, which
stands for
Unabhängig (independent). Until 2007, Stuttgart
also operated regular
trams. Stuttgart also has
a large
bus network.
Stadtbahn lines and
buses are operated by the Stuttgarter Straßenbahnen AG
(SSB).
The outlying suburbs of Stuttgart and nearby towns are served by a
suburban railway system called the
Stuttgart S-Bahn, using tracks supplied by
the national
Deutsche Bahn AG
(DBAG).
A
peculiarity of Stuttgart is the Zahnradbahn
, a rack railway
that is powered by electricity and operates between Marienplatz in
the southern inner-city district of the city and the district of
Degerloch. It is the only urban
rack railway in Germany.
Stuttgart also has a Standseilbahn
, a funicular railway
that operates in the Heslach area and the forest cemetery
(Waldfriedhof). In Killesberg Park
, on a prominent hill overlooking the city, there is
the miniature railway run by
diesel (and on weekends with steam).
Rail links

Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof (main train
station)
Stuttgart is a hub in the
InterCityExpress and
InterCity networks of
Deutsche Bahn AG (DBAG), with through services
to most other major German cities.
It also operates international services
to Strasbourg
, Vienna
, Zürich
and Paris
(four
times a day, journey time 3 hours 40 minutes).
Long
distance trains stop at Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof
, the city's main line terminus which is also used
by regional DBAG RegionalExpress
and RegionalBahn for services to
stations in the Stuttgart metropolitan area. The local rail
networks (see above) operate underneath the terminus.
Stuttgart also has its own rail freight centre with
marshalling yards and a
container terminal in the Obertürkheim
area of
Hedelfingen.
Rail: The Stuttgart 21 project
After
years of political debate and controversy, plans were approved in
October 2007 to convert the main train station
to a through station. The
Stuttgart 21 project will include the
rebuilding of surface and underground lines connecting the station
in Stuttgart’s enclosed central valley with existing railway and
underground lines. Building work is scheduled to start in 2010 and
should be completed in 2020.

Stuttgart Airport
Air, road and waterway links
Stuttgart is served by Stuttgart
Airport
( , airport code STR), an
international airport approximately south of the city centre on
land belonging to the neighbouring town of Leinfelden-Echterdingen
. It takes 30 minutes to reach the
airport from the city centre using S-Bahn lines S2 or S3. Stuttgart
airport is Germany's only city airport with one runway. Despite
protests and local initiatives, surveys are currently underway to
assess the impact of a second runway.
The
airport is adjacent to the A8 Autobahn
, a major motorway which forms the southern
boundary of Stuttgart and runs from Luxemburg
via Saarbrücken
, Karlsruhe
, Stuttgart, Munich
and Salzburg
eventually to Vienna
. Other Autobahns leading to Stuttgart are
the A81 (Zürich
– Singen
– Würzburg
– Hamburg
) and A831.
Stuttgart has an inland port in Hedelfingen on the River Neckar
.
Sport
Football
As in the rest of Germany, football is the most popular sport in
Stuttgart which is home to 'The Reds' and 'The Blues'. 'The Reds',
VfB Stuttgart, are the most famous and
popular local club. An established team in the German
Bundesliga, VfB was founded in 1893
and has won five German titles since 1950, most recently in 1992
and 2007.
VfB is based at the Mercedes-Benz Arena
in Bad Cannstatt.
'The Blues',
Stuttgarter
Kickers, are the second most important football team.
They
currently play in the Regionalliga
Süd (fourth division) at the smaller Gazi Stadium
close to the TV
tower in Degerloch.
Other lower-division football teams are
Sportfreunde
Stuttgart - most famous for taking part in the
Sir Thomas Lipton Trophy in 1908,
considered the first
World Cup - and
FV Zuffenhausen.
Other sports
Stuttgart is home to VfL Pfullingen/Stuttgart, a local handball team that played in the national
league from 2001 to 2006 in the Schleyerhalle
. Its three-times German champion women's
volleyball team, CJD Feuerbach, has now
stopped playing for financial reasons but there is now
Stuttgart Volleyball Club with a
women's team in the 2nd southern league.
Stuttgart's
ice hockey team,
Stuttgarter EC plays at the Waldau ice rink
in
Degerloch. The strongest local
water polo team is
SV
Cannstatt which won the German championship in 2006.
Stuttgart has two American Football teams, the Stuttgart
Nighthawks American football team which plays in the Western Europe
Pro League and Stuttgart
Scorpions which plays in Stuttgarter Kickers' Gazi Stadium
.
TC Weissenhof is a Stuttgart-based
women's
tennis team that has won the German
championship four times. Another women's team is
TEC Waldau Stuttgart (German champions
in 2006).
HTC Stuttgarter Kickers is
one of the most successful
field hockey
clubs in Germany, having won the German championship in 2005 and a
European title in 2006.
Sporting events
Stuttgart has a reputation for staging major events, including the
FIFA World Cup 1974, the
UEFA Euro 1988, and the
World Championships in
Athletics 1993. It was also one of the twelve host cities of
the
FIFA World Cup 2006.
Six
matches, three of them second round matches, including the 3rd and
4th place playoff, were played at the Gottlieb Daimler Stadium
(today Mercedes-Benz Arena
). Stuttgart was also 2007 'European Capital
of Sports', hosting events such as the
UCI World Cycling Championships Road
Race and the
IAAF World
Athletics Final.
Other
famous sports venues are the Weissenhof tennis courts, where the
annual Mercedes Cup tennis tournament is played, the Porsche
Arena
(hosting tennis, basketball and handball) and the Schleyerhalle
(boxing, equestrianism/show
jumping, gymnastics, track cycling etc).
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
Stuttgart is
twinned with the
following cities:
Stuttgart also has
‘special friendships’ with the
following cities:
Notable residents
Notable people born in Stuttgart or residents who influenced the
history of the city:
Gallery
File:Stuttgart Weinsteige.jpg|
Stuttgart from Weinsteige Road
File:Stuttgart SchlossSolitude.jpg|
Castle Solitude
File:Fernsehturm stuttgart.jpg|
The 1956 TV
Tower
File:S
Weissenhof.jpg|
The Weissenhof Estate
in 1927
File:Schloß-Rosenstein.jpg|
Castle Rosenstein
File:Stuttgart Schlossplatz Nacht
new.jpg|
Neues Schloss
at night
File:Stuttgart-Hegel-Birthplace-2006-04-09a.jpg|
The Hegel Museum, birthplace of Hegel
Footnotes
- Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg
- The life and works of Christian Friedrich von Leins, catalogued
in the German National Library. [1]
- Population archives of Baden-Württemberg, German
PDF
- German publication by Michael Kienzle and Dirk Mende: "Wollt
Ihr den alten Uhland niederreiten?". Wie die 48er Revolution in
Stuttgart ausging. ("The downfall of the 48 Revolution") German
'Schillergesellschaft', Marbach am Neckar 1998 (vol. 44),[2]
- Stuttgart - Where Business Meets the Future. CD issued by
Stuttgart Town Hall, Department for Economic Development,
2005.
- Paul Sauer: "Württembergs letzter König. Das Leben Wilhelms
II.", German. Stuttgart 1994.
- McLachlan, p. 245
-
http://www.germany.co.uk/Food---Drink/Gourmet/article,Culinary-A-to-Z,1501.html
Famous German foods, see also [3]
- McLachlan, p. 254
- Peters, p. 430
- Official museum visitor statistics Stuttgart Statistics department (German)
- BGG International website http://www.bgg-stuttgart.de
- Statistiches Amt, Stuttgart, July 2007. PDF source:
www.stuttgart.de
- Stuttgart Journal, German article accessed
28-11-08.
- Stuttgart Zeitung 27 Feb 2008, regional unemployment
figures
- Stuttgart official statistics
- City of Hamburg website
- McLachlan, p. 243
- " Contact." Contact Air. Retrieved on 21 May 2009.
- Stuttgart - Where Business Meets the Future. CD issued by
Stuttgart Town Hall, Department for Economic Development, 2005
- Stuttgart city council FAQs (German) Umweltzone und Feinstaub-Plakette: Fragen und
Antworten
- PDF showing the areas of Stuttgart in the Low
Emission Zone
- Stuttgart S-Bahn, see
- Stuttgarter Nachrichten German newspaper report on planned 2nd
runway
- Lipton Trophy
- European
Capital of Sport 2007
References
External links