MarketTimeline of Hamburg
Company Profile

Timeline of Hamburg

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Hamburg, Germany.

Prior to 16th century
• 831 – Bishopric established. • 845 – Town sacked by Norsemen. • 1189 • Adolf III of Holstein gets charter from Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I that gives Hamburg a court, jurisdiction, and fishing rights. • St. Peter's Church built (approximate date). • 1190 – Alster dam installed. • 1201 – Hamburg occupied by forces of Valdemar II of Denmark. • 1223 – Archbishopric relocated from Hamburg to Bremen. • 1241 – Lübeck-Hamburg alliance established. • 1410 – Constitution of Hamburg established. • 1412 – . • 1418 – St. Peter's Church rebuilt (approximate date). • 1479 – (public library) established in the Town Hall. • 1491 – Printing press in operation. • 1500 – City expands its borders. ==16th–18th centuries==
16th–18th centuries
• 1510 – Hamburg becomes an imperial city of the Holy Roman Empire. • 1529 • Protestant Reformation. • Council of citizens established. • Johanneum (college) founded. • 1536 – Hamburg joins Schmalkaldic League. • 1558 – Hamburg Stock Exchange established. • 1567 – Trade with the Company of Merchant Adventurers of London established. • 1590 – Berenberg Bank founded. • 1615 – City walls extended around Hamburg-Neustadt. • 1619 – Bank of Hamburg founded. • 1630 – Bremen–Lübeck–Hamburg defensive alliance formed. • 1654 – in use. • 1663 – Erbauliche Monaths Unterredungen magazine begins publication. • 1665 – Hamburg Chamber of Commerce founded. • 1669 • St. Michael's Church built. • (ship) launched. • 1678 – Oper am Gänsemarkt (opera house) opens; premiere of Theile's opera Adam und Eva. • 1679 – Coffee house in business. • 1705 – Premiere of Handel's opera Almira. • 1710 – established. • 1712 – Plague. • 1735 – (business library) founded. • 1767 – Hamburgische Entreprise (theatre) established. • 1789 – Clubbs der Freundschaft founded. • 1790 – United States consulate established. • 1792 – formed. • 1799 – H. J. Merck & Co. in business. ==19th century==
19th century
1800s–1840s • 1805 – (education society) founded. • 1811 • 9th French-Polish Uhlan Regiment founded in Hamburg. • City becomes capital of the French Bouches-de-l'Elbe department. • 1814 – Hamburg Citizen Militia and Hamburg Police formed. • 1815 – 8 June: City becomes a member state of the German Confederation. • 1828 – Hamburg Philharmonic Society formed. • 1833 – Rauhes Haus founded. • 1834 – Johanneum building constructed. • 1835 – Coat of arms of Hamburg redesigned. • 1838 – English Church built. • 1839 – Verein für Hamburgische Geschichte (local history society) founded. • 1840 • Gymnasium founded. • 1846 – Berliner Railway Station established. • 1847 • Hamburg America Line in business. • Patriotic Club building constructed. • Pestalozzi-Stiftung Hamburg founded • 1848 – in business. • 1855 – January: Flood. • 1859 • built. • Hamburg Frauenchor (women's choir) founded. • 1861 • Museum Godeffroy opens. • Population: 178,841. • 1863 • '''' newspaper in publication. • Rebuilt St. Nicholas' Church dedicated. • 1865 • Lübeck–Hamburg railway begins operating; Lübecker Railway Station established. • (bridge) built. • 1866 • Horsecar tram begins operating. • (railway station) established. • 21 August: City becomes part of the North German Confederation. • 1867 – Trabrennbahn Bahrenfeld (horse racetrack) built. • 1868 – St. Georg becomes part of city. • 1869 – Horner Rennbahn (horse racetrack) and Kunsthalle built. • 1871 • City becomes part of the German Empire. • Population: 240,251. • (education society) branch established. • 1872 – Venloer Railway Station established. • 1873 • Photographic Society founded. • Frei Hafen bridge constructed. • 1874 – Hagenbeck's zoo opens. • 1877 • Ohlsdorf Cemetery established near city. • Blohm + Voss shipbuilders in business near city. • 1878 – Museum for Art and Industry founded. • 1879 • headquartered in Hamburg. • Holsten Brewery in business. • 1880 – Steinway & Sons piano factory in operation. • 1883 – Speicherstadt (warehouse district) construction begins in the Port of Hamburg. • 1887 • '''' newspaper begins publication. • Sport-Club Germania Hamburg founded. • Central post office built. • 1888 • Hamburg joins German Customs Union. • Harbourworks and iron bridge constructed. • Free Port opens. • May: Gas-worker strike. • Population: 323,923. • 1891 – Natural History Museum built. • 1892 • . • German Open Tennis Championships begin. • Hamburger Dom (funfair) relocated to Heiligengeistfeld fair ground. • 1894 – St. Pauli becomes part of city. • 1896 • November: Dockworker strike. • (fish market) rebuilt. • 1897 – Hamburg Rathaus (city hall) built. • 1898 – Hamburg-Altona railway station opens. • 1899 – (library) founded. • 1900 • Institute for Maritime and Tropical Diseases opens. • Shipbuilding school founded. ==20th century==
20th century
1900–1945 • 1901 – Civil law courts built. • 1904 – American Businessmen's Club of Hamburg founded. • Gewerkschaftlich-Genossenschaftliche Versicherungsaktiengesellschaft (insurance firm) in business. • 1922 – Museum of Hamburg History opens. • 1923 – Labour and Socialist International founded in Hamburg. • 1924 • Nordische Rundfunk radio begins broadcasting. • Chilehaus built. • 1925 • Helms-Museum and Hamburg School of Astrology established. • Population: 1,079,126. • 1926 – Botanischer Sondergarten Wandsbek (garden) established. • 1930 • Planten un Blomen (park) created. • Population: 1,145,124. • 1933 • Nazis seize control of the city and Carl Vincent Krogmann becomes mayor. • Hamburger Flugzeugbau (aircraft company) in business. • Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp founded. • 1934 • Bürgerschaft abolished. • Gau Hamburg established. • Transmitter Hamburg-Billstedt begins operating. • 1937 • major expansion of the land of Hamburg per the Greater Hamburg Act: • the cities Altona, Wandsbek, and Harburg-Wilhelmsburg join • and the cities Geesthacht and Cuxhaven (including Neuwerk) leave the territory of the Land Hamburg. • 1938 – Neuengamme concentration camp established by SS. • 1939 – Bombing of Hamburg in World War II begins. • 1940 – April: Oflag X-D prisoner-of-war camp for Allied officers established. • 1943 • May: Langer Morgen forced labour camp for men established. • 7 August: Main base of the 2nd SS construction brigade (forced labour camp) relocated from Bremen to Hamburg. • 1944 • April: 2nd SS construction brigade relocated to Berlin. • July: Hamburg-Veddel subcamp of the Neuengamme concentration camp established. The prisoners were Jewish women. • 1 September: Hamburg-Wandsbek subcamp of Ravensbrück reorganized into a subcamp of the Neuengamme concentration camp. • 13 September: Hamburg-Neugraben and Hamburg-Sasel subcamps of the Neuengamme concentration camp established. The prisoners were Jewish women. • 13 September: Women prisoners of the Hamburg-Veddel subcamp moved to other subcamps in Hamburg and Wedel. • 27 September: Hamburg-Eidelstedt subcamp of the Neuengamme concentration camp established. The prisoners were Jewish women. • October: Hamburg-Finkenwerder subcamp of the Neuengamme concentration camp established. The prisoners were mostly Soviet, Polish, Belgian, French and Danish men. • November: Subcamp of the Neuengamme concentration camp established by the SS at the Spaldingstraße for men of various nationalities. • L'Obstinée masonic lodge established by Belgian POWs in the Oflag X-D POW camp. • 1945 • 8 February: Hamburg-Neugraben subcamp of Neuengamme dissolved and Hamburg-Tiefstack subcamp founded. Surviving prisoners moved from the Hamburg-Neugraben to the Hamburg-Tiefstack subcamp. • March: 250 Romani and Sinti women deported to the Hamburg-Langenhorn subcamp of Neuengamme from the Ravensbrück concentration camp. • Constitution of Hamburg ratified. • 1955 – Hamburg State Opera building opens. • 1957 • Fazle Omar Mosque built. • British Army School and Hamburg Symphony Orchestra established. • 1958 – Hamburg Atlantic Line in business. • 1959 – Kaiserkeller night club opens. • 1960 – August: English rock band The Beatles begin performing in Hamburg. • 1961 – Population: 1,840,543. • 1962 • Spiegel scandal. • North Sea flood of 1962. • 1963 • Millerntor-Stadion (stadium) opens. • St. James' Church restored. • Alter Botanischer Garten Hamburg greenhouses built. • 1964 - Deutsches Übersee-Institut headquartered in Hamburg. • 1965 • Gruner + Jahr publisher in business. • Hamburg Transport Association established. • Imam Ali Mosque built. • NDR Fernsehen (television) headquartered in city. • 1967 – Eros Center brothel in business on the Reeperbahn. • 1968 • Cherry Blossom Festival begins. • Alsterdorfer Sporthalle and Gruenspan music club open. • 1969 – waived older rights on harbour estate in Cuxhaven in favour of Neuwerk and Scharhörn to build an offshore harbour. • 1970 • Hamburg University of Applied Sciences founded. • Population: 1,793,640. • 1971 – • 1978 • July: City hosts the 1978 World Fencing Championships. • Technical University of Hamburg founded. • 1979 • Botanischer Garten Hamburg (garden) opens. • Werkstatt 3 co-operative founded in Ottensen. • 1985 • Birdland jazz club opens. • Museum der Arbeit established. • 1986 • Chaos Computer Club headquartered in city. • Radio Hamburg begins broadcasting. • Hamburg Marathon begins. • Brokdorf Nuclear Power Plant commissioned near city. • 1988 • Center for Science and International Security at the University of Hamburg founded. and Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Hamburg established. • 1996 – City website online (approximate date). • 1997 – Ortwin Runde becomes mayor. • 1998 • Afghan Museum established. • Am Rothenbaum (sport venue) built. • 2000 • Bucerius Law School established. • International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea headquartered in city. ==21st century==
21st century
• 2001 • Long Night of Museums begins. • Container Terminal Altenwerder opens. • Ole von Beust becomes mayor. • 2002 • 4 November: Bambule eviction. • O2 World arena opens. • Bucerius Kunst Forum (art gallery) founded. • 2003 – Hamburg Pride founded. • 2004 • Hamburg Summit: China meets Europe begins. • Major Records in business. • 2005 – eVendi Arena (for American football) built. • 2006 – German Institute of Global and Area Studies established. • 2007 • World Future Council and headquartered in city. • 29 May: Anti-globalization protest. • Dockville music festival. • Elbphilharmonie construction begins. • 2008 • HafenCity district and established. • (industrial public relations event) begins. • Museum für Kunst und Kultur an der Elbe opens in Jenisch House. • 2009 • International Chamber Music Competition Hamburg begins. • Student protest for education reform. • 2010 – Christoph Ahlhaus becomes mayor. • 2011 • Olaf Scholz (SPD) becomes mayor. • European Union, Latin America and the Caribbean Foundation headquartered in city. • 2012 – Population: 1,813,587. • 2013 – December: 2013–14 Hamburg demonstrations begin. • 2015 – 2015 Hamburg Olympics referendum. • 2016 – 31 October: Elbphilharmonie concert hall is officially completed. • 2017 • 7 July: G20 summit meeting held. • December: City hosts the 2017 World Women's Handball Championship. • 2018 - Peter Tschentscher (SPD) becomes mayor. • 2023 – Shooting. ==See also==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com