Darmstadt is a city in the Bundesland (federal state) of Hessen in Germany. As of 2005, its population was 138,500. The city is located in the southern part of the Rhine Main Metropolitan Area.
In the beginning of the 20th Century Darmstadt was an important centre for the art movement of Jugendstil, the German variant of Art Nouveau. Annual architectural competitions led to the building of many architectural treasures of this period.
Darmstadt's municipal area was extended in 1937 to include the neighbouring localities of Arheilgen Arheiligen and Eberstadt, and in 1938 the city was separated administratively from the surrounding district (Kreis). Its old city centre was largely destroyed in a British bombing raid of September 11 1944, which killed an estimated 12,300 inhabitants and rendered 66,000 homeless. Most of Darmstadt's 3000 Jews were killed by the Nazi regime between 1933 and 1945.
Darmstadt is home to many technology companies and research institutes, and has been promoting itself as a "city of science" since 1997. It is well known as the high-tech centre in the vicinity of Frankfurt Airport, with important activities in spacecraft operations, chemistry, information technology, biotechnology, telecommunications and mechatronics. The TU Darmstadt is one of the important technical institutes in Germany and is well known for its research and teaching in the Electrical, Mechanical and Civil Engineering disciplines.
The Luisenplatz, the largest square of the city, forms the centre of the town. Today it is surrounded by modern buildings. In 1844 the Ludwigsäule (called Langer Lui, meaning Long Ludwig), a 33-meter column commemorating Ludwig I, first Grand Duke of Hesse, was placed in the middle. The other large town square is the Marktplatz (see image) near the town hall.
Surviving examples of the Jugendstil period include the //www.darmstadt.de/en/sights/rosenhoehe/index.html Rosenhoehe, the //www.darmstadt.de/en/sights/mathildenhoehe/index.html Mathildenhoehe with the Hochzeitsturm tower, commonly known as the Five-Finger-Tower, the Russian Chapel and large exhibition halls as well as many private villas built by Jugendstil architects who had settled in Darmstadt. The Russian Chapel was built as a private chapel for the last Tzar of Russia, Nicholas II, whose wife Alexandra was born in Darmstadt.
The Hundertwasser building "Waldspirale" ("Forest Spiral") was built in Darmstadt between 1998 and 2000 by the famous Austrian architect and painter Friedensreich Hundertwasser.
The Jazz-Institut Darmstadt is Germany's largest publicly accessible Jazz archive.
The Internationales Musikinstitut Darmstadt, harboring one of the world's largest collections of post-war sheet music, also hosts the biannual Internationale Ferienkurse für Neue Musik, a summer school in contemporary classical music founded by Wolfgang Steinecke. A large number of avant-garde composers have attended and given lectures there, including Olivier Messiaen, Luciano Berio, Milton Babbitt, Pierre Boulez, John Cage, György Ligeti, Iannis Xenakis, Karlheinz Stockhausen and Mauricio Kagel.
The Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung (German Academy for Language and Poetry) provides writers and scholars with a place to research the German language. The Academy's annual Georg-Büchner-Preis, named in memory of Georg Büchner, is considered the most renowned literary award for writers of German language.
There is still U.S. army personnel in the Darmstadt region. Just outside the Darmstadt centrum, is a U.S. army village called "Lincoln Village". It is possible to listen to the military entertainment radio for the American troops in the region. The station is called AFN Europe. The base is to close around 2008-2010, and AFN Europe will be moved to Mannheim.
Literally translated, the German name "Darmstadt" means "City of the intestine". But that is just a coincidence, as the name derives from the medieval name "darmundestat", meaning "Place at the mouth of the Darmbach." The Darm(bach) is a small creek running through the city and flowing into the Modau, a small confluence of the river Rhine.
The chemical element Darmstadtium (atomic number: 110), first discovered at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung was named after the city in 2003, making Darmstadt only the fourth city with an element named after it (the other three are Ytterby, Sweden, Berkeley, California, and Dubna, Russia). Meitnerium (atomic number: 109) (1982), Hassium (atomic number: 108) (1984) and Roentgenium (atomic number: 111) (1994) and Ununbium (atomic number: 112) (1996) were also synthesized in this facility.
Darmstadt also happens to be one of the small number of cities worldwide which do not lie close to a river or coast.
Darmstadt | Cities in Hesse | Merck
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