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  • The history of Germany’s fifth largest city begins

  • on a small island in the middle of a swamp sometime in the 1st century AD,

  • with the Romans, although they usually avoided this place.

  • The remains of what they built also bear traces of a later settlement

  • coinciding with the first named reference to Frankfurt in 794.

  • Today, this is the site of the maginificent St Bartholomew’s Cathredral,

  • continually extended and altered over the centuries:

  • the oldest parts dating from the 13th century,

  • with the most recent from 1877,

  • unless you count the post-war reconstruction.

  • This oldest part of Frankfurt includes themerberg,

  • with its large square, its timberframed houses,

  • and magnificent City Hall.

  • This is the only place in central Frankfurt that youll find such buildings,

  • as the old city was subjected to a steady vandalism from the 19th century onwards,

  • with historic houses being swept aside for new roads.

  • All the buildings marked in purple on this map, for example,

  • were torn down to make way for the new Braubachstrasse.

  • One building from this era, St Paul’s Church, completed in 1833,

  • is most famous not in its primary function as a church,

  • but as host to the National Assembly of 1848 following the March Revolution of that year.

  • This was the first democratically elected national parliament in Germany,

  • and the first official use of the black, red and gold flag.

  • Due to the cold, they had to relocate during the winter,

  • while one of Germany’s first central heating systems was installed.

  • But by the following March, the revolution had failed anyway,

  • and the building returned to the Church.

  • What 19th-century town planners failed to achieve

  • was finished off by the bombers of the Second World War;

  • and even the buildings on themerberg are reconstructions,

  • with the sole exception of Haus Wertheym.

  • But some of the worst examples of post-war architecture are now being demolished.

  • The plan is to recreate at least a small part of mediaeval Frankfurt.

  • Another rare piece of old Frankfurt is a small section of the romanesque city wall,

  • built in 1180: the only section still surviving.

  • It so happens that it’s at the northern end of the infamous Jewish ghetto,

  • which was built just outside the wall in 1462, originally for about 100 people.

  • The Jewish population grew until the ghetto was filled to capacity,

  • and then continued to grow

  • until almost 3,000 people were living in Europe’s most densely populated street.

  • It wasn’t until the 19th century that Jews were allowed to live elsewhere.

  • Today, the street no longer exists, although some remains were discovered

  • during the construction of the modern museum of the Jewish ghetto.

  • The old Jewish market place, which has undergone many name changes recently,

  • still exists, with a memorial to the victims of Nazi atrocities.

  • In fact, the Jews of Frankfurt never had an easy time of it.

  • The Fettmilch Uprising of 1612, for example,

  • saw the middle classes, led by baker Vinzenz Fettmilch,

  • take out their frustrations on the Jews.

  • In 1614 they attacked, drove out the Jews, and looted their businesses.

  • Not until 1616 was order restored, Fettmilch executed,

  • and the Jews able to return under military escort.

  • Happily, although Frankfurt was one of the last European cities to force Jews to live in ghettos,

  • it was one of the first to grant its Jews completely equal rights.

  • Today, the Jewish community numbers about 7,000.

  • By the time the Jewish ghetto was being built, Frankfurt had long outgrown its old wall,

  • and a new system of defences was built in the 14th century.

  • Today, the course of this wall is traced by modern roads:

  • the Eschersheim Gate is the only actual relic of this wall.

  • The main street in this part of town is simply calledZeil”.

  • And this is where serious shopping takes place.

  • Just off the Zeil, by the side-entrance of a modern shopping centre,

  • is a simplified reconstruction of the Thurn-und-Taxis Palace.

  • It was originally built as the headquarters of the Imperial Mail,

  • the first national mail service of the Holy Roman Empire,

  • founded and run by the aristocratic Thurn und Taxis dynasty.

  • The Zeil ends at the Hauptwache, the old headquarters of the city militia.

  • The present building was originally built in 1729, and included a prison.

  • In the 1960s it had to be painstakingly dismantled

  • to allow the construction of an underground railway station,

  • and then rebuilt.

  • Nearby is St Catherine’s Church, built in 1681, and Frankfurt’s largest Lutheran church.

  • This is where the parents of Germany’s most famous poet, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe,

  • were married, in 1748.

  • Goethe himself may have been baptised there, although this isn’t certain.

  • Continuing on from there, you reach the street known asFressgass” — “Gluttony Alley” —

  • famous for its eateries.

  • It links the Hauptwache with the magnificent Old Opera House,

  • which seems like the ideal evening if youre torn between high culture and steak.

  • It’s also very handy for the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.

  • Frankfurt has been an important centre for financial trade since the Middle Ages.

  • The Stock Exchange was founded in 1585

  • to regulate an industry already hundreds of years old.

  • Today, Frankfurt is one of the world’s most important financial centres,

  • and is where the German Federal Bank and the European Central Bank have their headquarters.

  • This explains Frankfurt’s skyline,

  • unusual for Europe in having a relatively large number of skyscrapers

  • a “skyscraperbeing defined as a building over 100 metres high

  • seen here from across the river Main.

  • This in turn explains why Frankfurt is sometimes calledBankfurtorMainhattan”.

  • Nearby is the place that started it all, back in the 11th century:

  • the Frankfurt Trade Fair.

  • And surprisingly, this bustling part of Frankfurt

  • appears to provide something of a home to some wildlife.

  • This is also where Frankfurt’s impressive railway terminus is situated,

  • opened in 1888, and one of the biggest of its kind in Europe.

  • Not bad, considering the city has less than a million inhabitants.

  • Of course, you can try to drive into Frankfurt,

  • but it’s not the easiest of German cities to be a motorist in.

  • Public transport may be a better option, but Frankfurt’s is a bit chaotic.

  • Some major German cities have an U-Bahn system

  • which runs either underground or on elevated tracks;

  • others have a Stadtbahn consisting of trams going into tunnels in the centre.

  • Frankfurt has the worst of both worlds.

  • Back in the 60s, the idea was to build an U-Bahn system,

  • but instead of running a half-finished U-Bahn,

  • to allow trams to use the tunnels.

  • But the system was never completed,

  • and this means, in the outer districts, running U-Bahn trains at street level.

  • And sometimes running trains that are basically old converted trams.

  • It seemed like a good idea at the time,

  • but now Frankfurt is stuck with an U-Bahn using overhead power lines

  • requiring expensively high-roofed tunnels and stations,

  • and which is also notorious for delays and accidents.

  • Historically, Frankfurt has always prided itself

  • on being a city of trade rather than manufacturing,

  • and traditionally sneers at its more industrial neighbours, especially Offenbach.

  • In that respect, there’s been no change.

  • And yet, even though it is about 2,000 years old,

  • Frankfurt has continued to evolve,

  • so that what we now see is mainly a product of the last 200 years.

  • In another 200 years, who knows what the city will look like?

The history of Germany’s fifth largest city begins

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行き先: フランクフルト・アム・マイン (Destination: Frankfurt am Main)

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    Ya Ping Gong に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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