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The following lists events that happened in 2015 in Germany.
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See also: | Other events of 2015 History of Germany • Timeline • Years |
Incumbents
editEvents
editJanuary
edit- 1 January - The 'Mindestlohngesetz' (German Minimum Wage Law) comes into effect: Most jobs now have to receive €8.50 per hour as a minimum wage.[1]
- 11 January - An arson attack on the newspaper Hamburger Morgenpost, which published Charlie Hebdo cartoons, leads to two arrests.[2]
- 21 January - Lutz Bachmann resigns as chairman of the anti-Islamic Pegida movement. As of 9 April, the position is still vacant.[3]
February
edit- 5–15 February - 65th Berlin International Film Festival
- 15 February: Hamburg state election, 2015 in Hamburg
March
edit- March - German company Dr Oetker buys German company Coppenrath & Wiese[4]
- 5 March - Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 2015
- 24 March - The crash of Germanwings Flight 9525 leads to widespread media coverage and public attention in Germany. 72 Germans die aboard the German machine that was intentionally crashed by its German co-pilot.[5]
- March – CeBIT in Hanover
- March – ITB Berlin in Berlin
- March – Leipzig Book Fair in Leipzig
April
edit- April – Hanover Messe in Hanover
- April – Deutscher Filmpreis in Berlin
May
edit- 10 May - Bremen state election, 2015 in Bremen
June
edit- 7–8 June – 41st G7 summit was held in Schloss Elmau, Bavaria.[6]
- June – Kiel Week in Kiel
- 29 June – A robot grabbed a man at a Volkswagen production plant in Baunatal and crushed him to death against a metal plate. Prosecutors considered bringing charges after the incident.[7]
August
edit- August – Hanse Sail in Rostock
- August- September – Internationale Funkausstellung Berlin in Berlin
September
edit- September – ILA Berlin Air Show in Berlin
- September – Gamescom in Cologne
- September – Frankfurt Motor Show in Frankfurt
- 30 September – Alex Springer Media Group is ordered to pay €635,000 compensation for damages for pain and suffering to journalist and weather presenter Jörg Kachelmann following their reporting of a case in which he was falsely accused of rape. The award was a record sum for such as case, though later reduced to €395,000 on appeal.[8]
- September - October – Oktoberfest in Munich
October
edit- October – Frankfurt Book Fair in Frankfurt
November
edit- November - German company Merck Group buys American company Sigma-Aldrich[9]
- November - Japanese company Hitachi Koki buys German company Metabo[10]
December
edit- 31 December – New Year's Eve sexual assaults in Germany
Deaths
edit- 1 January: Ulrich Beck (70), German sociologist (born 1944)
- 7 January: Diether Kressel (89), German painter (born 1925)[citation needed]
- 8 January: Hubert Markl (77), German biologist (born 1938)
- 20 January: Edgar Froese (71), German artist and electronic music pioneer (born 1944)
- 25 January - Ernst Träger, German judge (born 1926)
- 31 January: Udo Lattek (79), German football player, coach, and TV pundit (born 1935)
- 31 January: Richard von Weizsäcker (94), German politician (born 1920)
- 18 February: Hans F. Zacher, German jurist (born 1928)
- 26 February: Heinrich Windelen (93), German politician (born 1921)
- 26 February: Fritz J. Raddatz (83), German feuilletonist, essayist, biographer and romancier (born 1931)
- 1 March: Chris Welp (51), German professional basketball player (born 1964)
- 1 March: Wolfram Wuttke (53), German footballer (born 1961)
- 5 March: Karina Kraushaar, German actress (born 1971)
- 9 March: Frei Otto (90), German architect (born 1925)
- 26 March: Friedrich L. Bauer, German computer scientist (born 1924)
- 30 March: Helmut Dietl (70), German film director and author (born 1944)
- 31 March: Klaus Tschira (74), German entrepreneur (born 1940)
- 13 April: Günter Grass (87), German novelist and author (born 1927)
- 14 April: Klaus Bednarz (72), German journalist (born 1942)
- 9 May: Odo Marquard (86), German philosoph (born 1928)
- 19 May: Gerald Götting (91), German politician (born 1923)
- 20 May: Manfred Müller, German bishop or Roman Catholic Church (born 1926)
- 27 May: Elisabeth Wiedemann (88), German actress (born 1926)
- 3 June: Horst Brandstätter (81), German businessman (born 1933)
- 4 June: Hermann Zapf (96), German typeface designer and calligrapher (born 1918)
- 4 June: Edith Hancke (86), German film actress (born 1928)
- 9 June: James Last (86), German composer and big band leader (born 1929)
- 15 June: Harry Rowohlt (70), German writer and translator (born 1945)
- 21 Jun: Alexander Schalck-Golodkowski (83), German politician (born 1932)
- 22 June: Gabriele Wohmann (83), German novelist (born 1932)
- 13 July: Philipp Mißfelder (35), German politician (born 1979)
- 14 July: Wolf Gremm (73), German film director and screenwriter (born 1942)
- 3 August: Johanna Quandt (89), German entrepreneur (born 1926)
- 11 August: Utta Danella (95), German author (born 1920)
- 15 August: Max Greger (89), German jazz musician (born 1926)[citation needed]
- 17 August: Gerhard Mayer-Vorfelder (82), Vice President of the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) (born 1933)
- 20 August: Egon Bahr (93), German politician (born 1922)
- 20 August: Armin, Prince of Lippe, German nobleman (born 1924)
- 4 September: Max Kruse (93), German author (born 1921)
- 4 September: Rainer Kirsch, German writer and journalist (born 1934)
- 24 September: Ellis Kaut (94), German author of children's literature, best known for her creation of Pumuckl (born 1920)
- 29 September: Hellmuth Karasek (81), German journalist, literary critic and novelist (born 1934)
- 1 November: Günter Schabowski (86), German official of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) (born 1922)
- 5 November: Hans Mommsen (85), German historian (born 1930)
- 10 November: Helmut Schmidt (96), German chancellor (born 1918)
- 5 December: Wolfgang Sandner (66), German physicist (born 1949)
- 15 December: Stella Doufexis (47), German mezzo-soprano opera singer (born 1968)
- 19 December: Kurt Masur (88), German conductor (born 1927)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Germany: Parliament Passes Law on Minimum Wage". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
- ^ "India Today". 11 January 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
- ^ Connolly, Kate (21 January 2015). "Germany's Pegida leader steps down over Adolf Hitler photo". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
- ^ European Commission (17 June 2015) [12 May 2015]. Case M.7598 — Dr. Oetker/Coppenrath & Wiese (PDF) (REGULATION (EC) No 139/2004 MERGER PROCEDURE, Article 6(1)(b) NON-OPPOSITION M.7598). EUR-Lex: 32015M7598. Retrieved 6 September 2024.
- ^ "No survivors from German airliner crash in French Alps". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
- ^ "Germany to hold 2015 G8 summit at Alpine spa". AP. 23 January 2014.
- ^ Robot kills worker at Volkswagen plant in Germany Archived 7 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian, 2015-07-01.
- ^ "'Bild' publisher ordered to pay 'record sum' to Kachelmann | DW | 30.09.2015". Deutsche Welle.
- ^ Kroll, David. "Merck KGaA (German Merck) Buys Sigma-Aldrich For $17B". Forbes. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
- ^ "Hitachi Buys German Power Tool Maker Metabo For Reported $180 Million". Industrial Distribution. 17 November 2015. Retrieved 5 May 2024.