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Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg
Free and Hanseatic City of HamburgHamburg, Germany.
Top Questions
  • Where is Hamburg located?
  • What is Hamburg famous for?
  • How is Hamburg important for transportation in Germany?
  • What is the Port of Hamburg, and why is it significant?
  • What are some popular cultural attractions in Hamburg?
  • How has Hamburg’s history shaped the city today?

News

German warships ‘sabotaged by workers’ at Hamburg port Feb. 3, 2026, 11:09 PM ET (The Telegraph)
Germany news: Hamburg police investigating subway deaths Jan. 31, 2026, 12:00 AM ET (Deutsche Welle)
Germany news: Hamburg hosting North Sea energy summit Jan. 26, 2026, 5:34 AM ET (Deutsche Welle)
Hamburg
Hamburg

Hamburg, city andLand (state), located on the Elbe River in northernGermany. It is the country’s largest port and commercial centre.

The Free and Hanseatic City (Freie und Hansestadt) of Hamburg is the second smallest of the 16Länder of Germany, with a territory of only 292 square miles (755 square km). It is also the most populous city in Germany afterBerlin and has one of the largest and busiest ports inEurope. The official name, which covers both theLand and the town, reflects Hamburg’s long tradition of particularism and self-government. Hamburg andBremen (the smallest of theLänder) are, in fact, the only German city-states that still keep something of theirmedieval independence. The characteristic individuality of Hamburg has been proudly maintained by its people so that, in many spheres of public and private life, the city’sculture has retained its uniqueness and has notsuccumbed to the general trend of standardization.

Hamburg, nonetheless, is acosmopolitan city in its outlook. Although comparatively few foreigners live there, many pass through it. The city has dealings with a large number of nations, and it has more consulates than any other city in the world, exceptNew York City.Shipping and trade have been Hamburg’s lifeblood for centuries. Not surprisingly, its harbour has remained the city’s most important feature.

Among Hamburg’s many other facets are a network of canals reminiscent of Amsterdam; lakes, parks, and verdant suburbs full of gracious houses; elegant shopping arcades; richly endowed museums; and a vibrant cultural life. These are among the attractions that have contributed to a growing tourist industry. Although it was badly damaged during World War II, Hamburg has succeeded in maintaining a sense of old-world grace alongside itsthriving commercial life. Area 292 square miles (756 square km). Pop. (2011) 1,706,696; (2021 est.) 1,853,935.

Physical and human geography

The landscape

Site

Hamburg stands at the northern extremity of thelower Elbe valley, which at that point is between 5 and 8 miles (8 and 13 km) wide. To the southeast of the old city, the Elbe divides itself into two branches, theNorderelbe and theSüderelbe, but these branches meet again oppositeAltona, just west of the old city, to form theUnterelbe, which flows into theNorth Sea some 65 miles downstream from Hamburg. Two other rivers flow into the Elbe at Hamburg—the Alster from the north and the Bille from the east.

Tower Bridge over the Thames River in London, England. Opened in 1894. Remains an Important Traffic Route with 40,000 Crossings Every Day.
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The city layout

The nucleus of the city is theAltstadt (Old Town), the former medieval settlement, bounded by the harbour and by a string of roads that follow the line of the old fortifications. Within this core there are few great buildings to remind the visitor of the city’s thousand-year history apart from the five principal churches—Sankt Jacobi, Sankt Petri, Sankt Katharinen, Sankt Nikolai, and Sankt Michaelis—and none of these is in its original condition. Fire has destroyed almost all the older residences and warehouses, and what was left untouched byconflagration has often been rebuilt for contemporary purposes. There are, however, a few scattered survivals of older buildings. Moreover, the layout of the old city centre can still be detected in some of the ancient street names and in theFleete (canals), which connect the Alster with the docks on theElbe. One of the best views of the inner city is to be enjoyed from the Lombardsbrücke (Lombard Bridge), whence the towers of the five churches can be seen rising high against a skyline that is still relatively harmonious despite the presence of modern skyscrapers.

At the heart of Hamburg is a lake, measuring 455 acres (184 hectares), formed by thedamming of the Alster and divided by the Lombardsbrücke into the Binnenalster (Inner Alster) and the Aussenalster (Outer Alster). Around the latter are elegant suburbs such as Rotherbaum, Harvesterhude, and Uhlenhorst. Many waterways, navigable by pleasure boats, run into the Aussenalster.

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Architecture

The last intact ensemble of traditional Hamburg architecture is to be found in theDeichstrasse, one side of which backs onto the Nikolai canal. Its tall, narrow houses, resembling those ofAmsterdam, were originally built from the 17th through the 19th century. It was in one of them, number 42, now a restaurant, that the devastating fire of 1842 broke out. Afterward the houses were rebuilt in the old style. Today the street is a protected area, and in recent years it has undergoneextensive restoration. Many traditional restaurants are found there.

Another survival of older architecture is in the Krameramtswohnungen, near Sankt Michaelis. Consisting of two half-timbered brick buildings on either side of a narrow courtyard, it was built as a series of dwellings for the widows of shopkeepers and is the only surviving 17th-century construction of its kind in the city. Thoroughly restored between 1971 and 1974, it now forms a delightful secluded alleyway housing a restaurant, small shops, and a branch of the Museum für Hamburgische Geschichte (Museum of Hamburg History).

Of Hamburg’s five great churches, the most imposing is probablySankt Michaelis, an 18th-century Baroque-style Protestant church with a rich white-and-gold interior. It was destroyed by fire in 1906, rebuilt, devastated again duringWorld War II, and restoredyet again after the war.

The prosperous years 1890–1910 brought an abundance of fine architecture, examples of which can be seen in the spacious and elegant patrician houses around the Aussenalster. Many of these are now occupied by consulates. Another period of architectural flowering came in the 1920s and 1930s when there was a revival of the use of the traditional north German dark red brick as a building material, led by the architects Fritz Höger and Fritz Schumacher. A good example is Höger’s Chilehaus, a massive office building constructed between 1922 and 1924.

Inside Germany's booming city: Hamburg's urban development
Inside Germany's booming city: Hamburg's urban developmentLearn about the German development project known as HafenCity Hamburg, an example of urban planning.
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More recently Hamburg hasacquired its quota of starkly functional modern buildings, such as the Congress Centrum (Congress Centre; opened 1973) and the Fernsehturm (Television Tower), 271.5 metres (891 feet) high, but there is now a strong tendency to renovate old houses rather than to demolish and build afresh. Thus the townscape of Hamburg as a whole has a human quality lacking in many German cities.


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