2012 in Germany explained
Events in the year 2012 in Germany.
Incumbents
Federal level
State level
Events
January – June
July – December
- 3 July – Heinz Fromm resigns as Head of the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, following controversies over the organisation's handling of the far-right.
- early July – Success for German players in the Wimbledon tennis Singles: In the Men's section, Florian Mayer and Philipp Kohlschreiber reach the quarter-finals; in the Women's section, Sabine Lisicki reaches the quarter-finals, and Angelique Kerber reaches the semi-finals.
- 13 July – FIFA President Sepp Blatter alleges that there were irregularities when Germany won the right to host the 2006 FIFA World Cup.
- 31 July - Germany wins its first Gold Medals of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, in the Equestrian sport, taking team gold, and with Michael Jung taking individual gold.
- 9–12 August – Hanse Sail in Rostock
- 31 August – 5 September – Internationale Funkausstellung Berlin in Berlin
- 11–16 September – ILA Berlin Air Show in Berlin
- 12 September - The German Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe ruled, that the new European bailout fund was inline with the German constitution.
- 15–19 September – Gamescom in Cologne
- 18–23 September – photokina in Cologne
- 20–27 September – Frankfurt Motor Show in Frankfurt
- 21 September - JadeWeserPort opened.[3]
- 22 September – 7 October – Oktoberfest in Munich
- 28 September - The SPD selects Peer Steinbruck as its candidate to face Angela Merkel in the German federal election, 2013.
- 4 October - Michael Schumacher announces his retirement from Formula One.
- 5 October - Footballer Michael Ballack announces an end to his playing career.
- 10–14 October – Frankfurt Book Fair, with special guest New Zealand.
- 12 November - 2012 MTV Europe Music Awards in Frankfurt
- 25 November - In Formula One, German driver Sebastian Vettel wins the Drivers' Championship for the third consecutive year.
- 26 November - A fire at a workshop for disabled people in Southwestern Germany kills 14 people.
- 6 December - German officials tried to outlaw the Nationalist National Democratic Party of Germany, with the interior ministers of all 16 states recommending a ban. The Federal Constitutional Court is yet to vote on the recommendation.[4]
- 10 December - An explosive device is found, and made safe, at the main railway station in Bonn.
- 25 December - Joachim Gauck makes his first Christmas address as President.
- Date unknown: German company Volkswagen Group acquired Italian company Ducati and German companies MAN and Porsche.
Deaths
January
- 2 January – Helmut Müller-Brühl, 78, conductor (born 1933)
- 3 January – Willi Entenmann, 68, footballer and coach (born 1943)
- 4 January – Xaver Unsinn, 82, ice hockey player (born 1929)
- 8 January – Bernhard Schrader, chemist and academic (born 1931)
- 10 January – Kyra T. Inachin, 43, historian (born 1968)
- 13 January – Guido Dessauer, 96, paper engineer and art collector (born 1915)
- 17 January – Julius Meimberg, 95, Luftwaffe flying ace (born 1917)
- 18 January – Georg Lassen, 96, naval officer (born 1915)
- 24 January – Vadim Glowna, 70, actor and film director (born 1941)
- 25 January – Veronica Carstens, 88, former First Lady (born 1923)
February
- 1 February – Lutz Philipp, 71, Olympic athlete (born 1940)
- 2 February – Paul Consbruch, 81, Roman Catholic prelate (born 1930)
- 8 February – Gunther Plaut, 99, German-born Canadian rabbi and author (born 1912)
- 20 February – Imanuel Geiss, 81, historian (born 1931)
- 25 February – Louisiana Red, 79, American blues musician (born 1932)
- 27 February – Werner Guballa, 67, Roman Catholic bishop (born 1944)
March
April
- 5 April – Ferdinand Alexander Porsche, 76, entrepreneur and auto designer (born 1935)
- 6 April - Heinz Kunert, German engineer (born 1927)
- 9 April – Ivan Nagel, 80, theatre director (born 1931)
- 10 April – Barbara Buchholz, 52, musician and composer (born 1959)
- 12 April – Manfred Orzessek, 78, footballer (born 1933)
- 18 April – Fritz Theilen, 84, resistance activist (born 1927)
- 20 April – Peter Carsten, 83, actor (born 1928)
- 21 April – Heinz Jentzsch, 92, racehorse trainer (born 1920)
May
- 3 May – Felix Werder, 90, German-born Australian composer (born 1922)
- 10 May – Horst Faas, 79, photojournalist (born 1933)
- 10 May – Gunther Kaufmann, 64, actor (born 1947)
- 12 May – Ernst Josef Fittkau, 75, entomologist (born 1927)
- 12 May – Fritz Ursell, 89, German-born British mathematician (born 1923)
- 15 May – Peter Koslowski, 59, philosopher and academic (born 1952)
- 15 May – Arno Lustiger, 88, Polish-born writer and historian of Judaism (born 1922)
- 16 May – Hans Geister, 83, athlete (born 1928)
- 18 May – Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, 86, baritone and conductor (born 1925)
- 18 May – Hans-Dieter Lange, 85, television journalist (born 1926)
- 19 May - Gerhard Hetz 69, swimmer (born 1942)
- 24 May – Klaas Carel Faber, 90, Dutch-born war criminal, died in Ingolstadt (born 1922)
- 27 May – Friedrich Hirzebruch, 84, mathematician (born 1927)
- 30 May – Gerhard Pohl, 74, politician (born 1937)
June
- 9 June – Audrey Arno, 70, pop singer (born 1942)
- 12 June – Margarete Mitscherlich-Nielsen, 94, psychoanalyst (born 1917)
- 14 June – Karl-Heinz Kammerling, 82, academic teacher of pianists (born 1930)
- 18 June – Lina Haag, 105, anti-fascist activist during World War II. (born 1907)
- 20 June – Heinrich IV, Prince Reuss of Kostritz, 92, nobleman (born 1919)
- 24 June – Gad Beck, 88, Resistance activist and Holocaust survivor (born 1923)
- 24 June – Franz Crass, 84, bass singer (born 1928)
- 24 June – Rudolf Schmid, 97, Swiss-born German Roman Catholic bishop (born 1914)
- 25 June – Doris Schade, 88, television actress (born 1924)
- 27 June – Ralph Warren Victor Elliott, 90, German-born Australian professor of English and runologist (born 1921)
July
- 10 July – Fritz Langanke, 92, Waffen SS Lieutenant (born 1919)
- 18 July – Günther Maleuda, 81, politician, President of the People's Chamber (1989–1990) (born 1931)
- 19 July – Hans Nowak, 74, footballer (born 1937)
- 21 July - Susanne Lothar, 51, actress (born 1960)
- 23 July – Maria Emanuel, Margrave of Meissen, 86, head of the Royal House of Saxony (born 1926)
- 27 July - Carl-Ludwig Wagner, 82, politician, former Minister-President of Rhineland-Palatinate (born 1930)
- 29 July - Heinz Staab, 86, chemist (born 1926)
- 31 July - Rudolf Kreitlein, 92, football referee (born 1919)
August
- 2 August - Bernd Meier, 40, footballer (born 1972)
- 8 August - Kurt Maetzig, 101, film director (born 1911)
- 19 August - Hellmut Geissner, 86, scholar (born 1926)
- 21 August - Georg Leber, 91, politician (born 1920)
- 24 August - Georg Feuerstein, 65, German-born Canadian scholar of Hinduism (born 1947)
- 26 August - Krzysztof Wilmanski, 72, Polish-born German scientist (born 1940)
- 28 August - Alfred Schmidt, 81, philosopher (born 1931)
- 30 August - Paul Friedrichs, 72, motocross racer (born 1940)
- 31 August - Norbert Walter, 67, economist (born 1944)
September
October
- 1 October - Dirk Bach, 51, comedian, actor and television presenter (born 1961)
- 4 October - Erhard Wunderlich, 55, handball player (born 1956)
- 6 October - Albert, Margrave of Meissen, 77, nobleman (born 1934)
- 11 October - Helmut Haller, 73, footballer (born 1939)
- 12 October - Harry Valérien, 88, sports journalist and presenter (born 1923)
- 17 October - Henry Friedlander, 82, German-born American Jewish historian (born 1930)
- 27 October - Hans Werner Henze, 86, composer (born 1926)
- 31 October - Alfons Demming, 84, Roman Catholic prelate (born 1928)
November
December
- 4 December - Peter Kiesewetter, 67, composer (born 1945)
- 7 December - Berthold Albrecht, 58, businessman (born 1954)
- 11 December - Albert O. Hirschman, 97, German-born American economist (born 1915)
- 14 December - Klaus Koste, 69, gymnast (born 1943)
- 16 December - Axel Anderson, 83, German-born Puerto Rican actor (born 1929)
- 19 December - Peter Struck, 69, politician (born 1943)
- 25 December - Rudolf Muller, 81, Roman Catholic prelate (born 1931)
- 27 December - Jesco von Puttkamer, 79, German-born American aerospace engineer (born 1933)
- 28 December - Emmanuel Scheffer, 88, German-born Israeli football coach (born 1924)
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: Schlecker drugstore to close half its shops - the Local . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120303205124/http://www.thelocal.de/national/20120229-41063.html . 2012-03-03 . 2012-03-01.
- Web site: Roman Lob | Das Erste: Eurovision Song Contest – Teilnehmer . 17 February 2012 . Eurovision.de.
- Web site: Jade-Weser-Port: Politik und Wirtschaft feiern Eröffnung . 2012-09-22.
- News: 6 December 2012. Germany seeks to ban far-right party. 3 News NZ. dead. 5 December 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20130928210537/http://www.3news.co.nz/Germany-seeks-to-ban-far-right-party/tabid/417/articleID/279402/Default.aspx. 28 September 2013.