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Most Common Foreign Citizenship In Each German District

June 7, 2015 2 Comments

German foreign citizenship

Map created by reddit user Szwab

The map above shows the country of citizenship for the largest group of foreigners by German district. However, it doesn’t show the absolute or even relative numbers. So even districts with very few foriegners will still have one group that’s the largest.

In total, Germany had 6,180,013 people with non-German citizenship living there in 2011, according to zensus2011.de.

In terms of numbers, Turks make up by far the largest group with over 1.5 million living in Germany. The district with the fewest foreign citizens is Nordvorpommern at just 0.62%, whereas Offenbach am Main has the largest number at 28.59%.

Reddit user Szwab, who created the map, explains that:

Turks, Italians, Portuguese, Greeks (who are not the biggest minority in any district) and others originally immigrated in large numbers to West Germany as Gastarbeiter (guest workers) to provide additional workforce to the then growing economy.

Vietnamese have been living in fellow socialist East Germany in somewhat larger numbers since the 1970s.

Russians are not ethnic Germans from Russia. These people were given citizenship when they arrived and are therefore not foreign citizens.

About the Dutch, I can tell at least for East Frisia (in the northwest), that they move there because of lower real estate prices. This probably applies to the other Dutch and Luxembourgish districts, too.

As you can see, most West German districts have Turks as largest group of foreigners. As they tend to live in urban areas, they are often outnumbered in more rural districts on the borders. In the east, the number of foreigners are generally lower, in many rural eastern districts, the percentage is under 2%, or even under 1%. Thus, the map is more colourful, as relatively small numbers are enough to be the largest group.

The areas with large groups of Americans are unsurprisingly the location of US military bases, as can be seen here.

Want to learn more about foreigners and immigration to Germany? Then consider reading:

  • Hypersexuality and Headscarves: Race, Sex, and Citizenship in the New Germany (New Anthropologies of Europe)
  • Other Germans: Black Germans and the Politics of Race, Gender, and Memory in the Third Reich (Social History, Popular Culture, and Politics in Germany)
  • State and Minorities in Communist East Germany (Monographs in German History)

Have any questions or comments? Leave them in the comment section below:

Filed Under: Germany Tagged With: immigration

Comments

  1. Matthew says

    September 2, 2021 at 1:35 pm

    No Israelis on the list?

    Reply
  2. Ralf says

    December 30, 2021 at 3:04 am

    Why Poland is 3rd and Italy 2nd? The numbers are switched?

    Reply

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