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  1. 1648 – Peace of Westphalia confirms Frankfurt as an Imperial Free City. 1681 – St. Catherine's Church built. 1719 – Fire. 1739 – Palais Thurn und Taxis built. 1742 – The Palais Barckhaus at Zeil in Frankfurt serves as residence of Emperor Charles VII until 1744. 1748 – Gebrüder Bethmann formed.

  2. After the end of the Holy Roman Empire, Frankfurt joined the Confederation of the Rhine and under the First Prince Karl Theodor of Dalberg, became the capital of a short-lived (1810-1813) grand duchy of Frankfurt. In 1815, Frankfurt became a free city and the seat of the federal government. In 1848, the March revolution broke out in the German ...

  3. En Wikipedia, as ligazóns interlingüísticas están na parte superior da páxina, fronte ao título do artigo. ... Ficheiro:Flag of the Free City of Frankfurt.svg.

  4. historical city-state, today part of Germany. This page was last edited on 17 February 2024, at 07:36. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  5. Frankfurt, officially Frankfurt am Main ( German: [ˈfʁaŋkfʊʁt ʔam ˈmaɪn] ( listen); Hessian: Frangford am Maa, lit. " Frank ford on the [a] Main "), is one of the biggest cities in Germany. The city of Frankfurt has a population of 700,000. The metropolitan area, called Rhine-Main after its two biggest rivers, has over four million people.

  6. In August 2014, the city of Frankfurt granted building permission for the first phase of Terminal 3. The groundbreaking for the new terminal took place on 5 October 2015. Its first phase, consisting of the main building and two of the planned four piers (concourses 3H and 3J), is planned to open by 2026 and will be able to handle 15 million additional passengers per year.

  7. After more than 600 years as a Free City, Frankfurt am Main was annexed to Prussia in 1866 With the rise of Revolutionary France in Europe, this trend accelerated enormously. After 1795, the areas west of the Rhine were annexed to France by the revolutionary armies, suppressing the independence of Imperial Cities as diverse as Cologne, Aachen, Speyer and Worms.