FC Urartu and Hesse: Difference between pages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Difference between pages)
Content deleted Content added
mNo edit summary
 
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{otheruses}}
{{Football club infobox |
<!-- This is the English language Wikipedia - do not change Hesse to Hessen no matter how odd it looks to you -->
clubname = Banants |
{{Infobox German Bundesland
image = [[Image:FC Banants Logo.png|150px|FC Banants]] |
|Name = Hesse
fullname = Football Club Banants Yerevan |
|German_name = Hessen
nickname = |
|state_coa = Coat of arms of Hesse.svg
founded = [[1992]] |
|map = Deutschland Lage von Hessen.svg
ground = [[Banants Stadium]], [[Yerevan]] |
|flag = Flag of Hesse.svg
capacity = 6,000 |
|flag2 = Flag of Hesse (state).svg
chairman = {{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Sargis Israelyan]] |
|capital = Wiesbaden
manager = {{flagicon|Denmark}} [[:da:Kim Splidsboel|Kim Splidsboel]]|
|largest_city = Frankfurt
league = [[Armenian Premier League]] |
|area = 21100
season = [[Armenian Premier League 2007|2007]] |
|area_source =
position = Armenian Premier League, 2nd |
|population = 6073000
pattern_la1=|pattern_b1=_blueshoulders|pattern_ra1=|
|pop_ref = <ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.statistik-portal.de/Statistik-Portal/de_zs01_he.asp |title= State population |work= Portal of the Federal Statistics Office Germany |accessdate=2007-04-25}}</ref>
leftarm1=FFFF30|body1=FFFF30|rightarm1=FFFF30|shorts1=0000fc|socks1=FFFF30|
|pop_date = 2007-09-30
pattern_la2=|pattern_b2=_blueshoulders|pattern_ra2=|
|GDP = 198
leftarm2=0000fc|body2=FFFFFF|rightarm2=0000fc|shorts2=FFFFFF|socks2=FFFFFF|
|GDP_year = 2005
|GDP_percent = 8.8
|Website = [http://www.hessen.de/ www.hessen.de]
|leader_title =
|leader = Roland Koch (Acting)
|leader_party = CDU
|ruling_party1 =
|ruling_party2 =
|votes = 5
|NUTS = DE7
|iso region = DE-HE
}}
}}
'''Hesse''' ({{lang-de|Hessen}}) is a [[States of Germany|state]] of [[Germany]] with an area of 21,110 [[square kilometre|km²]] and just over six million inhabitants. The state capital is [[Wiesbaden]]. Hesse's largest city is nearby [[Frankfurt am Main]].
Hesse contributes the largest share to the [[Frankfurt Rhein-Main Region|Rhine Main Area]].


== Geography ==
'''FC Banants''' ([[Armenian language|Armenian]]: Ֆուտբոլային Ակումբ Բանանց Երևան), is an [[Armenia]]n [[football (soccer)]] team, playing in the capital, [[Yerevan]]. The club plays in the [[Armenian Premier League]] and has won the [[Armenian Cup]] twice; in 1992 and 2007.
Situated in west-central Germany, Hesse borders on the German states (starting from the northwest and proceeding clockwise) of [[North Rhine-Westphalia]], [[Lower Saxony]], [[Thuringia]], [[Bavaria]], [[Baden-Württemberg]] and [[Rhineland-Palatinate]].


The principal cities of Hesse include [[Frankfurt am Main]], [[Wiesbaden]], [[Darmstadt]], [[Offenbach, Hesse|Offenbach]], [[Hanau]], [[Gießen]], [[Wetzlar]] and [[Limburg an der Lahn|Limburg]] in the greater [[Frankfurt Rhein-Main Region|Rhine Main Area]], [[Fulda]] in the east, and [[Kassel]] and [[Marburg an der Lahn]] in the north.
== History ==
FC Banants was founded in [[1992]] in the city of [[Abovyan]], before the start of the first Armenian National Championship. During the same year, the club won the first [[Armenian Cup]]. In 1995, the club was moved from [[Abovyan]] to [[Yerevan]], however, due to financial problems, it did not participate in the league championships until the season of [[2001]]. In the beginning of 2003, Banants merged with Spartak Yerevan, but was able to limit the name of the new merger to FC Banants. Spartak became Banants's youth academy and later changed the name to Banants-2. Because of the merger, Banants acquired many of Spartak's players, including one of its top players, [[Samvel Melkonyan]]. After the merger, Banants took a more serious approach and has finished in high ranks ever since. The club managed to lift the [[Armenian Cup]] in [[2007]].
Experience is making way for youth for the [[Armenian Premier League 2008|2008 season]]. The departures of [[Samvel Melkonyan]], [[Ararat Arakelyan]], [[Ara Hakobyan]] and [[Karen Simonyan]] – the spine of last season's team – have all moved abroad. And the striker from [[Uganda]], [[Eugene Sepuya]], has been sold to [[FK Vojvodina Novi Sad]], instead another Ugandan international, [[Noah Babadi Kasule|Noah Kasule]], has been signed. However the blow will be cushioned slightly with the acquisition of several seasoned professionals from [[Moldova]], [[Romania]] and [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]. The club have signed several players from [[Bulgaria]], while national team midfielder [[Romik Khachatryan]] has been brought back home from [[Cyprus]]. In August 2008 the [[Denmark|Danish]] coach [[:da:Kim Splidsboel|Kim Splidsboel]] was hired for the rest of the season.


The most important rivers in Hesse are the [[Fulda River|Fulda]] and [[Eder]] rivers in the north, the [[Lahn]] in the central part of Hesse, and the [[Main]] and [[Rhine]] in the south. The countryside is hilly and there are numerous mountain ranges, like the [[Rhön]], the [[Westerwald]], the [[Taunus]], the [[Vogelsberg_Mountains|Vogelsberg]], the [[Knüll]] or the [[Spessart]].
== Achievements ==
* '''[[Armenian Cup]]''': 2
**1992, 2007


Most of the population of Hesse is in the southern part of Hesse in the [[Frankfurt Rhein-Main Region|Rhine Main Area]]. The Rhine borders Hesse on the southwest without running through the state, only one old arm – the so-called Alt-Rhein – runs through Hesse. The mountain range between the Main and the Neckar river is called the [[Odenwald]]. The plain in between the rivers Main, Rhine and Neckar, and the Odenwald mountains is called the Ried.
== Banants in European Cups ==
{| class="wikitable" align="center"
|-
! Competition
! Matches
! W
! D
! L
! GF
! GA
|-
| [[UEFA Cup]]
| 16
| 2
| 2
| 12
| 11
| 40
|}


See also [[List of places in Hesse]].
{| class="wikitable" align="center"
! Season
! Competition
! Round
!
! Club
! Score
|-
|[[UEFA Cup 2002-03|2002/03]]
|[[UEFA Cup]]
|1Q
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}}
|[[Servette FC|Servette Geneva]]
|0-2, 0-3
|-
|[[UEFA Cup 2003-04|2003/04]]
|[[UEFA Cup]]
|1Q
|{{flagicon|Israel}}
|[[Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C.|Hapoel Tel Aviv]]
|1-2, 1-1
|-
|[[UEFA Cup 2004-05|2004/05]]
|[[UEFA Cup]]
|1Q
|{{flagicon|Ukraine}}
|[[FC Illychivets Mariupol|Illychivets Mariupol]]
|0-2, 0-2
|-
|[[UEFA Cup 2005-06|2005/06]]
|[[UEFA Cup]]
|1Q
|{{flagicon|Georgia}}
|[[FC Lokomotivi Tbilisi|Lokomotivi Tbilisi]]
|2-3, 2-0
|-
|
|
|2Q
|{{flagicon|Ukraine}}
|[[FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk|Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk]]
|2-4, 0-4
|-
|[[UEFA Cup 2006-07|2006/07]]
|[[UEFA Cup]]
|1Q
|{{flagicon|Georgia}}
|[[FC Ameri Tbilisi|Ameri Tbilisi]]
|1-2, 1-0
|-
|[[UEFA Cup 2007-08|2007/08]]
|[[UEFA Cup]]
|1Q
|{{flagicon|Switzerland}}
|[[BSC Young Boys|Young Boys Berne]]
|1-1, 0-4
|-
|[[UEFA Cup 2008-09|2008/09]]
|[[UEFA Cup]]
|1Q
|{{flagicon|Austria}}
|[[FC Red Bull Salzburg|Red Bull Salzburg]]
|0-3, 0-7
|}


Hesse is divided into 21 districs and 5 independent cities:
NOTE: In 2002/03 it was Spartak Yerevan that participated in the UEFA Cup. The following year Spartak merged with Banants to form FC Banants.


{|
== Current squad ==
|-----
''As of [[August]], [[2008]].''
| valign="top" |
The players in '''bold''' have senior international caps.
{{Fs start}}
<ol start=1>
<li>[[Kreis Bergstraße|Bergstraße]] <small>([[Heppenheim]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=1|nat=Moldova|name='''[[Yevgeni Matyugin]]'''|pos=GK}}
<li>[[Landkreis Darmstadt-Dieburg|Darmstadt-Dieburg]] <small>([[Darmstadt]], Ortsteil Kranichstein)</small>
{{Fs player|no=3|nat=Armenia|name=[[Gagik Daghbashyan]]|pos=DF}}
<li>[[Groß-Gerau (district)|Groß-Gerau]] <small>([[Groß-Gerau]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=4|nat=Armenia|name=[[Aghvan Hayrapetyan]]|pos=MF}}
<li>[[Hochtaunuskreis]] <small>([[Bad Homburg]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=5|nat=Armenia|name=[[Sargis Karapetyan]]|pos=MF}}
<li>[[Main-Kinzig-Kreis]] <small>([[Gelnhausen]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=6|nat=Ukraine|name=[[Andriy Burdian]]|pos=DF}}
<li>[[Main-Taunus-Kreis]] <small>([[Hofheim am Taunus]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=7|nat=Armenia|name=[[Aram Bareghamyan]]|pos=MF}}
<li>[[Odenwaldkreis]] <small>([[Erbach (Odenwald)|Erbach]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=8|nat=Bulgaria|name=[[Marko Markov|Marko Ganchev]]|pos=FW}}
<li>[[Offenbach (district)|Offenbach]] <small>([[Dietzenbach]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=9|nat=Belarus|name=[[Vitali Ledenev]]|pos=FW}}
<li>[[Rheingau-Taunus-Kreis]] <small>([[Bad Schwalbach]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=10|nat=Armenia|name='''[[Yegishe Melikyan]]''' ([[Captain (football)|captain]])|pos=DF}}
<li>[[Wetteraukreis]] <small>([[Friedberg (Hessen)|Friedberg]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=11|nat=Armenia|name=[[Arsen Balabekyan]]|pos=FW}}
<li>[[Gießen (district)|Gießen]] <small>([[Gießen]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=12|nat=Armenia|name=[[Sargis Nasibyan]]|pos=FW}}
<li>[[Lahn-Dill-Kreis]] <small>([[Wetzlar]])</small>
{{Fs mid}}
<li>[[Limburg-Weilburg]] <small>([[Limburg an der Lahn|Limburg]])</small><br />
{{Fs player|no=13|nat=Uganda|name='''[[Noah Babadi Kasule]]'''|pos=MF}}
<br />
{{Fs player|no=14|nat=Armenia|name=[[Semion Muradyan]]|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=15|nat=Armenia|name=[[Eduard Kakosyan]]|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=16|nat=Armenia|name=[[Stepan Ghazaryan]]|pos=GK}}
{{Fs player|no=17|nat=Bulgaria|name=[[Simeon Zlatev]]|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=18|nat=Armenia|name='''[[Romik Khachatryan]]'''|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=20|nat=Armenia|name=[[Hovhannes Grigoryan]]|pos=DF}}
{{Fs player|no=21|nat=Armenia|name=[[Norayr Gyozalyan]]|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=25|nat=Armenia|name=[[Artak Dashyan]]|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=|nat=Armenia|name=[[Romeo Jenebyan]]|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=|nat=Armenia|name=[[Suren Sargsyan]]|pos=MF}}
{{Fs end}}


</ol>
=== Transfers 2008 ===
| valign="top" |
<ol start=14>


<li>[[Marburg-Biedenkopf]] <small>([[Marburg]])</small>
'''In:'''
<li>[[Vogelsbergkreis]] <small>([[Lauterbach (Hessen)|Lauterbach]])</small>
{{Fs start}}
{{Fs player|no=|nat=Armenia|name=[[Romik Khachatryan]]|pos=MF|other= from [[APOP Kinyras Peyias FC|APOP Kinyras Peyias]]}}
{{Fs player|no=|nat=Belarus|name=[[Vitali Ledenev]]|pos=FW|other= from [[Maccabi Ahi Nazareth F.C.|Maccabi Ahi Nazareth]]}}
{{Fs mid}}
{{Fs player|no=|nat=Belarus|name=[[Maxim Tsigalko]]|pos=FW|other= from [[FC Kaisar|Kaisar Kyzylorda]]}}
{{Fs end}}


<li>[[Fulda (district)|Fulda]] <small>([[Fulda]])</small>
'''Out:'''
<li>[[Landkreis Hersfeld-Rotenburg|Hersfeld-Rotenburg]] <small>([[Bad Hersfeld]])</small>
{{Fs start}}
<li>[[Landkreis Kassel|Kassel]] <small>([[Kassel]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=|nat=Armenia|name=[[Karen Aleksanyan]]|pos=MF|other= to [[FC Torpedo Zhodino]]}}
<li>[[Schwalm-Eder-Kreis]] <small>([[Homberg (Efze)]])</small>
{{Fs player|no=|nat=Bulgaria|name=[[Plamen Krumov (midfielder)|Plamen Krumov]]|pos=MF|other= to ???}}
<li>[[Werra-Meißner-Kreis]] <small>([[Eschwege]])</small>
{{Fs mid}}
<li>[[Waldeck-Frankenberg]] <small>([[Korbach]])</small><br><br>
{{Fs player|no=|nat=Belarus|name=[[Maxim Tsigalko]]|pos=FW|other= to ???}}
{{Fs player|no=|nat=Ukraine|name=[[Andrey Cherevko]]|pos=DF|other= to ???}}
{{Fs end}}


Independent cities (with their acronyms, as used on vehicle registration plates):
== Notable players ==
*[[Darmstadt]] (DA)
{|
*[[Frankfurt am Main]] (F)
|valign="top"|
*[[Kassel]] (KS)
*{{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Ararat Arakelyan]]
*[[Offenbach am Main]] (OF)
*{{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Razmik Grigoryan]]
*[[Wiesbaden]] (WI)
*{{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Ara Hakobyan]]
<br />
*{{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Aram Hakobyan]]
*{{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Samvel Melkonyan]]
*{{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Rafael Nazaryan]]
|width="50"|
|valign="top"|
*{{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Vahe Tadevosyan]]
*{{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Aram Voskanyan]]
*{{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Arthur Voskanyan]]
*{{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Tigran Yesayan]]
*{{flagicon|Uganda}} [[Eugene Ssepuuya]]
*{{flagicon|Ukraine}} [[Oleksandr Kucher]]
|width="50"|
|}
|}
{| width=100% |
| valign=top | [[Image:Map of Hesse with districts (with numbers).svg|thumb|320px|Districts (here with numbers)<br>Independent cities]]
| valign=top | [[Image:Hessen phys Karte.gif|thumb|360px|The most important rivers, mountains, and cities of Hesse]]
|}

== History ==
{{seealso|Rulers of Hesse}}
An early [[Celt]]ic presence in what is now Hesse is indicated by a mid 5th century BC [[La Tène]] style burial uncovered at [[Glauberg]]. The region was later settled by the [[Germanic peoples|Germanic]] [[Chatti]] tribe in ca. the 1st century BC, and the name ''Hesse'' is a continuation of that tribal name. In the early Middle Ages, a Frankish ''[[Gau (country subdivision)|gau]]'' comprising an area around [[Fritzlar]] and [[Kassel]] and a Saxon one further north were known as Hessengau. In the 9th century the Saxon Hessengau also came under the rule of the Franconians. In the 12th century it was passed to [[Thuringia]].

In the [[War of the Thuringian Succession]] (1247-64), Hesse gained its independence and became a [[Landgrave|Landgraviate]] within the [[Holy Roman Empire]]. It shortly rose to primary importance under Landgrave [[Philipp I of Hesse|Philip the Magnanimous]], who was one of the leaders of German [[Protestantism]]. After Philip's death in 1567, the territory was divided up among his four sons from his first marriage (Philip was a [[Polygamy|bigamist]]) into four lines: [[Hesse-Kassel]] (or Hesse-Cassel), [[Landgraviate of Hesse-Darmstadt|Hesse-Darmstadt]], [[Hesse-Rheinfels]] and the also previously existing [[Hesse-Marburg]]. As the latter two lines died out quite soon (1583 and 1605, respectively), Hesse-Kassel and Hesse-Darmstadt were the two core states within the Hessian lands. Several collateral lines split off during the centuries, such as in 1622, when [[Hesse-Homburg]] split off from Hesse-Darmstadt. In the late 16th century, Kassel adopted [[Calvinism]], while Darmstadt remained [[Lutheran]] and subsequently the two lines often found themselves on different sides of a conflict, most notably in the disputes over [[Hesse-Marburg]] and in the [[Thirty Years' War]], when Darmstadt fought on the side of the Emperor, while Kassel sided with [[Sweden]] and [[France]].

During the [[American Revolution]], [[Great Britain]] hired mercenaries from Hesse, commonly known as [[Hessian (soldiers)|Hessians]], to fight the rebels in [[United States|America]].

Hesse-Kassel was elevated to the rank of an Electorate in 1803, but this remained without effect as the [[Holy Roman Empire]] was disbanded in 1806. The territory was annexed by the Kingdom of [[Westphalia]] in 1806, but restored to the Elector in 1813. While other Electors had gained other titles, becoming either Kings or Grand-dukes, the Elector of Hesse-Kassel alone retained the anachronistic dignity. The name survived in the term ''Kurhessen'', denoting the region around Kassel. In 1866 it was annexed by [[Prussia]], together with the [[Free City of Frankfurt]], Hesse-Homburg and the duchy of [[Nassau (duchy)|Nassau]], which established the province of [[Hesse-Nassau]].

Hesse-Darmstadt was elevated to the rank of a Grand Duchy in 1806. In the [[War of 1866]], it fought on the side of [[Austria]] against [[Prussia]], but retained its autonomy in defeat, because a greater part of the country was situated south of the Main river and Prussia did not dare to expand beyond the Main line as this might have provoked France. But the parts of Hesse-Darmstadt north of the Main river (the region around the town of [[Gießen]], commonly called ''Oberhessen'') were incorporated in the [[Norddeutscher Bund]], a tight federation of German states, established by Prussia in 1867. In 1871 the rest of the Grand Duchy joined the [[German Empire]]. Around the turn of the century, Darmstadt was one of the centres of the [[Jugendstil]].
Until 1907, the Grand Duchy of Hesse used only the Hessian red and white lion as its coat-of-arms [[Image:HessenD1844.jpg|thumb]]

The revolution of 1918 transformed Hesse-Darmstadt from a monarchy to a republic, which officially renamed itself to "[[Volksstaat Hessen]]" (People's State of Hesse). The parts of Hesse-Darmstadt on the western banks of the Rhine (province Rheinhessen) were occupied by French troops until 1930 under the terms of the Versailles peace treaty that officially ended WWI in 1919.

After [[World War II]] the Hessian territory left of the Rhine was again occupied by France, whereas the rest of the country was part of the US occupation zone. The French separated their part of Hesse from the rest of the country and incorporated it into the newly founded state of Rhineland-Palatinate (Rheinland-Pfalz). The United States, on the other side, proclaimed the state of [[Greater Hesse]] (''Groß-Hessen'') on 19 September 1945, out of Hesse-Darmstadt and most of the former Prussian province of [[Province of Hesse-Nassau|Hesse-Nassau]]. On [[December 4]], [[1946]] Groß-Hessen was officially renamed Hessen.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://60stolzejahre.hessen.de/dynasite.cfm?dssid=77&dsmid=1898 |title=Hessen - 60 stolze Jahre - Zeittafel 1945/1946 |accessdate=2006-12-01 |format= |work= }}</ref>

== Name ==
The state is called '''Hessen''' in [[German language|German]] and '''Hesse''' in [[English language|English]]; the English name for the state was taken from [[French language|French]]. An inhabitant of the state is a ''Hesse'' (masculine) or ''Hessin'' (feminine) in German and a ''Hessian'' in English (see [[Hessian (soldiers)]]). Occasionally the German term ''Hessen'' is also used in English. ''[[Hessia]]'' is another variant, although rarely used.
Hesse refers to the Germanic tribe of the [[Chatti]], who settled in the region in the first centuries B.C.

==Politics==

{{main|Politics of Hesse}}

The Politics of Hesse takes place within a framework of a federal parliamentary representative democratic republic, where the Federal Government of Germany exercises sovereign rights with certain powers reserved to the states of Germany including Hesse. The state has a multi-party system where the two main parties are the rightist Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and the leftist Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD).

In the [[Hesse state election of 2008]], the outgoing Prime Minister, [[Roland Koch]] (CDU), lost his majority in the state diet ([[Landtag of Hesse]]).

== State Anthem ==
The official state song of Hesse is called "Hessenlied" (Song of Hesse), but is not widely known. It was written by Carl Preser

"Ich kenne ein Land, so reich und so schön,
voll goldener Ähren die Felder,
dort grünen im Tal bis zu sonnigen Höh`n
viel dunkele, duftige Wälder.
Dort hab ich als Kind an der Mutter Hand
in Blüten und Blumen gesessen.
Ich grüß’ Dich, du Heimat, du herrliches Land,
Herz Deutschlands, mein blühendes Hessenland.

Vom Main bis zur Weser, Werra und Lahn
ein Land voller blühender Auen,
dort glänzen die Städte, die wir alle sahn,
sind herrlich im Lichte zu schauen.
Dort hab ich als Kind an der Mutter Hand
in Blüten und Blumen gesessen.
Ich grüß’ Dich, du Heimat, du herrliches Land,
Herz Deutschlands, mein blühendes Hessenland."

(1828-1910, text) and Albrecht Brede (1834-1920, melody).[http://www.hessen.de/irj/zentral_Internet?cid=a440b60a30af08a480026d4cbce9d5d9]

==TV & radio stations==
[[Hessischer Rundfunk]] (HR) is the main [[ARD (broadcaster)|ARD]] broadcaster in Hesse, providing a third TV programme as well as its local radio stations ( HR 1, HR 2, HR 3, HR 4, you fm and HR info ). Other than HR, [[ZDF]] and other privately run TV stations flourish. Among the commercial radio stations that are active in Hesse are Hit Radio FFH, Planet Radio, Harmony FM, SKY Radio and Main FM.

==Traffic and public transportation==
Hesse has one of the best transportation infrastructures in Europe. Many trans-European and German interstate freeways cross Hesse as well as high-speed train lines and many important trans-European waterways. [[Frankfurt International Airport]] is Germany's biggest airport and the third largest in Europe (after London and Paris). Near the airport is the [[Frankfurter Kreuz]], Europe's most important motorway junction, where the German autobahns A3 (Arnhem-Cologne-Frankfurt-Nuremberg-Passau) and A5 (Hattenbach-Frankfurt-Karlsruhe-Basel) meet.
[[Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof]] is Germany's most important railway station.

==Death penalty==
The [[death penalty]] is still mentioned in the [[Hesse constitution|constitution of Hesse]], as the Hessian constitution was ratified in 1946, when the death penalty was still part of the German penal code (and carried out as well). Because the [[Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany|1949 federal constitution]] provides for the abolition of the death penalty (Art. 102) and because of the supremacy of the federal constitution (Art. 31, incidentally the two shortest articles in the whole constitution), the Hessian constitutional articles still mentioning the death penalty are de facto obsolete. Nonetheless, no politician has yet proposed to formally abolish the death penalty in Hesse because that would require a [[plebiscite]].

==Trivia==
{{Trivia|date=June 2007}}
*Locals from the area speak the [[Rhine Franconian]] dialect known as ''Hessisch''.

*The chemical element of [[Hassium]] is named for Hesse alongside with [[Darmstadtium]] for the Hessian City of [[Darmstadt]].

*Hesse is a [[sister state]] of [[Wisconsin]], one of the [[U.S. state|states]] of the [[United States of America]]


*During the 17th and 18th centuries thousands of Hessians fought in the American Revolution and other conflicts as soldiers of fortune (though usually conscripted, the pay going to their Lord) on both sides<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.kriegsreisende.de/absolutismus/hessen.htm |title=Die verkauften Hessen (German text) |accessdate=2007-19-02 |format= |work= }}</ref>.
== Managers ==
*2001-2005: {{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Oganes Zanazanyan]]
*2005-2006: {{flagicon|Armenia}} [[Ashot Barseghyan]]
*2006-2007: {{flagicon|Russia}} [[Nikolai Kiselev]]
*2007: {{flagicon|Czech Republic}} [[Jan Poštulka]]
*2007-2008: {{flagicon|Bulgaria}} [[Nikolay Kostov]]
*2008: {{flagicon|Bulgaria}} [[Nedelčo Matušev]]
*2008- : {{flagicon|Denmark}} [[Kim Splidsboel]]


== External links ==
==See also==
*[[Landgraviate of Hesse]]
* [http://www.fcbanants.com/ Official Website]
*[[Landgraviate of Hesse-Darmstadt]]
* [http://www.ffa.am/en/teams/fcbanants/ Banants at FFA.AM]
*[[Hesse-Kassel]]
* [http://www.uefa.com/footballeurope/club=77866/domestic.html Banants at UEFA.COM]
*[[Hessische Bergstrasse]]
* [http://www.eufo.de/football/arm/banaevan.htm Banants at EUFO.DE]
* [http://www.weltfussball.de/teams/fc-banants/ Banants at Weltfussball.de]
* [http://www.playerhistory.com/Default.aspx?page=club_details&clubID=16340 Banants at Playerhistory.com]
* [http://www.transfermarkt.de/de/verein/11411/fcbanants/uebersicht/startseite.html Banants at Transfermarkt.de]
* [http://www.national-football-teams.com/v2/club.php?id=85 Banants at National Football Teams.com]


== References ==
<references/>


==External links==
{{Banants Yerevan squad}}
{{commons|Hessen}}
* [http://www.hessen.de/ Official government portal]
* [http://www.360-rhoen.de/ 360 degree virtual trip through the Rhön - part of eastern Hesse]
* {{web cite|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07298c.htm|title=Hesse|work=[[Catholic Encyclopedia]]}}


{{fb start}}
{{Germany states}}
{{Armenian Premier League}}
{{fb end}}


[[Category:FC Banants Yerevan|Banants Yerevan]]
[[Category:Football (soccer) clubs established in 1992]]
[[Category:Armenian football clubs|Banants Yerevan]]


[[Category:Hesse| ]]
{{euro-footyclub-stub}}
[[Category:States of Germany]]
[[Category:NUTS 1 statistical regions of the European Union]]
[[Category:Chatti]]


[[de:Bananz Eriwan]]
[[af:Hesse]]
[[fr:Banants Erevan]]
[[als:Hessen]]
[[it:Banants Erevan]]
[[ang:Hesse]]
[[ar:هيسن]]
[[lt:FA Bananc’ Erewan]]
[[nl:Banants Erevan]]
[[an:Hesse]]
[[ro:FC Banants]]
[[frp:Hesse]]
[[ast:Hesse]]
[[ru:Бананц (футбольный клуб)]]
[[az:Hessen]]
[[zh-min-nan:Hessen]]
[[bar:Hessn]]
[[bs:Hessen]]
[[br:Hessen]]
[[bg:Хесен]]
[[ca:Hessen]]
[[cs:Hesensko]]
[[cy:Hessen]]
[[da:Hessen]]
[[pdc:Hessen]]
[[de:Hessen]]
[[dsb:Hesseńska]]
[[et:Hessen]]
[[el:Έσση]]
[[es:Hesse]]
[[eo:Hesio]]
[[eu:Hessen]]
[[fa:هسن]]
[[fr:Hesse (Land)]]
[[fy:Hessen]]
[[fur:Assie]]
[[ga:Hesse]]
[[gv:Hesse]]
[[gd:Hesse]]
[[gl:Hessen]]
[[ko:헤센 주]]
[[hsb:Hessenska]]
[[hr:Hessen]]
[[io:Hesia]]
[[id:Hessen]]
[[ie:Hesse]]
[[is:Hessen]]
[[it:Assia]]
[[he:הסה]]
[[jv:Hessen]]
[[pam:Hesse]]
[[ka:ჰესენი]]
[[kw:Hesse]]
[[sw:Hesse]]
[[ku:Hessen]]
[[lad:Hesse]]
[[la:Hassia]]
[[lv:Hesene]]
[[lb:Hessen]]
[[lt:Hesenas]]
[[lij:Assia]]
[[li:Hesse]]
[[hu:Hessen]]
[[mk:Хесен]]
[[mr:हेसेन]]
[[ms:Hesse]]
[[nah:Hessen]]
[[nl:Hessen]]
[[nds-nl:Hessen]]
[[ja:ヘッセン州]]
[[nap:Assia]]
[[no:Hessen]]
[[nn:Hessen]]
[[nrm:Hesse]]
[[oc:Èssa]]
[[uz:Hessen]]
[[pms:Assia]]
[[nds:Hessen]]
[[pl:Hesja]]
[[pt:Hessen]]
[[ksh:Heßße (Bundesland)]]
[[ro:Hessa]]
[[rm:Hessen]]
[[qu:Hessen]]
[[ru:Гессен]]
[[sco:Hesse]]
[[stq:Hessen]]
[[sq:Hesia]]
[[scn:Hessen]]
[[simple:Hesse]]
[[sk:Hesensko]]
[[sl:Hessen]]
[[sr:Хесен]]
[[sh:Hessen]]
[[fi:Hessen]]
[[sv:Hessen]]
[[ta:கெஸ்சன்]]
[[th:รัฐเฮสส์]]
[[vi:Hessen]]
[[tr:Hessen]]
[[uk:Гессен]]
[[vec:Asia (Germania)]]
[[vo:Hesän]]
[[vls:Essen]]
[[zea:Hessen]]
[[zh:黑森]]

Revision as of 05:56, 10 October 2008

Template:Infobox German Bundesland Hesse (German: Hessen) is a state of Germany with an area of 21,110 km² and just over six million inhabitants. The state capital is Wiesbaden. Hesse's largest city is nearby Frankfurt am Main. Hesse contributes the largest share to the Rhine Main Area.

Geography

Situated in west-central Germany, Hesse borders on the German states (starting from the northwest and proceeding clockwise) of North Rhine-Westphalia, Lower Saxony, Thuringia, Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg and Rhineland-Palatinate.

The principal cities of Hesse include Frankfurt am Main, Wiesbaden, Darmstadt, Offenbach, Hanau, Gießen, Wetzlar and Limburg in the greater Rhine Main Area, Fulda in the east, and Kassel and Marburg an der Lahn in the north.

The most important rivers in Hesse are the Fulda and Eder rivers in the north, the Lahn in the central part of Hesse, and the Main and Rhine in the south. The countryside is hilly and there are numerous mountain ranges, like the Rhön, the Westerwald, the Taunus, the Vogelsberg, the Knüll or the Spessart.

Most of the population of Hesse is in the southern part of Hesse in the Rhine Main Area. The Rhine borders Hesse on the southwest without running through the state, only one old arm – the so-called Alt-Rhein – runs through Hesse. The mountain range between the Main and the Neckar river is called the Odenwald. The plain in between the rivers Main, Rhine and Neckar, and the Odenwald mountains is called the Ried.

See also List of places in Hesse.

Hesse is divided into 21 districs and 5 independent cities:

  1. Bergstraße (Heppenheim)
  2. Darmstadt-Dieburg (Darmstadt, Ortsteil Kranichstein)
  3. Groß-Gerau (Groß-Gerau)
  4. Hochtaunuskreis (Bad Homburg)
  5. Main-Kinzig-Kreis (Gelnhausen)
  6. Main-Taunus-Kreis (Hofheim am Taunus)
  7. Odenwaldkreis (Erbach)
  8. Offenbach (Dietzenbach)
  9. Rheingau-Taunus-Kreis (Bad Schwalbach)
  10. Wetteraukreis (Friedberg)
  11. Gießen (Gießen)
  12. Lahn-Dill-Kreis (Wetzlar)
  13. Limburg-Weilburg (Limburg)

  1. Marburg-Biedenkopf (Marburg)
  2. Vogelsbergkreis (Lauterbach)
  3. Fulda (Fulda)
  4. Hersfeld-Rotenburg (Bad Hersfeld)
  5. Kassel (Kassel)
  6. Schwalm-Eder-Kreis (Homberg (Efze))
  7. Werra-Meißner-Kreis (Eschwege)
  8. Waldeck-Frankenberg (Korbach)

    Independent cities (with their acronyms, as used on vehicle registration plates):
Districts (here with numbers)
Independent cities
The most important rivers, mountains, and cities of Hesse

History

An early Celtic presence in what is now Hesse is indicated by a mid 5th century BC La Tène style burial uncovered at Glauberg. The region was later settled by the Germanic Chatti tribe in ca. the 1st century BC, and the name Hesse is a continuation of that tribal name. In the early Middle Ages, a Frankish gau comprising an area around Fritzlar and Kassel and a Saxon one further north were known as Hessengau. In the 9th century the Saxon Hessengau also came under the rule of the Franconians. In the 12th century it was passed to Thuringia.

In the War of the Thuringian Succession (1247-64), Hesse gained its independence and became a Landgraviate within the Holy Roman Empire. It shortly rose to primary importance under Landgrave Philip the Magnanimous, who was one of the leaders of German Protestantism. After Philip's death in 1567, the territory was divided up among his four sons from his first marriage (Philip was a bigamist) into four lines: Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel), Hesse-Darmstadt, Hesse-Rheinfels and the also previously existing Hesse-Marburg. As the latter two lines died out quite soon (1583 and 1605, respectively), Hesse-Kassel and Hesse-Darmstadt were the two core states within the Hessian lands. Several collateral lines split off during the centuries, such as in 1622, when Hesse-Homburg split off from Hesse-Darmstadt. In the late 16th century, Kassel adopted Calvinism, while Darmstadt remained Lutheran and subsequently the two lines often found themselves on different sides of a conflict, most notably in the disputes over Hesse-Marburg and in the Thirty Years' War, when Darmstadt fought on the side of the Emperor, while Kassel sided with Sweden and France.

During the American Revolution, Great Britain hired mercenaries from Hesse, commonly known as Hessians, to fight the rebels in America.

Hesse-Kassel was elevated to the rank of an Electorate in 1803, but this remained without effect as the Holy Roman Empire was disbanded in 1806. The territory was annexed by the Kingdom of Westphalia in 1806, but restored to the Elector in 1813. While other Electors had gained other titles, becoming either Kings or Grand-dukes, the Elector of Hesse-Kassel alone retained the anachronistic dignity. The name survived in the term Kurhessen, denoting the region around Kassel. In 1866 it was annexed by Prussia, together with the Free City of Frankfurt, Hesse-Homburg and the duchy of Nassau, which established the province of Hesse-Nassau.

Hesse-Darmstadt was elevated to the rank of a Grand Duchy in 1806. In the War of 1866, it fought on the side of Austria against Prussia, but retained its autonomy in defeat, because a greater part of the country was situated south of the Main river and Prussia did not dare to expand beyond the Main line as this might have provoked France. But the parts of Hesse-Darmstadt north of the Main river (the region around the town of Gießen, commonly called Oberhessen) were incorporated in the Norddeutscher Bund, a tight federation of German states, established by Prussia in 1867. In 1871 the rest of the Grand Duchy joined the German Empire. Around the turn of the century, Darmstadt was one of the centres of the Jugendstil.

Until 1907, the Grand Duchy of Hesse used only the Hessian red and white lion as its coat-of-arms

The revolution of 1918 transformed Hesse-Darmstadt from a monarchy to a republic, which officially renamed itself to "Volksstaat Hessen" (People's State of Hesse). The parts of Hesse-Darmstadt on the western banks of the Rhine (province Rheinhessen) were occupied by French troops until 1930 under the terms of the Versailles peace treaty that officially ended WWI in 1919.

After World War II the Hessian territory left of the Rhine was again occupied by France, whereas the rest of the country was part of the US occupation zone. The French separated their part of Hesse from the rest of the country and incorporated it into the newly founded state of Rhineland-Palatinate (Rheinland-Pfalz). The United States, on the other side, proclaimed the state of Greater Hesse (Groß-Hessen) on 19 September 1945, out of Hesse-Darmstadt and most of the former Prussian province of Hesse-Nassau. On December 4, 1946 Groß-Hessen was officially renamed Hessen.[1]

Name

The state is called Hessen in German and Hesse in English; the English name for the state was taken from French. An inhabitant of the state is a Hesse (masculine) or Hessin (feminine) in German and a Hessian in English (see Hessian (soldiers)). Occasionally the German term Hessen is also used in English. Hessia is another variant, although rarely used. Hesse refers to the Germanic tribe of the Chatti, who settled in the region in the first centuries B.C.

Politics

The Politics of Hesse takes place within a framework of a federal parliamentary representative democratic republic, where the Federal Government of Germany exercises sovereign rights with certain powers reserved to the states of Germany including Hesse. The state has a multi-party system where the two main parties are the rightist Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and the leftist Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD).

In the Hesse state election of 2008, the outgoing Prime Minister, Roland Koch (CDU), lost his majority in the state diet (Landtag of Hesse).

State Anthem

The official state song of Hesse is called "Hessenlied" (Song of Hesse), but is not widely known. It was written by Carl Preser

"Ich kenne ein Land, so reich und so schön, voll goldener Ähren die Felder, dort grünen im Tal bis zu sonnigen Höh`n viel dunkele, duftige Wälder. Dort hab ich als Kind an der Mutter Hand in Blüten und Blumen gesessen. Ich grüß’ Dich, du Heimat, du herrliches Land, Herz Deutschlands, mein blühendes Hessenland.

Vom Main bis zur Weser, Werra und Lahn ein Land voller blühender Auen, dort glänzen die Städte, die wir alle sahn, sind herrlich im Lichte zu schauen. Dort hab ich als Kind an der Mutter Hand in Blüten und Blumen gesessen. Ich grüß’ Dich, du Heimat, du herrliches Land, Herz Deutschlands, mein blühendes Hessenland."

(1828-1910, text) and Albrecht Brede (1834-1920, melody).[1]

TV & radio stations

Hessischer Rundfunk (HR) is the main ARD broadcaster in Hesse, providing a third TV programme as well as its local radio stations ( HR 1, HR 2, HR 3, HR 4, you fm and HR info ). Other than HR, ZDF and other privately run TV stations flourish. Among the commercial radio stations that are active in Hesse are Hit Radio FFH, Planet Radio, Harmony FM, SKY Radio and Main FM.

Traffic and public transportation

Hesse has one of the best transportation infrastructures in Europe. Many trans-European and German interstate freeways cross Hesse as well as high-speed train lines and many important trans-European waterways. Frankfurt International Airport is Germany's biggest airport and the third largest in Europe (after London and Paris). Near the airport is the Frankfurter Kreuz, Europe's most important motorway junction, where the German autobahns A3 (Arnhem-Cologne-Frankfurt-Nuremberg-Passau) and A5 (Hattenbach-Frankfurt-Karlsruhe-Basel) meet. Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof is Germany's most important railway station.

Death penalty

The death penalty is still mentioned in the constitution of Hesse, as the Hessian constitution was ratified in 1946, when the death penalty was still part of the German penal code (and carried out as well). Because the 1949 federal constitution provides for the abolition of the death penalty (Art. 102) and because of the supremacy of the federal constitution (Art. 31, incidentally the two shortest articles in the whole constitution), the Hessian constitutional articles still mentioning the death penalty are de facto obsolete. Nonetheless, no politician has yet proposed to formally abolish the death penalty in Hesse because that would require a plebiscite.

Trivia

  • During the 17th and 18th centuries thousands of Hessians fought in the American Revolution and other conflicts as soldiers of fortune (though usually conscripted, the pay going to their Lord) on both sides[2].

See also

References

  1. ^ "Hessen - 60 stolze Jahre - Zeittafel 1945/1946". Retrieved 2006-12-01.
  2. ^ "Die verkauften Hessen (German text)". Retrieved 2007-19-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)

External links