List of German ambassadors in France

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This is a list of the German ambassadors in France . The ambassador is also accredited for the Principality of Monaco . The former seat of the embassy, ​​now the residence, is the Palais Beauharnais in Paris .

ambassador

Ambassador of the German Reich

Surname image Term of office Remarks
North German ConfederationAmbassador of the North German Confederation
Robert Heinrich Ludwig von der Goltz
(* 1817, † 1869)
RHL Graf von der Goltz 1868 (IZ 50 H Scherenberg) .JPG 1868-1869
Karl von Werther
(* 1809; † 1894)
1869-1870
German EmpireThe German Imperium/ German Empire/ German EmpireGerman Empire
Harry Graf von Arnim
(* 1824; † 1881)
Harry Karl Kurt Eduard Graf von Arnim-Suckow - Prussian diplomat.JPG 1871-1874
Prince Chlodwig zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst
(* 1819, † 1901)
Franz von Lenbach Prince Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst 1896.jpg 1874-1885
Count Georg Herbert zu Münster
(* 1820; † 1902)
GeorgMünster.png 1885-1900
Prince Hugo Julius Eduard von Radolin
(* 1841; † 1917)
Prince of Radolin.jpg 1900-1910
Wilhelm von Schoen
(* 1851; † 1933)
WP Wilhelm von Schoen.jpg 1910-1914
Wilhelm Mayer
(* 1874; † 1923)
MayerWilhelm.jpg 1920-1923
Leopold von Hoesch
(* 1881; † 1936)
Leopold von Hoesch thumb.jpg 1924-1932
Roland Köster
(* 1883; † 1935)
1933-1935
Johannes Graf von Welczeck
(* 1878, † 1972)
1936-1939
Otto Abetz
(* 1903; † 1958)
Otto Abetz.jpg 1940-1942
1943-1945
Worked in Paris / Vichy, Sigmaringen

Ambassador of the German Democratic Republic

Surname image Term of office Remarks
Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR German Democratic Republic
Herbert Merkel (* 1910; † 1967) 1956-1952 Handelsrat, head of the representation of the Chamber for Foreign Trade (KfA) of the GDR
Herbert Schulze 1962 Head of KfA
Willi Diebenkorn 1963-1967 Head of KfA
Gerhard Schramm (* 1923; † 2010) 1967-1973 Trade Councilor, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Head of KfA
Diplomatic relations since February 9, 1973
Gerhard Schramm (* 1923; † 2010) 1973-1974 ambassador
Ernst Scholz (* 1913; † 1986) 1974-1976 ambassador
Werner Fleck (* 1931; † 2018) 1976-1984 ambassador
Alfred Marter (* 1934; † 1998) 1984-1990 ambassador

Ambassador of the Federal Republic of Germany

Surname image Term of office Remarks
Germany Federal RepublicFederal Republic of Germany BR Germany
Wilhelm Hausenstein
(* 1882; † 1957)
Hausenstein Wilhelm around 1906.JPG 1950-1955 Consul General until May 1951, then Chargé d'Affaires until July 7, 1953, then Ambassador
Vollrath von Maltzan
(* 1899, † 1967)
1955-1958
Herbert Blankenhorn
(* 1904; † 1991)
Federal Archives B 145 Bild-F000897-0002, Herbert Blankenhorn.jpg 1958-1963
Manfred Klaiber
(* 1903; † 1981)
Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F017054-0045, Paris, inauguration of the German Embassy, ​​Klaiber.jpg 1963-1968
Sigismund Freiherr von Braun
(* 1911; † 1998)
1968-1970
Hans Helmuth Ruete
(* 1914; † 1987)
1970-1972
Sigismund Freiherr von Braun
(* 1911; † 1998)
1972-1976
Axel Herbst
(* 1918; † 2016)
1976-1983
Franz Jochen Schoeller
(* 1926; † 2019)
1983-1987
Franz Pfeffer
(* 1926)
1987-1991
Jürgen Sudhoff
(* 1935)
Jürgen Sudhoff thumb2.jpg 1991-1995
Immo Stabreit
(* 1933)
1995-1998
Peter Hartmann
(* 1935)
1998-2000
Fritjof von Nordenskjöld
(* 1938)
2000-2004
Klaus Neubert
(* 1942)
2004-2007
Peter Ammon
(* 1952)
Peter Ammon.jpg 2007-2008
Reinhard Schäfers
(* 1950)
2008–2012
Susanne Wasum-Rainer
(* 1956)
2012-2015
Nikolaus Meyer-Landrut
(* 1960)
2013 Nikolaus Meyer-Landrut.jpg since 2015

Envoy from German States (before 1871)

Baden ambassadors

1791: Establishment of diplomatic relations

  • 1713–1734: Johann Rudolf Fäsch (1680–1762), envoy
  • 1761–1762: Ulrich von Thun (–1788), authorized minister
  • 1772-1781: Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours (1739-1817), chargé
  • 1781–1782: Giorgio di Santi, Chargé d'affaires
  • 1783–1789: Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours (1739–1817)

...

1871: abolition of the embassy

Bavarian envoy

Hanseatic envoy

Prussian envoy

Saxon envoy

Wuerttemberg envoy

1650: Establishment of diplomatic relations

...

1871: abolition of the embassy

See also

Individual evidence

  1. 1955 worked a "permanent office of the Leipziger Messe" in Paris, which from 1956 referred to itself as chamber representation. On May 7, 1970, the GDR opened a foreign trade center in Paris. Source: GDR foreign policy - an overview - data, facts, people (III), LIT VERLAG Dr. W. Hopf, Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-643-10559-2
  2. ^ March 26, 1974, Ambassadeur de la République Démocratique Allemande. Retrieved March 18, 2010.
  3. Tobias C. Bringmann : Handbuch der Diplomatie, 1815-1963: Foreign Heads of Mission in Germany and German Heads of Mission abroad from Metternich to Adenauer . Walter de Gruyter , Berlin 2001, p. 23 f .
  4. Tobias C. Bringmann: Handbuch der Diplomatie, 1815-1963: Foreign Heads of Mission in Germany and German Heads of Mission abroad from Metternich to Adenauer . Walter de Gruyter , Berlin 2001, p. 425 .