This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "2009 in Germany" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
| |||||
Decades: | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
See also: | Other events of 2009 History of Germany • Timeline • Years |
Events in the year 2009 in Germany.
Incumbents
Federal level
State level
- Minister-President of Baden-Württemberg – Günther Oettinger
- Minister-President of Bavaria – Horst Seehofer
- Governing mayor of Berlin – Klaus Wowereit
- First mayor of Bremen – Jens Böhrnsen
- Minister-President of Brandenburg – Matthias Platzeck
- First mayor of Hamburg – Ole von Beust
- Minister-President of Hesse – Roland Koch
- Minister-President of Lower Saxony – Christian Wulff
- Minister-President of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern – Erwin Sellering
- Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia – Jürgen Rüttgers
- Minister-President of Rhineland-Palatinate – Kurt Beck
- Minister-President of the Saarland – Peter Müller
- Minister-President of Saxony – Stanislaw Tillich
- Minister-President of Saxony-Anhalt – Wolfgang Böhmer
- Minister-President of Schleswig-Holstein – Peter Harry Carstensen
- Minister-President of Thuringia – Dieter Althaus
Events
- 15 January – Germany presses Moscow and Kyiv to end the Russian gas crisis.
- 5–15 February – 59th Berlin International Film Festival
- 9 February – Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 2009
- March – The Volkswagen Polo Mk5 is launched at the Geneva Motor Show and was voted European Car of the Year eight months later.
- 11 March – A 17-year-old former student goes on a rampage at his former school in Winnenden, Germany, killing at least fifteen people, before turning the gun on himself.
- 23 May – 2009 German presidential election
- 15–23 August – 2009 World Championships in Athletics takes place in Berlin. Usain Bolt breaks the world records for 200 metres and 100 metres.
- 30 August – 2009 Saarland state election, 2009 Saxony state election and 2009 Thuringia state election take place
- September – Opel launches new Astra at Frankfurt Motor Show.
- 27 September – 2009 German federal election takes place. Angela Merkel wins reelection as chancellor.
- 27 September – 2009 Schleswig-Holstein state election and 2009 Brandenburg state election take place.
- 28 October – German bishop Margot Käßmann becomes first elected woman as leader of Evangelical Church in Germany.
- 28 October – The Second Merkel cabinet led by Angela Merkel was sworn in.
- 30 October – Christine Lieberknecht (CDU) becomes Minister-President of state Thuringia.
- 27 November – Wolfgang Schneiderhan, the Chief of Staff of the German Bundeswehr, and Franz Josef Jung resign over allegations that they withheld information in the aftermath of the Kunduz airstrike.
- 30 November – Ursula von der Leyen becomes Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs (Germany) and Kristina Köhler becomes new Federal Ministry of Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth
- December – Dresdner Bank was acquired by German Commerzbank.
Deaths
This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
- 5 January – Adolf Merckle, industrialist (born 1934)
- 2 March – Ernst Benda, politician (born 1925)
- 28 March – Helmut Noller, Olympic canoe sprinter (born 1919)
- 4 May – Gisela Stein, German actress (born 1935)
- 13 May – Monica Bleibtreu, German actress (born 1944)
- 23 May – Barbara Rudnik, actress (born 1958)
- 9 June – Karl Michael Vogler, actor (born 1928)
- 17 June – Ralf Dahrendorf, sociologist and politician (born 1929)
- 19 June – Joerg Hube, actor (born 1943)
- 30 June – Pina Bausch, choreographer and dancer (born 1940)
- 30 July – Peter Zadek, theatre and film director (born 1926)
- 31 July – Ilona Christen, journalist (born 1951)
- 18 August – Hildegard Behrens, opera singer (born 1937)
- 22 August – Horst E. Brandt, film director (born 1923)
- 19 September – Eduard Zimmermann, journalist (born 1929)
- 3 October – Reinhard Mohn, businessman (born 1921)
- 4 October – Guenther Rall, fighter pilot (born 1918)
- 6 October – Werner Maihofer, jurist and legal philosopher (born 1918)
- 9 October – Horst Szymaniak, footballer (born 1934)
- 19 October – Dietrich von Bothmer, art historian (born 1918)
- 10 November – Robert Enke, footballer (born 1977)
- 15 November – Hans Matthöfer, German politician (born 1925)
- 27 November – Erich Böhme, journalist (born 1930)
- 5 December – Otto Graf Lambsdorff, German politician of the Free Democratic Party (born 1926)
- 23 December – Rainer Zepperitz, German double bassist (born 1930)
See also
References
Years in Germany (1871–present) | |
---|---|
19th century | |
20th century |
|
21st century |