Немшин орна әңгин улус

Wikipedia-с


Сүльд Таңһчин нерен Немшин орн
ниицилсан цаг
Залврин Толһач Залврин
партин ниит
Немшин Хуралин
дууһин тоо
Аһу (km²) Улус
(thous.)
Улусин нигтнь
per km²
Хотол балһсн Немшин
ахр нерн
Baden-Württemberg 1949[1] Stefan Mappus (CDU) CDU, FDP 6 35,752 10,739 300 Stuttgart BW
Bavaria
(Bayern)
1949 Horst Seehofer (CSU) CSU, FDP 6 70,552 12,488 177 Munich
(München)
BY
Berlin 1990[2] Klaus Wowereit (SPD) SPD, The Left 4 892 3,395 3,807 BE
Brandenburg 1990 Matthias Platzeck (SPD) SPD, The Left 4 29,479 2,559 87 Potsdam BB
Bremen 1949 Jens Böhrnsen (SPD) SPD, The Greens 3 404 663 1,641 HB
Hamburg 1949 Ole von Beust (CDU) CDU, The Greens 3 755 1,774 2,309 HH
Hesse
(Hessen)
1949 Roland Koch (CDU) CDU, FDP 5 21,115 6,075 289 Wiesbaden HE
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern 1990 Erwin Sellering (SPD) SPD, CDU 3 23,180 1,707 74 Schwerin MV
Lower Saxony
(Niedersachsen)
1949 Christian Wulff (CDU) CDU, FDP 6 47,624 7,997 168 Hannover NI
North Rhine-
Westphalia

(Nordrhein-Westfalen)
1949 Jürgen Rüttgers (CDU) CDU, FDP 6 34,085 18,029 530 Düsseldorf NW
Rhineland-Palatinate
(Rheinland-Pfalz)
1949 Kurt Beck (SPD) SPD 4 19,853 4,053 204 Mainz RP
Saarland 1957 Peter Müller (CDU) CDU, FDP, The Greens 3 2,569 1,050 409 Saarbrücken SL
Saxony
(Sachsen)
1990 Stanislaw Tillich (CDU) CDU, FDP 4 18,416 4,250 232 Dresden SN
Saxony-Anhalt
(Sachsen-Anhalt)
1990 Wolfgang Böhmer (CDU) CDU, SPD 4 20,446 2,470 121 Magdeburg ST
Schleswig-Holstein 1949 Peter Harry Carstensen (CDU) CDU, FDP 4 15,799 2,833 179 Kiel SH
Thuringia
(Thüringen)
1990 Christine Lieberknecht (CDU) CDU, SPD 4 16,172 2,335 144 Erfurt TH
  1. In 1949 the states of Baden, Württemberg-Baden and Württemberg-Hohenzollern joined the federation. These were united in 1952 into Baden-Württemberg.
  2. Berlin has only officially been a Bundesland since reunification, even though West Berlin was largely treated as a state of West Germany.