Bank deutscher Länder
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Bank deutscher Länder
Summary
Bank deutscher Länder is a central bank[1]. It draws 85 Wikipedia views per month (central_bank category, ranking #73 of 202).[2]
Key Facts
- Bank deutscher Länder is in the country of West Germany[3].
- Bank deutscher Länder is in the country of Bizone[4].
- Bank deutscher Länder's instance of is recorded as central bank[5].
- Bank deutscher Länder's headquarters location is recorded as Frankfurt[6].
- Bank deutscher Länder's Commons category is recorded as Bank deutscher Länder[7].
- Bank deutscher Länder's industry is recorded as financial service activities, except insurance and pension funding[8].
- Bank deutscher Länder's industry is recorded as central banking[9].
- March 1, 1948 marks the founding of Bank deutscher Länder[10].
- Bank deutscher Länder was dissolved in 1957[11].
- Bank deutscher Länder's location of formation is recorded as Frankfurt[12].
- Bank deutscher Länder's significant event is recorded as Currency Reform of 1948[13].
- Bank deutscher Länder's replaced by is recorded as German Federal Bank[14].
- Bank deutscher Länder's board member is recorded as Wilhelm Vocke[15].
- Bank deutscher Länder's board member is recorded as Victor Wrede[16].
Body
Founding
March 1, 1948 marks the founding of Bank deutscher Länder[10]. Its location of formation is recorded as Frankfurt[12].
Leadership
Board members include Wilhelm Vocke[15], an economist[17], 1886–1973[18], of Germany[19], awarded the Grand Cross 1st class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany[20] and Victor Wrede[16], an economist[21], 1906–1950[22], of Germany[23].
Operations
Bank deutscher Länder's headquarters location is recorded as Frankfurt[6].
Industry
Industries include financial service activities, except insurance and pension funding[8] and central banking[9].
Dissolution
Bank deutscher Länder was dissolved in 1957[11].
Why It Matters
Bank deutscher Länder draws 85 Wikipedia views per month (central_bank category, ranking #73 of 202).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24]