Königsreh: Difference between revisions
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===Prior to construction=== | ===Prior to construction=== | ||
===Gneisloe plan and construction (1794–1811)=== | ===Gneisloe plan and construction (1794–1811)=== | ||
Königsreh is the last major Berean city to have been planned and constructed as a {{wp|planned city}}. [[Monarchy of Mascylla#List|King Lucas I]] sought to replace the late medieval [[Lancaide]] as his established residence with a new city that was open in layout, flexible for further expansion, and befitting of his new station as [[Monarchy of Mascylla|Mascyllary King]]. According to popular myth, Lucas I barely survived a direct confrontation with a {{wp|red deer}} while out hunting in the [[Horenforst]], and in gratitude, chose to erect his residence named after that particular animal; however, historians generally agree that its strategically valuable location at the River Blaugold and at the [[Meißert Gap]] was carefully selected. Beginning in 1794, Lucas I had his imagined city designed by architect and scholar [[Ernst Ignatius von Gneisloe]] who took major inspiration from the royal Shwesian residence of [[Carlsweil]], and attended the {{wp|groundbreaking}} of the [[City Palace, Königsreh|City Palace]] (then named Lucas Palace, ''Lukasschloss'') designed by [[Heinrich von Kayffshausen]] on 1 August 1795. | Königsreh is the last major Berean city to have been planned and constructed as a {{wp|planned city}}. [[Monarchy of Mascylla#List|King Lucas I]] sought to replace the late medieval [[Lancaide]] as his established residence with a new city that was open in layout, flexible for further expansion, and befitting of his new station as [[Monarchy of Mascylla|Mascyllary King]]. According to popular myth, Lucas I barely survived a direct confrontation with a {{wp|red deer}} while out hunting in the [[Horenforst]], and in gratitude, chose to erect his residence named after that particular animal; however, historians generally agree that its strategically valuable location at the River Blaugold and at the [[Meißert Gap]] was carefully selected. | ||
Beginning in 1794, Lucas I had his imagined city designed by architect and scholar [[Ernst Ignatius von Gneisloe]] who took major inspiration from the royal Shwesian residence of [[Carlsweil]], and attended the {{wp|groundbreaking}} of the [[City Palace, Königsreh|City Palace]] (then named Lucas Palace, ''Lukasschloss'') designed by [[Heinrich von Kayffshausen]] on 1 August 1795. | |||
The actual reasonings behind the city's location and name have never been fully ascertained. The system of roads and pathways radiating outward, which is generally understood to be a physical embodiment of political {{wp|absolutism}} itself, corresponds to the design of a "hunting star" (''Jagdstern'') and the {{wp|landscape design}} principles of a {{wp|French formal garden|Lavish formal garden}}, and opened up the Horenforst as royal hunting grounds. Little of the original design remains today, though the [[Straße der Krone, Königsreh|Straße der Krone]] is one of two major axial roads still present and in use by pedestrians and vehicles. The [[Royal Palace, Königsreh|Tower Wing]] (''Turmflügel'') of the City Palace served as a minor {{wp|hunting lodge}} (''Jagdschloss'') and {{wp|Lustschloss|residence for pleasure}} (''Lustschloss'') while construction was ongoing; it was not until 1811 that Königsreh was suited for occupation by the royal court. In 1808, the ''[[Reichsrat (Mascylla)|Reichsrat]]'' held its first parliamentary session in [[Colmar Palace]] (''Palais Colmar''), and most of the [[Government of Mascylla|Royal Government]] had relocated to new seats in Königsreh. From 1799 to 1808, the city became a heavily fortified {{wp|citadel}} with 16 {{wp|bastion}}s. | The actual reasonings behind the city's location and name have never been fully ascertained. The system of roads and pathways radiating outward, which is generally understood to be a physical embodiment of political {{wp|absolutism}} itself, corresponds to the design of a "hunting star" (''Jagdstern'') and the {{wp|landscape design}} principles of a {{wp|French formal garden|Lavish formal garden}}, and opened up the Horenforst as royal hunting grounds. Little of the original design remains today, though the [[Straße der Krone, Königsreh|Straße der Krone]] is one of two major axial roads still present and in use by pedestrians and vehicles. The [[Royal Palace, Königsreh|Tower Wing]] (''Turmflügel'') of the City Palace served as a minor {{wp|hunting lodge}} (''Jagdschloss'') and {{wp|Lustschloss|residence for pleasure}} (''Lustschloss'') while construction was ongoing; it was not until 1811 that Königsreh was suited for occupation by the royal court. In 1808, the ''[[Reichsrat (Mascylla)|Reichsrat]]'' held its first parliamentary session in [[Colmar Palace]] (''Palais Colmar''), and most of the [[Government of Mascylla|Royal Government]] had relocated to new seats in Königsreh. From 1799 to 1808, the city became a heavily fortified {{wp|citadel}} with 16 {{wp|bastion}}s. | ||
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After Mascylla's defeat at the hands of [[Edwin III of Cuthland|Edwin III]]'s armies during the [[Alhstead Wars|Alhstead]] [[Second Cutho-Mascyllary War]], King Lucas II fled from the capital for [[Carnitz]]. Authorities and wealthy families similarly left the city. Cuthish troops [[Siege of Königsreh|encircled and besieged]] Königsreh, [[Fall of Königsreh|forcing an unconditional surrender]] in autumn of 1840, and occupying it for approximately a year. The new [[Königsreh City Ordinance]] (''Königsreher Städteordnung'') was passed in 1841 under the reformer [[Prime Minister of Mascylla#List of Prime Ministers (1793–present)|Emmanuel Heinrich Freiherr von Lyder]], leading to the creation of the first freely elected {{wp|city council}}; a {{wp|mayor|First Mayor}} (''Oberbürgermeister''), [[Werner Leibig]], was elected to head the new self-governing administration, referred to as the [[Senate of Königsreh|Senate]] (''Senat''), and took up office in the [[Altes Rathaus, Königsreh|Old City Hall]]. | After Mascylla's defeat at the hands of [[Edwin III of Cuthland|Edwin III]]'s armies during the [[Alhstead Wars|Alhstead]] [[Second Cutho-Mascyllary War]], King Lucas II fled from the capital for [[Carnitz]]. Authorities and wealthy families similarly left the city. Cuthish troops [[Siege of Königsreh|encircled and besieged]] Königsreh, [[Fall of Königsreh|forcing an unconditional surrender]] in autumn of 1840, and occupying it for approximately a year. The new [[Königsreh City Ordinance]] (''Königsreher Städteordnung'') was passed in 1841 under the reformer [[Prime Minister of Mascylla#List of Prime Ministers (1793–present)|Emmanuel Heinrich Freiherr von Lyder]], leading to the creation of the first freely elected {{wp|city council}}; a {{wp|mayor|First Mayor}} (''Oberbürgermeister''), [[Werner Leibig]], was elected to head the new self-governing administration, referred to as the [[Senate of Königsreh|Senate]] (''Senat''), and took up office in the [[Altes Rathaus, Königsreh|Old City Hall]]. | ||
The establishment of a [[Hährnig University of Königsreh|Königsreh university]], proposed by [[Philipp Alexander von Hährnig]], played a significant role in the reform process under Cuthish military administration; the new {{wp|university}} quickly became the intellectual center of Königsreh. Further reforms such as the introduction of a {{wp|corporate tax}} and the abolition of professional {{wp|guild}}s under State Chancellor [[Georg Karl von und zu Lichtenberg]] led to renewed economic and population growth in the city and laid the foundations for early {{wp|industrialization}}. Lucas II returned to Königsreh in 1842 but was not successful in reversing the implemented reforms. | The establishment of a [[Hährnig University of Königsreh|Königsreh university]], proposed by [[Philipp Alexander von Hährnig]], played a significant role in the reform process under Cuthish military administration; the new {{wp|university}} quickly became the intellectual center of Königsreh. Further reforms such as the introduction of a {{wp|corporate tax}} and the abolition of professional {{wp|guild}}s under State Chancellor [[Georg Karl von und zu Lichtenberg]] led to renewed economic and population growth in the city and laid the foundations for early {{wp|industrialization}}. Lucas II returned to Königsreh in 1842 but was not successful in reversing the implemented reforms. With the onset of the {{wp|Second Industrial Revolution}}, a large number of factories and manufacturing plants were erected outside the city walls, attracting more immigrants finding employment as workers or {{wp|day labor|day laborers}}. Königsreh's population nearly tripled from 120,000 to about 330,000 inhabitants until 1850, becoming the second-largest Mascyllary city after [[Flussmund]]. Companies such as [[Herber]], [[Reuthers]], [[Koldmeier]], and [[UGE]] emerged and soon transformed Königsreh into an {{wp|industrial city}} of national and later international importance. This development was accompanied by the political rise of its {{wp|labor movement}}, which became one of the strongest of its kind in the world. | ||
The [[Mascyllary Revolution of 1847]] had its origin in Königsreh and prompted [[Monarchy of Mascylla#List|Queen Sophia]] to make numerous concessions. In 1849, a city {{wp|constitution}} and new {{wp|local ordinance|municipal code}} was introduced, allowing for the {{wp|freedom of the press}} and {{wp|freedom of assembly}}. However, on the other hand, the continuation of the {{wp|Prussian three-class franchise|three-class franchise}}, the restrictions imposed on the power of city counselors, and the strengthened position of chief of police [[Ernst von Haydenfels]] caused public outcry. The rising prominence of the ''Reichsrat'' as a political institution precipitated the construction of the present-day [[Reichsrat (Mascylla)|''Reichsrat'' building]] from 1858–1866. During Sophia's reign, she was responsible for the development of the city's infrastructure, its {{wp|public utilities}}, {{wp|sewerage}}, {{wp|water supply}}, and the maintenance of {{wp|public space}}s. The rapid population increase, paired with persistent {{wp|poverty}} and large-scale {{wp|property speculation}} led to precarious living conditions in the {{wp|tenement}}s of the sprawling workers' quarters typical of the city. | |||
In the latter 19th century, the ''[[History of Mascylla#Colonial empire and the Gründerjahre (1800–1840)|Gründerjahre]]'' and the ''[[History of Mascylla#Neuzeit|Neuzeit]]'' saw Mascylla rising to become a {{wp|great power}}, and Königsreh developing as a {{wp|global city}}. In 1874, Königsreh initially became a city of over 1 million inhabitants, but by 1909, its population exceeded some 2 million due to overwhelmingly rapid {{wp|urbanization}}. Königsreh was [[Battle of Lückwalde|almost encircled]] and repeatedly bombed by Cuthish forces in the [[Great War (Aurorum)|Great War]] (1911–1916), killing well over 5,000 civilians and heavily damaging swaths of the city center. | |||
===Interwar period and Greater Königsreh (1916–1924)=== | ===Interwar period and Greater Königsreh (1916–1924)=== |
Revision as of 16:11, 27 December 2022
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Königsreh | |
---|---|
Free Capital City of Königsreh Freie Reichshauptstadt Königsreh | |
Country | Mascylla |
State | Königsreh |
Founded | 21 March 1811 |
Government | |
• Mayor | Paul Friedrich Choldwig (RU) |
Area | |
• Capital city and federated state | 928.9 km2 (358.7 sq mi) |
Elevation | 48 m (85.30 ft) |
Population (2018) | |
• Capital city and federated state | 3,231,326 |
• Density | 3,482/km2 (9,020/sq mi) |
• Metro | 7,311,177 |
Demonym(s) | Konigsrehers (Fallish), Königsreher (m), Königsreherin (f) (Hesurian) |
Time zone | UTC+2 (EST) |
Postal code | 01 |
Area code | 536 |
Vehicle registration | KR |
Website | koenigsreh.ma |
Königsreh or Konigsreh (Hesurian: [ˈkøːnɪçsˌreh]), officially the Free Capital City of Königsreh (Hesurian: Freie Reichshauptstadt Königsreh), is the capital and second-largest city of Mascylla. It is populated by 3,231,326 (2017) inhabitants, making it one of the most populous cities propers in Berea, and second only to Flussmund in Mascylla. The city and its surrounding adjacent urban agglomeration is one of Mascylla's 18 federated states, and it is surrounded by the states of Eustria–Folnery, Shwesia, Nelgery, and Falia. Together with Flussmund up north it forms the second-most populous metropolitan area in the country, referred to as the statistical Königsreh–Flussmund Greater Metropolitan Area (Metropolregion Königsreh-Flussmund), closely behind the Elbgau–Blaugold region.
In the aftermath of the establishment of the Mascyllary Kingdom, Königsreh was developed and constructed as a planned city by Ernst Ignatius von Gneisloe. In 1811, the arrival of Lucas I and his court to the Royal Palace (Königliches Schloss) as well as the first session of the Reichssenat officially inaugurated Königsreh as the capital city of Mascylla, replacing Lancaide. Königsreh quickly evolved into a large metropolitan area during the Gründerjahre and Neuzeit, becoming the third-largest city in the world by the 1920s. The city served as the historical seat of government of the Mascyllary Kingdom (1793–1923), the short-lived May Republic (1923–1924), and the Crowned Republic of Mascylla (1924–present).
The city lies on the banks of the River Blaugold, which flows through the city centre towards the Mascian Bight of the North Sea. Various smaller lagoons and lakes dominate Königsreh's topographical makeup in the western and southern boroughs, and an abundance of greenery, forests, parks, rivers, canals, and gardens largely shape the cityscape. Due to its location in the Great Mascyllary Plain and Königsreh Bay, Königsreh receives a temperate and seasonal climate.
A global city and hub according to the Newcott World Cities Index, Königsreh is often referred to as one of the world capitals of culture, finance, and media, and exerts a significant influence upon commerce, entertainment, art, fashion, sports, technology and research, education, politics, and tourism. Home to the headquarters of the Assembly of Nations, Königsreh is an important center for international diplomacy. The service-based and highly entrepeneurial economy of Königsreh is populated by high-tech and IT firms, biomedical engineering companies and the healthcare industry, automotive manufacturing, cleantech and other startups. The city of high standard of living is well known for its multiculturalism, nightlife, contemporary lifestyle, and high social attractiveness, as is the internationally well-known Landherrenallee.
Major landmarks of Königsreh are the Victory Gate, the Reichsrat building, the scenic Straße der Krone, the Assembly of Nations headquarters, the Königsreh Column of the Great War, Lobrecht Palace, Köpenick Palace, St Lawrence Cathedral, and the Fernsehturm Königsreh. Its zoological institutes, encompassed in the Zoologischer Park, is the most frequently visited zoo in Berea. Ellingerode was the world's first large-scale film studio complex and continues to be a global center of the television and motion picture industry, hosting award shows of international acclaim such as the annual Mastery Awards. The historical city centre is a popular tourist destination, with renowned universities, orchestras, museums, and galleries; these include the Hährnig University, the Technical University, the New University, the University of the Arts, the TSEM, the Palace Island, the National Gallery, the Pergament Museum, the Old Museum, the New Museum, the Academy of the Arts, the National History Museum, the Royal Library and Opera, and the Königsreh Philharmonic.
History
Second Cuthish Empire 1840–1841
Mascyllary Kingdom 1841–1847
Mascyllary Kingdom 1847–1923
Crowned Republic of Mascylla 1924–present
Prior to construction
Gneisloe plan and construction (1794–1811)
Königsreh is the last major Berean city to have been planned and constructed as a planned city. King Lucas I sought to replace the late medieval Lancaide as his established residence with a new city that was open in layout, flexible for further expansion, and befitting of his new station as Mascyllary King. According to popular myth, Lucas I barely survived a direct confrontation with a red deer while out hunting in the Horenforst, and in gratitude, chose to erect his residence named after that particular animal; however, historians generally agree that its strategically valuable location at the River Blaugold and at the Meißert Gap was carefully selected.
Beginning in 1794, Lucas I had his imagined city designed by architect and scholar Ernst Ignatius von Gneisloe who took major inspiration from the royal Shwesian residence of Carlsweil, and attended the groundbreaking of the City Palace (then named Lucas Palace, Lukasschloss) designed by Heinrich von Kayffshausen on 1 August 1795.
The actual reasonings behind the city's location and name have never been fully ascertained. The system of roads and pathways radiating outward, which is generally understood to be a physical embodiment of political absolutism itself, corresponds to the design of a "hunting star" (Jagdstern) and the landscape design principles of a Lavish formal garden, and opened up the Horenforst as royal hunting grounds. Little of the original design remains today, though the Straße der Krone is one of two major axial roads still present and in use by pedestrians and vehicles. The Tower Wing (Turmflügel) of the City Palace served as a minor hunting lodge (Jagdschloss) and residence for pleasure (Lustschloss) while construction was ongoing; it was not until 1811 that Königsreh was suited for occupation by the royal court. In 1808, the Reichsrat held its first parliamentary session in Colmar Palace (Palais Colmar), and most of the Royal Government had relocated to new seats in Königsreh. From 1799 to 1808, the city became a heavily fortified citadel with 16 bastions.
On 21 March 1811, the Royal Palace finished construction, and Lucas I officially proclaimed Königsreh to be his official residence (Residenz- und Hauptstadt Königsreh) with the royal assent of the Capital City Act (Hauptstadtbeschluss). As a result, the town, which grew around the Royal Palace in the 17 years of active construction, was merged with the towns and Vorstädte of Auguststadt, Lukasstadt, Königsstadt, Jungfernheide, and Spadowstadt; the population rose to approximately 40,000 by 1800 and following the administrative merger.
Aldia and Mascyllary Kingdom (1811–1916)
With the Act of Privileges (Privilegienbeschluss) of 9 October 1812, Prime Minister Wilhelm Fürst von Stenreck created incentives for immigration and settling in Königsreh. By 1820, the city had developed into one of the epicenters of Mascyllary culture, and its metropolitican bourgeois culture ushered in the era of Königsreh Classicism. Religious and social tolerance during this period made Königsreh one of the main centers of the late Enlightenment in Berea, despite efforts by Lucas I and his successor, Lucas II, to suppress Cuthish revolutionary thought.
During the Königsreh Fire of 1818, the Royal Palace was almost entirely destroyed; Lucas II was forced to acquire Lobrecht House from Wilhelm Günther Graf von Lobrecht and convert it into a royal residence under heavy financial strain.
After Mascylla's defeat at the hands of Edwin III's armies during the Alhstead Second Cutho-Mascyllary War, King Lucas II fled from the capital for Carnitz. Authorities and wealthy families similarly left the city. Cuthish troops encircled and besieged Königsreh, forcing an unconditional surrender in autumn of 1840, and occupying it for approximately a year. The new Königsreh City Ordinance (Königsreher Städteordnung) was passed in 1841 under the reformer Emmanuel Heinrich Freiherr von Lyder, leading to the creation of the first freely elected city council; a First Mayor (Oberbürgermeister), Werner Leibig, was elected to head the new self-governing administration, referred to as the Senate (Senat), and took up office in the Old City Hall.
The establishment of a Königsreh university, proposed by Philipp Alexander von Hährnig, played a significant role in the reform process under Cuthish military administration; the new university quickly became the intellectual center of Königsreh. Further reforms such as the introduction of a corporate tax and the abolition of professional guilds under State Chancellor Georg Karl von und zu Lichtenberg led to renewed economic and population growth in the city and laid the foundations for early industrialization. Lucas II returned to Königsreh in 1842 but was not successful in reversing the implemented reforms. With the onset of the Second Industrial Revolution, a large number of factories and manufacturing plants were erected outside the city walls, attracting more immigrants finding employment as workers or day laborers. Königsreh's population nearly tripled from 120,000 to about 330,000 inhabitants until 1850, becoming the second-largest Mascyllary city after Flussmund. Companies such as Herber, Reuthers, Koldmeier, and UGE emerged and soon transformed Königsreh into an industrial city of national and later international importance. This development was accompanied by the political rise of its labor movement, which became one of the strongest of its kind in the world.
The Mascyllary Revolution of 1847 had its origin in Königsreh and prompted Queen Sophia to make numerous concessions. In 1849, a city constitution and new municipal code was introduced, allowing for the freedom of the press and freedom of assembly. However, on the other hand, the continuation of the three-class franchise, the restrictions imposed on the power of city counselors, and the strengthened position of chief of police Ernst von Haydenfels caused public outcry. The rising prominence of the Reichsrat as a political institution precipitated the construction of the present-day Reichsrat building from 1858–1866. During Sophia's reign, she was responsible for the development of the city's infrastructure, its public utilities, sewerage, water supply, and the maintenance of public spaces. The rapid population increase, paired with persistent poverty and large-scale property speculation led to precarious living conditions in the tenements of the sprawling workers' quarters typical of the city.
In the latter 19th century, the Gründerjahre and the Neuzeit saw Mascylla rising to become a great power, and Königsreh developing as a global city. In 1874, Königsreh initially became a city of over 1 million inhabitants, but by 1909, its population exceeded some 2 million due to overwhelmingly rapid urbanization. Königsreh was almost encircled and repeatedly bombed by Cuthish forces in the Great War (1911–1916), killing well over 5,000 civilians and heavily damaging swaths of the city center.
Interwar period and Greater Königsreh (1916–1924)
Crowned Republic (1924–present)
Geography
Location
Topography
Parks and nature
Climate
City administration
Demographics
Cityscape and architecture
Boroughscape of Köpenick
Main article: Köpenick
Politics
As the Mascyllary capital
The Reichssenat of the Mascyllary Kingdom decided in 1794, one year after the unification of Mascylla, in the so called "Capital Order" (Hauptstadtbeschluss) that a newly erected city as the capital would house the Reichssenat and the Reichsrat as well as the Government of Mascylla. Therefore, Langquaid was relinquished of the title of capital city and Königsreh determined as the new seat of government.
Since 1800 the Monarch maintains his or her primary seat in the Königsreh Palace and Hohenehr Palace. Subsequently, in 1803, most of the government and authorities relocated from Langquaid to Königsreh. The Reichsrat, Reichssenat and Mascyllary government have since then begun operating in the Mascyllary capital. In 1810 the new Kronenrat building was inaugurated and first obtained by Prime Minister Wilhelm von Stenreck. Other government buildings were erected between 1810 and 1813; the latest government agency to relocate to Königsreh was the DSA after its new headquarters was erected in 2015. All 16 ministries and agencies of the Kronenrat have their mean seat in Königsreh, but also operate secondary seats in Langquaid. Most of its government official releases (Reichsgesetzschrift) and statements (Reichsankündigungen) are still being released in the other city to this day, and no high court is located in Königsreh, but in Augusthal, Langquaid and Lehpold.
Most sovereign states have their embassy to Mascylla in Königsreh, while the 21 federal states and free cities have additional representative offices. International organisations such as the Telmerian Union, UPESCH and BDTA also maintain offices. A large number of diplomatic representations are located in the Diplomatenviertel and on the Lorenzinsel in the city centre.
As the seat of government of the largest economy in Berea, Königsreh is one of the influential and sought after centres of Berean politics. Party headquarters, labour and trade unions, foundations, organisations and lobby representations of companies are all maintaining seats and offices in the city. State visits and receptions on every political level as well as important celebrations dominate the political schedule of Königsreh.
As the state of the Kronlande
Königsreh as an Imperial Free City (Freie Reichsstadt) is an autonomous federal state in Mascylla, the Kronlande. The Kronlande solely encompasses the City of Königsreh (Stadt Königsreh) per definition. The state itself is divided into seventeen boroughs, while each of them are further subdivided into neighbourhoods.
The parliament of the state that exercises legislative power is the House of Deputies of Königsreh (Abgeordnetenhaus von Königsreh), in which deputies of the SDP, RU, MDP, NDU, Independent Voters and VP are seated. As of 2022, the government is led by the SDP, in coalition with the MDP and RU. The Senate of Königsreh (Königsreher Senat), consisting of the Mayor (Bürgermeister) and ten additional senators, makes up the government of the state (Landesregierung). While the Mayor is responsible for political affairs of the state, the ceremonial head of state is the currently reigning monarch since 1803. The senator administrations have similar tasks as its counterparts in the Mascyllary government.
Subdivisions
City services
The state of the Kronlande as well as every other state and free state in Mascylla is served by the Imperial Police (Reichspolizei). It is subdivided into eight local directives, as well as the Kronlande Criminal Agency (Kriminalamt Kronlande). The police service employs around 21,500 people, 17,900 of which officers and the remaining 3,600 support staff and administration, making it the largest localized police service in Mascylla.
The Königsreh Fire Department (Königsreher Feuerwehr), being founded in 1870, is the oldest continuous fire department of Mascylla. With its 3,980 employers and up to 31 fire stations it is also the biggest urban fire department in the country. It is supported by 50 voluntary fire brigades with approximately 1,220 active unsalaried members and partly made up of the Städtisches Hilfswerk (SHW) in Marienfelde.
Coat of arms and flag
The coat of arms of Königsreh depicts a sitting, white deer with a golden antler and golden hooves in a golden shield. Sometimes the crown of the Mascyllary monarchs is depicted to crown the coat of arms to symbolize the unique status of the city. The deer is the namesake of the city and is derived from the heraldry of the House of Ahnern and therefore the first king who founded the city, Lukas I of Mascylla. The colours of the shield, green and yellow, reflect the city's abundance in nature and its royal status, respectively.
The state flag of Königsreh is composed of two horizontal stripes of green above and yellow below. It is a continued design with few stilistic differences since it was first flown in 1862. Previously, the flag featured the coat of arms in between the two stripes on a white background, but it was redacted since it appeared too similar with the flag of Eustria and was too complex to identify from far away.
The uniformed statute of waving flags (in front of state authority buildings):
Flag of the Telmerian Union
Flag of the Berean Defence Treaty Association (for specific events and buildings)
Urban partnerships
The city of Königsreh maintains city partnerships with Lilienburg City, Lilienburg (1947), Tinz am Sigmund, Temaria (1966), Aniarro, Lavaria (1968), Kristianshavn, Norden (1971), Ulich, Dulebia (1985), Toulogne, Sarrac (1988), and Sydenham, Falland (1988).
Infrastructure
Public transport
Further reading: Königsreh U-Bahn
Motor traffic
Air traffic
Further reading: Königsreh–Albert Polschnitz Airport