© #visitfrankfurt, Holger Ullmann

Frankfurt Christmas markets since 1393

Royal reconciliation
and artistic heritage

There is documentary evidence dating back to 1393 that markets were held in Frankfurt am Main at Christmas.

The market was usually accompanied by ecclesiastical mystery plays on the Römerberg, which presumably had their origins in the encounter of 941, when King Otto I "the Great" reconciled with his brother Henry after the Christmas mass.

Henry prostrated himself before his brother in front of the Palatine Chapel, which stood where the cathedral is today.

Alfred Rethel used this scene as the inspiration for a painting that is now in the Historical Museum.

© #visitfrankfurt, Holger Ullmann

All Frankfurt    
Christmas markets

An overall view of Christmas in the city

Information on the individual Christmas markets will follow.

Historical splendour

How the Frankfurt
Christmas Market came into being

The year 1498 represents a high point in the historical development of the Christmas market. At Christmas that year, the wedding of Landgrave Wilhelm von Hessen to the daughter of the Elector Palatine was celebrated. The chronicle tells of 1,000 horses with which the Elector, his entourage and guests rode into Frankfurt am Main on horseback.

The "Christkindchesmarkt" of that time still lacked the essential symbol of today's Christmas market, namely the Christmas tree. It was not until the beginning of the 19th century that the Christmas tree became a common Christmas decoration. In Frankfurt am Main, the Sachsenhausen traders had the privilege of selling the best trees in the Römerhalle before Christmas. Over time, this sale moved to the Römer.

  • Back then, the Christmas market was a purely Frankfurt affair, no strangers were allowed in, and so the market took on a Frankfurt flavour over time.

  • The best local handicrafts were on offer, as well as toys, sweets and Christmas gifts.

  • Toys were mainly simple wooden balls and "Stoffbobbe". Over time, wooden hobby and rocking horses were added.

  • Until the seventies and eighties of the 19th century, it was common for Frankfurt parents to buy toys for their children exclusively at the Christmas market.

© #visitfrankfurt, Holger Ullmann

Customs and tradition

Until the beginning of the Second World War, Frankfurt had a strange custom in the run-up to Christmas that was not known anywhere else and which can be described as the "custom of the St Nicholas giants".

Pupils from secondary and public schools collected money to make these up to two metre high figures from gingerbread dough and carried the sugar-painted figures to their teacher.The gift was then eaten together. "Brenten", "Bethmännchen" and "Quetschemännchen" can look back on a centuries-old tradition as typical Frankfurt baked goods. In earlier times, they were produced in large quantities in the city's bourgeois houses. Unfortunately, however, the shy admirers of today no longer have the same opportunity as the admirers of the 19th century. They used to send a "squeeze" to the house of their admirer, if she kept it, he could hope, if she sent it back, he was not listened to.

Goethe's preference of Goethe for Bethmännchen and their mysterious origin

One of the greatest admirers of old Frankfurt Christmas treats was Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who, even as a privy councillor in distant Weimar, received a parcel of Bethmännchen from his mother every year for the festive season. It is not entirely clear where the marzipan biscuits got their name from.

 

One tradition holds Napoleon responsible for this, who is said to have said during a stay at the home of the banker Bethmann in Frankfurt: "Give me the little Bethmännchen again!"

 

FAQ 

Frequently asked questions about the Christmas market

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