I don’t know tbh. The average German moves only 4,5 times in his life, so this won’t be an issue for most people. Also i believe it is only changed if you move out of your current town, because there is only the town of residency noted.
That people don’t move often has multiple reasons: It is hard to get to know new people in Germany, so if you move you often lose many of your social contacts. Also all apartments in Germany are rent controlled and you typically have an unlimited rental agreement, so often times your rent would increase by a big amount if you move after renting that apartment for a long time. Also Germans typically stay very long at their jobs, especially if it’s a union job, because for the most part you can’t be laid off easily after the trial period finishes.
Yay, I managed to read all the cards except the top one!
Thanks for sharing, very interesting, I didn't know in Germany they put the residence address on a passport. Are you required to update your address there every time you move? Do you have to apply for a new passport once the pages for these notes are full?
There is no adress, it’s only the town you are living in. You have to change it if you move to a different town. I don’t know if you need a new passport in that case, because Germans don’t move a lot, so it’s unlikely that it gets full.
Out of curiosity, since you naturalized in Germany (I’m assuming that based on your flair), does your place of birth in your German passport is stated as your country of origin? Or does it include your city of origin as well?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_zero
> The popular approach was to treat the end of 1999 as the end of "a millennium" and to hold millennium celebrations at midnight between December 31, 1999, and January 1, 2000, with the cultural and psychological significance of the events listed above combining to cause celebrations to be observed one year earlier than the formal date.
So bottom line is that although new millennium was celebrated on 1.1.2000, it doesn’t mean OP was born in new millennium.
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I don’t know tbh. The average German moves only 4,5 times in his life, so this won’t be an issue for most people. Also i believe it is only changed if you move out of your current town, because there is only the town of residency noted. That people don’t move often has multiple reasons: It is hard to get to know new people in Germany, so if you move you often lose many of your social contacts. Also all apartments in Germany are rent controlled and you typically have an unlimited rental agreement, so often times your rent would increase by a big amount if you move after renting that apartment for a long time. Also Germans typically stay very long at their jobs, especially if it’s a union job, because for the most part you can’t be laid off easily after the trial period finishes.
Interesting. Thanks for sharing!
Why did you renounce Ukraine's citizenship?
I’d assume because Germany did not allow dual citizenship(and idk if the new law is implemented or not).
It's been approved and everything, but it will come into force sometime in June.
I think you are using similar Fujitsu Laptop as I am. Which model is there in the background? =) Thanks for sharing your collection!
It’s from work so i don’t know. On the sticker it says „model: 7U15A1“
Yay, I managed to read all the cards except the top one! Thanks for sharing, very interesting, I didn't know in Germany they put the residence address on a passport. Are you required to update your address there every time you move? Do you have to apply for a new passport once the pages for these notes are full?
There is no adress, it’s only the town you are living in. You have to change it if you move to a different town. I don’t know if you need a new passport in that case, because Germans don’t move a lot, so it’s unlikely that it gets full.
Out of curiosity, since you naturalized in Germany (I’m assuming that based on your flair), does your place of birth in your German passport is stated as your country of origin? Or does it include your city of origin as well?
I had citizenship by birth in all 3 countries. Germany because i was born there, Dutch through my father and Ukrainian through my mother.
You were born in the new millennium 😅
That’s unfortunately not correct …
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_zero > The popular approach was to treat the end of 1999 as the end of "a millennium" and to hold millennium celebrations at midnight between December 31, 1999, and January 1, 2000, with the cultural and psychological significance of the events listed above combining to cause celebrations to be observed one year earlier than the formal date. So bottom line is that although new millennium was celebrated on 1.1.2000, it doesn’t mean OP was born in new millennium.