Staatsbuergerschaft.
Staatsbürgerschaft
You don't say whether you mean legally or culturally.Citizenship laws are complicated ... In general, if you had a parent with German citizenship at the time of your birth and have no other citizenship you are a German citizen. (Place of birth is irrelevant). Obviously naturalized Germans have citizenship. There are some others who may have a claim to citizenship - which is not the same thing as citizenship itself.If you mean culturally German, then self-identification and the ability to speak German as a native speaker are crucial.
No - where on earth did you get the idea from? The qualification for German citizenship is being born to a parent with German citizenship, or naturalization.
Yes. It depends on what you mean. You may or may not be German in heritage, but legally you are a German if you have German citizenship. All depends you could have a split nationality meaning you have a dual citizenship.
Citizenship can be translated as:StaatsbürgerschaftNationalitätStaatsangehörigkeitBürgerschaftStaatsbürgerschaft
Contact your nearest German consulate. Citizenship questions are often complex.
Yes, you can apply for German citizenship and be a dual citizen regardless of the fact if your mother was still a German citizen or not.
The National Socialist German Worker's Party, or Nazi Party for short, excluded Jews from German citizenship.
Contact the German embassy or consulate. Explain your situation and they will tell you whether you have lost your German citizenship or not and will tell you if you can regain it.
If either of your parents was a German citizen at the time of your birth, you have a claim to German citizenship. (Being born in Germany is usually irrelevant and does not confer citizenship).
Yes, but she was deprived of German citizenship by the Nazis.
Probably not; German citizenship is required first, and you don't sound like you've done anything to start getting German citizenship.
Einstein renounced his citizenship in 1896 to avoid military service.