Frankfurt Escorts
Escorts in Frankfurt
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Escorts available to travel to Frankfurt
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- Angelique
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- Brussels

- Jill
- Brussels

- Eve
- Brussels

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- London

- Amy
- Milan

- Sharon
- Milan

- Jess and Jane
- London

- Amber
- Dubai

- Jessica
- London

- Ane
- London

- Alexandra
- Barcelona

- Angel
- London

- Isabelle
- London

- Natalie
- Vienna

- Sharlotte
- Rome

- Jill
- Vienna

- Martina
- Barcelona

- Johanna
- Vienna

- Lina
- London

- Christie
- Dubai

- Claire
- Vienna

- Angelina
- Rome

- Emily
- London

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- Amsterdam

- Carmen
- London

- Pearl
- Dubai
Frankfurt History
- The documented history of Frankfurt dates back over a thousand years, although evidence of people having lived in the area dates back to prehistoric times. Remains of encampments from 3000 BCE have been found in the area now known as Cathedral Hill, surrounded by the Kaiserdom (Cathedral). At that time up until the 8th century CE the area was nothing more than a small island enclosure on Cathedral Hill, surrounded by a mosquito-infested swamp.
The arrival of the Romans in the first century did much to improve matters, and the control of the area by the Franks in approximately 500 CE brought the town to further prosperity. They built up the area and gave the town its name, Franconovurd, ‘Ford of the Franks’. The Franks’ Emperor Charlemange enhanced Frankfurt’s position on the world consciousness when he built one of his royal residences there in the 8th century. By the 12th century Frankfurt was a prosperous market town attracting traders and merchants to its trade fairs from across Europe.
The town grew in importance further when in 1147 it was made the official site of the election and crowning of Germany’s kings, as well as later on the Holy Roman Emperors. In 1372 the city became practically autonomous from the Kaiser as a free imperial city, and was able to manage its own economy, leading to the city developing greatly financially.
In the 16th century the Frankfurters joined Martin Luther’s Protestant Reformation movement, and became embroiled in conflicts, including the Schmalkald War in 1546-7 which they lost against the Catholics and Kaiser Karl V. As a result the city was forced to lift its ban on Catholic services and the city faced further upheaval. In 1585 the city’s reputation as Germany’s financial centre when the Frankfurt Stock Exchange was built. Between 1631-5 the city was invaded by Swedish troops during the Thirty Years’ War, and then again by the French army in the 18th and 19th centuries. Despite this Frankfurt continued to prosper as a centre of importance, and in 1848 the German National Assembly met briefly at St Paul’s Church in the city in an attempt to establish a democratic constitution in the country.
In the 18th and 19th centuries Frankfurt’s Jewish citizens were largely responsible for the city’s growth as a famous banking capital of the world, leading to the city’s international financial reputation it has today. Frankfurt grew as a cultural, academic and commercial centre throughout the early 20th century but this all ended swiftly with the outbreak of the Second World War. Earlier Nazi attacks on the Jews of the city had begun earlier following Hitler’s Kristallnacht in 1938, but the outbreak of the war made the situation in Frankfurt even worse. In March 1944 Allied bombing raids totally decimated the city centre, and in 1945 when American soldiers occupied the city WW2 finally came to an end. In 1949 Frankfurt lost out to Bonn by one vote in the election to choose the capital of West Germany, but despite this the city still continued to prosper as Germany’s business capital. The European Central Bank has its home in the city, as do many other foreign banks, and Frankfurt also boasts the largest trade fair centre in Europe, which are all testament to the city’s role on the international commercial stage.